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The Montana Alumnus, 1906-1907; 1922-1933 University of Montana Publications

3-1-1923

The Montana Alumnus, March 1923

State University of Montana (Missoula, Mont.). Alumni Association

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Recommended Citation State University of Montana (Missoula, Mont.). Alumni Association, "The Montana Alumnus, March 1923" (1923). The Montana Alumnus, 1906-1907; 1922-1933. 45. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/mtalumnus/45

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Sllumm Ssteoriation of tfje ^>tate ®niber$itp of ^Montana

MISSOULA, MONTANA March 1923 y. I ( K^' .. .. ^Montana Alumnus

VOL. 1 ______NQ- 4

Application for entry as second-class matter at the postoffice at Missoula, Mon­ tana, pending. GERTRUDE A. ZERR...... Acting Editor GERTRUDE BUCKHOUS ...... Associate Editor WINIFRED FEIGHNER ...... Associate Editor J. B. SPEER ...... Business Manager

The Montana Alumnus is published in October, December, March and June by the Alumni Association of the State University of Montana. Subscription: 75c a year; subscription and annual dues of Alumni Association combined, $1.50 a year.

TABLE OF CONTENTS FOR MARCH, 1923. Page The Chancellor ...... 5 The Athletic Field ...... ® The Legislature ...... T...... 8 Progress of the Buildings ...... ® Athletics ...... -...... Personalities ...... H The Classes ...... T...... 13 Help Wanted ...... 23

THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION of the STATE UNIVERSITY OF MONTANA

Executive Committee, 1922-1923. TOM C. BUSHA. ’17 (Law ’20)...... President MRS. FANNIE HATHAWAY LUCY. ’08...... Vice-President LUCILE JAMESON. ’22...... Secretary-Treasurer GERTRUDE BUCKHOUS. ’00...... Three-Year Delegate MRS. JENNIE LYNG K-ITT. ’09...... Three-Year Delegate ALVA BAIRD. ’16...... Three-YearDelegate WINIFRED FEIGHNER. ’OS...... One-Year Delegate J. B. SPEER, ’OS...... One-Year Delegate GEORGE R. SHEPARD, '21 (Law ’21)...... One-Year Delegate “The University of Montana— It Must Prosper” DR. CRAIQ. DR. MELVIN A. BRANNON, Chancellor; University of Montana The Chancellor

HE UNIVERSITY OF MONTANA is fortunate in having as its new T Chancellor a man of the experience, ability, and character of Dr. Melvin A. Brannon. He has worked for twenty-three years in the Northwest, and hence has an intimate knowledge of Montana; in fact, he came very near being a member of the first faculty at the State University in 1895, when Webster Merrifield, then president of the University of North Dakota, was offered the presidency and was asked to bring some of his staff with him to Montana.

Dr. Brannon likes Montana, and his fondness for the West was strong enough to pull him away from Beloit, Wis., back to what he considers his real home.

After graduating from Wabash College and teaching for four years, he went to the University of North Dakota as professor of Biology in 1894. While in North Dakota.he not only became Dean of the College of Arts, but built up the School of Medicine, placed among the first twelve by the American Asso­ ciation of Medical Colleges, a public health laboratory, and a state biological station on the shores of Devil’s Lake, the second largest salt lake in the United States.

He was brought to Idaho by Dr. Edward 0. Sisson, former president of the State University of Montana, as president of the University of Idaho in 1914. Here he remained for three and a half years. It was during that time that he formed many intimate relationships with Montana, and with many of the older members of the University, notably with Professors Scheueh and Elrod.

In 1917 he became president of Beloit University, so that he has had the benefit of the direction not only of a state university but of that of a privately endowed college. He has already made a great many new friends in Montana, especially in Helena, in Missoula, Bozeman, Butte, and Dillon. He has made it his field of activity to weld the alumni of the State Institutions into an effect ive body to act as the interpreters of the Greater University to the people of the Treasure State. He has already demonstrated his ability to co-operate with the presidents of the four institutions, and he has done a great deal to make the public realize that the University of Montana is their institution, and its success depends very largely upon their support. 6 THE MONTANA ALUMNUS THE NEW ATHLETIC FIELD By Lawton Beckwith Since the last issue of the “Alum­ fans. The tennis and handball nus” much work has been done to­ courts are to be south of the new ward raising funds for the Athletic gym on either side of the swimming- Field pledged to the University by pool wing. The women’s field and the alumni last fall. A corporation courts are to be north and east of called “The Alumni-Challenge Ath­ the original gymnasium, which is letic Field Corporation ’ ’ has been now the women’s gym. incorporated under the Montana laws Active work has been carried on to “ receive, purchase, own, pledge, during the past two months in get­ hold, sell, convey, deliver and invest ting subscriptions from alumni liv­ and incumber gifts of real and per­ ing in Missoula. Circulars were sonal property” for the purpose of sent out giving a description of the constructing the Athletic Field. field with a sketch showing its loca­ The officers and trustees of the cor­ tion and salient points. A meeting poration are: of Missoula alumni was held in the D. D. Richards, ’12, President; gym after a basketball game to dis­ J. B. Speer, ’08, Secretary; George cuss the plans for the field. The R. Shepard, ’21, Treasurer; Trustees, books were opened for subscriptions D. D. Richards, Tom Busha, C. F. at that time (January 20th) and the Farmer, W. L. Murphy, G. R. Shep­ first subscriptions were made imme­ ard, J. B. Speer and C. IT. Clapp. diately after the meeting. The fund Plans for the field have been was headed by a subscription of $500 drawn up. They provide for a by W. G. Long, ’16, who wired: football gridiron, baseball diamond, “My personal conviction is that running track, skating rink, con­ while we owe Montana more than crete tennis courts, volley ball courts, can be measured in money, our ap­ handball courts, women’s hockey preciation may be measured to some field, women’s baseball diamonds, extent by the financial sacrifice we women’s basketball courts, women’s are willing to assume in this time concrete tennis courts and women’s of need. Count me in for five track. The grandstand will have a hundred.” capacity of 10,000 with space avail­ To date () $3,500 has able for expansion to 25,000 when been subscribed, all by alumni and expansion is needed. former students residing in Missoula The field is to occupy all space with the exception of Mr. Long’s between the new gvm and the new subscription. There are still a con­ heating plant. This location is ideal, siderable number of subscriptions as it makes possible the use of Mount in Missoula which have been made Sentinel as one side of a stadium. out but have not yet been entered When completed, the field will be a upon the treasurer’s books. great bowl, with grandstand on the The total number of subscriptions west side, the gym on the south, thus far received is 83; the largest, and the foot of the mountain, upon $500, the smallest $5.00, the average. which grandstand seats will be built $42.00. It is estimateci that if each on the east. The north end of the alumnus will subscribe $40.00, the track will ultimately be enclosed by fund of $40,000 will be complete. extending the east side grandstand Some of the alumni do not feel able in a curve parallel to the track, thus to give this amount; some can and forming the north side of the bowl. have given much larger amounts. The baseball diamond will be sit­ However, it is certain that every uated on the site of the old football alumnus of the University cannot field, batting north. Special bleach­ but feel that a gift of this small ers are provided for the baseball size is but a trifle compared to the THE MONTANA ALUMNUS 7 great personal value of his Univer­ giving their time and effort to rais­ sity days. ing the funds for the new field, that There have been many heated dis­ the subscription campaign be carried cussions between various alumni re­ through to a successful conclusion garding the plans for the proposed at a very early date so that construc­ field. Of course, all agree that tion work can be begun. A great they are going to help build it. part of the heavy construction work The corporation’s by-laws provide can be completed this summer if that each subscriber to the Athletic funds are made available. field fund shall have one vote for each $10 subscribed by him. This plan was adopted so that the field FACULTY NOTES would be what the alumni decided it should be. Those who give the most will have the greater voting Music Majors are to be permitted power in deciding how the field is to receive the Bachelor of Arts de­ to be. built. gree from the College of Arts and The following figures show how Sciences. The next catalog of the the alumni in Missoula are taking University will contain the an­ up the funds campaign. The per­ nouncement. centage of the total number of Mis­ The 25% D grade ruling has been soula resident alumni of each class modified by a new regulation thor­ and of each organization who have oughly consistent with the present subscribed is listed below. University policy of raising scholar­ Class Per Organiza- Per ship standards. It requires that Cent tion Cent (1) every candidate for a degree 1899 ...... 33 ADA 28 must specify the credits of passing 1900 ...... Karnak 50 grade which he proposes to offer to 1901...... 33 I N 45 1902...... 60 P D T 17 the exact number required for the 1903.. .-...... 60 S X 50 degree; and (2) upon these speci­ 1904 ...... 8 N 19 fied credits he must have a number 1905 ...... 50 S P E 60 of grade points at least equal to the 1906 ...... 60 A P 25 1907 ...... 33 D G 100 number of credits. 1908 ...... 44 KAT 25 A new “honor roll regulation” 1909...... 83 K K G 45 provides that a student shall be 1910 ...... 25 1911 ...... 50 eligible for the honor roll in any 1912 ...... 50 quarter provided (1) he have no 1913...... 33 grade of “E” (Condition) or “F” 1914...... 44 (Failure) and no credit deduction 1915 ...... 17 1916 ...... 58 for absence; and (2) he shall have 1917 ...... 46 at least 33 grade points for the 1918 ...... 23 quarter. 1919 ...... 14 1920...... 13 The high school honor scholarships 1921...... • 24 may in the future be retained only 1922...... 27 on condition that the students do 1923...... 7 creditable work in the University. 1924...... 10 Within a short time circulars will be sent out to all the alumni of the More upper classmen finish their University and details of the plan work at the University of Montana. under which subscriptions are being Out of the 1,491 students registered, taken will be given in letters accom­ 11 per cent are seniors and 14 per panying the circulars. It is the cent juniors. The figures last year earnest desire of the men who are were 9 and 13 respectively. 8 THE MONTANA ALUMNUS THE MONTANA LEGISLATURE The Legislature of 1923 did what Montana. On first blush it would was prophesied last fall; it left the seem that these are entirely benefi­ University of Montana with only cial measures, but it is believed that the mill and a half tax, excluding there is danger that money needed such miscellaneous sources of income at the present time might be diverted as that derived from student fees, from use by being placed in such a from the Federal land grants and fund, which could not possibly be from Federal appropriation, as its built up within fifty years. sole source of income; that is, the Attempts were made to discon­ appropriations for the University tinue the office of the Chancellor, were cut far below the amount esti­ by the introduction of bills both into mated as the minimum necessary to the House and into the Senate, but carry the minimum load that it both were defeated. would be asked to undertake. The appropriation for the State Univer­ sity was cut from $1,083,000 to THE CLASS SECRETARIES $840,000, which represents a slight Early in January, the secretaries decrease over the amount that will were appointed out of each class to have to be. spent for the fiscal bi­ act, so to speak, as the hostesses at ennium, ending June 30, 1923. the quarterly gathering of the clans The policy was accepted that the in the Class Notes columns of THE quality of the work done at the ALUMNUS. The first party has various institutions should not be been a stupendous success. There sacrificed, but not so much work is more chatty, informal, authentic could be undertaken as they would information about the alumni in this be asked to do. month’s issue than has been seen in It was unfortunate that in the any Alumnus publication. Appropriation Act the maximum amounts which each institution could First “Sons of Montana Alumni” spend were fixed, so that the incen­ to enter the University turn out to tive for carrying on self-supporting be girls. They are the daughters activities was removed. However, of Lillian Jordan Bendon, A. B. Lit­ as it has been argued in the past erature, ’03. Their names are Mary that the institutions are entitled to a d )orothv, born in 1905 and 1907, expend their miscellaneous sources of income which depend either upon respectively. They are graduating the federal government or upon the this' spring, one from Sidney High institutions’ own initiative, and that School, the other from Dawson these should not be subject to legis­ County, and will enter the Univer­ lative appropriation; the bill was sity for the fall quarter. amended on the last day of the ses­ sion so as to exclude self-supporting The literary productions of the activities from the provision of the University of Montana rank third in act. the United States, according to the The only other bill affecting the estimate of the publication, “College University was a proposed amend­ Anthology for 1921-1922.” Lloyd ment to the Constitution, providing Thompson’s “If I Should Go,” pub­ for the establishment of three funds lished in the Frontier is printed in to be built up through endowment; the Anthology. Honorable mention one of a hundred million dollars for was awarded to Mary Elizabeth the maintenance of the state; one of Doerr, ’22; Gwendoline Keene, ’21; five hundred for the maintenance of Wilda Linderman, ’20; Adalouie the schools; and one of a hundred McAllister, ’22; Homer M. Parsons, millions to support the University of ’21; Jack Stone, ’23. THE MONTANA ALUMNUS 9 PROGRESS OF THE BUILDINGS GYMNASIUM that goes into the boilers is metered Each department of the gymna­ and the temperature recorded. sium has been used as soon as fin­ The stokers are 72% efficient, op­ ished. It is now fully occupied, the swimming pool having been opened erating at 180% rating. No smoke at the beginning of the spring quar­ comes from the chimney; there is no ter. The old gymnasium is turned dirt, dust or excess heat inside the over to the women’s physical educa­ plant. All the pipes are covered tion work. with insulation and in cold weather FORESTRY it will be necessary to put heat coils Classes are now held in the com­ in the building to make it comfort­ pleted building, and offices installed. able to work in. It is the second of the buildings to be The steam exhaust from the en­ put to use. The old building now gines necessary to run the plant is houses the language department. all utilized; the exhaust from the LIBRARY turbine is run into the heating mains The stacks are finished, and docu­ to be used about the campus, and ments and books are being installed, that from the engines is used to heat and much of the decorative work has the water for the boiler. been done. From 17 to 25 tons of coal are re­ RESIDENCE HALLS quired every day to heat the build­ The girls who come from the state ings. This is weighed and fed high schools for Interscholastic will automatically into the stokers. An be housed in the Women’s Dormitory, elevator, consisting of an endless which is nearing completion. The chain with small buckets attached, men’s hall will be practically com­ lifts the coal into the hopper, which pleted at that time, but fixtures will has a 75-ton storage capacity. not be in place to accommodate Few comparisons are available, guests. because the old plant had no check­ ing system. Last year’s figures on THE HEATING PLANT expense show that it cost $5.36 per day to heat 1,000 sq. ft. of radiation during the month of February; this “Classes are out,” said the Chief year for the same month the cost at the Heating Plant. was $2.88. The careful checking The Heating Plant is at the mouth prevents waste, and the high effi­ of Hellgate Canyon, and the Main ciency of the stokers permits the use Hall is hidden by trees and build­ of low-grade coal which is purchased ings from the view of the Plant. at a low price. To increase the But they don’t tell by the appear­ heating day from 18 to 24 hours and ance of the students on the Campus. more than double the radiation, re­ They look at the steam indicators. quired the addition of but two men So accurately is the heat regulated to the staff. The cost of evaporat­ that the opening of the doors after ing 1,000 lbs. of water to steam at classes in the various buildings 125 lbs. pressure, is 50 to 55 cents, about the campus is apparent by the as compared with the charge drop in the steam pressure at the throughout the state in commercial plant. plants of approximately $1.25. Every operation of the plant is Last year 24,150 sq. ft. of radia­ carefully checked; the coal is tion were used in the various build­ weighed as it goes into the stokers; ings; when the new structures are the steam given out from the plant completed and everything connected is metered, and the amount of water up, there will be 70,000 sq. ft. 10 THE MONTANA ALUMNUS

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Bulletins for Interscholastic have The university men were victorious gone out, and entry blanks will be in eight of the games. mailed early in April. At a meet­ Mount St. Charles team was the first one met in the season and was ing of the central committee it was defeated by a score of 24 to 14, and decided to divide the state into dis­ Mount St. Charles was the last team tricts for the purpose of accommo­ met in the season and the State Uni­ dating the 130 high schools that will versity was defeated 27 to 11. This participate in the meet this year. A gives some idea of how things went. Injuries and inability to play caused district manager was appointed to some of the best men to be out of have charge of organizing the coun­ the grind at the end of the season. ties. One of the outstanding things of A new feature of this year’s pro­ the season was the statement made by gram is the bringing to the meet of Coach J. W. Stewart in the Kaimin all the winners of the districts for regarding the student body and the the tryouts in debate. This is a support that was given the team. The very big undertaking, involving coach felt that the student body was seven or eight teams of three de­ willing to support a winning team baters each instead of four teams of only and when a few reverses were two each, as in previous years. met the support was withdrawn. This, The program: the coach declared, had its effect on the team and to one not directly con­ Debate: Tryouts, Wednesday fore­ nected with the institution this noon ; finals, Wednesday night; seemed to be true. At all events, the April 9. spirit of the team and the student Declamation: Tryouts, Thursday body seemed to sag terribly about forenoon; finals, Thursday night. the middle of the season. Track: Semi-finals, Thursday As usual, Montana maintained its afternoon; finals, Friday afternoon. record for sportsmanship in the con­ Awarding of Medals, Friday night, ference games. No conference teams in the High School Auditorium. were defeated, but the university George Varnell, Sports Editor of went after them just the same and the Spokane Chronicle, will act as held up its end. There was no “ back­ starter for the events. Dudley ing out;” there was no “crabbing” Richards of Missoula, as Clerk of the because the conference teams were Course. better. The university did its best; did all it could; got beat and liked it. In basketball, the State University That spirit of Montana has done team did not make a showing that much to maintain our place in the will cause this year’s team to be re­ Northwest conference. membered for any particular thing, The track outlook is rather good. unless it is that the style of play There are several men out who have was changed radically and a good done well in past years and who are showing made, all handicaps consid­ expected to do well again. However, ered. because of the late spring it is impos­ The team made a total of 395 sible to give any definite lineup as to points during the year playing a track possibilities. The State Uni­ total of 21 games. Opponents in the versity has the heaviest track sched- 21 games made a total of 521 points. (Continued on Page Twenty-two) THE MONTANA ALUMNUS 11

late Colonel Wilbur F. Sanders of pioneer history. His home is in Helena. FROM THE SOUTH SEAS

Quaint superstitions and fabulous tales of “enchanters’ children” give variety and spice to the English classes of Margaret Wickes, in Ma­ nila. Although most of the girls of the Ellinwood School are Chris­ tians, they still cling to the fables of their childhood. A splendid musical organization; an American Women’s University Club; a Little Theater; a Union Protestant Church; movies, with the stories in English, Spanish and French; band concerts by the famous Manila band; beau­ tiful drives and fine people from all parts of the world—all these make Manila a splendid city to live in. Among the fine people Miss Wickes meets is Florence Dixon Leach, who lives only three blocks away. TOM C. BUSHA, ’17 President of the Alumni Association FREDERICKS IS EDITOR OF This is the man under whose ac­ STEAMSHIP’S DAILY tive leadership the Association is rapidly becoming a vital force in Robert (Boob)) Fredericks, for­ University and State affairs. Tom mer journalism student at the Uni­ Busha has carried out the promise versity, is now editor of the daily paper published on the steamship of a successful under-graduate ca­ President Jefferson of the Admiral reer by finding himself in a position Line, P. S. S. Co., which sailed on of responsibility and importance. January 26th. The ship will put Upon his graduation, with two de­ in at Victoria, Yokohoma, Kobe, grees. in 1920, he entered the Re­ Shanghai, Hongkong and Manila. habilitation work, of which he is Mr. Fredericks has the best of ac­ now Sub-District Manager of the commodations and lives with the United States Veterans’ Bureau, ship’s officers. He will publish the with jurisdiction over the State of ship news, the radio and wireless dis­ Montana. The Bureau has a staff patches. of eighty people and deals with Mr. Fredericks is a veteran of the about nine thousand men. World War, and since then has Mr. Busha was married last year worked on various papers, among to Miss Harriet Sanders, daughter them the St. Louis Dispatch, the of Mr. and Mrs. J. U. Sanders of Butte Post, and the Post Intelli­ Helena, and granddaughter of the gencer of Seattle. 12 THE MONTANA ALUMNUS

A GREAT AND COLORFUL FINANCIAL REPORT OF HOME­ COUNTRY—ALASKA COMING COMMITTEE

Katherine Wilson, ’01, of New The Homecoming Committee has a York, California, Washington and balance of $245.77, which T. C. , is in Alaska gathering local color and material for more fiction. Spaulding, Chairman of the Com­ She figured in the literature of the mittee, hopes will be retained to help early days of the University, editor- finance the next Homecoming in in-chief of the Kaimin, on the staff 1924. The tag sale and admissions of the first Alumnus and class poet; to the big final event in the new on leaving the University she became connected with the literary life of gymnasium amounted to $575. Ex­ , on the staff of the New penditures were as follows: Prizes, York Times and of Harper’s Bazaar. $50.00; printing and stationery, Her adventures in “that most $233.06; labor, $11.04; miscellaneous harassing of careers, writing,” car­ expense, including telegrams, ex­ ried her from one end of the conti­ penses for parade, etc., $42.55. nent to another, to Europe and back, There was a net balance from the and now into the far north. A Homecoming dinner of $7.42. country full of inspiration and inter­ est to the fiction writer, she says of Alaska, where one measures the A FORESTER IN THE time by “boats” instead of by cal­ PHILIPPINES endars. She has within the past year met with Lu Knowles Maxey, Placido Dacanay, ’20, returned to George Greenwood and Ben Stewart, the Philippines last year after a year and counted it not the least of her in Harvard, and was appointed For- adventures to connect up again with ester-in-Charge of Reforestation the old days in Montana. Projects of the Bureau of Forestry. After some months spent in inspect­ THE WONDERFUL CLASS OF ing the reforestation areas and out­ “FIRSTS” lining the policy for the Bureau of Forestry, he was appointed Assist­ Classes did not exist as “classes” ant Professor of Silviculture at the prior to the wonderful class of Forest School of the University of “firsts.” That’s how 1904 hap­ the Philippines. pened to inaugurate a greater num­ ber of things than any class before Varsity Vodvil was said to be ar­ or since. They came out in flaming tistically the best ever. It netted red caps in Junior year, and insisted the A. S. U. M. $644.76. on being a class. It engineered the first Sentinel; edited the class book; held the first “Singing on the Steps” (that was the year Robert OUR ADVERTISERS Sibley came) ; started Sigma Chi and Turn to our advertising col­ Kappa Kappa Gamma, and the first umns which are a new feature two honor societies; first and only with this issue. Note the liberal class to give a class prize; first to support THE ALUMNUS is re­ give a junior prom, and now, it has ceiving .from professional men the first alumnus to deliver the and business firms. Professional Commencement address. The hon­ cards of alumni and also of the ored man is George Greenwood, one contractors of the new University of the chief factors of the class buildings are special features of achievements of 1904. the advertising section. THE MONTANA ALUMNUS 13

1898 Association, as Secretary for the class Secretary, Mrs. Ella Robb Glenny, 3221 of 1906, for the ensuing year. The pur­ Emerson Ave., So., Minneapolis. pose is to obtain “more class notes for the Alumnus.” Fred says he wrote 1899 every member of the class and only Secretary, Mrs. Sidney Ward (Zoe three replies were received. Before the Bellew), Hamilton, Montana. next issue, he wants a letter from every Professor William H. Harkins of the one of 1906. The letters will after­ University of Chicago, has made a new wards be pinned together and mailed in electrical discovery. He constructed an “round robin” fashion to each member apparatus which makes it possible to so they may read the details. photograph the track of an atom. Mr. Grace Flynn is again teaching in Mis­ Harkins was head of the Chemistry de­ soula after a vacation and rest of five partment at Montana State University months on the coast Grace lost her from 1900 to 1912, and is the husband of mother last March from pneumonia. Louise Hathaway, ’99. Miss Flynn saw the Montana-Washington football game in Seattle and the Mon­ 1900 tana-Gonzaga game in Spokane. She Secretary, Charles Avery, Durston visited Jessie Bishop Giboney, ’05, who Bldg., Anaconda. lives at Three Tree Point on Puget 1902 Sound, 16 miles from Seattle. Grace Secretary, Guy E. Sheridan, 818 West says, “Jessie’s home surroundings are Galena St., Butte. ideal; Mrs. Giboney has three children, Edith Watson Keel is living at 529 the youngest being 1% years old.” Also, East Mercury St., Butte. Grace adds, “more class notes in the 1903 Alumnus are very welcome.” Secretary, Mrs. Harriet .Rankin Sed- Ona M. Sloan is now Educational Di­ man, Dean of Women of the State Uni­ rector of the Bon Marche store, one versity. of the largest establishments on the 1904 coast. She has supervision over the salespeople, cash registers, rest rooms, Secretary, Roxy Howell Derge, 901 gives instructions on salesmonship, and W. Copper St., Butte. in another month will have charge of Page Bunker is located at College Sta­ the cafeteria in addition. Sadie tion. as State Forester. Two of his Schmalhausen Ward, ex-’05, is also at children are in , the boy attending the Bon Marche. Ona says Seattle has English High School, and the girl study­ a Missoula Club which gave a Mon­ ing art. Louise, the third and oldest, tana picnic last summer; 2,000 Mon­ graduated from the New England Con­ tanans were present. servatory of Music in 1918, in the violin Maud Burns Hoefer writes from her soloist course. She then went to Ger­ home at Dixon, Illinois, that “she has many and is now concertizing in Europe. little to say, but is still much alive.” Page is surely to be congratulated on his Her husband is in the coal business and family. also has the agency for the Lexington The class of 1904 has always been car. They have one child, a daughter, proud of the “firsts” for which they are Jane, three years old last October. A responsible, such as first annual, first year ago Maud and Jane spent the sum­ class book, and many others. We now mer with Mrs. Burns in Long Beach, have another: George Greenwood is California. Besides seeing many other the first alumnus to be asked to deliver Montana friends, she visited Florence the Commencement address. We con­ Ervey, ’07, and Gil Heyfrou at Holly­ sider this some honor I wood. Maud often sees Mrs. Conibear, Evelyn Polleys Mason, after living the ex-Coach “Connie’s” wife, and daughter, nomadic life demanded by the forest who live at Dixon. Maud “enjoys the service for several years, is now most Alumnus,” and says “she is coming back happily settled in her own home at Port­ some day, but believes she will hardly land Oregon. She may be reached at know the place; here’s hoping for a big­ 509 Myrtle St. ger and better University.” Roxy Howell Derge is at 901 W. Cop­ Margaret Summers, ’06, has been in per St., Butte. Three small University the real estate business for some time in prospects occupy her time. Portland, Oregon, and finds it both “in­ 1906 teresting and profitable.” She spent Fred E. Buck has been appointed by last summer at Tillamook and Cannon the executive committee of the Alumni Beaches. She is “now busy buying a 14 THE MONTANA ALUMNUS new Studebaker sedan and contemplat­ Jr., is connected with the editorial staff ing a drive to California this summer.” of the Chicago Daily News. Margaret is one of the 5,000 members Cecil Kramer Mather will return soon of the Montana Society in Portland. to her home in Carter, after a visit to Once a month they have a program Missoula. and dance. She often sees Lawrence Mrs. Florence Matthews Hanssen will Grady and family, also Oral J. Berrv. leave about April 1 for an extended visit an ex-football star at the U, about 1906. to Omaha, Mt. Clemens, New York and A letter to her from Jessie Robb Lynch, other points east. ’06, says her little boy was seriously Mrs. Mary Shull Lamire and children hurt reecntly. Maragret adds, “I enjoy have come from their home in Ronan the personal notes.” for a short visit with relatives in Mis­ soula. 1907 From Suzanne Stabern Graham coin" Secretary, King Garlington, 630 Eddy the news that the Distinguished Service Ave., Missoula. Medal for exceptionally meritorious serv­ Stella Duncan Maloy is living at 22 ices in the A. E. F., has been conferred Blogden St., Boston. She is buying for on her husband. Lieutenant Colonel Gra­ one of the Boston stores. She took her ham, of the 42nd or Rainbow Division. B. S. from Simmons College in 1921. The medal was presented to him by 1908 General Edwards in Boston on Nov. 23. Mrs. Graham hopes to visit Montana Secretary, Winnifred Feighner, Assist­ this summer. ant Librarian, State University. Hugh Elmer MacDonald, husband of 1909 Cornelia McFarlane, died early in De­ cember. There is one child, a daugh­ Secretary, Ida Cunningham Bush, 322 ter, aged 2 years. Blaine St., Missoula. Mrs. H. O. Bragg (Mary Rankin) has 1914 been appointed instructor of English in Secretary Ellsworth Smith, Smith the Los Angeles High School at San Block, Missoula. Pedro, California. Herbert Kuphal is engineer on the Mrs. C. A. Popkin (Bess Bradford) is West Gallatin road project. This proj­ president of the Sapulpa, Oklahoma, ect is now about 5 per cent completed branch of the A. A. U. W. as far as tlie road work is concerned, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hamilton have re­ while bridge construcction is something cently moved into their new home on over 50 per cent finished. the corner of Hilda and Evans. Miss Alice Wright is training for the 1915 Personal Service Bureau of New York Secretary, Anna Davis Watkins, 701 City. Ave., Urbana, Ill. Fred Greenwood is president of the Donald Bruce Young is in the whole­ Federal Reserve Bank of Portland, Ore. sale and retail grocery business in We­ Gil McLaren returned several weeks natchee, Washington. ago from Seattle, where he was called Henry Guy Woodward, M. A., 1915, is on account of the death of his brother- in the air service, located at Pamponga. in-law. P. I. Ivan Leininger, ex, is District Mana­ Orin D. Cunningham, M. A., 1915, is ger of the Northwest for the Permuttet engaged in Chemical Research for the Water Co. Republic Creosoting Company of Indian­ 1910 apolis. Anne Hutchinson Sanders lives in Wil­ Secretary, W. J. Tait, 2718 Floral sall. Blvd., Butte. Wade Plummer, ex, submitted to a 1911 major operation this winter. Secretary, Mary Elrod Ferguson, 436 The State School of Mines is publish­ S. Fifth St. W., Missoula. ing a bulletin by Roy Wilson, on the Charles Stuart McCowan is traffic Geology of the Mission Range. manager for E. S. Burgan & Son, Spo­ I. S. Crawford was re-elected last No­ kane, Washington. vember, to the office of County Attorney Ralph Smith is an electrical engineer of Rosebud County. for tlie Westinghouse Company of Pitts­ Raleigh Gilchrist writes from the Bu­ burgh. reau of Standards in Washington, D. C., 1912 that he will attend the meeting of the Secretary, Mrs. Nina Gough Hall, Po­ American Chemical Society at New tomac. Haven. Conn., in April. He will then visit Montana and he plans to spend 1913 Interscholastic at his Alma Mater. Secretary, Mrs. Florence Mathews After graduation at Montana Albert Hanssen. 804 Chestnut St., Missoula. Keiser became a fellow in the English George Stone, father of Dean Stone. department of the University of Illinois, THE MONTANA ALUMNUS 15 from which he received his doctorate in Frances Cochrane is teaching in Mi­ 1919. His doctor’s thesis, “The Influ­ ami, Florida. ence of Christianity on the Vocabulary of Old English Poetry,” has been pub­ 1917 lished by the university. Following a Secretary, Stuart McHaffie, Ryegate. sojourn in Europe during 1920, Dr. Thomas C. Busha, Manager of the Keiser became head of the English de­ United States Veteran Bureau at Hel­ partment of Augustana College, Sioux ena, Montana, recently officiated as best Falls, S. D., which position he still fills. man at the wedding of M. M. ‘Punk” Edward Allen is now engaged in the Owsley, ’16. practice of medicine in Chicago. He Virginia Dixon, Elizabeth Hershey and graduated from Rush Medical College Hazel Swearingen are members of the in 1919, and completed his intern service Missoula County High School faculty at in Presbyterian Hospital in 1922. He Missoula, Montana. was married in June, 1922, to Grace Harold J. Jones was married shortly Robeson, a nurse of Presbyterian Hos­ after New Year’s day to Everis Ander­ pital. son, and is now residing at Portland, Diana Uline (Mrs. A. F. Grove) Dell Oregon. Rapids, S. D., is assisting in the pro­ vision of a wholesome community life Elizabeth Hershey recently visited at for' her home town. A fifty-acre park, the home of Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Mc­ a bathing beach with modern equipment, Haffie in Ryegate, Montana. and a Community House, which is the Mrs. John Dutcher (Patricia O’Flynn) home of the American Legion and other is now a resident of Twin Bridges, Mon­ organizations, have been provided tana. through the efforts of the townspeople. Edward Simpkins is now’ employed as Mrs. Grove says: “There is so much Assistant Engineer in the office of the we can assist with—those of us who are State Engineer at Helena, Montana. ‘stuck’ in small towns, but we’ve got it Edgar P. Reid is County Attorney of all over ‘Gopher Prairie.’ ” Madison County, Montana; Stuart Mc­ Haffie is County Attorney of Golden Ralph M. Lewis, who spent only his Valley County, Montana, and Charles L. senior year at Montana, has been for Tyman is County Attorney of Meagher the last three years principal of the high County, Montana. school from which be graduated in The following members of the class Morrison. Illinois. During the war he are practicing law: Lloyd A. Fenn, at served in Base Hospital No. 95, in Kooskia, Idaho; R. C. W. Friday, at France Missoula. Montana; Ira A. Gwin, at In addition to the “intensive study of Shelby, Montana; Horace W. Judson, at kindergartening,” requisite to the care Browning, Montana; Emmett O’Sullivan, of two small daughters, Merle Kettlewell at Harlowton, Montana; William E. Ray, (Mrs. Rauenauver) finds time to serve at Richey, Montana; Verne Robinson, at as president of the Plains Town Library Browning, Montana; Clarence T. Ward, Board, which position she has held for at Boise, Idaho, and Onni A. Wuolle, at two years. One phase of this work in­ San Francisco. California. cludes the giving of benefit entertain­ Emmett O’Sullivan was married dur­ ments to supplement the funds received ing the summer of 1922. Mrs. O’Sulli­ from the town. Mrs. Ruenauver has van is from Lewistown, Montana, where also assisted in the organization of Emmett formerly practiced law. school for mothers and the develop­ Myrtle M. Parmalee died suddenly on ment of a study course for the scientific September 30, 1922. consideration of problems incident to Gladys Lewis (Mrs. Payne Templeton) the care of children, character build­ and two daughters are now residents of ing, etc. Big Timber, Montana, where Payne joe Tope has been county attorney of Templeton, ’16, is superintendent of Prairie County since the fall of 1916, scchools. having entered upon his fourth term in John Suchy is a member of the faculty January of this year. of the State University at Missoula. 1916 Ira A. Gwin is an attache of the last Montana Legislature. Mr. Gwin is in­ Secretary, Irene Murray Lansing, 333 terested in the oil fields at Kevin, Mon­ Beckwith Ave., Missoula. tana, and- may soon be the “John D.” of Kathryn Janie Sutherlin is singing in the Class of 1917. the Chicago Grand Opera Company. B. R. Riordan is Prosecuting Attorney E. Paul Bacheller is practicing law in for Owyhee County, Idaho. Lusk, Wyoming. Marguerite Linn, who taught in Ha­ Harold I. Bacheller is practicing law waii last year, is now in Henderson, in Lusk, Wyoming. Montana. Alpha B. Buse is a student at the Colin Campbell Clements, ex, has London School of Economics and Po­ opened a Dramatist’s Bookshop on Bea­ litical Science in London, England. con Hill, Seattle, * Washington. Mr. 16 THE MONTANA ALUMNUS

Clements is well known in the Little Theaters for numerous one-act plays he ALUMNI PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY has written. 1918 Secretary, Charlotte Bockes, head of MERRICK AND LONG the English Department, Kalispell High LAWYERS School, Kalispell. WM. G. Long, *16 IVAN MERRICK, ’14 John Breneman is Superintendent of Schools, Silverton, Colo. “Montana Business Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Flitcroft (Mar­ Given Prompt Attention” guerite McGreevy) Stanford, Montana, 523-6 Railway Exchange Bldg., Seattle who had planned to spend a six weeks’ vacation in California with an aunt, were rushed there by the death of this aunt about the tenth of January. They will return the latter part of March to O. A. WUOLLE Stanford, where Mr. Flitcroft is asso­ Attorney and Counselor-at-Law ciated with his father in the Basin Mer­ cantile. 207-208 Hobart Building Bently Barrows is married to Alfred 528 Market Street E. Lyle. They have their home at 204 S. 36th St., Billings. Mr. Lyle is a San Francisco California contractor in Billings and throughout the state, for public buildings. “Perk” is still in Bluefields, Nica­ ragua, Central America, and will be for E. A. BLENKNER, ’21 another year. Her husband is manager of the mahogany cutting for Mengel ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Bros, of Kentucky. Margaret Miller Dolliver, ex, is visit­ Broadus Montana ing her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Miller, of Kalispell. They returned for the Christmas holidays from Portland and other points in Oregon, where Staf­ ford Dolliver, ex-19, was doing highway JOHN T. PATTERSON, ’20 construction work. They expect to make their home in Montana. 501 Montana Building, Missoula Alec Swaney, ex, has returned from diplomatic service in Scotland, and is Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York spending the winter in Kalispell. Ruth Porter has been teaching Mathe­ matics and American History for the past three years in the Mullan High School at Mullan, Idaho. Last year she C. J. FORBIS, ’12 coached the Senior play, “Mrs. Temple’s Telegram.” ARCHITECT Peg Garlington Stone sees Ethel John­ son and her year and a half old son fre­ Montana Building quently. Missoula Montana Chris Bentz writes that he is happily married, still cashier of the Security State Bank in Trail City, S. D., where he has been since 1919. J. Maurice Dietrich went to Deer HOWARD TOOLE Lodge in June, 1921, when the Deer Lodge Bank and Trust Co., of which he ATTORNEY-AT-LAW is assistant cashier, was opened. In eighteen months this new bank ha Montana Building Missoula, Mont. grown in deposits from .$97,562.19 to $4S8,S20.80. J. Maurice married Helen Prescott, ex-’2O of Helena. Helen Goodwin has been for two years in charge of cataloging department of GEORGE G. WITTER, ’21 the Spokane Library. After graduation she went to the Library School at the ATTORNEY-AT-LAW University of Washington, and for a year and a half after that worked in First National Bank Building the U. of W. Library. Charles Baldwin’s father. Major Bald­ Missoula Montana win, died in Kalispell in January. THE MONTANA ALUMNUS 17

Charles has a lovely wife and a young Arkansas, in American Red Cross work. son, Chas., Jr., over a year old. She writes: “My work is itinerant. Annabel Acker married Wm. Cookson I am a sort of hybrid of social work, in May. nurse, and home economics teacher. I Verne and Wilda Linderman of Kalis­ have my work in the schools, and follow pell, are spending the winter with their this up with work in the homes. It is parents at Santa Barbara, Calif. very interesting, and sufficiently no­ Gladys Shindler is teaching in a busi­ madic to satisfy even my disposition. ness college in Portland. We are now planning work on the three- “Blackie” Dawe spent five months in year program basis. That brings the service in 1918, attending Presidio at work into the country everywhere, and San Francisco; later transferred to S. allows sufficient time to see some re­ A. T. C. at Missoula; got Ph. G. in sult. As we do that, our work becomes March, 1919; is and has been employed more permanent and at the end of three in Jensen’s Montana Street Pharmacy, years the community will, we think, see Butte. “With the exception of a ‘night’ the value and employ a permanent work­ or two now and then, I have found very er, whether nutrition or nurse; and the little excitement. Once or twice a year work will pass entirely out of the hands I enjoy a call at Missoula, especially at of the Red Cross.” Homecoming. I have not made a mil­ Jack Hill writes that he, and others lion dollars, nor have I been united in of Dr. Jesse’s former dogs, have deserted matrimony with any ‘fair one,’ as have the noble science of chemistry to become many of our former school associates.” mere pedagogues. He is teaching Sci­ Merle C. Gallagher is the youngest ence, Mathematics and Athletics, at the principal of Senior high schools in the Geraldine High Schol, Geraldine, Mon­ State of Minnesota. Hers is the High tana. School at , Minn., a school From Jack Hill I learned that George which enrolled 415 this semester, in its Turcott is also teaching at Hinsdale, four-year course. It has a faculty of Montana; and I also learned that Edna eighteen members; is located in the Montgomery is now back in Illinois do­ heart of the Minnesota Lake region, a ing some graduate work. “play-ground surpassed only by Western Lysle Hodson is teaching Science and Montana in summer months.” Mathematics in the Baker High School, P. Dick Stone (this news is contrib­ Baker, Montana. He intends to go to uted by his wife) : “Has been review­ summer school at the University of Mon­ ing books, mostly fiction, for the Book­ tana next summer. man, constantly now for over two years. Morse Hoiles is at present the busi­ Reads from five to eight books of theirs ness manager of the “New Northwest.” a week. John Farrar, Editor of the Elsie May Johnson is teaching in Bookman, considers him exceptional for Laurel, Montana. She plans a summer so young a person. For the New York tour of the western coast as soon as Evening Post he is at present reviewing school is out. bibliographies and essays; some are to Hazel Kain is teaching Science and be signed. During Emil Goue’s trip in Home Economics at Clayton, Illinois. America, P. Dick travelled with him Elizabeth Kelley (address after May 1, for the New York World, and wrote 219 University Avenue). She is at special stories for the N. Y. Evening present teaching Social Science at the Mail. Just sold a special article to the Superior High School. Superior, Montana. Pictorial Review.” Charlotte Shepherd is instructor in 1919 Chemistry at Converse College, Spartan­ Secretary, Barbara Fraser, Box 85, burg, South Carolina. She writes that Livingston. although this southern climate is pleas­ Grace Armstrong is teaching at Bridg­ ant, nothing can compare with the west. er, Montana, and expects to attend sum­ Jeanette Spuhler has been teaching for mer school at the University of Cali­ the past two years at Roundup, Montana. fornia. Melville Woods is Treasurer of the Chester L. Baldwin is principal of the North American Securities Company of Circle Schools at Circle, Montana. Spokane, Washington. He writes that Florence Benson (permanent address he is getting so bald headed that he Floodwood, Minnesota. She is at pres­ fears that the modern flapper will never ent teaching in the High School at stir any thought of romance in him. Bear Creek, Montana. She is taking Henry Lamb is with an accounting advantage of the plan of attending four firm, C. B. McBMath Company, of Spo­ summer school sessions at Columbia, kane, Washington. which enables one to procure a Master’s George Tester. now employed as as­ Degree. This summer will be her third sistant Secretary of the State Senate at one. Helena. Ruth Davis—now teaching History in Margaret Evans, ex. is married and the Missoula County High School; lives in Helena. Her name is Mrs. Helen Jillette, at present at Prescott, Scott. 18 THE MONTANA ALUMNUS

Songs by Edna Leopold, ex, are a fea­ Radcliffe Beckwith, ex, Rhodes scholar ture at the Hales broadcasting station from Montana, has been hiking in the in San Francisco, for the benefit of Pyrenees mountains with several com­ radio fans. She is connected with a panions. He has spent parts of two California opera company. summers in Spain studying the language and country. While at Oxford he has 1920 been doing work in chemistry and geol­ Secretary, Mildred Gleason, Glendive. ogy. J. J. Bourgoin has held the position Glenn Chaffin, ex, a former journalism of Deputy County Attorney of Silver student, is employed by a Hollywood Bow County for the past two years. film company as publicity man. E. Butler is connected with Illinois Ruth Line, ex, was featured recently Terminal R. R. Company as draftsman. in one of the St. Paul papers as having His address is Alton, Illinois. done exceptionally fine work as edu­ Elizabeth Ireland was elected Super­ cational director of the Golden Rule intendent of Schools of Hill County last Store of that city. She took up this November. positioii in August, going there from the Kitty Bramble is now teaching in the Prince School in Boston, and the class Tacoma Public Schools. She received instruction is carried on more exclu­ her degree in the summer session, 1920. sively than in any of the other stores. Charles Baldwin is practicing law at Kalispell, Montana. He states that he 1922 is married and has a wild baby boy, Secretary, Mildred Lore,-Judith Gap. who keeps him jumping sideways to Early in February the secretary of the please his various whims and fancies class of ’22 sent out some 120 letters after* office hours. “In teaching Civics last semester in the Preemption Community High School. BUILDING CONTRACTORS’ DIRECTORY I had the pleasure of telling my students that I came from the state which headed the list in educational standing,” said CHARLES L. PILLSBURY CO. Erik A. Hadeen. who is teaching this ENGINEERS year in Preemption. Ills. On leaving Minneapolis St. Paul the Univeristy in 1921. he went to Chi­ Designed heating plants at State Univer­ cago to attend the fall semester of the sity, Missoula; Montana State College, University there; the winter and spring Bozeman. he spent at the Maywood Theological Seminary in Iowa, and the summer ses­ Engineers to Minnesota State Board of sion at the State University of Iowa. Control He expects to resume his work at Iowa University, in Manual Training and Me­ chanical Drawing. INTERNATIONAL Bob Oslund gets a doctor’s degree at Combustion Engineering Corporation Chicago University this spring. Kathryn Foley, ex. has charge of the New York London Tokio Buenos Aires page “Doing the Shops With Doris." on Installed Coxe Stokers State University, the Seattle Post Intelligencer. She is Missoula. a graduate of the School of .Journalism C. P. OVERFIELD of the University of Washington. ’20. Rocky Mountain Manager, Salt Lake City 1921 Secretary, Hans Hansen, Worden, Mon­ tana. Hawley Wymond is an attorney at law NELSON & PEDERSON in Joplin, Montana. Fay M. Collins is teaching in the High 309 Electric Bldg. Butte, Montana Schol at Sumatra. Bob Osmund, ’20, says he frequently General Contractors, Library Building sees Jessie Bierman at Chicago Univer­ sity. She is doing advanced work there. Helen A. Little is teaching in Butte High School. Guy Mooney is in Washington, D. C.. HILMER J. SETTERGREN as Secretary to Congressman-elect Scott Leavitt. Mr. Mooney has been in news­ GENERAL CONTRACTOR paper work since his graduation from the University. At the time of his ap­ Missoula, Montana pointment he was on the city staff of the Great Falls Tribune as court re­ General Contractor of New Gymnasium porter. THE MONTANA ALUMNUS 19 to the members of the class. Out of George A. Strong is Vice Principal and the sixty who had responded by Febru­ head of the Science department in the ary 15, it is interesting to note that 18 Pocatello, Idaho, High School. are teaching, five are in some branch of Bill Wilson is teaching in the French­ forestry, five are in law, five are phar­ town High School. He plans to do macists, four are in journalism. graduate work in Modern Languages at Elsie Holloman has been teaching Eng­ Harvard next fall. lish. Latin and History in the Toston Clarence B. May, originally of the High School since Christmas. class of ’16, has been principal of the Ruth James spent a recent week at Hinsdale public school for the past four Missoula. She is teaching Science and years. Home Economics and coaching girls’ bas­ Sylvia Bakkeby is in the Moccasin ketball in Corvallis. High School teaching English, Latin and Reba Houck is teaching English and History. Music in the Paradise High school. She Clarence E. Moore has been assistant also has a class of sixteen music pupils. in the Botany department at the State She plans to resume her study of piano University since the first of the year, and pine-organ in Chicago next fall. being in charge of instruction in Voca­ Elizabeth Wickes is teaching Latin, tional Botany. He expects to complete Home Economics and Science in Plains. his research work for an M. A. in Botany She recently gave several lectures on and eventually to work for a Ph. D. in nutrition at the special dairy school Botany, probably at Harvard. held there. Paul Smith is one of the Representa­ Mary Vedder is having an interesting tives of Lewis and Clark County in the time teaching in the Crow Agency State Legislature. At the end of the Schools, as half of her pupils are In­ Legislative session he will continue the dians. practice of law in his father’s office in Leroy (Joe) Kershner, who has been Helena. working on the Anaconda Bureau of the Eugene Harpole has opened a law of­ Butte Miner since last December, is now fice in Superior. He writes that Earl reporting for the Daily Missoulian. P. Dirmeyer, of ’21, is an insurance Hyle Jones is cashier of the First representative there and Bessie Kelly, an State Bank at Bynum, Montana. ’ He M. A. graduate of ’22, is teaching in the plans to enter the University of Chicago Superior High School. Law Scohol within the next year or two. Pat Keeley has been practicing law in Helen Gregory has been visiting in the office of his brother in Deer Lodge. New York, Washington and Dayton, Ohio, They have recently formed a partner­ for the past few months. After March ship known as Keeley and Keeley. Pat 1, she will be associated with her mother states that he hasn’t much time to prac­ in the Gregory-Mason Shop in Billings. tice law as lie is on so many committees. Kelsey Smith is manager of the J. N. He is Adjutant of the American Legion, McCracken Company, Helena. Chairman of the publicity committee for Jim Dorsey, who is traveling for an the Kiwanis Club. etc. He ran for investment firm out of Seattle, was in county attorney, last fall, but. “owing Billings recently. to the fact that the other fellow got Everton Poindexter, ex, is working for more votes, he wasn’t elected.” an M. A. at Columbia. Mark Derr has opened a law office in Raymond Nagle went to Helena with Ronan. the Legislature as keeper of the House Robert Merrill is in Havre, employed Journal. During the session he went in the office of the county attorney of before the Supreme Court and was ad­ Hill county. mitted to the bar. At the close of the “Wink” Warner is estimator and sales­ session he hung out his shingle, holding man for the Monroe Street Lumber Com­ forth in the office of Mr. Walsh, with pany in Spokane, Washington. whom he is associated in many cases, K. McKain is working for the McCloud largely as a matter of experience. Ed River Lumber Co. of McCloud, Calif., one Bailey kept the Journal for the Senate. of the largest producers of lumber in Dorothy “Pi” Moore is teaching in the the west. At present he is on his win­ Lewiston, Idaho. High School. ter vacation and has been visiting vari­ John L. Morris is principal of the ous places in southern California. Plevna High School. He plans to enter Felipe Valderrama will be in Missoula the State University of Illinois next fall, until he has taken the Forest Assistant but writes that he intends to send his Civil Service Examinations in March. small son. John, Jr., to the University About he expects to leave for of Montana some day. Yale University, where he will take work Muriel Harner is teaching in the Clin­ leading to the degree of Master of Sci­ ton High School. ence in Forestry. After completing Inez Tiedt is teaching Home Econom­ his course he plans to work with the ics and Mathematics in the Wibaux Government Forestry Service in the County High School. Philippines. 20 THE MONTANA ALUMNUS

A very interesting letter comes from Frank Hutchinson, who is with the For­ BUSINESS DIRECTORY estry Department of the Abitibi Power and Paper Company at Iroquois Falls, Ontario, Canada. He intends to finish his graduate work in Forestry at the Montana U. sometime within the next two years and then to return to his home in New Zealand. Among the pharmacists. Hugh J. An­ derson is working for the B. A. Reyn­ olds Drug Co., in Helena; Walter Clark is at present manager of the Depot Drug Co., in Helena. He intends to go east this fall to enter a college of Dental “Everybody’s Store for Everything” Surgery. Cecil J. Moore is working in Fagan’s Pharmacy, in Butte; Joy Allison, in Welch’s Drug Store at Libby, and Ruth Johnson in the St. John Drug DICKINSON PIANO CO. Store at Stevensville. W. O. DICKINSON, Class of ’05 Bob McHatton travelled about the country for some time after graduation. 218 Higgins Avenue Missoula. Montana At present he is a reporter on the City Pianos, Victrolas. Music and Teachers’ News Bureau of Chicago, covering the Material federal prohibition agency and the school board. The recent Chicago school board graft indictments have provided consid­ erable excitement. George Masters is employed as news­ PETERSON DRUG CO. writer on the Butte Daily Post and is at present writing some feature stories “A Good Place to Trade” for a South Dakota paper. 3 Stores Ethel Brockway Warner is working in the office of C. B. McMath Comnanv. Missoula Montana Public Accountants of Spokane, as Junior Accountant. Heinie Lamb, ’19, is audi­ tor for the same company. Lillian Goff is at present at 814 Sixth St., Santa Monica, California. She vis­ DONOHUE’S ited the University of Washington and the University of California, but says: Missoula’s Busy “Give me old Montana U.” Bill Allen is attending the Harvard Department Store Law Schol. There are several Montana U. students whom he sees frequently. Ward Donlau and Phil Carrol are in the graduate business school at Harvard. Colin Clements is in the Harvard 47 Workshop, and Bill Watterscherin is at­ tending M. I. T. Virginia Yegen is in Billings, acting as her father’s private secretary. She has THE UNIVERSAL CAR been doing some work in connection with Ca rs—Pa r ts—Service the newly organized Billings Little Thea­ ter. II. 0. BELL AND COMPANY S. S. Maclay is on his father’s ranch at Lolo. Sol B. Korman is doing graduate work in the department of Anatomy at Co­ lumbia University. THE COFFEE PARLOR Kathlyn Broadwater is working in the Where the Students and Alumni Meet Security State Bank at Havre for the last few months. She writes that Ann 221 Higgins Ave. Missoula, Montana Wilson is teaching in the Havre High School. THE MONTANA ALUMNUS 21

CONFERENCE OF DEANS OF PRE-PREPS WOMEN (Class of 1945 or thereabouts) Franklin Dwight Stevens, Feb. 1, 1923. Clarence L. Stevens. Mrs. Harriet Rankin Sedman, ’03, Bessie Rutledge Stevens, ’19. Dean of Women at the University Lodge Grass, Montana. Virginia Fry, Jan. 17, 1923. of Montana, returned recently from Janies A. Fry, ex ’17. the Conference of University Deans Josie Jones Fry, ’18. of Women held at on Marjorie Inez Clapper, May 21, 1922. Aubrey A. Clapper, ’17. February 26, 27, and 28. She Inez Bowen Clapper, found the conference of great value; Billings, Montana. she had the opportunity of meeting Howard It. Jacobsen, February 10, 1923. Arthur Jacobsen, ’22. the prominent deans of women from Gladys Shepard Jacobsen, ex ’23. practically every state in the Union, Souchow, China. of discussing with them the many Travail Pierre De France Streit. Jan­ uary 12, 1923. large problems in connection with Clarence Streit, ’20. student government, and of compar­ Jeanne Du France Streit, ing methods and plans for improve­ Paris, France. Dean Stone, January 8, 1923. ment. She found that the Uni­ George P. Stone, versity of Montana is recognized Mildred Ingalls Stone, throughout the country as having a Chicago, Ills. splendid opportunity for construc­ tive work. In particular, she was MARRIAGES congratulated on the great advan­ Hugh Norville, ’21, to Helen Wilson, of Bronton, Minn., in June, 1922. Mr. and tage Montana enjoys in the housing Mrs. Norville are living in Minnesota, situation; the splendid residence where Mr. Norville is taking post grad­ uate work at the State University. halls make it possible to provide ac­ Merrit M. Owsley, ’15, and Miss Ada commodations for all the freshman Tower Heath, on December 16, in Hel­ girls and a certain per cent of the ena. Mr. Owsley is a training assist­ ant at Veterans’ Bureau Vocational upper class girls, giving them the School. benefit of close companionship with Jean Sloan Thompson, ex-’19, to How­ each other and making possible the ard Chilcott Cochrane, on Dec. 24, in development of a system of self- Seattle. Mr. Cochrane is employed by the Portland Railway and Power Co. of government that will carry them Portland. successfully over the later years of Frank Eisenminger, ex-’24, to Anna their college life. Bennett, ex-’24, on Nov. 29, in Seattle, Mrs. Sedman also visited the vari­ where Mr. Eisenminger is connected with ous colleges of the middle west; the Epperts. stopping at Oberlin, Ann Arbor, Harry G. Ade, ’15, to Gertrude E. Ward, on December 27, in Missoula. Ypsilanti, DuPaw, Chicago Univer­ Mr. Ade is a forest officer in charge sity, Northwestern, Madison and of land exchange in District No. 1 of Minnesota, spending several hours at the Forest Service. each institution, in conferences with Conrad Orr, ’19, and Miss Mabel An- the deans of women, student presi­ derberg, on January 6. Mr. Orr is in dents and directors of residence the insurance business in Missoula. Ray A. Ricketts, ex-’17, to Miss Mary halls* Peters, on Jan. 12, in Paola, Kansas. While in Chicago, she met her old Anne Cliff, ex-’14, to William S. Cotton friends, Louise Hathaway Harkins, of Butte, on Feb. 12, in Missoula. ’99, and Professor William II. Har-1 Grace McKenzie, ex-’25, to Frank Wal­ kins, whose discoveries in electricity ter McKenzie, ex-’14, on Feb. 14, in are making him internationally fa­ Anaconda. James Dorsey, ’22, to Miss Vivian mous. Brooke, of Billings. 22 THE MONTANA ALUMNUS ATHLETICS

(Continued from Page Ten) ASK ule it has had in years and much work in preparation remains to be WHISLER done. REAL ESTATE - INSURANCE In baseball, the State University has always made a wonderful record and the outlook for a good year this season is bright. “Perk” Spencer MISSOULA DRUG CO. is baseball coach, and he knows the The House of Service game from start to finish and at all angles. The team has done some Wholesale and Retail - light work this spring, but has been handicapped. The baseball schedule, too, is a heavy one. FORBIS-TOOLE COMPANY GENERAL INSURANCE Seattle, Jan. 5.—Four alumni— Brokers Real Estate Investments George Scherck, ’20; Marion Fergus, Missoula Montana ex-’17; Rox Reynolds, ex-’19, and Robert Fredericks, ex-’18—are on NORTHERN FLOUR MILLS the staff of the Seattle Post-Intelli­ COMPANY gencer; while James Frye, ’17, and USE RAVALLI PRODUCTS Lloyd Thompson, ex-’21, are em­ Flour Cereals ployed with the Seattle Times. Missoula Montana Reynolds is conducting a column, The Toreador,” and is well on the way to national fame. Bill Long, ’17; Ivan Merrick, ’16; SPORTING GOODS Thomas Davis, ’16, and Charles SIMONS Hickey, ’18, are all making a suc­ Missoula Montana cess at law here. The “Varsity Quartette,” com­ posed of Sheridan (pianist), Rob­ erts, Kiff, Brown and Stowe, played here lately. They are now on a INTERSTATE LUMBER theatrical tour of Canada. COMPANY R. T. FREDERICKS. Boxes, Lumber and Building Material Missoula Montana The University Club of Missoula entertained Dr. Frank L. Schoell of Paris, at dinner on December 12. Dr. Schoell is a member of the J. M. LUCY AND SONS French high commission, and came Clothing and Furnishings to this country in the endeavor to bring about a better understanding Men’s, Young Men’s and Boys’ and closer friendship between the Missoula Montana two countries. THE MONTANA ALUMNUS 23

HELP WANTED 1907-1908. Margaret McCampbell, Billings; Eliz. The addresses listed after the non-gradu- Crolle, Boulder; Ed Cullen, Madison, Wis.; ates on this list are the latest we have. Ida Wright, Butte. They are not correct. Please send any in­ formation you may have to the Secretary of the Alumni Association. 1908-1909. Note: The numerals indicate the first Carrie Allen, Livingston; Sylvia Black, year of attendance. Missoula.

1895-1896 1910- 1911. Grace Moore, Missoula; Esther McClain, Delbert Conrad, Missoula; Merle Snyder, Carlton; May Kemp, Missoula; Sophie Shelby, Iowa; Fred Allen, Missoula: Velters Evans, Deer Lodge; Ida Mary Brandis, Logan, Missoula; Bonita Rentfro, Missoula; Hamilton; Lillian Beaucharme, Missoula>£ Spencer Small, Butte. N. Gladys Hanson, Missoula; Isabelle Jamieson, A Missoula; Maude Rakestran, Missoula; Gus­ 1911- 1912. tavus Sgeward, Fort Missoula; Theophilus Stewart, Fort Missoula. Garnett Thompson, Missoula; Cora Schill­ ing Lawson, Missoula; Floyd Halford, Mis­ 1896-1897. soula. Sidney Samuels, Missoula; Pearl Leedy, 1913.1912- Missoula; John Sedman, Alberton; Luther Reinhard, Missoula. Helen Orr, Florence; William Strever, Missoula; Chas. Sorenson, Merrifield, Minn.; 1897-1898. Warren Cain, Missoula; Mary Baker, Stev­ Fred Ebert, Missoula; Belle Buker, Mis­ ensville; David Kemper, Dillon; Frank Pinck­ soula; Jo Grace Million, Stevensville. ney, Three Forks, B. C. 1898- 1899. 1913- 1914. Curtis Robinson, Florence; Lucinda Rey­ Joseph Seybert, Seybert, Indiana; Leslie nolds, Florence; Philip Morse, New Chi­ Furlong, Butte; John McCoy, Missoula; cago; Lawrence Heckler, Hamilton: Grace Margery Maxwell, Chicago, Ill.; Sue Lucile , Buker, Migsowkn—Lenore Rennick, Missoula: “Thompson, Boston, Mass.; Vera Anderson, ySarah Jones, Missoula; Chas. Savage, Red Libby; Pauline Swigart, Missoula. 'Lodge; Fred Wagstaff, Missoula; Josephine Wagstaff, Missoula. 1914- 1915. Mrs. Ethel Higgins, Dixon; Kenneth John­ 1899- 1900. ston, Butte; James King. Missoula; Ethel Gertrude Watson, Red Lodge; William Riach, Butte; Robert Sanborn, Minn.; John Manson, Livingston; George Lyon, Drum­ Harris, Portland, Ore.; Anna Lynch, Butte; mond: Cora Bovee, Missoula; Walter Hay, Thomas Nicholas, Misosula; Richard Howell, Missoula; Clarence Raymond, Missoula. Livingston; Bernard Robinson, Missoula; Nina Schanck, Libby. 1900- 1901. 1915- 1916. Ida Wright, Stevensville; Florence Wood, Hilda Nyerg, Missoula; John Markle, Bon­ _Missoula77—Lola Ulm, Toston; Daisy Coombs, ner; Marie Adams, Missoula; Ruey Turner^ Missoula; Jennie Manson, Missoula: Bessie Stevensville: Lenore Oldridge,- Dubuque, ^-Clynnick, Bonner; Wilbur Day. ^MissoTrtaT'" Iowa; Dorothy Nebergall, Spokane, Wash.; Florence Johnson. Philipsburg; Earl Smith, Grace Madera, Milbank, S. D.; Esther Jones, Missoula; Grace Conklin, Sheldon. Aberdeen, S. D.; Dell Jones, Wallace, Idaho. 1901- 1902. 1916- 1917. William Wright, Missoula; Frank Jenkins, Fort Missoula; Frederick Frazer, Florence; Albert Valentine, New York City; Eras­ Frederick Busch, Missoula: Mary Holland, mus Woods, Stevensville; Etta Wigand, Bil­ lings; Manila Schmidt, Missoula; Gabriel Red Lodge£_Nelite Kellogg, Fort Missoula. Napisa. P. I.; Wm. Keeney, Missoula; Linda 1902- 1903. Canning, Butte. Jessie Quist, Iron Mountain; Joseph Mur- 1917- 1918 Phy, Missoula; cTom Morgan, Missoula: Ralph Messenger, Missoula: Henrietta Long­ Jessie Blackstone, Anaconda; Ruth Sum­ ley, Missoula; Fred Lilley, Missoula; Ada mers, Missoula; Ruth Pierce, Camas Prairie; --'Cramer. Missoula; John McDonald, Lee Lester Moyer, Alaska; Alice Montgomery, Helena; Frances Lowrie. Great Falls; Leslie Dick, Red Dodge; Corliss Hargraves, Hel­ Lloyd, Great Falls; Florence Harrington, ena; Cecil Houston, Glendive. Stevensville; Wm. Fahey. Noxon; Delbert 1903- 1904. Darst, Lavila, Iowa; Nicholas Cullinan, Butte. Christine Quist. Missoula: Fern T-Iealv, _ Missoula-;—Eloise Palmer, Missoula; Arthur 1918- 1919. stewarf, Butte: Tom Westby. Missoula: James Whitacre, Choteau; Alonzo Peters, Fave Evans. Livingston: Bessie Groller, Mis­ Fresno, Cal.; Lfiura Nelson, Missoula; Ber­ soula: George Noffsinger. Missoula; Tom nice Matke, Valier; Hugh Stallings, St. Trin­ Ross, Red Lodge; Bessie Russell; plinton. idad, Colo. 1904- 1905. 1919- 1920. Chas. Johnson, Thomas; Beatrice Stillin- Phyllis Wright. Helena: Helen Martin, ger, Iron Mountain. Missoula: Ethel Martin, Missoula; Frances 1905- 1906. / Magee, Florence; Stanley Ford, Billings. Mary Weller, Missoula; Claire Salisbury, 1920- 1921. Anaconda; Frank Christensen, Anaconda; Jessie Fuller, Wallace, Idaho; Bill Smith, Ethelyn Schmidt, Missoula; Wm. Roach, Milwaukee, Wis.; Frank Logan, Billings; Martinsdale. Thelma Fullmer, Great Falls; Joseph Diehl, 1906- 1907. > Johnston, Pa.; Gladys Beaver, Marysville, Percy Thompson, LoUyrop: Lila Cobham Wash. Missoula; Katherine -^Colmus, Missoula: David Connor, Missoula: Essie Haley, Ste­ 1921- 1922. vensville; George Lichli, Missoula; Irene Mrs. Maude Russell Brown, Missoula; Locke, Livingston; Winnie Phillips, Stevens­ Emma Pritchard, Missoula; Ivyl Burks, Bil­ ville. lings. /

24 TIIE MONTANA ALUMNUS

BUSINESS DIRECTORY—Continued. ~ I

Meet Me at THE SMOKE HOUSE AND POSTOFFICE NEWS STAND KELLEY’S CIGAR STORE Cigars Tobaccos Magazines 246 N. Higgins Ave., Missoula, Mont.

THE FLORENCE HOTEL THE WESTERN MONTANA Missoula NATIONAL BANK One of the Best in the West Capital and Surplus, $250,000.00 Special Attention given to Reservations Established 1889 requested by Alumni Missoula Montana

MISSOULA LIGHT AND THE FIRST NATIONAL WATER COMPANY BANK OF MISSOULA Masonic Temple Building Montana’s Oldest National Bank Missoula Montana Capital. $200,00; Surplus, $100,000

WESTERN LUMBER CO. MISSOULA TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK Building Materials Missoula, Montana Capital and Surplus. $250,000

MISSOULIAN PUBLISHING CO. Printers, Publishers and Book Binders MISSOULA MONTANA

THE ASSOCIATED STUDENTS’ STORE Stands Ready to Serve THE MONTANA ALUMNUS Who Is Continuing His Studies at Home the Campus” State University ••