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BOZE;\JAN, i\fONTAKA, TUE SDAY, l\lAY 20, 1930 I S. M. S. C. RE-VOTE TODAY I NDUSTRIAL INSPECTION MUSICAL PROGRAM MT COLORFUL REVIEW STUDENTS ELECT THREE u TO BE PRESENTED I I GIVEN BY CADETS TRIP Nm, IN PROGRESS CANDIDATES TO OFFICE tudent Tour Is Be in g Condu c ted Throu g h P lants of State In Order to S tud y Fi rs t-hand A pplication s of Engineering eering Auditorium Coll eg ians Give A nnual White- Friday Win g. P resid e nt , H . Gre i ner , Demonst ra ti ons, a nd Vand e nhook , was hin g to l\J. 'angs S up e Forensi cs are Yicto riou s. Ame ndme nt s to Cons titution P ass. Prin c iples This week will witness two out- vise Work In one of the most. colorful e\cnl" S Off' F 'I H ;\I . R otandtng music reotals given bv the of the school year, the Bobcat battal- e\'en ic es ' ai to a l'e' a jorit1es and ar e Being evoted pupils of i\lrs Johansoon voeai m- ion of the R 0 . T. C. was 11»pectc.I on Today. Large N umber Cast Ballots. Bartl et t U nopposed A group of ·ll junior and senior en- trital cnid1wc1 :i will to Butte to struc:tor at ::\1. S. May After fou1: hou18 of. \\OI k or. by Lt Col. l\\"a Idell, 9th cm ps a.rea for Dra ma ti cs ineering from '.\lontanfl. spend the dny. 21. A crack is to be pre- the C\ery coll: ge man, :h commander, Friday, J\Iay lti With tate College left Bozeman Sunday 1 The of trip each sented b . .:\largaiet Soudeis , Lowe ll Grnnt on Lally about 4,000 people them, thC' . . , . . . ar 18. on their anual t ip to visit is to :$tudv at first hand the applica- Kurtz P)aul Koetitz and Ben Frost annt:al coat of trh tl' ning '' hite- cadets , about 3.10 m numb r. carneJ Students o[ State College music 1 e indt:strial plants of Butte and tion of -principles of eng-ineering All these n;e well kno\\n on wash the praise of spcctaton• by exec:utrng \·ote for the$ cond tlmc today in an social affairs ano )ell kmg. naeonda. they the practic:e with illustrations in indu:;t:";: the ius anu ha\e gamed quite 3 Tlns spnnj! hohclay \\:a"' the commands g1\:Cn them as \\e1l effort to elect me•nbers for next )ear'5 The . office of of tire <lay visiting- Anuconda Re- wh,h arc not always a\"ailable in the f 01 their fm, voice:s. The l eal for pamtmg the hu e letter 1 he coul d be exptected with the amount Student Senate. At the election ... he!d dramatics \\a:, unopposed and \\·ent to ction 'Yorks of the Anaconda Copper t•olleg-e laboratoril's. In B:..tte and second iecita l \\Ill be given Sat..:rdn\· bright sun beat do\\n fill . the laboring of training they ha,·e had and the a week ag-o only threo tan 1dat<s I.cl Bartlett. tht- only candidate nom- ining Company at Anaconda. Today, Anaconda the :.tudy the e'emng b,· B<:rtha \ ·an Hoin future and ma11e thlm w_el- agteeablcn<s'-' of day their opponents by maJont1e" large mated. part of the group \isited the indus- ·transmission and. ut1hzat1on _of clec- Delaney kathn n Lyon, and '.:\larjoi:ic come the 1('e-l'old ice clla m bms wh1c'1 Lt . Col. \\-ad tell "ecmed p:ea"Nl enOUJ?h to be cle. ted. Tho;;e elc<'ted Both th amnll_n !men ts to the A. S. plants and mines in Butte. and power with,., spe- Foote ·ac:.sisted b _ ioh Ho t d we1e served up and do wn the hne by ",th the inspection of the were: Presw nt, L<onaid \\mg; com- .:\I. S. C. constitution passed with hu£rh The inspection trip is ma:<' cial emphasis on dynamo an.i ma ... hmc Ho ' d D t) f on,tan. the Spurs and Fangs. and made the statement that "t'"el missioner of ne111onst1at1ons, Hi majoritlCs. An unusuallv Jarg-e nl:m ring by senior electrfr·al engineers. I design. . . . 0 .. 1 1 bous on Afte1 the task wa::; ( er the Sput s hoys put up a fine showm!l' '' He and comm1s1oner of forensi s, b e of voter::. seemed favor the nior ml'chnnkal and junio!" In Butte the students will 8 Oo J:-; s. die\\ ,lb:; wi served a substantial Jun hat the foot allowed fo 1 the st.-ength oi the wmd Alice \randenhook pomt system as 1t was by p.dustrial chemist". and chemi(•td e:1- mines of the Copper given a le of the to thosi: whu. had so nobely and the peculiar way in which the . The students failed to elect can<l1 - the --.enate, and, although the redis- ineers. ThC> chemistry w1!l Compan_y and them from .the Yen· well kno\\n numbeis aie to be dono their auty. Be the noon sounds fiom the band were chctned _ates to the fol!owrng offnes as no of the funds pass d main t\vo additional in ?f uhhzation of elcdrieal · d b t wh1:stle blew the c1ow had all dis- th1oug-h the air. j onc had a maJor1ty of th \otes cast: w1th a safe margm, manv students ndn but the ml'chanical and elec- power, kinns of fuel and th r rbolh ap11eared and all that were k•ft \\ere Par ade Formed I president, commissioners of fi- were skept1 al as to the OMPUS IS O SUGGtSS problems of water softening. They an mg s " I the hustlmg Spurs ''h o \\ c re busy The parade formei on the I aiadf' of the change will also ,·isit tht.: and Wll e by Koehtz. Lowell l\.urtz gathenng- lip the r lllains of their ""roum:s soon after the of the s , 1 b . "earlv 650 votes were cast last other of the as the lunch, and those mdu str1ous Fangs Rota,..1an assembly in the gymna ... mm I ecretar1a Clu Tues<laY which shows that the student. Power Company anJ the telephone ex- g • 0 e tolum fio n the out search111g of stray \\ater <:ans . Prac:ticalh: e'cry one present at th•· J. body took a far mtcre. ... t this change of th!! :\fountain States Tele- of Si,;ville 1 ' and "lnO\ation to I In the C\emn)! the F:1 l\ 'S and Spur:-. assembly 'came to the renew !!IOU!ldc:. Nom1·nat1'ons Made year .than last, when only 596 voles i;.hon and Tele2.,.aph Comi1any. Llfe' by ··Tc> Eevemng were hoste:::-ses at an t. clanc:c I and the number \\as inc1t-ac:.ed b) \vere cast. The rartr will be headed by \V. :\I. ta:" from Tanhauser on B<.•n in the college 1.r: rmnas 1u.11. Ref1esh- many who came esp ciall:r to MP I Tooay the polls opened at .00 a. m. Cobleig-h. D<an of the College of En- Fro:st'.s list, t.nd .lit:,>'-' has ments were sold and E khuff's Colleg- parade. The crowd was ma 1 le up of --- and will remain open until 5:00 p. m. gineerirnr. Other faculty members go- her numbers "" 'ill the ians the mu 1c until the Rotarians from all over the state a:_.. De tJar t nlent al Club Offi- \\ith the e..xception ?f the hour. on the trip are: Prof. J. A. Thaler. by Spross. and '' Yioleb" by 1 clock struck eleven, a ,I once a::min well as college and high school stu- . I ,..,. 1 B El t d O '" d The follov.'lng candidates \\Ill be re- department of electrical cngineerin1?: " rig'ht. In t_he second g-roup appear :\Iontana State Coll e " )!" Day dents, and people from Bozeman and c m S n 1 l e ec e n ,,. e • ,-oted on: Prof. Eric Therkelsen, department of such outstandtnj?' numbers as "The went down in history. the nearby vicinit)' comprising in all, nesday, )lay 21 Yice pr csident - "Fuzzy" Connell parta ni ans Spon se r Athl e tic Pl ay -day. Ar e Ta pp ed mechanical entrineC'rinn; and Dr. R. E. Kashmire Song/' "The Trout" by ----- -- about 4,000 s1'lectators. and Dorothy Garrett. Pled ges Kirk, of the chemistry department. "The Lass with a D. licate XOTI CE I The mo"t pleasmg- patt of the par- Commissioners: The followinl!' students will make Air" by Arne, and "Indian Dawn" a le was the "officers center" for A new departmental club has mad. Finance-''Skee" Rivers, _j,J oore Tice 1 the trip: El drLal engine:ers-W. H. lby Zamecknic. Saturday night a piano .\II Set reta rial st ;..<len ls special rnstruction. These men all ad- its on the camp,is m the and "Lizzie'' Lee. Se<.·ond annual Campus Rom pus Day Queen, R. R. Edwards, John Re " radlc Song'' by ;\lacFayden ' cte in the build.ng Ya need student.5-, many having- at - form of The Secretanal Club of )Ion- pub Ii cat i 0 n 5 _ Hor ace Bolster. nsoi ... d by the 'partanian athletic .Joseph Rad<'iiffe, Glenn will a lso be- pre:-ente l by John Hous- \Yet in esd a). )bl) 21. This ek ct ion tended military schools for spe 1a l in- 1 tana State College whose pos1t1on )lichael Deevy and Yera Ann 0').;'ei!. lub pro,·e<l a huge :success. The Prank Brown. Ted Rowe, ton and Howard Dean . Both.programs is for th l pur rcsc of dect ing of- stru tton. \Vere at then· be:-t as they app10\ed and granted at a facuh) '\Yorthington, Pa. l pa rtanians aimed to :show any women Barnes. Daddson, E1taro 1 are arranged. Each _will ri cers for the Secret aria l Clu h fo r marched to the center and then up to I meeting a few weeks ag-o. This club \Yinner and Ed Buzz.tti. terested the worthwhile fun found in Etow. Fi-ed Su1?mra. Claud .... E,·ans. C'onstclerable talen.t. and eithe r will bt next E'a r. recei,·e their 0 .. der:-; from the cadPt has b ... en formed for the purp< se of )l us ic- :\l argant Souders, Ben orb. Apptoxiluately 50 \\Omen took and _ far too g-ood to miss . Kl'nnc!. !, ..: hr!,..th-on. major. Leonard :tiding anJ Frost and .Kenneth dvantage of the opportunity between )Techa111cal engmeers-Eug :ne A. _ ,.o pleas to the spectotor:-; secretarial student:-. a nd Social-Helen Schultz. and Elizabeth ' ano 6 p. m., Friday, )lay lti. Reber. Francis H. Chesc.rek: Kenneth wnMEN'S ATHLETIC ASSOCIATI ON OUTLINES was the part the band had in i The first meetill::!' r th<. purpo:-;e of Pope. Dul'ing the afternoon the D\-er. Thoma• Carry, Jo>epn FfaiTer ; , _, 1 off" and "pass in redew", led by nominating ofifcer' wa' held on Wed- Yell King-Kenneth Freese, J immie am.s contests fi;_ nishe-d amu,,,c- Clifford Huntsberger. .Johnson V' "Stew'' A\ery who acted as drum ncsday, .:\fay 7. At this me2ting- the Ovens and )lark Fulmore. ent for the c-ue..;t.s: Three-deep, black Harold Lee. ·w m. :\orman Os·.\·ald. major for the parade-. Howarrl following- ,.,;er 0 nominated md white'. 1 ace, and , Frank Ralph, Quentin Art 1 !C ER llf desen·es much credit fo" th succ:e""' for offices: For president . Isabelle order to create Seiler. Jam·. s Rh e par d. \ mcent i I" f\ I\ of the parade because of the. training \\'ood, )la"'l?aret Rowe, and :.\lary I f 0 u R ner competition Stanich, Alf Swanson, Stewart 1 he has given the members of the band. Hakala ; for vice president, Doroth)· e group ,\ ed int-0 separate \ V'aE!'ner, and .Ta k 'Yieehert. The part of the four companies playcJ Hannah and Ruth Ri idell; for sel're- ams dcsig b color I ndustrial and C'hemicai DL tance Hiking and 'p ee d J.11 ing \ \i ll Ta ke In e st for Re- in the inspection can be judg-ed by the tary-treasurer, Jiay Burkhart. Peg-gy MtN JOIN AG he red tea , 11 he series with the ene:ineei»-Alton Belk. Charles Brush maind t.' r of 'l er m. Hi f f(• lee l lo sed Thm . ·- comment made by Lt. ('ol. Waddell. S:ott, Josephine ;\Jic'olick, and C'aro- points, while the .John Eck. Cvril Evans. l\\ ... allace· \Vinne t;-, I Each company had its fine points Co:hrane ; and for historian. Harrity, Porter, Milo Sands. to Bt.' \nnoun ced •. ., t \\e ek \well as fau\t-e, the fine points out- ''Billy" Henkel, and Lucille ook mo,·ing pie- <Conti nuE"<l on Pae-e 1'wol numbering the much Zortman. ni aames in ac- T , _ ... h (Continued on page Two) Election fo ... these will be on "'" nl xt 1"' e of t e Exponent. 'VI- dnesdav '\la\· :?l in the hall of the ' hown at a date M t St te Glee day •·r of the .Jo ciay contest will 6 S • buildin.J? . . Yotino: will he hv winners are on· on ana a >< s•:''Ol' of :· beaut'.ful _small Nearly 1 0 en1ors <eCTet ballot and a table and box Howard. Bols ter. Bjork and Windecker Are Initiated. .'.\el on Is Chancellor :\Irs. 1 be pro,·ided for this pmpc ... e. Elect10!1 1 been conduc:ed Club Pleases Many Ihe oth )' four high"t com- T R . D arano:rnient. are in of the gymnasium Will also be announce,! at 0 ece1ve egrees Hawkf::.\VOrth and Ke1 neth Christison. • and community All ret?ulary c nrol:e;l secretarial s.tu- Alpha Zeta. national honorary agr i- cultur_ fraternity, held a formal in- itiation Thursday eqming, ::\l ay 15, in the agriculture building. ol. -g-oing- n+- , I hter as her suc - Crest as the in- . )[ary Hakala r age Two) Show to People of Dillon , Har- lowton. Le wi s town and Butte. Directed By Don l{intz WOl l An• nou But t rnc t• JI mg 'Mo rtar Board Holds Meeting The ) fontana State ColleJ?e J?l .e n,,, club on its sixtb annua l tour of the pants ill d h state , under the dire-ction of Donn Crest, ha:-; l.Jt.:cn una Le Kintz, gave lo\"ers of the state check all the records. Th sc will be enior Women' s Organizatio n H as Bus in ess Meeting and Breakfas t W e dn esday Ag Contests Are Success a Yery capab le and artistic perform- ance in conce• ts J?iYtn in Harlowton, Lewistown, Butte and Dillon. Th pe1 sonnel of the or ganization three soloists , two acc:ompanists, six members of the str ing ensemble and 31 members of the chorus. Under the direct ion of Donn Kintz a mixe:i I We<.nesday mo:-nino: )lortar Board chorus sanl? with fin;> tone coloring, Many S tud ents Enter Contes ts elrl their u•ual bu'i""'' meetinJ? different numbers which included the for Medals and Ribbons of af ter a six o'clock breakfast. The "Largo" from the "New \\.orld S:,.,1 1- ! l\i "t. members present werL: X orma Beck. phony" by Dvo:·ak and "The Miller's et 1 lizabeth Gardiner, Jrrna :\fonroe, ,,.ooing-" by Fanning. irJtinia :\lary O'Lc,ary, Helen An interesting numbe r was the llen, and :\Iartha Flynn. The faculty string- quint<. t. con::;isting of a first 1 embers present wue : Dean Herrick .. violin, selected violin, bratschc , Dr .J cnnmgs, and ?\-hss Bull. viol with a piano accompa nist. The A special feature of the bi eakfast qu.intet played th;, is bY the following motto: 1 :\Imut"t.t from the Suancl "A. B. and B. breakfast. untouched by in D :'.fajor' by Hayden charming ome Ee The cooks were the I fashion . The )fessts., Kintz, 'V haet, president, B'-(k, and the ·vice Slater, Garry, an:I Krause at t he resident, Elizabeth Gardiner . J ( Continu<>d on Pall" Three) The Ag Day Program began Friday afte r noon wit h the dairy products judging contest anci the grain judg-ing co ntest . The live.<.; t otk fi t.ting cunt.est was held Sa turda y morning, an.I the livestock judging co ntest was held Saturday afte rnoon. A lar ge number of stud:.nts took part in cun- t1sts, and judging from the of the the whole program was a decided success. Ten men took part in the grain Wew Methods In Scientific Bathing judginj? contest. Wm. Nelson directed the conte::;,t an<l made it an inte. Are Gradu ally Replacing Old Ways · affair. Forty samples were iclentifierl and seven were judged Reasons w<. re gh·en on th ree classts. Like modes of living, there has been I wherever bath mg faC"1hties arc pro- of the agronomy depart ment a de.:1ded <.:hange in the public mind'\ ided. Th is fart 1s not at all stranir acted as. officials. Out of a uring- the last deca e with regard to 1 1 when it is consi :cred that eclucat1onal 1.000 points, Horace Bolster f irst a thmg. \Vhile enameled and po .. cclain development. ac.ounts for nll p1of:tress place 92U Earl BJork ub fixtun:s for bathrooms, that and has proven the shower bot h is th e ond w1t.h 8H· l points, and Dcll>c1t narked a big stnde forwa1d m sa mta- most sanitary and healt h fu l way in l\ly1'i ck l hir-.1 with 872 points, . tion and convenience, doubt less always which to ba t hl. The user of the shower In the dairy product judg111g c:o n- will have a plat<' in home, club and bath compartm. nt has no t hought of I test, milk 1 butlt r, cheese and ice- hotel equipment, the public now is d; - who ha; previously_ used the bath , were \Vm. Corkins ma n ding- facilities for t.he modern and such as IS the case w1th other methods m charge while members of the dnn scientific method of bathing. of bathing I nstead. he b-athes jn depa 1tment officiated . I n the separate P E:ople, old and young alike. havo;o clean, runni 1 ng water of J oh n Howe. wo_n f.irst i.n be<: orne 0 shower minded," as is temperature . He bathes m on' - thtnl butte r; A. '. 1rst. m nulk, )lc- evidenced by shower bnt h com pa r t - , the time and step.s the sho"·er :\fa ste r :$ fi rst am, nnd F. ments in homes, fr at ern ity and sor or - feeli ng refresheJ, mngor a ted and ab- won fir st in In ity hou ses, clubs and ho tels ; in fa ct , (Continued on Page Three) I (Contmued on Page Four) Speed Hiking C I dents are eligible to vote. ·tke on<·-quarter mile 'Pel' I Lar ges t G radu a tin g l ass n take pla <e at the new tra : I: Hi s tory of l\lo nt a na State orning-, ' a \ 2:3, at 6::?0 a. m. College i r mil_ for points. l :'iOTI E Cly ·e Howard. Horace Bolster, and Ea!'l Bjork sophomores, and Claude 1 ·or the mil. There \\ill be an importa nt \Yindecker a junior, were initiated. On June 11, Hl:>O , the E urodel r, hian meet in g- \Yedncsday. men were thosen fro m th e il .P for points. ad1 tc f or the three graduating class in the of )la) 21, in the r re pl ace room of up1>::r two-fifths of the cla::-s. Besides Montana tate Coll ge wi:l recci\"e Herrick hall at 7 ::lO 1>. m. The ha\·ing the best grades in their cla ss mile. Thursday. Final hrec mile hike (winner of which h-com s posscs::;or of the )lartin medal ) diplomas. Ba;·helor of Scienee de-., pur p-ose of th e mcetin;.: for the these men haYe such qualities as grees will be given out probably to 15S installation of the new off ic<'rs leadership. and ch aracte r. Seniors. three )laster of Science de-, and for th e consider ati on of ne\\ 1 The new officers elected were Viil- point....; thn., iecified practices are required. grees will be nwardetl for completion 1-ledges. .\II members 1>lease liam Xelson, Chancellor; p a u l · I d present. (Continued on Page Th'-l 'Yoml·n's Basehall Remaining hao;;.cb games will b<' played soon. Th( m at noon. of graduat e work an<l one spe.ia e-, --- ----- -- ---- ---------------- gree in CiYil Enrrinecrin,2" will bt:- issueJ. . . Visiting Rotarians Attend College Last vcar o,·er rerc1ved )fay 24 . .\ II pral't ic s must be in at that time. 1la)- l ).Jay 20-- S11arta11 a)' 2- Soph I II <. Soph I I. Bachelo;· of Science dediw. Tha: Assembly; Also See R. 0. T. c. Parade number marked another mil. stone Ill n vs. 1, . Frosh 11. the j?rowth of )l ontana State Colleo:e, but this June mnrks nn enn greater Thb Yl·ar on!l' :;oo Hotarians and Rotary Anns attended thl· annual Dis- CO-ED ACCUS ES MEN increase. t•kt ('01wention held this year at Although c•omplete plans for Com- Bozeman. Several of the im:ctin!...s of mencement Day h:.we nol b en com- this l'Cll\ cntion wer held in the col- pleted the dates; have been set ll•ge gymnasium, n.l!"ain putting- .:\I. S. Baccalaur eate Services will be held C. before the people of tlll' Ju ne 8 and Commencement Exercisel1 and Fan'.!s were on tiuty tn help June 11. Fi nal examinations for the show off thL· l·ollege to bl·st advanta).!c. spring quarter w ill be held from J un e F'riday morning- the 10 to .J une 14. I g-i\·en one of the treats of ex1:t- OF BEING UNCLEAN Savs Ma les Wear Rocks U ntil ;rhey Sti ck to Wa ll s ''Men are queu r emarked a coed u one pair oJ stf'p-in wear their soeks un on the wall when and the)" nC>,·er <.'h ance. At 10 a. 111. all classes Wl·re , the least, 11 DR WILSON LEC - TURES missed and it app("'ared that pral'tic- hopped from (} another. "They AT ENGINEER ASSEMBLY . ii they will stick j u!d han• disappoin_ted ven a g-ood toss either. tor the talk l!"l\"l'll that mo· nmg- 1Jte the ir collors .. \ddr ess on the "Rontance of the "Prh•ate Peat'' <lll the "l nC>xl·u:-;- rk able Lie" worth j?"Oin)! !l Thev hang onto ti r unde r wear 1 ·e " Is Given By state or a nation to hear. a docs fleas <.1 mi the only way · ·r Professor I "Pri\"atC' Peat" has th. rare kna k __ of fixing h:.:mor nnd facts in a way asleep. About th <' only th ing th e Dr. Curtis L. \\"ilson. profes::;or of that ,·e.ry imprC'sses the wifev ca n't !-; neak away is th e ir trous- meta ll m·g-)• at th<.• Stale Sd1ool I his li e ers ; 11 d they wcnr tht• m fo r ever. !\lines in Butte gave a ta lk last Fr:- suhJed nnd \'ery 1''1'hey ma ke m<' laugh when they day a fternoon to the I group but he did so 111 a way that made. 1t say that women re such foolish of engineers in th·· Enginl'ering As- extrcmlly pleasant to ta ke. JHC- clrcssers. \Ve an• ruining our hea lt h; !;emblv Room. His talk was on the turecl the of wnl', the 1gnor- we freeze in t hC' winte r and roast in of the :\ IC'tals" dealt ance surrounding the whole world al the summe r. Cat yo u imagine us with the fundamrntal principles un- thC' time thC' last started. w<-aring ou r socks fi\"C days without derlyin£r the using of metals in · .. g-rndual chanctinJ? t hem an<l Wl•nr in g on<"' dress neel'inj? development. Th lC'dun r \\as \\ h1ch dark even· dav for six mont hs'! \Vhv men I secured by the lo. al branch of lhf' 1 of 191-1- 1: 1 m . n that an) one · ·. I · h. f d · · 1 Society of )fechanical En- who h .arJ him will nc' er wear theu c ot es oreve r an ne vet · . According to him ignorance and (Continued on Pal!'e Two) gmeers. , narrow-mindedness are the chief causes of war . If people could see and understand the conditions existant in other and if they could fu llv g-rnsp the hideous into which h-ilizat.ion b thrown in time of war, pu1ce wouJj be a permanent blessng. and not just a period between upheavals. ·•If this wot Id were n little more like a people would not be so apt to throw stones." He pictured more fullv than could be done on a s re en, the· terrible con- ditions under which the had lo Jive, the long- hideous Cays in the mud and filth, and thC' apparent hopc - !ess.ness of the whole thin:,r. In 1914 people eould not see thls. ho All ther c·ould understand was thl) glam- our. the heroism, an<l the g-allantry of fightin:,r another nation and the world into a slaughter vard. "Private Peat" n ·, the preg- ent system of military tr aining, only ht'" would more of it. li e "If every man we .. e gin·n th ree n 1 onth.s of military train- ("'ach year training- between the time he was 20 nnd 25 Y<'Brs old. and this training put him under actu al fJont-line conditions, i-.u<·h a nuusea for the wholl hid ous busint.•ss would be drilled into cvei:, p<'rson that war ould never again exist . Science is (Continued on Pllge Two)

lAY 20 1930 I S. M. C. RE-VOTE TODAY NDUSTRIAL …arc.lib.montana.edu/msu-exponent/objects/exp-021-32-001-004.pdfi s. m. c. re-vote today ndustrial inspection musical program mt b~lo~

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Page 1: lAY 20 1930 I S. M. C. RE-VOTE TODAY NDUSTRIAL …arc.lib.montana.edu/msu-exponent/objects/exp-021-32-001-004.pdfi s. m. c. re-vote today ndustrial inspection musical program mt b~lo~

r,ry~xpon.ent BOZE;\JAN, i\fONTAKA, TUESDAY, l\lAY 20, 1930

I S. M. S. C. RE-VOTE TODAY I

NDUSTRIAL INSPECTION MUSICAL PROGRAM MT B~lO~ AG~IN COLORFUL REVIEW STUDENTS ELECT THREE u TO BE PRESENTED I I GIVEN BY CADETS •

TRIP Nm, IN PROGRESS p,~~-. ~,~·t~~;,'~,~~, 1 GRm5_WOAKER5 R.~ ·~,\~,,~~i'~:,~:~r';i'; CANDIDATES TO OFFICE tudent Tour Is Be ing Conducted Throug h P lants of State In

Order to S tudy Fi rst-hand A pplications of Engineering eering Auditorium

Collegians Give Annual White- Friday Win g. P resid ent, H . Greiner, Demons t rations, a nd Vandenhook, washin g to l\J. 'angs S uper· Foren s ics a r e Yicto rious . A m endments to Cons titution P ass. Principles This week will witness two out- vise Work In one of the most. colorful e\cnl" S Off' F ' I H ;\I . R

otandtng music reotals given bv the of the school year, the Bobcat battal- e \'en ices ' ai to a l'e' a jorit1es and are Being evoted pupils of i\lrs Johansoon voeai m- ion of the R 0 . T. C. was 11»pectc.I o n Today . Large N umber Ca s t Ballots. Bartlett U nopposed A group of ·ll junior and senior en- trital cnid1wc1 :i will ~o to Butte to struc:tor at ::\1. S. C~ • \\'cd~c.:sday , May After fou1: hou18 of. L· l1ou~ \\OI k or. by Lt Col. l\\"a Idell, 9th cm ps a.rea for Drama ti cs

ineering ::-tudent~ from '.\lontanfl. spend the ~-con.I dny. 21. A crack pio~Tam is to be pre- the pa.~·t .~( C\ery coll: ge man, :h commander, Friday, J\Iay lti With tate College left Bozeman Sunday 1 The I1Urpo~e of thi~ trip each sprin~ sented b . .:\largaiet Soudeis , Lowell Grnnt ~I on J\lo~mt Lally rec~l\erl about 4,000 people watch111~ them, thC' . . • , . . . ar 18. on their anual t ip to visit is to :$tudv at first hand the applica- Kurtz P)aul Koetitz and Ben Frost 1t~ annt:al coat of trh tl'ning '' hite- cadets, about 3.10 m numb r . carneJ Students o[ J.lonta~a State College nan~e. pu~ltcat10.ns, at~let1cs, music

1 e indt:strial plants of Butte and tion of -principles of eng-ineering All these ~in~<:rs n;e well kno\\n on wash the praise of spcctaton• by exec:utrng \·ote for the$ cond tlmc today in an social affairs ano )ell kmg. naeonda. Yl~sterday they sp~nt the practic:e with illustrations in indu:;t:";: the cat~ ius anu ha\e gamed quite 3 Tlns annua~ spnnj! hohclay \\:a"' the commands g1\:Cn them as \\e1l a~ effort to elect me•nbers for next )ear'5 The . office of comm1s~1oner of tire <lay visiting- th ~ Anuconda Re- wh,h arc not always a\"ailable in the ieputati~n f01 their fm, voice:s. The l eal for pamtmg the hu e letter 1 he could be exptected with the amount Student Senate. At the election ... he!d dramatics \\a:, unopposed and \\·ent to ction 'Yorks of the Anaconda Copper t•olleg-e laboratoril's. In B:..tte and second iecital \\Ill be given Sat..:rdn\· bright sun beat do\\n fill .the laboring of training they ha,·e had and the di~- a week ag-o only threo tan 1dat<s I.cl ~a.k Bartlett. tht- only candidate nom-ining Company at Anaconda. Today, Anaconda the ~tudC'nt~_wil_I :.tudy the e'emng b,· B<:rtha \·an Hoin Carol\"~ future g1~duat . s and ma11e thlm w_el- agteeablcn<s'-' of th~ day their opponents by maJont1e" large mated. part of the group \isited t he indus- ·transmission and. ut1hzat1on _of clec- Delaney kathn n Lyon, and '.:\larjoi:ic come the 1('e-l'old ice cllam bms wh1c'1 Lt. Col. \ \-ad tell "ecmed p:ea"Nl enOUJ?h to be cle. ted. Tho;;e elc<'ted Both th amnll_n !men ts to the A. S. ~·ial plants and mines in Butte. Jt~·ical and n~C>chan1cal power with,., spe- Foote ·ac:.sisted b _ ioh Ho t d we1e served up and down the hne by ",th the inspection of the bat~ahon were: Presw nt, L<onaid \\mg; com- .:\I. S. C. constitution passed with hu£rh The inspection trip is ma:<' ea~h cial emphasis on dynamo an.i ma ... hmc Ho ' d D t) f ~l 0f~ on,tan. the Spurs and Fangs. and made the statement that "t'"el missioner of ne111onst1at1ons, Hi majoritlCs. An unusuallv Jarg-e nl:m ring by senior electrfr·al engineers. I design. . . . pia~~~

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; c;~~h '~ 0 .. ~. 1

1 r~il bous on ~I Afte1 the task wa::; ( er the Sput s hoys put up a ver~ fine showm!l' '' He Gr~iner, and comm1s1oner of forensi s, b e of voter::. seemed ~to favor the nior ml'chnnkal fng-in ~ eris and junio!" In Butte the students will nsi~ ~he 8 Oo J:-; s. die\\ ,lb:; wi e~~nt~ served a substantial Jun hat the foot allowed fo 1 the st.-ength oi the wmd Alice \randenhook pomt system as 1t was pre~entecl by

p.dustrial chemist". and chemi(•td e:1- mines of the An~tconda Copper ".\hnm~ e~gm~~r1

11~g a~~1udi~~nun~. given a le of the h1l~ to thosi: whu. had so nobely and the peculiar way in which the . The students failed to elect can<l1 - the --.enate, and, although the redis-

ineers. ThC> chemistry ~tudents w1!l Compan_y and \\"l~l .no~ them from .the Yen· well kno\\n numbeis aie to be dono their auty. Be n l~ the noon sounds fiom the band were chctned _ates to the fol!owrng offnes as no tr~but1on of the stt.~dlnt funds pass d main t\vo additional clay~ in Ana-1standpo111~ ?f uhhzation of elcdrieal · d b t wh1:stle blew the c1ow had all dis- th1oug-h the air. j onc had a maJor1ty of th \otes cast: w1th a safe margm, manv students ndn but the ml'chanical and elec- power, kinns of fuel u~ed. and th biesent,~ r rbolh fruu~s . "'J?an~~; ap11eared and all that were k•ft \\ere Parade Form ed I \~ice president, commissioners of fi- were skept1 al as to the ~hisabihty

OMPUS O~Y IS AO~f O SUGGtSS

problems of water softening. They el~v~r an \.I~ mg s " Nessi~na I the hustlmg Spurs ''ho \\ c re busy The parade formei on the I aiadf' of the change will also ,·isit tht.: sub-~tations and Wll e sun~ by Koehtz. Lowell l\.urtz gathenng- lip the r lllains of their ""roum:s soon after the clo~e of the s ,

1 b . "earlv 650 votes were cast last

other in~tallation~ of the ~Iontana t:l~so t~L SU~~ sue~ J~Um~er:-. as the lunch, and those mdu str1ous Fangs Rota,..1an assembly in the gymna ... mm I ecretar1a Clu Tues<laY which shows that the student. Power Company anJ the telephone ex- g • 0 ~ e ~a tolum fio n the out search111g of stray \\ater <:ans. Prac:ticalh: e'cry one present at th•· J. body took a far great~r mtcre. ... t this change of th!! :\fountain States Tele- "~ai:ber of Si,;ville

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' and "lnO\ation to I I n the C\emn)! the F:1 l \ 'S and Spur:-. assembly 'came to the renew !!IOU!ldc:. Nom1·nat1'ons Made year .than last, when only 596 voles i;.hon and Tele2.,.aph Comi1any. Llfe' by Spro:-~. ··Tc> t~e Eevemng were hoste:::-ses at an t. o~ablc clanc:c I and the number \\as inc1t-ac:.ed b) \vere cast.

The rartr will be headed by \V. :\I. ta:" from Tanhauser 1 ~ on B<.•n in the college 1.r:rmnas1u.11. Ref1esh- many who came esp ciall:r to MP th~ I Tooay the polls opened at .00 a . m. Cobleig-h. D<an of t he College of En- Fro:st'.s list, t.nd .lit:,>'-' ~oUUl'15 has ments were sold and E khuff's Colleg- parade. The crowd was ma 1le up of --- and will remain open until 5 :00 p. m. gineerirnr. Other faculty members go- a~~on.g her numbers " " 'ill o· the ians furnish~J the mu 1c until the Rotarians from all over the state a:_.. ~ew DetJart nlenta l Club Offi- \\ith the e..xception ?f the n~n hour. in~ on the trip are: Prof. J. A. Thaler. ". 1~P' by Spross. and ' 'Yioleb" by 1 clock struck eleven, a ,I once a::min well as college and high school stu- . I ,.., .

1 B El t d O '" d The follov.'lng candidates \\Ill be re-

department of electrical cngineerin1?: " rig'ht. I n t_he second g-roup appear :\Iontana State Colle ~·::; " )!" Day dents, and people from Bozeman and c m S n 1 l e ec e n ,,. e • ,-oted on : ,,-omen~s Prof. Eric Therkelsen, department of such outstandtnj?' numbers as "The went down in history. the nearby vicinit)' comprising in all, nesday, )lay 21 Yice prcsident - "Fuzzy" Connell parta nia ns S p onse r

Athle tic Play-day. Are Tapped

mechanical entrineC'rinn; and Dr. R. E. Kashmire Song/' "The Trout" by ------- about 4,000 s1'lectators. and Dorothy Garrett. Pledges Kirk, of the chemistry department. ~hubert, "The Lass with a D. licate XOTICE I The mo"t pleasmg- patt of the par- Commissioners:

The followinl!' students will make Air" by Arne, and "I ndian Dawn" a le was the "officers center" for A new departmental club has mad. Finance-''Skee" Rivers, _j,J oore Tice 1 the trip: El drLal engine:ers-W. H. lby Zamecknic. Saturday night a piano .\II Setreta ria l s t ;..<len ls pl~a ~e special rnstruction. These men all ad- its appeaianc:~ on the camp,is m the and "Lizzie' ' Lee.

Se<.·ond annual Campus Rom pus Day Queen, R. R. Edwards, John Re ~el. d~o, " radlc Song'' by ;\lacFayden ' c te in the ma thematic:~ build .ng Ya need student.5-, many having- at- form of The Secretanal Club of )Ion- pub Ii cat i 0

n 5

_ Horace Bolster. nsoi ... d by the 'partanian athletic .Joseph Rad<'iiffe, Glenn :\fontgome~·· will a lso be- pre:-ente l by John Hous- \Yetinesda). )bl) 21. Th is ek ct ion tended military schools for spe 1al in- 1 tana State College whose pos1t1on w~~ )lichael Deevy and Yera Ann 0').;'ei!.

lub pro,·e<l a huge :success. The Prank Brown. Ted Rowe, ~ewrn ton and Howa rd Dean. Both.programs is fo r th l purrcsc of decting of- stru tton. \Vere at then· be:-t as they app10\ed and granted at a facuh) Athletics-~Iax '\Yorthington, Pa. l partanians aimed to :show any women Barnes. )furrai:,~ Daddson, E1taro

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are ~\·elJ arranged. Each _will pr~sent ricers for the Secret aria l Clu h fo r marched to the center and then up to I meeting a few weeks ag-o. This club \Yinner and Ed Buzz.tti. terested the worthwhile fun found in Etow. Fi-ed Su1?mra . Claud .... E,·ans. C'onstclerable talen.t. and eithe r will bt next ~ E'a r . recei,·e their 0 .. der:-; from the cadPt has b ... en formed for the purp< se of )l us ic- :\largant Souders, Ben orb. Apptoxiluately 50 \\Omen took and Robe~t .Jone~-.. _ far too g-ood to miss . Kl'nnc!.!, ..:hr!,..th-on. major. Leonard 'Yin~. :tiding anJ inereasin~ inte!"e~~ :.mon~ Frost and .Kenneth "~ht..:at .

dvantage of the opportunity between )Techa111cal engmeers-Eug :ne A. _ ,.o les~ pleas in~ to the spectotor:-; secretarial student:-. a nd ah:n~ni. Social-Helen Schultz. and Elizabeth ' ano 6 p. m., Friday, )lay lti. Reber. Francis H. Chesc.rek: Kenneth wnMEN'S ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION OUTLINES was the part the band had in ·'~oun i The first meetill::!' ~ r th<. purpo:-;e of Pope. Dul'ing the afternoon the followin~ D\-er. Thoma• Carry, Jo>epn FfaiTer ; , _,

1 off" and "pass in redew", led by nominating ofifcer' wa' held on Wed- Yell King-Kenneth Freese, J immie

am.s ~n<l contests fi;_ nishe-d amu,,,c- Clifford Huntsberger. ~furray .Johnson V' "Stew'' A\ery who acted as drum ncsday, .:\fay 7. At this me2ting- the Ovens and )lark Fulmore. ent for the c-ue..;t.s: Three-deep, black Harold Lee . ·w m. :\orman Os·.\·ald. major for the parade-. ··Lo~" Howarrl following- member~ ,.,;er 0• nominated

md white'. ~el 1 ace, and , Frank Ralph, Quentin Ruiter~: Art 1!C ER llf ~ RTEJ desen·es much credit fo" th succ:e""' for offices: For president . Isabelle

order to create Seiler. Jam·. s Rh e par d . \ mcent ii I" f\ I\ of the parade because of the. training \\'ood, )la"'l?aret Rowe, and :.\lary I f 0 u R ner competition Stanich, Alf Swanson, Stewart 1 he has given the members of the band. Hakala ; for vice president, Doroth)·

e group , \ ed int-0 separate \V'aE!'ner, and .Ta k 'Yieehert. The part of the four companies playcJ Hannah and Ruth Ri idell; for sel're-ams dcsig b color marker~. Industrial chemi!"h~ and C'hemicai DL tance Hiking and ' peed J.11 ing \\i ll Take In est for Re- in the inspection can be judg-ed by the tary-treasurer, Jiay Burkhart. Peg-gy MtN JOIN

AG fR~TtRNIT~ he red tea , 11 he series with the ene:ineei»-Alton Belk. Charles Brush maind t.'r of 'l erm. Hi f f(• lee l losed Thm . ·- comment made by Lt. ('ol. Waddell. S:ott, Josephine ;\Jic'olick, and C'aro-

points, while the .John Eck. Cvril Evans. l\\ ... allace· ~- \Vinnet;-, I Each company had its fine points a~ lin~ Co:hrane ; and for historian. ne~·y Harrity, Raym~nd Porter, Milo Sands. to Bt.' \nnounced •. ., t \\eek \well as fau\t-e, the fine points out- ~fc:\ei l , ''Billy" Henkel, and Lucille

ook mo,·ing pie- <ContinuE"<l on Pae-e 1'wol numbering the weaknesse~ ~o much Zortman. n i aames in ac- T , _ ... h (Continued on page Two) Election fo ... these offire~ will be on

"'" nl xt 1"' e of t e Exponent. 'VI- dnesdav '\la\· :?l in the hall of the ' hown at a date M t St te Glee day •·r of the .Jo ciay contest will 6 S • ~r:th buildin.J? . . Yotino: will he hv winners are on· on ana a ><s•:''Ol' of :· beaut'.ful _small Nearly 1 0 en1ors <eCTet ballot and a table and box ,~·ill Howard. B ols ter. Bjork and

Windecker Are Initiated. .'.\el on Is Chancellor p1c~ented d.llnu a_ll~ b~ :\Irs. 1 be pro,·ided for this pmpc ... e. Elect10!1

1 been conduc:ed Club Pleases Many Ihe oth )' four high"t com- T R . D arano:rnient. are in char~e of ~lartha the gymnasium Will also be announce,! at 0 ece1ve egrees Hawkf::.\VOrth and Ke1 neth Christison.

• and community All ret?ulary c nrol:e;l secretarial s.tu- Alpha Zeta. national honorary agri­cultur_ fraternity, held a formal in­itiation Thursday eqming, ::\lay 15, in the agriculture building.

ol. -g-oing- presid~ n+-, I hter as her suc­

Crest as the in­. )[ary Hakala

r age Two)

S h ow to People of Dillon, Har­lowton. L e wis town and Butte. Directed By Don l{intz

WOll

An• nou But

D~ t rnct• JI 1~ mg

'Mortar Board Holds Meeting

The )fontana State ColleJ?e J?l . e n,,, club on its sixtb annual tour of the pants ill d

h

state, under the dire-ction of Donn ~Iarga ret Crest, ha:-; l.Jt.:cn una Le

Kintz, gave mu~ic lo\"ers of the state check all the records . Th sc will be

enior W omen's Organization H as Bus iness Meeting and Breakfas t W ednesday

Ag Contests Are Success

a Yery capable and artistic perform­ance in conce• ts J?iYtn in Harlowton, Lewistown, Butte and Dillon. Th pe1 sonnel of the organization in~luded thr ee soloists, two acc:ompanists, six members of the string ensemble and 31 members of the chorus. Under the direction of Donn Kintz a mixe:i I

We<.nesday mo:-nino: )lortar Board chorus sanl? with fin;> tone coloring, Many S tudents Enter Contes ts elrl their u•ual bu'i""'' meetinJ? different numbers which included the for Medals and Ribbons of

af ter a six o'clock breakfast. The "Largo" from the "New \\.orld S:,.,11- ! l\i "t. members present werL: X orma Beck. phony" by Dvo:·ak and "The Miller's et 1

lizabeth Gardiner, Jrrna :\fonroe, ,,.ooing-" by Fanning. irJtinia :H ill~, :\lary O'Lc,ary, Helen An interesting number was the llen, and :\Iartha Flynn. The faculty string- quint<. t . con::;isting of a first

1embers present wue : Dean Herrick .. violin, selected violin, bratschc, bas~ Dr .Jcnnmgs, and ?\-hss Bull. viol with a piano accompa nist. The

A special feature of the bi eakfast qu.intet played th;, Adagi~ Allegr~ is mu~trated bY the following motto: 1 :\Imut"t.t from the Suancl Symph~n) "A. B. and B. breakfast. untouched by in D :'.fajor' by Hayden ~n charming

ome Ee han ~!s." The cooks were the I fashion . The )fessts., Kintz, 'V haet, president, ~orma B'-(k, and the ·vice Slater , Garry, an:I Krause at t he resident, Elizabeth Gardiner. J (Continu<>d on Pall" Three)

The Ag Day Program began Friday afternoon with the dairy products judging contest anci the grain judg-ing contest. The live.<.;totk fi t.ting cunt.est was held Sa turday morn ing, an.I the livestock judging contest was held Saturday afternoon. A large number of stud:.nts took part in the~e cun­t1sts, a nd judging from the re~mlts of the conte~ts, the whole program was a decided success.

Ten men took part in the grain Wew Methods In Scientific Bathing judginj? contest. Wm. Nelson directed the conte::;,t an<l made it an inte. ~sting

Are Gradually Replacing Old Ways · affair. Forty samples were iclentifierl and seven ~ampl cs were judged Reasons w<. re gh·en on th ree classts.

Like modes of living, there has been I wherever bath mg faC"1hties arc pro- ~fembers of the agronomy department a de.:1ded <.:hange in the public mind'\ ided. Th is fart 1s not at all stranir acted as. officials. Out of a poss~b lc

uring- the last deca e with regard to 1

1 when it is consi :cred that eclucat1onal 1.000 points, Horace Bolster \~on first athmg. \Vhile enameled and po .. cclain development. ac.ounts for nll p1of:tress place ~\'ith 92U po i1~t.c;, Earl BJork se~­ub fixtun:s for bathrooms, that and has proven t he shower both is the ond w1t.h 8H·l points, and Dcll>c1 t narked a big stnde forwa1d m sa mta- most sanitary and healthfu l way in l\ly1'ick l hir-.1 with 872 points, . t ion and convenience, doubtless always which to ba thl. The user of the shower I n t he dai ry product judg111g c:on­will have a plat<' in home, club and bath compartm. nt has no t hought of I test, milk1 butlt r, cheese and ice­hotel equipment, the public now is d;- who ha; previously_ used the bath , ~ream were j~clged . \Vm. Corkins ''.~~ man ding- facilities for t.he modern and such as IS the case w1th other methods m charge while members of the dnn ~ scientific method of bathing. of bathing I nstead. he b-athes jn depa 1tment officiated . I n the separate

PE:ople, old and young alike. havo;o clean, runni1

ng water of ~ny desi1~ed cl as~es. J oh n Howe. wo_n f.irst i.n be<:orne 0shower minded," as is temperature. He bathes m on' - thtnl butter ; A. Coo~ w~n '.1rst. m nulk, )lc­evidenced by shower bnth com par t - , the time and step.s ~rom the sho"·er :\faster :$ \~on f irst u~ H:e~cr am, nnd F. ments in homes, fra tern ity and soror- feeli ng refresheJ, mngora ted and ab- MacCorm1c~ won first in chee~e . I n ity houses, clubs and hotels ; in fact, (Continued on Page Three) I (Contmued on Page Four)

Speed Hiking C I dents are eligible to vote. ·tke on<·-quarter mile 'Pel' I Largest Gradu a tin g lass n take pla<e at the new tra :I: His tory of l\lont a na Stat e

orning-, ' a \ 2:3, at 6::?0 a. m. College i r mil_ for points. l

:'iOTI E Cly ·e Howard. Horace Bolster, a nd Ea!'l Bjork sophomores, and Claude

1·or the mil. There \\ill be an importa nt \Yindecker a junior, were initiated . On June 11, Hl:>O , the large~t Eurodelr,h ian meetin g- \Yedncsday. The~e men were thosen from the il.P for points.

ad1tc for the t hree graduating class in the hi~tory of )la) 21, in the r replace room of up1>::r two-fifths of the cla::-s. Besides Montana tate Coll ge wi:l recci\"e He rrick ha ll a t 7 ::lO 1>. m. The ha\·ing the best grades in their class mile.

Thursday. Final hrec mile hike (winner of which h-com s posscs::;or of the )lartin medal )

diplomas. Ba;·helor of Scienee de-., pur p-ose of the mcetin;.: i ~ for the these men haYe such qualities as grees will be given out probably to 15S installa tion of t he new off ic<'rs leadership. per~onalitr and cha racter . Seniors. three )laster of Science de-, a nd for the consideration of ne\\

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The new officers elected were Viil-Fo~ point....; thn., iecified practices

are required. grees will be nwardetl for completion 1-ledges. .\II members 1>lease b~ liam Xelson, Chancellor; p a u l

· I d present. (Continued on Page Th'-l 'Yoml·n's Basehall

Remaining hao;;.cb games will b<' played soon. Th( ~ m clo~es at noon.

of graduate work an<l one spe.ia e-,-----------------------------­gree in CiYil Enrrinecrin,2" will bt:-

issueJ. ~ . . Visiting Rotarians Attend College Last vcar o,·er l~O se111or~ rerc1ved )fay 24 . .\ II pral'tic s must be in at

that time. 1la)- 1~-Soph l ).Jay 20-- S11arta11 ~1 a)' 2- Soph I II

<. Soph I I. Bachelo;· of Science dediw. Tha: Assembly; Also See R. 0. T. c. Parade number marked another mil. stone Ill

n vs. Fro~h 1, . Frosh 11.

the j?rowth of ) lontana State Colleo:e, but this June mnrks nn enn greater Thb Yl·ar on!l' :;oo Hotarians and

Rotary Anns attended thl· annual Dis-

CO-ED ACCUSES MEN increase. t•kt ('01wention held this year at

Although c•omplete plans for Com- Bozeman. Several of the im:ctin!...s of mencement Day h:.we nol b en com- this l'Cll\ cntion wer held in the col­pleted the dates; have been set ll•ge gymnasium, n.l!"ain putting- .:\I. S. Baccalau reate Services will be held C. before the people of tlll' ~tatc. Ju ne 8 and Commencement Exercisel1 ~pun: and Fan'.!s were on tiuty tn help June 11. Fi na l examinations for the show off thL· l·ollege to bl·st advanta).!c. spring quarter w ill be held from J une F'riday morning- the c·o1l~·g- ,~·as 10 to .J une 14. I g-i\·en one of the treats of It~ ex1:t­

OF BEING UNCLEAN Savs Ma les W ear Rocks U ntil

;rhey Stick to W a lls

' 'Men are queu remarked a coed u one pair oJ stf'p-in wear their soeks un on the wall when and the)" nC>,·er <.'h

ance. At 10 a. 111. all classes Wl·re d1~-

, ~ay the least,11 DR WILSON LEC-TURES missed and it app("'ared that pral'tic-

~he hopped from • ~'~~~~t e~~:;~ ~u~l~~1t ~~~~11 ~~~il::~~~tl~~t~~~ (} another. "They AT ENGINEER ASSEMBLY . ii they will stick j l" ~ u!d ~10t han• b~t·n disappoin_ted ven a g-ood toss either. tor the talk l!"l\"l'll that mo· nmg-1Jte their collors .. \ddress on the "Rontance of the b)~ "Prh•ate Peat'' <lll the " l nC>xl·u:-;-

rk able Lie" wa~ worth j?"Oin)! al·ros~ !l Thev hang onto ti r underwear 1 ·e ~feta l " Is Given By l\Tine~ state or a nation to hear. a d~g docs fleas <.1 mi the only way

· ·r Professor I "Pri\"atC' Peat" has th. rare kna k ~~e~n::~I t~~~1n~l~' ;~ ~~~~nth~~~y '~~r: __ of fixing h:.:mor nnd facts in a way asleep. About th <' only th ing the Dr. Curtis L. \\"ilson. profes::;or of that ,·e.ry ~orcibly imprC'sses the fac~~ wifev can't !-; neak away is their t rous- meta llm·g-)• at th<.• Stale Sd1ool c~f I upo~ his <1 1.s~enPr$. li e p'.e~entcd 111.~ ers ; 11d they wcnr tht•m fo r ever. !\lines in Butte gave a ta lk last Fr:- suhJed d~~·1sn·~ly nnd \'ery lor.efull~.

1''1'hey make m<' laugh when t hey day afternoon to the :.is~cmble I group but he did so 111 a way that made. 1t say that women re such foolish of engineers in th·· Enginl'ering As- extrcmlly pleasant to take. II ~ JHC­

clrcssers. \Ve an• ruini ng our health; !;emblv Room . His talk was on the turecl the horror~ of wnl', the 1gnor­we freeze in t hC' winter and roast in ;, Rom~nce of the :\IC'tals" ~rnd dealt ance surrounding the whole world al the summer. Cat you imagine us with the fundamrntal principles un- thC' time thC' last w~ir started. ~nd w<-aring ou r socks fi\"C days without derlyin£r the using of metals in en~i · t~c .. g-rndual ~HI~ pmnf~I awa_kf.'_nm~ chanctinJ? t hem an<l Wl•nr ing on<"' dress neel'inj? development. Th lC'dun r \\as \\ h1ch can~e ,h(~\\eC'n :h~s<' dark )~ais even· dav for six months'! \Vhv men I secured by the lo. al branch of lhf'

1

of 191-1-1: 1 ~· m . n \\a~ that an) one · ·. I · h. f d · · 1 ~meri can Society of )fechanical En- who h .arJ him will nc' er for~et.

wear theu c ot es orever an nevet · . According t o him ignorance and (Continued on Pal!'e Two) gmeer s. ,

narrow-mindedness are the chief causes of war. If people could see a nd understand the conditions existant in other countrie~. and if they could fu llv g-rnsp the hideous situatio~ into which

h-ilizat.ion b thrown in time of war, pu1ce wouJj be a permanent blessng. and not just a ~hort period between upheavals. ·•If this wot Id were n little more like a glas~ hou~e. people wou ld not be so apt to throw stones."

He pictured more fullv than could be done on a s re en, the· terrible con­ditions under which the soldier~ had lo Jive, the long- hideous Cays in the mud and filth, and thC' apparent hopc ­!ess.ness of the whole thin:,r. In 1914 people eould not see thls. ho ror~. All ther c·ould understand was thl) glam­our. the heroism, an<l the g-allantry of fightin:,r another nation and turni n~ the world into a slaughter vard.

"Private Peat" n ·, ocatt""s~ the preg­ent system of military t raining, only ht'" would hav~ more of it. li e ~ a id, "If every man we .. e gin·n th ree n1 onth.s of compul~ory military train­in~ ("'ach year training- between the time he was 20 nnd 25 Y<'Brs old. and this training put him under actual fJont-line conditions, i-.u<·h a nuusea for the wholl hid ous busint.•ss would be drilled into cvei:, p<'rson that war ould never again exist . Science is

(Continued on Pllge Two)

Page 2: lAY 20 1930 I S. M. C. RE-VOTE TODAY NDUSTRIAL …arc.lib.montana.edu/msu-exponent/objects/exp-021-32-001-004.pdfi s. m. c. re-vote today ndustrial inspection musical program mt b~lo~

PAGE TWO TIIF.: WEEKLY EXPO. TE:\T. TUESDAY. :.'IIAY 20, 1930

YL'UTI.:-;G ROT,\HL\NS .\T· !lu========i================i W¢¢kly Expon¢nf l SMATrER~G1i-~~~ ~~n:r A-~D THERE J TE:~nt~n:~L=:~ ;~~:~::~L)'j !::' Established 1910 +---

Continuance of the Monthly Exponent, Est.ablished 1895 To he l'cr .. ec-tly frank. we didn't n tic<' a partide of tlifft..rence in the Cl)lor :oini:t much to mnhe war more horr- !i Publishe:tl every Tuesday of the college year by the staff chosen from the

Associated Students oi Montana State College at Bozeman, .Montana

ubscription R ate $2.00 per school ,-car

f ilile. By so doing- it l'fln do more for ii of tlw :\I fhtcr it hntl had b :--uni-annual ~i\llution "~dm• .... <lny, Lut a tcr the world in the next fifty years thnn ii r1..·r~rnrt..in~ on it and hci g :w used of lhl• pil:nic hcin~ ll10 mm:h for us, ·w~ has be~n done lJy politk:> in the Inst ;.ij; ri>'"raincd '10111 furtht'r cnmmcut. h ..

-- PLANTS --We are now ready with all kinds of Bedding Plants

.\T OUR GREENHOU E

M. Lango hr, Florist t ~bs~l~~~t.urer is not a fan~1tic <1r n i: "-e u1allrstand th:it the ~i1! \lphs held ( haptt!r llH.•eting- at the foot of radi.al. 1I1• is only doing his bit to I a

---------------------d- d-f--.- ,_::--. - t -. - 1- 1-:0-:-3 ti hiJJ keep the worlll from n J:!!l"!lte: cat~ts- i; 19 E . l\Iain Accepted for mailing at special rate of postage proYi e or in ~ec ion ' 10 • tl'Ophc than the last one. He wishes to ii:n::::::::--==·==-- •

Act of October 3, 1927, authorized February 17, 1919 .-\nd then lhl•re was t H.' pad..:a'=>e of ei.e-nrNte!'. lh~t Ucrnard passC'd up see peace gi'en the snme g-lnmour ai:d - - --- - ·-=::::::i:iut::i::i::::::=t:n::i::mm:m=l

I · t 1 othi.>rs J·ust cll)ry that. hns been gi,·en to war. lits I ===1

Phone 95

the ··hrl·:d line" to Liz. ~omt.:' p<'ople ar(" >orn optinus ~. am. I T - l t ........... _I (lon 't 'nO\\ ,·1n\,· h<·ttC'r. aim is to S('(.• cin izatlon at \"am·e _o .... I I I I I I I I I I I I I ' I I I I I I I I 1 I I I I I t e I I I I I I ' I I I I I I I HI I I I

" a state wlwrt• )ll'\lp1e no long-er ha\ e

y un .... \\ ernlt i t n to 1• • c a . ot shot on the campus that h<' ~~;~~::1~:1rt~~~~~!~:~· in orc.ll'r to liYc I ONrE Ar.AIN Telephone: 117-Ask for Exponent. On Monda)S after .~:00 P. l\l. 80

~~!~~:~i:-~: ~e:g~~-----~--~~~·.--~~---~---~·---~·~·--~------····.-_·_-_·_-_·_--_._._--_-_-_-_-.-·-~-~-----~-.-.-.--~Leon.~rd- ~~ i~\- i~~ b~;~

News Staff l\lannging Editor ·------------·------·-·-----­Assistant Editor ··-·--·-·····-···-····---.. ········--------.Associate Editor _ --·· --·· --------·····--·- -- .

... lilichncl De1"''1 -· ....................... Ruth Platt

Armin IIill Sports Edit~r ·-·--··-·-···-.. ·--····-··-.. ·-··· .. ····--........................................... George Harl Assistants, ·wallace Harrity, Harold Greiner, Chet Huntley, Clarence Connell Feature Editor ..... ___ ... _.,, ......... -................... ............. . .......... ~lary llaknla Women's Sports ---- .. --·-··-·------·-·------·-·····-··-·-----.. -····-------------· ..... Dorothy Garrett

Assistant Frances Fogler

think$ hi.> dtt'sn't hP:\t t w<.'ar h::. git. n t.•ap-nt h.·n~t he thought so Ia~t I Tht. <'TOW l whkh at.tended this le<-- l.J U \\Ct..'k .. st hl'c n" l't.' ''doe>~n· <' ••• EYidently he has c}urng-cd ht:=: tur,. was one of the !nr:::c"t (>\'1,1' ~cen mind rc'-=cntly, Fan!...s hml• n, l~ " h thl'm. in the g-ymna~ium. Extrn bl"nches were LO IS\TILLE SL GGER B.\ T"'

broui::-ht in to fill up the lower floor. 'Whrtt \\C? lo\·1.~d at +Jw n "C'mhl 1 r~ \\<\S the ftnC! di..::plny of colll.'~e Th:'" hlNtt•her~ Wl"r<' also ~et up. E\'tn RED TEXNIS BALLS

SP_\ULDL 'G TE:\NlS R.\CKET:' chiYalr:- oh well. thC' gnb didn't ,~. t to =- t clown nny"ay. ~~~1 t111;~~· ~~,l~~n~~~'~hr~~~~c~~:nd~~~ lowC'r floor "C't'C' p:n·kcd to rap:icit:.·

R. 0. T. C. !ns11l'dion d~n c· ·rt,11nl) brought ~omi.> plcndid spcl'imens of The R. 0. T. ('_ boy~ in uniform, .\nit.•rit:an mu.nl1t1Ptl lt\ t lt.• fort.. pal:k<'1l in the hnkony must ha\'e fur- HAUS£MAN & McCALL

Society Editor -···-·--- ----- .. -------···----··-----······--····--· .. \..lit'e \'andenhook Assistants, Elizabeth Seitz, Bernice .Norris, Gretclwn Lehrkind, MilclreJ

!'\evin1 Helen Oli\'er. Teresa O'Donnell, Jo~uphine )Jiklich, Emma Bal1iwin. 'I)rping .... Elizabeth Seitz, Helen Souders, ElizabC'th Graham Sarah Barringer

nish<'d a familiar scene to the speaker. An~! then tlwr urc the army spon:;;;or~ . Tht•ir dutiC'-: musl Le "trcnuous.. The Robcat band furnished Oil(> p!et'e I I t I I I I I I I I : I I I I I I I I I I I I : : : I : . ' t I . : : : I a : • I : : I I I • : I I

jud,:;ng. from Friday. and then Prc>-.ident Atkinson intro­

"E,·ery thing to Help Your Game"

du t.~tl ··rrh·ntc Pe:1t". In ~11e int• the d"k111na of thl~ lad who had dates to all :>f .he ~l)roril) partit.:'s lmm(>clintel:-· aftC'r the h.cture. the

~atunh,,.· n·!!ht and ;:di ::-uch :-.Wl'd g'rl~. too. \"i::.:Hors were> ... jycn a <·hnncc to see the ~ ...................... J"J".._.._ .... ~ ..................................... ._.._.._ • .,, ... _.._.._,.,,..,...,.,.,. ... .....,_~

Military Editor -·----·- ......................................... Charles Ille ~- annual pnrn ll' nnd inspection of the t AFTER THE THE.tTRE I

Business Staff I ong ha\"c..' \\e ~us}'tlt I flUr l11lty hut whl'n it tome:-; to lll1t allowin Advertising Manager .. ·----·- ·--·---------··--····-···----·---··········--··----.-·----- ...... Al Greiner them to chnpcrunc tl1e St'n'riti<'!' men:;,., nwrcy.

Assistants: Earle Hansen, Bob Jones I - . Business Assistant ....... - ....... ·-···-·-·-·--· .. ----·-----··----------·-·--··----·Frank :l\lacCormick Our ~VU'"t.'t.• of info1:1r.at"<1n ="<l)" he h:1 ' t h0cn m_ixt:.'1 up in anything t .1:0:.

James ·waters WL•ek-l:IHI. anti line 11 t kPow an) 11 ·t . Looks like a poorvr wet•k than Circulation l\Iannger ---·-···-··--···-·--···---··-·----·---··---·----------··---· ............. Jack Erkkila (.'\ 1 1or the C'olyum.

Assistant, Larry Kunkle - ---

Reporters

Earl Rudberg, Margaret Bowman, Fr~mklin Dewey, Lorraine •rhompson, Virgil Hurlburt, Gladys Elliott, Arthur Sheldon, Clara \\11ite, Kay Rh·ers, Peggy Scott, Rathryn Kellet, Doris Kuhns, Russell Freeman, Leona Rut­ledge, El~a Hendrickson, Hell•n Eagle, ~orma Beck. Yern Ann O'?\eil, .:\rt

Fr('qUl·nt ly lwnrd nm1 n thC' S nwrs "well. if I \\Olk hnrrl tlll'5.c two \•"t' h• and get all my gradl'"' uo 1'11 be practically thrr'u~h s<'hool by the ~! 1 11 l f .:'lfoy.

Buckley, Wes Funk.

rm~t?' Ill' n!tu· ~,Jl hl'!'L' Yl'<\r"' the ~C'flllll'~ <If(' ~t'll thinkin~ tht.•y l'311

j.!"l' a 1p,1arkr's "ork done in t \\ o \\ <'ek:t.

Calendar ..................................... _ ·----·-.......... .... .... . -··-Proof Reader. ---· ...

Courier Prl:nt ...... Rozema n, Monts na

Flora Da'"is Dare Boulter Gallatin High Seniors Will Present

Funniest Play, "The Poor Nut" Soon NEW OFFICERS

;\Iontana State has partially come through with another student elect10n without the sign of any of the many edls that aff!id I etudent elections in many of the uni,·ersities and colleges of the 1

nation. Opinion will be didded as to whether the best candidate wou in all rnses or not. That, howeYer, is passing since any I man who successfull~· pa"ses the constitution requirements and wins the fa\'or of the student majority surely must be capable.

Both the acting student senate and the student body tleserws much credit for the smoothness with \\'hirh the elections were carr;~d off.

All '. io frequently we read and hear cf political scandals at other ik,itutions, but students of ;,\I. S. C. can point with pride at the freedom of their elections from unfair means of electing' candidates. True there 1rns some electioneering by fraternities and other groups, but any such \\·as not offensh·e or criminal a"· has been the case in past years. The appearance of cliques desiring to control were not in eYidence.

WHY GIRLS GO TO COLLEGE

Girls used to go to college with the idea of "catching a man . But that is not the reason why the modern girl goes to college. One of the reasons is that she wants an education. he realizes the benefits of a college education apart from the scholastic l:'ide,

D.-ffE Rl\'IXES as "The. Poor • ·ut"

the cultural and social a~rnntages. . . L\DllSTRL\L 11 ·sPECTIOX

:\Iost girls h~\'e a defnn:e career for which they are preparmgl TRIP • ·ow IN PROGRESS themsel\'es. Years ago after a girl recei\'ed her diploma there were two thing she could do-teach or get married. But now (Continued fro~ Page One)

there are so many fields open to a "·oman from \Yhich she may .Jacl, Sheridan. st""' Rupert, r , choose that she spends from two to ten years pursuing her career \\'toa.i<, and r..oren Z lier. before marrying. There are many women who are de,·oting their T!": folkrn.in~ of ;, ab lm,·c cooper-. ' . . ntC'd lll making the a rati_f: lC' s r

h\·es to a career rather than marrymg, for, according to many I the inspection frip: Lou• Be., er. I!'' n-

reports, oYer 50 per cent of the graduates from women's calleges "!'"l unninten~cnt of t' , A• ac:•ml.1 do not marry. l opp«r Mmml': l mpany; l. D. ~ oo •

. . wan!, chief ngin l'r of th<' A. l'. ~l. How much more sensible are the girls of today as compared co.; I". c . . Ja.uird. mcchani al s c ·.

lh ~e nf 1.: • i

ting

a play' {'('Ult:!.

:-;," i:-.

'.\: 1t" tht• -.en OT I n. to LL~ p1 e.;;l n: l

'.\ 2.1. has tha tol l

0

nnt1 thl' 1at. rut\ ,ould pron~ ci-;pcci·

a Bo- man audie

wh • nv >:een it \\hiJ~ I P ~U ·h

II\ i of WO nd:-. ked wt h <·haractcr

'\ an hun o•·. Th<:' joll~, whole on1l1 nn~ •

l'nior cla~=- h ::- b l'n nt; "T1

1e Poor Xut,'' is are bl··n.,. Jsr 1 ... ::: hl' track 11\f'Ct. 5<'('111 I t~1.~1 ~;~n~ninder o · tl1e I

CO·FD H <CSE~ .'.llEN OF BEL 'G UXCLE.\X 1

"'rom P2ge C'ne) n~ more than u good

n Ot't'asional hot steam

u happen by a tailor are pressing a pair your nose instead of n. You will ck•ter-

1 ~1 lf iust how clean a e n woman swC'atinz

1 ter with thl' samt.•

cad1 day rP1d th€'n .m's sanitnt ion. I

l 't arc sanitary. Th" ·ood enougoh for Jlad. wh. o are c1-.1z)· or to I "!'' Utah.

with the girls of the 19th century who spent their girlhoocl 'ntcn<l«nt of the A. C'. )!. Co.; F. \\. angling for a husband and then getting caught in a net of domes- !~err. manager of the )Jon!ana Po" c1·

. . . ( ompnny; ;ml .\lC'x::mder Hrmnt•a;::, tic1ty from which they could not escape, no matter how uncon- mana er of th« )l"untnin f:tot"s Tele-

~!,lt1l"l'1J111.1,11 I I I 11. 1 111 I : I I 1 11 f I I I I I I

·The Park genial it might ha\·e become! 1 hone and Tel graph r'umpnny.

RO.'.\IPUS DAY IS PROVED SUCCESS

(Continued fr-Om Page One) is to replace Bernice ~orris as st<'re­t.ary.treasul'er. Jliss Nugent then an­nounced the new Spnrtanian pledges who are: Grace Andcr~on, Betty Brain, )larguorite Roscoe, B. tty ll!r­.. ·eil, ~an Cole, Polly \Yisner, Helen Bradbur;'. Grace Cresap an<l Aleda Tokerud.

The ~ucc.c:>ss of Campus Rompus Day was <lue to the untirin)! l:.ft'orts of the comm::tee compos. d of )farjorie Xyc,

-- COI.ORFFL REVIEW ''.· Hawkswo1ih, )J. Hakala, Ag-n I GIYE ' BY C \DETS !\u.e:ent and F. Foder. Thev \\ere abh· '" .. assisted by )!ary L. Stewart. ·

XOT!l'E

There n ill be a n•g-ular mt' (ng of Spurs in the orl!'anization rt}(lm or Herrick ha1J this (''enin:.:- :it j:OO o'd(}{"k.

SEXIORS XOTICE

.\nnountements and cnrds ncrn a\ ailahle at Ilauseman & 'lcCalls

'Cont ,ue.l from pa::ra One)

that these faults were easily ovcr­looke<l.

Glneral lmproyement The fc>nhH"l• of thl dav was th~ •

noti table improvement in. thc> wholl' command o'tr Le last. fow \·ea,.

I unch

Fount ain Drinks

Candie ·

Snooker Tables Bi lliards Smokes

. ,

Th< re ha..; ht?cn sn h n dN"ide ·1 im­prov ment that the nnnot.:t l'Clllt nt of .. nn in. rf'l'tion or para l<> brin s pto1 le from u 11 on·r to h:n c thC' opportun "ty • of watching- the l'Y< nt. In this rt•s1a:oC't • ih" o'ficor- in char~e of 1hr n. O. T. : 9 l• .\ST l\IAh _ f', (''!}Tl Wc..11 be J;irCn thej dtle ('l' dit. if1,.1 • ,1 •h i •l·•I ,,.,, 11 t1 l hl! l !l l, 11 11 1 '''If' ll11t I I 111,'t

local R. 0. T. C. batallion.

;\OTffE

Ph' Et.a Si:rma 1t1C'('tinl'.!" Thul"s­day. 'lay 22. at ;; :00 JJ. m. L'" pp('r floor or th£' eni.!"ill('('r;in~ building. El<'ction of officers.

Henry Eagle.

Thirts-thn:l' men a"e trYin.rr out for th nati.on.nl :-ithletk frate;·nity, Sil!mn l1rlb Psi. RC'nn. ~emmin!!s.('n and K.lefnrnn have complete i rill b t a few rl'quir(>ment~. Renn is almost t·erlain to $UC'C'C'C'd.

I The B0~~~alow I ._....,..~-.. -.......... -..-~ .............................................................................. ,., ...... .,, . ..,_-.. _ ...... ,., .............. ,,..~

~~~"'--~'--~'--~~"'--"'--~~

I .\SK .\BOUT OUR BIG SPECIAL $76 TRADE.JN

OFFER - O. 'LY GOOD FOR .\ SHORT TIME

JU T A FEW l\IORE D.\ YS nJSTRES$IXG

EYES!l.111' llE.\D.\C'TIF.S

1; ~

ORTON BROS. !\le11knl inve~tig-ation pro,. l's t hot /,) of headnrh('=" are dir­N·tlr dul• tn C')'(' strain. If you have the lwadat•he. we h:we the g}n~5.CS. ~~"'--~'--'--~"'--~"'--~~~'--'--'--~~~

FOR A :\'ICE HAIR CUT

LESLIE E. GAGE Optometrist and :\Jfg. Optician

Broken Lenses Replaced the

Phone 842-J I j

I BAXTER BARBER SHOP i

,~_.1 j Phone 1067 +----~~~~~~~~~~~~--

A n1ilestone of Telephone progress '"11·~ l' . ,.' ,::· is t ltl r > ~ 1 1uw r:1e position of

1 I t. \\ t' '' of l nd1.: ground 1..1bJc line. f t is , '" .i monument to the Bell !"1 stem policy < 1 1. ~t.1 t\ i111pnl\ ing estahlishcd 111ethnd~

dL'' d Jp1 l!.~ new ont'S.

I '" \ L \rs t111dcrground telephone c.ihles 11 l•et n L.i,l i•1 holln11 duct lines especial!"

t >I' ruct\ d It)!" the purpo~t'. B,· this lll.'\\ h ' f'(' I supnlcmcnun· method thL'\' L'.111

bL bt:ri~d llirL'aly in t~lt.' PTt u1h.! \\ "thout con-

duit-:1:hl, under n1:inr conditions, at a s:n·­ing t f t·mc and 1none\·.

To ,! i ti 1is it 11 as necessary to de,·elop a nc\I· n·pc of c:1ble, mam· kinds of special .:qui 1>1'1Cnt including l:tbor-sa\'ing insr:tllarion machincn·, and to 11 ork out :111 entirely new installatiun prou~dure.

Progress me:ms change. The Bdl , ystern holds no procedure so sacred that it is not open to improvement.

BELL SYSTEl\I vi 1:.;1. r. .• •... JJ•t •• o;· 1 "trr-,·vnner111:g 1rlrphont1

"l) I R 1'101 EER I NG 1VO Rh. IIA S JUST BEGUN "

Page 3: lAY 20 1930 I S. M. C. RE-VOTE TODAY NDUSTRIAL …arc.lib.montana.edu/msu-exponent/objects/exp-021-32-001-004.pdfi s. m. c. re-vote today ndustrial inspection musical program mt b~lo~

THE WEEKLY EXPONENT, TUESDAY, lllAY 20, 1930 PAGE THREE

SOCl.\L CA l,R'iDAR

Friday, l\Iay 2:~-Pi Beta Phi Party.

print!

Saturday, ~lay 2 1-Kappa Sigina Party; B. E. Party.

up floors or knocking off plastering- on \valls. This shower bath tompartment. whi .. h is fant;factured b\· the Fiat :\letal :\1anufacturing (:ompany '>f Chicago, is absolutely leakproof.

Party; Amigo Thursday, ::\lay 29-Alpha Gamma MONTAi ' A STAT!; GLEE

I Delta Pnrty. Friday, )lay 30 Sifrma Chi Party;

Omei:ra Bela Party.

CLU13 PLEA E MANY

. (Continued from Page 0ne) stnng and :\liss Kathr)·n Bohart at the piano perfonned capably.

Tho ~lontana State Collq.rt! glee club showed fine training and much

~~~~1 :~:~t;~e we k encl lo visit with I serious \~·01 k. The .concerts ""'-re ~vel-:\1 ~- '-' ... . \:Omed with enthusiasm at the \·a nous

Cr~\~':-;Th~~-~~ay. was the guest of )fr~. towns and much appreciation for !"\. . • ~ ~) · . shown for the talent. displ&yetl. The

Jpha Omicron Pi / Kappa De lta . -hhle l?·ndiner ~atl,C<.u:olme Delaney people of the pin Ts visitC!d provec, to lpha i'hi of Alpha Omicron Pi en- Kappa Delta entclinine<l at. a sprin,g as er ~linner ~est. un ay afternoon. be very ~ood ho~ts and did all in their

<·rtau. l :-;a1urday e\C'ning, ~lay 17th party at Sprinl!hill Saturda\· . The llanict Lewig spent Sunday and 1 powe:- to show th members of t.he t the Summc>r ht>mC' of :\Ir. and '..\Irs. J!Uests were Profo~sor and :\lrs. :\Ionday at. her hom, in Butte. glee club a good time. l t is hoped that

W .. ·.Purdy, with a Luffrt dinner at Swingle Dr. and ~!rs. Cannon. :\fr. and Ruth Bradbm·~: and Ye: a Ann O':\'e!J ne.x't year the trip will pro\'e as ~UC·

Saturday, i\lay 3 1 - Sigma Alpha Epsilon Party; Pi happa Alpha Party; Alpha Gamma Rho Party.

:SO followed by dandngo "ith music :\lrs. S. S. Sutherland, Di·. an i :\lrs. ~~~nt Sunday with the Bradburys at cessful as it was this year. by RonJli('S Bobcats. fhc spacious ""el h, IIden Shaw, Bruce Garling- \ illow Creek. :'ll cmbers of the chorus who made r ooms wc:re decorated with spring house. Ernie :\Iycrs, Ever. tt Eelons. Sigma Chi. the trip were: \?j\·ienne Boulw3re. fJO\\Crs. Robert Schabarker, :-\orman Gru<l· Beta Rho of Sigma Chi held formal Prisc~lla Ilaulberg, :'l.Jildrcd Richards,

The guc>:-:t Ii. t ndudPil chaperone~: ing-er, John C'aE=sidy, Eric Blannin. · T t" S I . f .., C. Hollensteiner, Garnet Peter~on, I

\I \Y ~ I' I \I l l G h G im ia ion um ay mornmg or l· rank: )farcclla Rawson :;\1 arg-aret Choate. '.\lr. an< . r:-;. . • . un y , . rs. ca cor,£re S. crmnn, e<>rge Grucnfelder Dyer of Butte, Ed Bree !en of Boze- I ?\I · · r ' B t ' h . Sayre, :'i.lr. and :'\lrs. lla\'idson, )J r . )[arYin Thomas, Harry Bowman, Ed· man. Ray Buzzetti of Hardin. i arJ011e .i•oote .. ct Y l·rans a1~1, nd .:\lrs. L. I>. l'''nklin~. Guests: ward. Fuller, Georj!'e llart, Georgt. Lawrence Cooper of Billings and Btity :Olatthew;:;, .oli~er :\!organ, ~ycha

~!rs. Lee Popham, )li::-. 1-1. \. Sale~, :\farkm Robert Hawks, Ev-.rett. Peter- Charles Dumont of Baker. Romersa, Paul halt1tz, LO\~·ell Kurtz Ethl·l Keyt•:" ~all·~. Jlis:-:l·- .Tulia Pawer son Kennl'th Freese Jimmie rore-l T d R . ld f G Th Harold Slater, Elanort• Rite, Hc·l: n .. lary Stnagl•. ~lildn•il Jla<.:hPr and lan:t, Alt.on :;\lac!ll~\tan, \Vilfre<l a w~ek :~:togu:i:!~ of a~~;;;~a ~~~1

wa.:; Sanders, r~~oy La\v s o_n, Da\'id Messri::, Gardner \\"aik .• ·oblc Hosley, Rhackley, Howard Jens.en. Rodney Larry Preston cnmc clown from the Brc,~er, "- ilham \Vall .. Ju ht~ Belden. Teti Power, l· red Ben!lion, Ihde ilohart Spicker, Basil Ashcraft, ('y Rooke, I park last Sunda\'. Bessie Eyre, ~Peggy s,·?tt, Earl Ilan-

oe ).Juli in, Richard Burns, James Glen Frisbie, Eh·in \\,..hite, Rosy/ Roger De". ne\: of Butte gpent \Vc<l- ~on . L;l~ B Stone, L o1::; We11s , L~1cy \Vater~. ~axon :\lnrtin. Herbert Zwi~- Hacker. Oli\er '..\lorJ!~ln. Glen '..\Iont- nesday as a gu~st of the Sigma Chi. I wen, u ower. er, Charles ,Johnson, lh•nry Helland, :oonma.1n·;,·I. E~oa'r'1·el('.lc1',·uelratzn .. '.Wallace John- p· ]{appa .-\l pha. FOUR i\IEN JOIN

Carl '\Yall, Ejl :\kPhen: )n, Howard ..., - .1 ... -

Eldrikin. Robert Lung, ( reighton Carr Sigma Omega of Kappa Dcl1'1 an- Gamma Kappa of Pi Kappa Alpha AG FR\ TERN ITY \\"illiam XeL-on. Ja.ne G,mno\vay, noi.::nres the pledg-ing of Doroth;r announ(•es the formal initiation of Leonard \Ying-. Robert Gjullin. Bob )liller. :'lfark Fulmor of Ana .. onda and Erquin 1ohnson. Hal Bolingl' Yirg-il Hurl· Kappa Ddta h(.•ld formnl pledging- Amick of Lh·ing-~ton .

urt,. Dl'xtcr )lo u·. Earl Hansen for Dorothy :'lli;lcr, Friday, )lay 16. )fr. Charles Lanphier was a dinner John Toi. on, Leonard Kaufman, and i..>"Uegt of Pi Kappa Alpha on Friday Sam Kirkes. Chi Omega. e\·enin~.

)Iiss )lar.r ~ilY:lge of Outte wn ~ a Chi Omega held their spring party :;\fr. an! :\lrs. :\I. A. Fulnwr of week end J?Uc>~t of Emmn Baldwin :it Karst~. :\Jay 17. Guests were: :\Ir. Anaconda and :;\Ir. and :\Irs. Sulli\'an

l\Iiss :\lildr1.•d IIaC'k(;'r, cx :n, no\·: anJ )hs. :\frndl'nhall. :;\lr. and :\Irs. were Sunda\· dinner guests at Pi ttending the Unh·ersity at )lissoula Joe Lin~1·s, :\-Irs. Adele :'.\kCray, :\Lr. Kappa Alph~ . as been a J!UPSt at the Alphn Omi- Stephen Stl•phl. )lr. un<l :\Irs. Foirc:-:t

rron Pi house durin~ the past few \\. ndnll, :\Ir. an l :.\1 rs. C'has. Bru~h . avs. Helen Olin:r, Robert O'BriE-n. Geor!!\.' ~Ir. and :\lrs. Chnrles Boult;-ware . .Tmksun. Hemy Sc.:oYil, Larry :.\lalm·

and daughtl'r AdelinC' ~pl•l\t Suntla~ ber)!. G·•orge ..:hanlcy. Ed Lane, :\lax with thC'ir daug-hter \"i\'iene Pat kin, Erl Hu~he;.;, larl Sloan, Ernie

.:\lis::; .:\Iildr<·d • ·t>v 'l n •orl~d with :\kLau}.!"h'.in. Roblrt .f,1nes, Harold er father to he,~ hon1e in Butte . ·u1 Greine''. St., wart "a~er, Bert Kime, n:r Boh J\., n1lall, Har+ Hutledg"e, Frank ~unday dinner gue:-ts of Alpti 1 Ball, Chuck Xagel. .lack \Ykkert. Dirk

m'.cron Pi were t e :\hq;';L'S Dorothy Bruner. Pra::1.k Brown. Ke:t!1 Gas.tin­ord, Yi,·inia \\"arnl' , Pauline ""ii:- eau, Harry Adams. Jnck ~heridan

. \ migo. :\Ir. and :\lrs. \harlt•s Gn•hll'r of Butte were Sunday dinner gue:-ts of Amirro.

:\Ii~s :\lildrcd Hacker was a Linn r ~ruest Sunday .

La1Ty Jlalmhorg- of )lanhattan was n week end gue:;:;t.

Stewart \raj{ncr. \'inrcnt Stanic!1, .Jack ""eichert and Robert Jones left for Butt<. and Anaconda.

rk. ;\lr. an<l :\frs. Char es Boule\\ ~\r Frank f offin. Frank Shanley, :\Ir. and nd daug-htcr .\..dcl lC'. ':'\Irs. Ja~on Pre<:.ton. Carlton Dale. Sip:ma .\l pha Ep~i l on.

Alpha Phi of A ,ha Omicron f'i Geor_e Red, Yens R!H~ncs, Franklin :i\Ir. and :\lrs. George );, Short of nnounc·es the pil,dgin of Dorot'ly Dewey, an I Gordon Pappin. Butte and )..Ir. and :'lfrs. C'. A. Truitt ord

0.r HC'lcna. :iir. and .:\lrs. Forrest \\"cndall of of Bozeman were dinner ~ue-;ts at th~

Bi:Iing-s were d!1mcr gut·~ts Thursday S A. E. hou~e on Saturday. e' ening. ~liss Elizabeth Gardiner was a Sun-

::\I1 .. s Esther Seifert and Geo1·,e:t <lay dinner g-uest of Sigma Alpha

I I Shanley were dinm:r guest:s Sunday. Epsilon Ralph Hawkins of Billmgs is \1"'it-

: .\Ir.ha Gamma Dt:lta. I ing at the S. A. E house I I Alice :\lae Carr nnd Flo1 ence Lio) d

a .. tcndcd the installation of Beta Beta Delta Tau. I SHOE S FOR WOMEN chapter of Alpha Gamma De:ta all Jo,eph Berl!" of :\l!S$oula '""a din-

11 Fa1 g-o. ::\ orth Dakota, ft om )fay 15 t:J ner a"ll.~t at the Ddt.a. Tau hou"e

I '~Ir. and :\I1s. C. L Bdden of Scnda:r dinner g'uests at the Delta

(ContinueU from tiai:e One) \Vinner, Censor; Al t •l. :\lt Ilhatton. scribe; :\Ielbourne Par 1

• n·a-;urer, and Leonard \YinJ!, chronic er.

Alpha Zet.a, nntio. a! ag-rkulture honorary fraternity \ s founde I on Nov. -t, 18~1/, at. the l 1lh•;:e or A,!!ri ­rulture of Ohio St.ate Cnhersity for the purpos. of inrulcn1 .ng a spirit of fellowship among stuck· its co1bctrated to the cause of at?:"ricu irt:. There are at pre.!>ent as chapter . •he most re­cently establi~hed bcin., at l,;tah State Logan, Utah. Th~ :;\Iontana chaptt· arose from :1

local fraternity, Zeta ·. which was organized for the exp ~s purpose of petitioning Alpha Z il, an1L was granted a charter in ]It:!:?.

The actiYe members or the local chapter are: Herb Z\\;-;Jer. Leonard ""ing. :\l.lbourne Parker, Kenneth Copley. Art De\ 'rie> Ralph Cline, Scott Ho~kinson , Bill . "els.on. Paul ~\Tinner. Alton ~1c IF atton. Claude "~indccker, Horace BoLter, Clyde Howard, an! Earl Bjor~

)fern be rs of Alpha Ze+ a in the fac­ulty are Professors !\ el~on, Haning-­ton .)lcKec. Post. Nor on. \"aughan, Vink~. v.·il~on , Tootell, Tavlor. Dean Linfield, and Prc~iden Atkinson.

Young Sisters ~It • t t ll l 'l l l• l •1 t •· t I ·t ·t · I ' I I •I • l " I t · I I · I I I I I I I I I I I I I 1 11 I Ill I I I I I I I I I I I I I I ~

i ~

H B McCAY Get Hardware Warning'i ~ Dinnerwa re. Glassware, Oriental Gift Goods

"Since I haven't a kid sister, I'm moved to burst into print with a chosen few of the thingli I'd tell ht·r,"

i t I I I Sl• I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 11 I ! t · lllti t 111 t i I I t tt~

writes Katha1inc Brush in Colle,..:-e Humor about whnt " I'd Tell :\!;. Younger Sister." '

' 'The promise is , of course, that I'd want hl·l' to be popular and to IJl! charm ing. And I should want lwr to be 'cagey.' X ow therc 1 '5 a \\'nrd I think if I had this little sbtcr •\·ho1n I haven't.-- let's call her Pat. for hrc ,;ty's sake-, I should make t.aµ.·t·v­n~ss the subject of Lessons One, r,\:,,, Five and Seven. The point is tliat it's the thing abo\·c all other *"liint!. that extreme youth is likl'ly to 1:1.ck. If Pat at the age of, say, se\·ent( , had e\·en a g-limmering of it, .-..he':! be so far ahead of her fic•ld th:it it wouldn't be even funny. It would be

PICTURES ON A CLOUDY DAY SURE!

Wilh a Voigslander F--1-5 Camera Fastes t Camera Lens l\lade

LINFIELD'S grand, though-for Pat.

'"Wherefore J >hould tell her that ~S~SSS~l,USl'3<SS~S'."'"""'""°"""'"""

IF YOU W A.i"IT QUALITY BUY FROM

THE

WEST SIDE GROCERY

drinking isn't ca~~~· and tnat nec·king­isn't very cagey either. I ~hould nnt join the croaking thorus that call~ the.se th_ings immoral.. bL•cause I don't I believe Ili I should ~11npl\' submit to Pat that they arnn't devewr. I should give reasons. I should present proof. She should watch nn<l observe. If she has any sern~e at all, it ought to dawn on her presently that attractive Staple and Fancy Groceries women, drunk, an: not rare, but that . . there i:s no ~uch thing as an ·attrac- Prices Right tivc drunken' woman. ~he should be I Phone 266 410 W. Curtiss told th:;it the most soph1st1cated ~ _ .. women m the world -t_he heautifol, "'"-~~"~:l'SSSS""'SS""'~"~ naughty ones with H1~pano-Smzas ~nd diamond brac.:elets and boudoirs I like :\Iadame du Barry- -seldom drink much. They ha\·e too mul"h respect for the beauty and feminity and allure that is their stock in trade to dis­:::;ipate it in floods of cocktails.

.. Don't be too expensive to entC'rtain Orchids and taviar and thcatl r ticket:-. and fi\'e c:ollar couv rts are difficult on the average young man's allow­ance. Have a heart. or you'll be so1TV For if the honor of your presen:t: costs 0' er muth 1 it won't be request el as often ag you could wh.;h.

I

"Don't insinuate by means of vour e)·es and the bold. small thing-s w you ~Y that )·ou're \'ery wbe and very wicked . Any txperienc-ed behold r ,\;ll know you're not, by your im;i~tence.

"Don't hesitate to sav that vou c!on't like ba:\·ci)· jokes (e\'c>n if ;-ou do l. Smut 1s terribly hi£"h :-t hool after all. You're not a p1·udC' if \'OU

~von't listen to it you'\'e ju~t outgrOwn Jt.

"Oth~r thing~ against which I shoi.:ld caution Pat are raspberry col­ored fing-ernail polish, white salve under the fing-e1 nails , almost all beaded d_ressc~. hose with \'el r fancy heels. skirts !'O short that thcv show the ugly· incurve at the back· of th knee. and barbers who trim the nape of the neck with the clipperl" instead of the ~('is:-ors."

I

I

BOZEMAN MEAT MARKET We specialize in the best of Dressed Meats, Poultry

and Fish

We Cater to Fraternities and Sororities

Phone 167 435 E. Main Four Deliveries Daily

ERICKSON TAXI SERVICE PHONE 314-W

ST ANDS

7 s. Tracy Baxter Hotel Baltimore Hotel

1

1' :\!onday.

I Rounc up\ is1tcd their dauJ!hter, .Judttl) Tau hou!';e wer · Dean l'na B. Herrick ,

$ I Belden, at the Alpha Gamma Dclt'"l :\Irs. A ~ele :iierm,·, Prof. and )Ir ... H hou:._ dut ing- the Rotarian com ention. C. l

f Dean Lna B. Ilcrn<.:l<, :.\Ir. an. llrs. t A F Rutle::h.~e. :\Ir and ..\It:-. II . G ~\ l~ la tramma 1,ho. off the tee it's

Klemme, :Jlr and :;\h :- E O IIolmL~. • r r \

I and )fr. and :\Ir". C Kcnslund \\ere an \I I guests at a formal drnne1 Thur~dav 1 dml r \ cvemng at the Alpha Gamma Delta t

I house. ~~\ j ~Ir. anrl :\lr>. Paul Campbell of

AAMA lo ill:Sizes lto.12 I Butte visited at the Alpha Gamma Delta house last week .

S l In I Lillian Tubb arnl Harriet Tullock f spc~t t~c ,,.:C'k end at _:'IIr. Brewer'.; ~~·

LIGHT A 'D >ARK TAN, 1 cabm m \\e;t Gallatin canyon a; ian BL \CK T)ATEXT I guests of Con•tan<e Brewer.

All Htel Styles I Hami1ton H al l. Clara 'White wa~ the dinne:· guegl da

of Haniet Lt.:wis. \\"edncs<lav evenin!!.

I Fran ·es Pet r~on spent ~he wecl.;: en, ERS.- end at her home in Three Fo1ks. Dean Herrick had • · orma BC'rk a~ Orne 1 Bj ta C 0 • I her dinner guest, Friday c\·ening. R1 11 n f ,,

-----' 1 Pauline Soderholm went to LiYing- week en<l gu t 1.

NEW METHODS IN I t II I I I I I I I I I I IL II I I I I I I I I I I 11 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I

What a Play! SEE YO!_;RSEL\'ES AS OTHERS

SEE YOU IN

"The Poor Nnt'' TIL\T COLLEGE COM IC

To Be Gh·en By

TUE SENIORS OF GALLATIN

AT THE

EMERSON Friday, May 23

Admis:- ion 50c - Curtain 8 :15

Resen-ed Seat 'ale at Ha useman & McCall's on Wednesday

4"+t11111111111 1111 1111111 1 111111 11 1111111111111111111

SCIE 'T(FIC BATHING I (ContinueJ from page One)

solutely elean. And, of direct int.En st j

I to home owners. club managers and I hotel proprietors who must pay by the meter rate, the bather U:'es only onc-thir<l the volume of wah r a..; l'OTil­

parEd with the old method of bathing. The foregoing' ai·e only a .. ·ew of the

reasons why shower bath compart-ments are rapidly g-ainin~ in popular­ity with the public. An oulstandin·~ feature of the new improved type of showu· bath C'Ompartnll'nt. whh-h is made in man:-,• sizes anJ of different models to suit. the individual pocket· book, is the ease with which it can b.: in~tallcd. It is a unit in and by itge\f independent of the building structu!"e eliminating the nece ... sily of tearing

~~~~ .......... ~~~

ttt SA y GIRLS! I

The Rainbow Colors fo r Party Shoes are here. For Satin or Leather Shoes.

t: WE SPECIALIZE IN I CLEANING FELT

HATS

f Ciga rettes, . Candy and f f Gum f t -:- t : Eag~~p~ta!a!~rks : f 35 W . Main Phone 233 I ---~~ .... 41>~- - - -

. . .

r

I

1n a cigarette it's

"PROMISES FILL no sack" .•. it is not words, but taste, char makes }OU enjoy a cigarette.

But you're encitkd to ,,f/ the fragrance and flavor that fine tobaccos can giv~; don"c be

making chem, 've pu t tlste first-

u TA ST~ above evef'!j thing ..

he terfield FINE TURKISH and DOMESTIC tobaccos, not only BLENDED but CROSS-BLENDED

@ 1929. 1.J(";CfTT & Mnu: TOBACCO Co.

Page 4: lAY 20 1930 I S. M. C. RE-VOTE TODAY NDUSTRIAL …arc.lib.montana.edu/msu-exponent/objects/exp-021-32-001-004.pdfi s. m. c. re-vote today ndustrial inspection musical program mt b~lo~

PAGE FOUR THE " .EEKLY E XPONENT, TUESDAY, i\IAY :20. 1930

MONTANA STATE TRACK Cold Weather f O~KOT~ TO SEE C LORADO

Stops Games SQUAD GO TO 0 Si~~ ,~~it~i;,.'~:\!~i~l~71tLead l NIGHT fOOTB~l l

Leave Tomorrow, EJe,·en Team l\Ien. Coaches and Managers Will l\lake Trip. Twelve Schools Will Be Represent ed. l t ab l ' Favored to Win

Baseball wa::; hl.'ld in l'heck last ~ight football at °XOl'lh Dakota week due to the cold weather. Jlost ::=;talc <:ollcge draw~ one step neare"' of thl.• p:nmes "l'l't' ~1~w" nnd many Jcalit.y next we(k wilh the announce· lars:re scores were run up in :.-<.ome of nicnt bv Director of A.thlctks C. C. the contest$. The kad is still ht'.'ld "Casey=: Finnegan that representalin•«:

Tomorrow at 12 :40 P . ::\I. the Bobcat track squad Jea \·es for Boulder, Colo. to comp(>te in the Rocky Mountain Conference Field and Track i\leet. Besides the ele,·en Bobcat. competitors Ct111c.hes Adams and Dyche, Trainer Dolan and J lanag-er llia..xey are mak­ing the trip. The men representing ~ontann State are : Renn , (Capt.) r li ne, Srnith 1 ll olst, Devricse, Seming ­sen1 F . ' Va1·d, Wellington, Griffi n, Brunner, and Coey.

The meet this )·ear is at the home by the- Sigma Chis and the ~ii:r AlpL~ of se' eral comnwrt•ial ~oncm·ns will of the State University o( Colorado. neither has lost a g-ame up to dat~. demonstrate U1eil' wares 011 the night A total of J2 team8 will be represent- O\'>inrr to the fact that their ga.1tc of :\lay :?/ at D~ll·otah fi~l<l. Athletic

had to be postponed last night. bo~1rd offitia!s :it the Di~on s<:hool ed, eight from the Eastern Di'\ision Owing to the inclement wealh1..'r th,.. have decided on this method in an d~ and four from t.he Utah-i\lontann sec- following games were postpoHcd; fort to obtain the \<'IT best fiood lig-ht

FOOTBALL MEN NAMED FOR FALL PRACTICE

tion. Utah Unin~rsit)·, from all indica­tions should cop first honors quite ha11dilY. Last \\'eek in the Utah State meet ihey took first h.r a large mm:­gin. Such stars as Ca11tain Squires in. the half and mile. Long in the sprints, and Grant hurdler and high jumpe1· are internationally known athletes represent inp; the Utes. Colo­rado l". also has a Yery strong, well bafanced squad. B. Y. U. will un­doubtedly he in the running.

Last year the Bobcats won eleYen Are R eques ted to Turn In Neces· points and this year Coach Adams is

sary Data. Training Begins out to cop at least twice that number. September 15 In fact, he snys ~L S. C. has a good

__ chance for second place. •·The following then", according to I The tearn arriYes in Boulder FTiday

Coach Dyche, "showed ma terial of morning at 7:30. T he trials will be varsity calibre and are expeckd to re-11·uu Friday and the finals will be de­turn for training which begins on cided Saturday. Anr man winning a September 15.' ' The men a.re r~quested point in the Conference .Meet auto­t o turn in the data asked for by the matically earns a letter. However, notice on the gymnasium bulletin I Sm ith is the only man on the Bobcat board so t.hat necessary equipment squad who has not won his letter. may be ordered.

Amigo vs. SAE; lndepend~nts Y::;. equipment for the inauguration of the Kaµpa Sigs; BE YS. OB and SAE YS. ttight football sd1cdule this fall. The Sig- Chi. innonition togeihf'r with the fines'.:

Th" results of last weeks gm11cs borne scheJule in lhc hi:">lm ~' of the m·e: scho1.1\ is cx1>e it'd to a: tract rc .. i)rd

Tuesd~ly, ?day i:~-DT 1-0B 7: crowds to the F~n-l!·o field. Pi KA ;3-BE 17. ThP n.ig-ht schedule will be opened b~

Thursday, ;\lay l;) BE .5: AGR :':!; the most colorful college team in PI KA :J-OB 19. ea~tcrn cirrlPs, Pmis and Elkins of

Frida~·. :\lay 16-SAE 31-KS 1; I \\~e,t Yirginia. This c~nhst on Sep~ Ind. 2-SX 17. tcmber 27 wit al!.':o be Xorth Daknl-a's

Sa.turtluy. :\lay 17-DT 0-BE 9. fir:::t big intersediun:il football bat.tie. 1Ionday1 i\fay 19-Amigo 9-lnd. &:. \Yith en'>ry indicati1.1n that Nort'1

Tea ms Percentages D-aknla State and :::\orth Dakota r Team

Sig-nm Chi _ S . A. E. ···-Beta Epsilon Amigo .. Omega Beta . Delta Tau Kappa Sig1ua Pi K. A. A .. G. R. Ind

·w L Pct. will be two of the stronC"e~t teams in .5 O 1000 !the Xorth Central <'Onference race this A O 1000 \ear, the homecominj? struggle be-6 1 .8:11 tween thsese lra,iitionril rfrals is ex-:3 .liiO rccted lo ~et a new mark in attend-5 .715 ance totals. This wil1 be the only day-

.. ... 1 .200 light game on th1.' Bi~on :::.thC'dule. 1 .:WO I Awarding- of the lig-hting- contra.t

... 1 .166 wm he made as sonn ns po~sible nfter 1 .166 the tests 11ext \Vl?C'k. Mr. Finnegan de-

...... 1 .143 clnrcd, in or<le~· that installation may

The followin~ are e).,-perieneed letter men: Winner, O'Leary, Greer. A.1;0, J. Leland, Long, K . Dyer. Skinner. Bauer, \\'agner, 'Worthington. Bruner, Sadler. DeFrate and :\lcFarland.

I be compleLd and sen"ral testo;: mn.h"' in earl)- sea~on l'J'::i..·tiee ~ame~ under

Ml.ssoula ui·g'h Sei·zes the electric beam< \thletic officiab and a board of <'Xperl~ will Yiew the demonstration.

Annual Track Meet1 Prospect material: L. Johnson, Whelan. Bartlett, Godar. Griffin Pepper. E. Johnson, Freese, 1\"m. Harry E llis will be a t the $!Y m-

NOTICE!

Anderson, R i ,. c rs:, Flynn, Noble, nasium Fridav afternoon t o ron-il mundsen, Harrit)·, Chesarek. N'elson duct t r ia ls fo.r ~igma Del ta P si. G. Rensen, o. Hansen, Harrer, Bakke .l\ine R ecords Shattered. SeYen Schools Take Majority of Points. the national honorarv athletic Drazich. Hendrickson, Hughes, Moore. Cus t er S econd While Butte and " .hit efish Tied for Third fraternity. for those ;,-ishing to :lfcLean, Schuler, Slatter)·, Fulmo1·e, and F ourth Places, 18 Points Each. F h"e l\len P1·ove S ensa tions f try out fo r any of the ,,·ents Ball, ~lills, Gillette . Shea, Harding Crosswuitht\ i\lencec, Larson. ?IJiatilich. ond . Butte; thir.J, Anaconda; fourth. Keenan , Nagel, Gannaway, Bowman, Missoula county high school used an )Tears history of the event. Nine rec- 1\I~ssoula; .. fifth, Bozeman. Tim:: 1

Schlicker, O'Brien, Popharn, F. Dyer. overpowering strength in the field ords weTe shattere·d and one equnlle.1 nmlu~'. ~ 1 sec~oni,~. ~ , .. CheeYer. EreeJen, Yeager, Burns, eYents for Yictor Sa tu day in the fast- llost of the points went to ~c\·cn ~O~) al d da:sh \\.on by }kn tm of Jacobs ... n and Pe:erson. est t1·a ·k and field m .... et in the 27 schools. .Missoula garn ~ed a2 l-~~ B~mVlle; second .. 0 f.~a~ley of Butte: ""'============================= 1 k .( -1 t.a 1 . 1 . , third. Jones Oi B1lhng,; fourth, J

IL

1a:; s . SE VEN T Y -FIFTH 4NN IVERS ARY. 1930

The oven ... the cook

and the cake «Only fine ovens produ ce ~akes of fine tex­

ture." Th is rule applies as surely to the most

complicated ((cake-baking" process in modern

industry ... making steel castings fo r high

pressures ... as it does to the sim plest domestic

cookery. In basic-lined Heroult electric fur­

naces that apply the heat directly an d cleanly to the metal and perm it exact con trol of tem­

peratures at every stage, the steel for Crane cast >tee! valves and fitti ngs is prepared . Every casting is an nealed under temperatures held at

i 6oo° F. for hours, then slowly shaded olf

to cooling. In teresting as is th e Vulcan-like

fou ndry equipment in Crane foundries , com­plete as are the manufacturing re ou rces tha t

gi\·e exact ness and uniformity in production ,

the vi ral secret back of quality in Crane electric

~reel materials 1s not the " ovenH but the: skill uf the <lcooks11

•• • the chemists, the superintend­

ents, the w orkmen w ho watch and control

each step and process. Through 7 5 years, this skill has been developed and refined. Back of

it is an exha ustive scientific library of labora­

tory studies and tesr charts. ?l l ucb of the data

that has enabled rane Co. to prod uce depend­able \·alvcs fo r the enormou p res~urcs anJ

temperacures now used in industry is culJcCLcd

in a book , u Pioncering in Science.)) Ir IS a \'alu­

able reference book fo r students L et us send you J copy.

CRANE PlPlNG MATERIALS TO CONVEY' AND CONTROL STEAM,

LIQUIDS OIL. GAS. CHEMICALS

CRAN E CO .• GE NERAL OFFICES: 836 S. MICHIGAN AVE NUE. CHIC AGO

N EW YOR K OFFICES: 23 W EST 4 4TH STREET

Bran..J..i oJr.J ~ltJ OjfittJ i.'1 Ont H:.nJr1J .u1J .Ymrr;-J:.ur Cilm

nar ·.rs or 1 s 5 tc l' 1'1111P1?11 :i 11 P· Hart.sell of Ana1 on<la · fifth Lvba .. ~er Custer countv placed second wtth 2-1. . . , _ I'} ' • I Butte and \\~hitefie~h tit:d for third of ~te\·~11sv1le. Trn1~, a3_.- seconds. a j f ti ·u lo h B If High Jtm1p--Dan>1e of Bea,·. rhead .n ou_r · 1 wi 1 eal." · e ry ."-ou county Brown of Butte 'Yilder of

fifth mtl1 13. Anaconda and Dillon \I 1ia:' 1 ff·l . f :i.i-·· I ("" tied for sixth and seYcnth with 12 TI 8 . ht a~ f ~s ~r~" ho · l~::,.OU a. L.

each. ~fo-):a~·d ec~a~h~~~o~s . by Peden o~ E,·en oyershadowinc; the strug:J!le

between )lissoula and :\liles City Custer. s.:concl, ::\filler of Sten~·m:yi!le: w:re the dazzling perform•\nccs of third, Robertson of Malta and Balko fi\e individuals. The~e were Cave of of to.:kett-Sand Coulee . ti ; fifth. ~\liles City, Dansie of Dillon, Peden of Agather of Flathead county. Time .i\Iiles City, :\laple of Belfry and. 22.6 seconds. New st.ate record. Custer of :Missoula. Half mile nm-\\'on by \Yalker llf

Caven of CusteT knocked down two }[alta, second, l\liksch of Simms; rocords when he rnn the 220_yard rla:i;h third, Cornelius of Ronan; fourth. ill 22.u and the low hurdl; event in Honaker of B~lt Valley ; fifth . liar· ~6.2 seconds. The former time for the rison of Harlowton. Time 2 minutes

1

220 dash was :22.8 while that for the 6·8 seconds. low hu1'dles was 26.5. )!aple of Bdfry 220-yard h"rdles-\\'on by Cnv:n of set a new xecord for the high hu,·dles Custer county, second . Brown of when h£" choppeJ -lO of a ~ec:ond Butte; third. :\linckler of 'Yhitefish; from the r.cord estabilshed in l9l 1. fourth, King- of Flathead county i the time for this e,·ent wns Hi.~. fifth, :c\faple of Belfrr. Time 26 sec. 1

Dansie of Dillon set the new mark Javelin throw-'\Yon by Fallman o" for the broadjump at 2l feet, ti inches. -'lissoula; second , 1ludro of l':irhon Walter Custer or i\.lis~oula t\1pped the eounly; thi!d. I.. 1\ lcKeen of ""hile­bamboo Lo plale the !)Ole vault r {'Ord fish; fourth, Fladager of Billings; at 12 feet lO in. hes. fifth, Hull of Con·allis. Distam·e 1111

Tea m Placin gs f~et, 5 inches.

The teams placed as follows: Missoula, ;J3 1-;J; custei· tou11ty, 24; AG CONTESTS ARE SUCCESS

Butte, 18; Whitefish, 18; Belfry, 13; Anaconda. 12; Beaverhead ccunty, 12; (Continued from page One) l\falta, 101 2 ; l'latht.·ad coUI.ly, Si all pToducl.s, John Uowc wa~ fil'st. Ste,·ensYil1~, S; Carbon county. 7; llcm-y Robin:'on w:is second, F1·il'k Bear Creek, G; Fergus county, 6; Holmen was thir.l, and ltlo)f.nsters was

1 Bainsville. 5; Billings, 5; Simms, 4: fourth . I Stockett-Sand Coulee, :11~: Park Saturday mo111ing the fittimr t•on­rounty, 3; Plains, ;~; Ronan. 3; Belt 1 test was held. The men taking part in YaUey, 2; Ennis, 2; Con·alli~, 1: Har- this contest drew for their animals lo\\'ton, l; Teton county, ] ; "\\'hitthall. and worke<l on t hem al l WOt'k. i>lcm-1; Camas Prairie. 1-:.l; Gallatin. 1-3. bers of the animal husbandry deparl-

Inrlhiduals with fin! points .or more ment are very much pleased with the weTe : results of this contest, for th ]Klrtici-

CaYen of C'ust:.cr and Dansie Clf pants put in a lot of work on their Beaverhead. 12 each; Ped<!n of Custer animals and made a creditable- show­and Roe of Ana.<:ond;:1, 10; .:i.lindd(>r of ing. Haryey Griifin act.eel as jud!!e Whjtefish, 8; I. JfucKten of \Vl1ite-

1 of ih.e fitlctl animals, and picked tho

fish, :Matt1·oss of Belfry. i\ludro of grnnd champion and the rese-rYC Carbon, 7; Cu st c r of Missoula. champion. as well ns th('> winners in Disbrow of :\li!'<soula, Map!~ of Belfry, each indi\ridual class. Ftanci::; N. Yins Kastelitz of llcm· Creek, 6 : Robertson was awanfod t he grand champion of Malta, 5 1 !!; Bell of :iitissoula , Fall- ribbon. Stanley rn ith came next with man of Missoula, Martin of Dainvillc, the rese1·ve chami ponship 1·ibbon. and \\-alker of J\.lalta, 5. I n the separate ch1$scs lhe results

100-yard dash-\\"on by Peden of :'t.[iles City; second. ca,·~n of flliks ~~~ City; third, Sharpe of Livin).!'ston; fourth, Hayden of Ennis; fifth, Brown of \.Vhitehall. Tim. 10.2 seconds.

120-yAi·d hurdles-\Von by :\laplc of Belfry; second . Dansie of Deaverhcad; third, Cav~n of C'u:::.t.er; fourth, Lug-g-ins of Buttei fifth, King- of Flu.thead. Time 16.2 sernnds.

l\iilt> J'un .\Von by Roe of Anaconda s:i.:cond, I. McKcrn of \Vhit<'fish; third, ,\fatlross of Belfry; l'ourlh, Twedo of f.Iissoula; fifth, Rose of Kalispdl. Time 4:45.4.

Broad jump· V\1on by Dnnsic of Beaverhead county; set·ond, Saylor of .:\fissoula; third, Di~brow of ?\fis.soula; fourth, Kastelitz of Bear Cre<•k; fifth, Custer of 1\.1h;:souln. Di::;tam:e, 21 fe. t, 9 inches. :Kew sta.t.e record.

R el a Y-"~011 hy cu~ter t'OUnty {Peden1 Dilts, l\fcKcnzie, CaYen); sec-

THE ARCADE

Ma lted Milks

Good Eats

MEET Y OUR F RIENDS HERE

----weie as follo·ws: beef cattle-ll) c. I (3) s. Smith \'\i.nd ... ckei·; {~) B. Ashuaft; (~~) Kile- t3) C. Skinner. man. Dai1y cattle--( t) F. :\'edns; (2) Dn.iry Cattle---Freshmcn: f"'"N"v'~"iiE:Ni A. ..... ~

I I C. _Bauer;· (3) Franklin. Horses-(!) D) K. Eliason Q. Kenck: (2) B. Slanr:-er; (31 Ed. (2) P. Etcht'pare Pe.terson. llogs-11) S. mith: (2) R. (3) S. Feriroson. ~ Tooth Paste ! Overstred: (:3) B. l\kPher$On. Rib- Sheep-Freshmen: bons were awa.rded for eu~·h of the (1) . Fer~son

I ~

\d1rne1·.::;. (2) K. Bakke i For smooth, white t eeth , i The li\"('f:itoC'k judR"in~ contest wu:':t (3) K. Eliason. I ~,~.:~t~1~1;~'t"~~ and a clean, ! b~r far the lnrp:c:::.t nnJ most fie-rcely Hogs-Freshmen:

contested. Six"tv odd men took p:n1 (1) K . Bakke ani the QYent. lasted all afternoon. (~) S. Smith i FlaYor ed with clean, cool ! Eight classe:. of livestock were judg-ed: C~n P. Etchcpar('. i mint. ! one of dairy c.aille, one of hor:;0~. twn

e ; of sheep, t,,.o o( hogs and two of beef cattle. Orn! reasons were given ~o-~ I LARGE TUBE I on one clns.s each of cJniry cattle, horses, hogs, sheep and be.et cattle. by t.hc men getting QV('r :~00 out of a possible 750 points. iiembers of the animal husbandry department ac:t..d a.$ officials..

Tho resl1lt.s of the contest are as follows: All clas.ses:

(ll Henry Robins.on (2) Dusenberry (3) Corkins

For Your Summ er S moke

Kaywoodie Drinkless

Pipes

$3.50 to $5.00

--:--

KLEINSCHMIDT CO.

: 50c ~ i !

; -.- i ' . i Roecher Drug Co. !

(4) R. On•rstret, S. Smith, Etc he pare.

(fi) '''inde(;ker

i "For the Idle Hour" P.~

t Phone 327 ~ • _ PrescriptiQnS a Specially i :; I Ul l! I "1 11 1 l r1 1 r 1 n 1 1 11 1 111 1u 1 11 11 11I l l Ul 11 111 llU I Jl l l~

( 6) Ed. Peterson. (7) i\Iyrick an;! D. Nickelson.

All Classes-Freshmen: (ll Sherman Smith (2) Paul Etchcpare (:3) St.anley and Ferguson (4) Kenneth Eliason (5) Chades. Skinner ( 6) Ke11ncth Bakke.

Beef-Upperclassmen: (1) JI. Robinso11 (2) 11·m. Corkins (3) R. O\·erstreet.

Horses: (1) R. Du ~enbe1-r)' (2) l'\ick<lson ( :l) R. Overstr..,t.

Dairr Cattle: (l) C. Rader ( 2) Ed. Peterson, R. Overst•·eet .

sh..,p: (1) (2) (3)

H. Robinson Erkkila C. \\"indecke.r.

Hoi:rs· - (.1) H. Dus.nberry

(2) C. Windeckcr (3) G. Ree>.

Beef- Fr.shmcn: (1 l P. Etchepare (~) S. ~mith (3) K. Bakke.

Ilor~es-Freshmtn: (1) P. Etchepare

"not a coug h

in a carload"

OL

HOWARD'S

T r y on our S PORT OXFORDS

nirty Brown and \\.hite, and Black and White Spor t Oxfords for Knicker wear

ohe HUB Ed and Lou Howard

Walk-Over S hoes Stetson Hats ·obby Caps

ONLY AT THE "M'' YOU CAN GET A NICE l\IALTED MILK AND ALSO A

GOOD SANDWICH ALL FOR

25c Come i"n fellows and try one

The''~ ''

G • Ill a stun11ing

cigarettes

new velour box ! If you could go lo Paris , . . to cleve r French tabac

sh op s .• . yon might find a cigar ette _box as . mart as

this. Or ma) h e in Berlin , , . or Yienua. But now

O L D G 0 LD h as caught the coutineutalflair for pack­

aging ... dressed its familia1· "fi.ft.ies " package in

this golden velour paper ... and delfrered it. for you,

to) our n earest dealer's. It's a stunning box to k eep

on your study table ... to pass to your friends ...

or to take on trips. And it costs no more than

the regular " fiflies" tin. Now on sale every" here.

If dealer c~tnno t 1:>uppl r, :)end 35~ to Old Guld, 119 W. -!0th L, :New York