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j 'HE Administrative Committee of fhe Faculb? and fne Executive
Board of fne Student Commission, in joint session,
Agree —
(1) 'That fnev condemn fne vulgarity) and fne misrepresentation of
life and spirit of fne College, contained in parts of fnis gear's Nugget; and
(2) <Tnat no more copies of fne book are to be distributed unless
fkey contain fne above official statement.
^
* €x libris *
(i)
COMPILED, 1921
(By
EINO LEINO, Editor
GEORGE H. BRUCE, Manager
Out West 'Printing & Stationery Co.
Colorado Springs
Pikes Peak Tlugget
VOLUME XXII
MAY - 1921
Published bij the Class of 1922
ii m
Wo
|3rofes#or Jf ranfe Jllorris; ®htp
A
▼
, tfje Class of 1922, Bebicate tfjis Volume of tfje
Ptfecs igeafe J^ugget in Appreciation of His
Hopal H>eruice to Colorabo College anb
JMS <§oob Jfellotosfnp tottf)
its g>tubents.
11 11
ii m
3n iUcmortam
A
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T
For more than forty years a helpful and generous
and sympathetic friend of the college, with visions
for its future, giving freely of his sagacious
advice and generously of his means; ever ready
to aid the student and faculty member.
11'
m
3fn iWemorp of ^rof es&or 12ItUiam |§>triebj>
W\)o J&itb (October Ctgfjteentf), (Brit QTijouganb
Mint J^tmbreb anb ^Etoentp
A
▼
Forty-two years in the service of Colorado College ;
an accurate and thorough scholar of wide interests;
a sympathetic and kindly teacher, skillful and suc-
cessful, beloved by forty generations of students;
a good Christian and church man; modest, preferring
to be helpful rather than conspicuous; a royal, faith-
ful and loving friend; an intelligent, high-minded and
devoted citizen; consecrated to the building of colo-
RADO College; an asset for all time of the intellec-
tual, MORAL AND SPIRITUAL INTERESTS OF THE COLLEGE.
Hi
m
Clyde Augustus Duniway, Ph. D., LL. D.
President of Colorado College
Trustees
C. A. Duniway, Ex-officio President of the Board 24 College Place
Term expires 1921
Benjamin Griffith 408 First National Bank Building, Denver
Hugh McLean Colorado National Bank, Denver
Term expires 1922
Irving Howbert 17 N. Weber Street
George Foster Peabody Saratoga Springs, New York
E. P. Shove 1329 Wood Ave.
Harold T. Roberts First National Bank Building, Denver
Term expires 1923
Mahlon D. Thatcher First National Bank, Pueblo
William M. Vance 1332 Wood Ave.
SPERRY S. Packard 2909 High Street, Pueblo
Term expires 1924
John Campbell 824 Equitable Building, Denver
*Frank Trumbull 61 Broadway, New York
Leo W. Bortree Burns Building-
re/- m expires 1925
Oliver H. Shoup Exchange National Bank Building
William Lennox 1001 N. Nevada Ave.
Term expires 1926
Willis R. Armstrong 1420 Culebra Ave.
George A. Fowler 1225 Wood Ave.
Phillip B. Stewart 1228 Wood Ave.
* Deceased July 12, 1920.
STANDING COMMITTEES OF THE TRUSTEES
EXECUTIVE
P. B. Stewart, Chairman; Oliver H. Shoup, Irving Howbert, George
Foster Peabody, William Lennox, Sperry S. Packard.
FINANCE
E. P- Shove, Chairman; William Lennox, Vice-Chairman; George A.
Fowler, Irving Howbert, Hugh McLean, Phillip B. Stewart,
Mahlon D. Thatcher, William M. Vance.
FORESTRY SCHOOL
William Lennox, Chair man; Benjamin Griffith, George A. Fowler,
Phillip B. Stewart.
GROUNDS AND BUILDINGS
Phillip B. Stewart, Chairman; Willis R. Armstrong, Hugh McLean,
William M. Vance, Harold D. Roberts.
INSTRUCTION
John Campbell, Chairman; Willis R. Armstrong, Irving Howbert,
Benjamin Griffith, Leo W. Bortree.
AUDITING
Irving Howbert, Chairman ; William Lennox, Mahlon D. Thatcher.
INVESTMENTS
Irving Howbert, Chairman; William Lennox, Vice-Chair man; E. P. Shove,
W. M. Vance.
The President of the Board is ex-offieio member of all committees.
OFFICERS OF ADMINISTRATION
CLYDE AUGUSTUS DUNIWAY, President
JAMES G. McMURTRY, Dean of the College
KROGER HENWOOD MOTTEN, Secretary of the College
WILLIAM WALLACE POSTLETHWAITE, Treasurer
LUCY CORLISS PHINNEY, Dean of Women
MRS. JOSEPHINE RAMBO MORROW, Registrar,
and Secretary of the Faculty
ALFRED ATWATER BLACKMAN, Medical Advisor
JOHN LEWIS BENNETT, Attorney for the College
*Absent on leave, 1920-1921
President' s Office:
Secretary: Lillian G. Wall
Field Secretary: William D. Copeland
Treasurer' s Office:
Superintendent and Chief Engineer: Arthur Baylis
Superintendent's Assistants: Edward Etchison, L- S. Wilson, J. P.
Smith, Charles Smith
Janitors: Leon Lester, Robert A. Howes, Ernest Rice, A. L. Bunce
Manager of Cossitt Dining Room: Louisa S. Blauvelt
Assistant Manager: Melva M. Lattimore
Cashier: T. C. Brown
Weather Observer: R. W. Leisy
Registrar's Office:
Stenographer: AlliE Ellithorpe
Dean of Women's Office:
Secretary: Arete Covey
House Manager: Louisa S. Blauvelt
Assistant Manager: Melva M. Lattimore
Nurse: Elizabeth M. Butler
CLASS OFFICERS
Senior Mr. Duniway
Junior Mr. C. C. Mierow
Sophomore Mr. Palm
Freshmen Mr. Okey
Assistant Mr. Copeland
Special Mr. McMurtry
COSSITT STADIUM
Administration Building
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PRESIDENT'S RESIDENCE
24 College Place
Montgomery Hall
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Hagerman Hall
Ticknor Hall
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Chapel
Palmer Hall
Interior Coburn Library
North Cheyenne Canon
Pikes Peak from Monument Lake
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Faculty
CLYDE AUGUSTUS DUNIWAY, Ph. D., LL. D 24 College Place
President
A. B. (Cornell) '92; A. M. (Harvard) '94; Ph. D. (ibid.) '97; LL. D. (University
of Colorado) '14; LL. D. (University of Denver) '14; Colorado College '17
WILLIAM FREDERICK SLOCUM, D. D., LL.D New York City
President and Head Professor of Philosophy, Emeritus
A. B. (Amherst) '74; B. D. (Andover) '78; LL. D. (Amherst) '93; LL. D.
(Nebraska) '94; D. D. (Beloit) '01; LL. D. (Illinois College) '04; LL. D.
(Harvard) '12; LL. D. (Allegheny and University of Colorado) '15;
LL. D. (Colorado College) '17; Colorado College, '88
W. LEWIS ABBOTT, Ph. D 1324 North Nevada Ave.
Professor of Business Administration and Banking
A. B. (University of Pennsylvania) '11; A. M. (ibid.) '13; LL. B. (ibid.) '13;
Ph. D. (ibid.) '20; Colorado College, '20
GUY HARRY ALBRIGHT, A. M 1201 N. Tejon St.
Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy
Ph. B. (Michigan) '99; A. B. (Harvard) '00; A.M. (ibid.) '13; Colorado College, '07
ARTHUR ERNEST DAVIES, Ph. D 1512 North Tejon St.
Professor of Philosophy and Education
B. D. (Yale Divinity School) '91; Ph. D. (Yale) '98; Colorado College, '19
A. P. R. DRUCKER, M. A 124 East Espanola St.
Professor of Business Administration
B. A. (Columbia) '01; M. A. (Chicago) '10; Colorado College, '18
RALPH JOHN GILMORE, Ph. D 20 E. Buena Ventura St.
Professor of Biology
A. B. (Lehigh University) '07; A. M. (ibid.) '10; Ph. D. (Cornell) '14; Colo-
rado College, '19
AUBREY W. GOODENOUGH, Ph. D 816 North Corona
Professor of English
A. B. (Oberlin) '06; A. M. (Yale) '08; Ph. D. (Iowa) '20; Colorado College, '20
ARCHER BUTLER HULBERT, A. M 9 East Cache la Poudre
Professor of History
A. B. (Marietta) '95; A. M. (ibid.) '04; Colorado College, '20
FRANK HERBERT LOUD, Ph. D 1203 N. Tejon St.
Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy, Emeritus
A. B. (Amherst) '73; A. M. (Harvard) '99; Ph. D. (Harverford) '00; Colorado
College, '77
JAMES G. McMURTRY, Ph. D 1335 N. Nevada Ave.
Dean of the College and Professor of Biblical Literature
A. B. (Wabash) '93; A. M. (ibid.) '95; Ph. D. (ibid.) '98; Colorado College, '18
CHARLES CHRISTOPHER MIEROW, Ph. D 216 E. Espanola St.
Professor of Classical Language and Literature
A. B. (Princeton) '05; A. M. (ibid.) '06; Ph. D. (ibid.) '08; Colorado College, '16
*ROGER HENWOOD MOTTEN, A. M 7 Pelham Place
Professor of English and Secretary of the College
A. B. (Allegheny) '01; A. M. (ibid.) '15; Colorado College, '09
FRANK MORRIS OKEY, B. C. E 1315 North Weber St.
Professor of Civil Engineering
B. C. E. (Iowa State College) '04; Colorado College, '14
MANLY DAYTON ORMES, A.B., B. D 1623 N. Tejon St.
Librarian
A. B. (Yale) '85; B. D. (ibid.) '89; Colorado College, '04
FRANK C. PALM, Ph. D Plaza Hotel
Professor of History
A. B. (Oberlin) '14; A. M. (Illinois) '15; Ph. D. (ibid.) '18; Colorado College, '18
GEORGE HOWARD PARKER, S. D.
Harvard Exchange Professor for 1921
Professor of Zoology
GEORGE KYNETT PATTEE, A. M 805 N. Weber St.
Professor of English
A. B. (Dartmouth) '02; A. M. (ibid.) '03; Colorado College, '17
LUCY CORLISS PHINNEY, A. B Bemis Hall
Dean of Women and Instructor in Sociology
A. B. (Radeliffe) '13; Colorado College, '19
CHARLES HERSCHEL SISAM, Ph. D 30 East Columbia
Professor of Mathematics
A. B. (Michigan) '02; A. M. (Cornell) '03; Ph.D. (ibid.) '06; Colorado College, '18
MARK SKIDMORE, M. A 1629 North Tejon
Professor of Romance Languages
A. B. (University of Missouri) '05; B. S. (ibid.) '06; A. M. (University of
Illinois) '09; Colorado College, '20
f WILLIAM STRIEB Y, A. M., E. M., Sc. D 805 N. Cascade Ave.
Head Professor of Chemistry and Metallurgy
A. B. (New York) '75; E. M. (Columbia School of Mines) '78; A. M. (ibid.) '79;
Sc. D. (Colorado College) '13; Colorado College, '80
ROLAND RAY TILESTON, A. M 319 E. Columbia St.
Professor of Physics
A. B. (Dartmouth) '07; A. M. (ibid.) '11; Colorado College, '16
*Absent on leave, 1920-1921.
t Deceased October 18. 1920.
ALBERT HARTMAN DAEHLER, A. B 1527 North Rover
Associate Professor of English
A. B. (University of Illinois) '08; Colorado College, '20
FRANK WILLIAM DOUGLAS, Ph. D 1224 N. Weber St.
Associate Professor of Chemistry
A. B. (Albion) '05; A. M. (Michigan) '08; Ph. D. (Cornell) '19; Colorado
College, '19
WILLIAM V. LOVITT, Ph. D 1415 North El Paso St.
Associate Professor of Mathematics
A. B. (Nebraska) '03; Ph. M. (Chicago) '07; Ph. D. (ibid.) '14; Colorado
College, '18
EDITH C. BRAMHALL, Ph. D Ticknor Hall
Assistant Professor of History and Political Science
A. B. (Indiana University) '95; A. M. (University of Pennsylvania) '96; Ph.D.
(ibid.) '98; Colorado College, '20.
ELEANOR SOUTHGATE DAVIS McGregor Hall
Director of Physical Education for Women
Graduate (Boston Normal School of Gymnastics) '07; Colorado College, '14
JESSIE HUTSINPILLAR, A. M Ticknor Hall
Assistant Professor of English
A. B. (Wellesley) '02; A. M. (Ohio State University) '09; Colorado College, '19
M. A. JENCKS, A. B 617 Paseo Street
Assistant Professor of Business Administration and Banking
A. B. (University of Wisconsin) '10; Colorado College, '20
I. ALLEN KEYTE, B. S. in Ed 1918 Woodburn Street
Assistant Professor of Geology
B. Ph. (Missouri State Normal) '03; M. Pd. (ibid.) '07; B. S. in Ed. (Missouri
State University) '09; Colorado College, '19
JOSEPHINE RAMBO MORROW (Mrs.), A. B 2116 N. Nevada Ave.
Registrar
A. B. (University of Kansas) '06; Colorado College, TO
HELEN ELIZABETH MURPHY, Ph. D 1018 North Weber Street
Assistant Professor of Biology
A. B. (Cornell) '17; Ph. D. (ibid.) '20; Colorado College, '20
VINCENT H. OGBURN, A. M 1918 North Tejon
Assistant Professor of English
Ph. B. (Drake University) '10; A. M. (University of Pittsburgh) '11; Colo-
rado College, '20
GORDON PARKER, M. F 1401 Wood Ave.
Assistant Professor of Forestry
A. B. (Columbia) '00; M. F. (Harvard) '11; Colorado College, '19
CHARLES LYMAN PARSONS, B. S 1025 North Cedar
Director of Athletics
B. S. (Iowa) '14; Colorado College, '19
CHARLES N. SALTUS, A. M 1119 North Weber
Assistant Professor of Education
A. B. (Colorado Teachers' College) '12; A. M. (University of Wisconsin) '16;
Colorado College, '20
JACOB SWART, A. M 1008 North Wahsatch
Assistant Professor of Business Administration and Political Science
LL. B. (Ohio Northern University) '11; B. Sc. (ibid.) '13; A. M. (Harvard) T5;
Colorado College, '19
ELEANOR ESTE BARTLETT 1 103 Wood Ave.
Instructor in Physical Education for Women
Colorado College, '20
JAMES GLADSTONE BROWN, A. B Acacia Hotel
Instructor in English
A. B. (Ohio University) '15; Colorado College, '20
FLORENCE MAY BRUMBACK, A. M 2321 N. Tejon St.
Instructor in Biology
A. B. (Vassar) '09; M. S. (Chicago) '19; Colorado College, '19
ELLA S. CAMPBELL, B. L. S 310 E. San Rafael St.
Assistant Librarian
A. B. (Morningside College) '13; B. L. S. (Illinois) '17; Colorado College, '18
WILLIAM DUNCAN COPELAND, A. M Hagerman Hall
Field Secretary and Instructor in English
A. B. (Colorado College) '19; A. M. (ibid.) '20; Colorado College, '20
CHARLES F. FRAKER, A. M 232 East Cache la Poudre
Instructor in Romance Languages
A. B. (Colorado College) '19; A. M. (Harvard) '20; Colorado College, '20
ELIZABETH WOOD GEROULD, A. B Montgomery Hall
Instructor in Chemistry
A. B. (Colorado College) '12; Colorado College, '17
*MABEL MARGARET HARLAN, A. B Ticknor Hall
Instructor in Modern Languages
A. B. (Colorado College) '14; Colorado College, '17
REBEKAH MARY HARTNESS, A. M 332 East Yampa
Instructor in Romance Languages
A. B. (Carroll College) '10; A. M. (Columbia) '17; Colorado College, '20
BARTON HOAG, A. B 729 North Weber
I nstructors in Physics
A. B. (Colorado College) '20; Colorado College, '20
*Absent on leave, 1920-1921.
LOUISE FIELDING KAMPF, A. B 1210 North Weber
Cataloguer
A. B. (Colorado College) '12; Colorado College, '20
EFFIE LANDERS, A. B 506 North Cascade
Instructor in Romance Languages
A. B. (University of Missouri) '08; Colorado College, '20
CHARLES TROWBRIDGE LATIMER, A. M 229 E. Uintah
Instructor in Romance Langtiages
A. B. (Colorado College) '16; A. M. (University of Chicago) '20; Colorado
College, '20
SUSAN FALKENBURG LEAMING, A. B 1614 Wood Ave.
Instructor in the History of Art
A. B. (Colorado College) '20; Colorado College, '19
HERBERT EDWARD MIEROW, A. B 1103 Wood Ave.
Instructor in Classical Languages
A. B. (Princeton) '14; Colorado College, '18
CLARA STANTON 524 North Cascade Ave.
Instructor in Chemistry
Colorado College, '20
WILLIAM JAMES TWAY, A. B 1430 N. Royer St.
Instructor in Journalism
A. B. (De Pauw) '18; Colorado College, '19
ALICE ELFRIEDA VAN DIEST, A. B 719 North Nevada
Instructor in Romance Languages
A. B. (Colorado College) '16; Colorado College, '20
EDWARD DANFORTH HALE, A. M 1424 N. Nevada Ave.
Dean of the Department of Music and Professor of Theory and Literature of
Music and the Pianoforte
A. B. (Williams) '80; A. M. (ibid.) '83; Professor at the New England Conserv-
atory, '85-'04; Colorado College, '05
HENRY HOWARD BROWN 23 W. Cache la Poudre St.
Instructor in Voice Culture
Pupil of E. W. Glover (Ass't Director for Cincinnati May P'estival) '00; J. A.
Broeckhaven, '00-'01; James Sauvage, '01; Dora Topping, '02-'04; Max
vSpicker, '02-'06; Amherst Webber (Coach of Wm. J. and E. de Reszke,
Mmes. Nordica, Eames, and others) '05; Colorado College, '14
DORA TOPPING BROWN (Mrs.) 23 W. Cache la Poudre St.
Instructor in Public School Music
Graduate in Music, State Normal School, St. Cloud, Minn., '88; Supervisor in
Music in Public Schools, St. Cloud, Minn., '88-'93; Student in Voice
Culture, New York, '93-'99; Student in Piano and Composition, Phila-
delphia Institute of Music, '99; Colorado College, '17
*MABEL MARGARET HARLAN, A. B Ticknor Hall
Instructor in Violin
vSoloist's Diploma in Violin (Colorado College) '14; Instructor in Violin (Daniel
Baker College, Brownwood, Texas) '14-' 17; Colorado College, '17
EDWIN A. DIETRICH 1230 N. Corona St.
Instructor in Violin
Graduate Leipsic Konservatorium, 1889; Gewaudhaus and Opera House
Orchestras; Colorado College, '20
FRANK JOHN 107 Cheyenne Blvd.
Instructor in Violoncello
Graduate of Prague, Bohemia, Conservatory of Music; 'Cello, European
Symphony Orchestra; Leading Hotels in New York; The Broadmoor
from its opening; Colorado College, '19
SAMUEL JESSOP 614 N. Tejon St.
Instructor in Organ
Graduate, with honors, of the Royal Academy, London; pupil of Henry J. B.
Dart, Padding Parish Church, London, and of George Ernest Lake,
All Saint's Church, Notting Hill, London; eleven years organist in Lon-
don; Organist and Choirmaster, St. Stephen's; Colorado College, 1918
SUSAN FALKENBURG LEAMING, A. B 1614 Wood Ave.
Associate Director of The Academy of Fine Arts (Affiliated)
Art Institute, Chicago, '90-'93; Instructor Normal Department, Art Institute,
Chicago, '01 -'03; Pupil of Arthur W. Dow, Teachers' College, New York,
'03; Art Director Teachers' Training School, New York, '03-'06; Director
Art Department, Colorado Springs Schools, '17; Colorado College, '16
CHARLOTTE LEAMING 1614 Wood Ave.
Associate Director of The Academy of Fine Arts (Affiliated)
Art Institute, Chicago, '98; Pupil of Albert Herter, New York, '97; Frank
Duveneck, Cincinnati, '98; William M. Chase, New York, '99; Instructor
Art Institute, Chicago, '99-'00; Academy of Fine Arts, Chicago, '09-' 10;
Colorado College, '16
THE HARVARD EXCHANGE
An arrangement with Harvard University is in operation, by which that
institution, each year, sends two professors for a half-year to six Western
colleges; Beloit, Carleton, Colorado College, Grinnell, Knox, Pomona, dividing
the time equally among them; and each of them, in return, sends a member of
its faculty to Harvard for a half-year, one-third of his time to be given to
instruction, and the remainder to graduate or research work.
The Harvard Exchange Professor sent to Colorado College for the year
1921 is Professor George Howard Parker, S. D., Professor of Zoology.
*Absent on leave. 1920-1921.
COMMITTEES OF THE FACULTY, 1920-1921
Committee on Committees — The President, Mr. McMurtry, Mr. C. C. Mierow,
Mr. Pattee, Miss Phinney, Mr. Tileston
Administration — The President, The Dean of the College, The Dean of Wo-
men, The Registrar, Mr. Davies, Mr. Drueker, Mr. Gilmore, Mr. C. C.
Mierow, Mr. Sisam, Mr. Tileston
Accredited Schools — Mr. Saltus, Mr. Copeland, Mr. Keyte
Advanced Degrees — Mr. C. C. Mierow, The Dean of the College, Mr. Davies,
Mr. Douglas, Mr. Goodenough, Mr. Parker, Mr. Skidmore
Athletics — Mr. Okey, The Dean of Women, The Director of Athletics, The
Instructor in Physical Education for Women, Mr. Copeland
Chapel Office* — Mr. Albright
Curriculum — The President, The Dean of the College, The Dean of Women,
Mr. Davies, Mr. Douglas, Mr. Sisam, Mr. Skidmore
Individual Courses — The Dean of the College, The Dean of Women, The
Registrar, Mr. Gilmore, Miss Hutsinpillar, Mr. C. C. Mierow, Mr.
Sisam, Mr. Skidmore, Mr. Swart
Library — The Librarian, The President, Mr. Abbott, Mr. Douglas, Mr. Hul-
bert, Mr. Lovitt, Mr. Pattee
Music — The Dean of the Department of Music, Mr. H. H. Brown, Mr. Fraker,
Mr. H. E. Mierow, Miss Phinney
Publications — Mr. Daehler, The Registrar, Miss Bramhall, Mr. Pattee, Mr.
Sisam
Schedule — The Registrar, The Dean of the College, Miss Brumback, Mr.
Jencks, Mr. Okey
Scholarship — The President, The Dean of the College, The Dean of Women,
The Registrar, Mr. Albright, Mr. Copeland, Mr. Douglas, Mr. Okey,
Mr. Palm
Social Life — The Dean of Women, The Dean of the College, The Registrar,
The Instructor in Physical Education for Women, Mr. Copeland, Mr.
Hulbert, Mr. Palm, Mr. Tileston
Student Activities — The Dean of the College, The Dean of Women, The Dean of
the Department of Music, The Instructor in Physical Education for
Women, Miss Gerould, Mr. Latimer
Tiger Board Representatives — Mr. Pattee, Mr. Swart (Comptroller of the Tiger
Board Constitution)
Athletic Board Representatives — Mr. Gilmore, Mr. Palm
Representative to the Rocky Mountain Faculty Athletic Conference — Mr. Gilmore
vvxt 53ZSZ3 nn y n i i i i j a v
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Class m
of
1921
Senior Class
OFFICERS
President, James McCool Vice-President, Evelyn Arnold
Secretary, Helen Marsh Treasurer, Max Hardy
Manager of Senior Play, Howard Coldren
Edward Jones Allen, A. B.
Ben
Buhl, Idaho.
"Efficient and always willing."
MAJOR — Economics.
Nugget Board (3); Treasurer, Nugget Board of
Control (4); Treasurer Band; Apollonian, (1), (2), (3);
Student Commission, Treasurer, (4).
Evelyn Arnold, A. B.
116 E. Dale Street. Colorado Springs.
"And she conquers even iron and steel who is beautiful."
MAJOR— Philosophy.
Vice-President Class (4); Home-Coming Committee
(4); All-College Dance Committee (3); Town Girls'
Board (1); Dramatic Club.
Evelyn Annie Austin, A. B.
24 E. Eleventh Avenue. Denver, Colorado.
"A sunny disposition is half the battle."
MAJOR — Mathematics.
French Circle (2); Athenian, Vice-President (4)
Eager Heart (1), (2); Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (3), (4)
Hawley Scholarship (3); War Memorial Scholarship (4)
All-College Dance Committee (2); Dramatic Club
Dais.
John Franklin Bickmore, A. B.
S X, A K t, Z A *
1450 Grant Street. Denver, Colorado.
"Business before pleasure."
MAJOR — Economics
Freshmen Football (1); Football (2), (3), (4)
Track (1), (2), (3), (4); Manager Basketball (3); "C
Club; Student Commission (2), (3), (4), Treasurer (3)
Tiger Staff, Assistant Manager (2), (3), Manager (4)
Pan-Hellenic Council (2), (3), (4), Secretary (3)
Question Club; Spanish Club (1), (2), Treasurer (1)
K. U. K. (1), (2), (3), (4).
Jack Frederick Bischof, A. B.
K 2
605 N. Cascade Avenue. Colorado Springs.
"Small service is true service."
MAJOR — Chemistry.
Spanish Club (3); Men's Glee Club (4).
Ruford Watt Blair, A. B.
Fountain, Colorado
"His fingers shame the ivory keys they dance so light
along."
MAJOR— English.
Men's Glee Club (1), (2), (3), (4); Pearson's (3), (4);
Junior Play (3); Orchestra (1), (2).
Ethel Margaret Boatwright, A.B.
Marshall, Missouri.
"Observant, studious, thoughtful."
MAJOR— Education.
Missouri Valley College, (1), (2), (3); Dramatic
Club; Town Girls' Association.
Kenneth Vernon Brown, A. B.
$A0,AK^,TKA
806 E. Boulder Street. Colorado Springs.
"In finest tones the youth could speak."
MAJOR — Economics.
Track (1), (2), (3), (4), Captain (4); "C" Club;
Band (2), (3), (4), Manager (4); Orchestra (4); De-
bating (4); "Hitchy Kow."
Roy Jennings Brumfield, A. B.
$A 9, KB <f>
Colorado Springs, Colo.
"He was the mightiest among many."
MAJOR — Economics.
Football (1), (3), (4); Wrestling (1), (2), (3), (4),
Captain (4); "C" Club; Men's Glee Club (1), (2), (3),
(4); Enthusiasm Committee (4); Pearson's (3), (4);
"Hitchy Kow;" Home-Coming Committee (4); Man-
ager "C" Club All-College Dance (4).
Leroy Thornton Burgess, A. B.
$A6
730 N. Nevada Avenue. Colorado Springs.
"An extremely reserved man."
MAJOR — Civil Engineering.
Evelyn Janet Campbell, A. B.
220 E. Washington Street. Colorado Springs.
"Her hair is not more sunny than her heart."
MAJOR— Biology.
Contemporary Club, Secretary (4), President (4);
Dramatic Club; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (3), (4); Town
Girl's Board (2), Secretary-Treasurer (3), President
(4); Girl's Glee Club (1), (2), (3), (4); French Circle
(1), (2), (3); Dramatic Club.
Reignson C. Chen, A. B.
$BK,AKt
Foochow, China.
"An energetic worker, capable along many lines."
MAJOR — Business and Banking.
K. U. K. (3), (4); Political Science Club (4); De-
bating Team (4).
Howard Burt Coldren, A. B.
4>A0
1731 Hudson Street. Denver, Colorado.
"He had the one great quality of excellence-stability."
MAJOR -Civil Engineering.
Manager Senior Play; Manager Baseball (4);
Mens Glee Club (1), (3).
Lottie Lucina Crabtree, A. B.
1911 W. Colorado Avenue. Colorado Springs.
"Marked with some act of kindness every day."
MAJOR— English.
Hypatia Society; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, Vice-Pres-
ident (4); Manager May Festival (3); Sophomore-
Junior Play (3); Town Girls' Board (3); Girl's Glee
Club (3), (4). President (4); Dramatic Club.
Helen H. Erps, A. B.
$BK
1719 E. 16th Avenue. Denver, Colorado.
"A merry heart that laughs at care."
MAJOR — Mathematics.
Hypatia Society, Vice-President (4); Town Girls'
Board, Vice-President (3); Student Commission (4);
Women's Athletic Board (2); Dramatic Club Function
Play (2); Dramatic Club; Dais.
Florence Maude Fabling, A. B.
r $b
Denver, Colorado.
"Cheery, sweet, and always ready to join in the fun."
MAJOR— History.
Leland Stanford University (1), (2), Vice-Presi-
dent Class (1); Dramatic Club; Dais, Secretary-
Treasurer.
Gertrude Edythe Farr, A. B.
2 2 2
911 Fifth Street. Greeley, Colorado.
"A merry heart doeth good like a medicine."
MAJOR— English.
Contemporary Club; Dramatic Club; French
Circle; Mandolin Club; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (4);
Manager Eager Heart (4); Dais.
Margaret Felt, A. B.
<£B K
1301 Race Street. Denver, Colorado.
"Deep love for learning and a zeal for truth."
MAJOR — History.
Minerva Society, President (4); K. U. K. (3), (4);
Spanish Club (2), (3); Eager Heart (2); Dramatic Board
(3); Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (3), President (4); Athenian
Society (3), (4); Home-Coming Committee (4); Student
Government (4); Dais.
Hugh Francis Flaherty, A. B.
BGn.TKA, KB$, 2BK
1620 N. Weber. Colorado Springs
"I'm for Ireland, my dear old Ireland."
MAJOR — Economics.
Debating (1), (2); Manager Athletic Board Carni-
val (4); Wharton School of Commerce (3).
Agnes Barbara Flanagan, A. B.
213 E. Victoria Street. Colorado Springs.
"Sober little school-girl with your bag of books."
MAJOR— Latin.
Dramatic Club; Town Girls' Board (4); Mandolin
Club (4); Y. W. C. A.; Athenian Society (3), (4).
Charles B. Freeman, A. B.
2X, KB 4>
839 Marion Street. Denver, Colorado.
"Happy-go-lucky, fair and free,
Nothing there is that bothers me."
MAJOR — Economics.
Freshman Football; Men's Glee Club (2), (3), (4),
Manager (3), (4); "C" Club; Manager Track (4); All-
College Dance Committee (3), (4); Tiger Staff (3), (4);
"Hitchy Kow."
Ruth Fisher Giluland, A. B.
La Junta, Colorado.
"And still she gazed, and still the wonder grew
That one small head could carry all she knew."
MAJOR— History.
Contemporary Club; Girl's Glee Club (3), (4);
Dramatic Club; Student Government (4); Athenian
Society (3), (4); Dais.
Neata Madelyn Green, A. B.
Phippsburg, Colorado.
"The Nightingale."
MAJOR— History.
Contemporary Club, Secretary (4); Girl's Glee
Club (1), (2), (3), (4); Dramatic Club Function Play
(3); Sophomore-Junior Play (2); Eager Heart (2), (3),
(4); Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (2), (3), (4); Dramatic Club;
Dais.
L. Irena Hamilton, A. B.
Canon City, Colorado.
"Faithful, gentle, good.
Wearing the rose of womanhood."
MAJOR — Economics.
Contemporary Club, Factotum (3); Student Gov-
ernment, President (4); Spanish Club (2); Student
Commission (3); Eager Heart (2); Y. W. C. A. Cabinet
(3), (4); Inter-Society Council (4); Dramatic Club;
Dais.
Creta Helen Hanes, A. B.
Colorado Springs.
315 Mesa Road.
"Earnest and sincere."
MAJOR
-Mathematics.
Contemporary Club, Secretary (4); Town Girls'
Board, Vice-President (4); Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (4);
Dramatic Club.
Marjorie G. Hankins, A. B.
Ordway, Colorado.
"In the bloom and beauty of young womanhood.
MAJOR— History.
Minerva Society; K. U. K. (3), (4), Junior Plav;
Dramatic Club Function Play (1); Class Secretary (j).
President (3); Sophomore- Junior Play (2); Tiger Staff
(4); Student Government (3); Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (3),
(4); Nugget Board (3); Dramatic Club; Dais.
Max Hardy, A. B.
$A6,AK^
Canon City, Colorado.
"Who relished a joke and rejoiced in a pun."
MAJOR — Business and Banking.
George Washington University (3); Tiger Staff-
Class Treasurer (4); Home-Coming Committee (4);
Dance Manager.
Charles Monroe Heath, A. B.
K 2, $ B K, T K A
1511 N. Nevada Avenue.
"Knowledge he has."
Colorado Springs.
MAJOR — Economics.
Pearson's Dramatic Club (3), (4); French Circle-
Men's Glee Club (2); Nugget Board (3); Debating;
Perkins Scholarship (3); Honors (1), (2), High Honors
(3); Junior Phi Beta Kappa; Rotary Club; Fortnightly
Sketch Club.
Eleanor Williams Hobbs, A. B.
1125 Ogden Street.
Denver, Colorado
"Tall and stately and full of dignity."
MAJOR— Biology.
Minerva Society; French Circle (4); Dramatic Club
Eager Heart; Dramatic Club Function Play (3); All-
College Dance Committee (4); Home-Coming Commit-
tee (4); Dais.
Martha Howbert, A. B.
n B $, $ B K
1320 N. Nevada Avenue. Colorado Springs.
"So queenly a form and so noble a mien."
MAJOR — Romance Languages.
Goucher College (1); Hypatia Society, Treasurer
(3), President (4); Spanish Club, Vice-President (4);
French Circle (4); Town Girls' Board (3); Nugget
Board (3); Student Commission, Secretary (4); Inter-
Society Council (4); Secretary Class (3); Student Volun-
teer Convention (3).
Lois Rebecca Hunt, A. B.
2311 N. Tejon Street.
"So light of foot, so light of spirit."
MAJOR -Biology.
Dramatic Club.
Colorado Springs.
Hazael C. Jolly, A. B.
312 W. 13th Street. Pueblo, Colorado.
"A light heart lives long."
MAJOR— Psychology
Minerva Society; Girl's Glee Club (2), (3); Soph-
omore-Junior Play (2); Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (4);
Dramatic Club; Dais.
Katherine Ruby Kaufman, A. B.
AAA
Tulsa, Oklahoma.
"From day to day she hath done her best."
MAJOR— Latin.
Northwestern University (1); Wittenberg College
(2), (3); Dramatic Club; Athenian Society (4); Dais.
Gladys Eudora Layman, A. B.
730 A Street. Hutchinson, Kansas.
"Her fair auburn tresses."
MAJOR— English.
Hypatia Society, Vice-President (4); Mandolin
Club; Manager Freshmen Play (3); Dramatic Club;
Dais.
David Barnes Lesher, A. B.
AN
Arvada, Colorado.
"Strong and dependable."
MAJOR — Economics.
Football (4); "C" Club; Pan-Hellenic Council (4):
"Hitchy Kow."
Charles Henry Lloyd, A. B.
$rA, KB $
Jacksonville, Florida.
"And life's worth while if you just smile."
MAJOR — Economics.
Basketball (2), (3), (4); "C" Club; Question Club;
Nugget Board (3); Pan-Hellenic Council, Vice-Presi-
dent (4); Home-Coming Committee (4); Chairman
Enthusiasm Committee (4); "Hitchy Kow."
Helen Hortense Lytle, A. B.
Fort Morgan, Colorado.
"Silence is deep as eternity; speech is shallow as time."
MAJOR— Latin.
Minerva Society; Girl's Glee Club (2), (3); Dra-
matic Club.
Donald Seymour MacDougall, A. B.
$A0
1149 Fillmore Street. Denver, Colorado.
"Good nature, muscle and grit all combined."
MAJOR — Economics.
Freshman Football; Football (3), (4); Baseball (1),
(2), (3), (4), Captain (3), (4); "C" Club; Question Club
Student Commission (3), (4); Athletic Board (3), (4)
Nugget Board (3); Pan-Hellenic Council (3), (4)
War Memorial Scholarship (4).
Helen Gardner Marsh, A. B.
Herculaneum, Missouri.
"A regular girl."
MAJOR —Economics.
Contemporary Club; Junior Play (3); Student
Government; Advisory Board (4); French Circle (2);
Secretary Class (4), Dais.
V. L'Ewis Mason, A. B.
I-Hsing, Kiangsu, China.
"Never idle a moment, but thrifty."
MAJOR — Economics.
Ralph Donald Maxwell, A. B.
IIKA, 2 e
Fort Collins, Colorado.
"Unpracticed he to fawn, or seek for power."
M A JOR — Economics.
Colorado Agricultural College (1), (2); Occidental
College (3); Junior Play (3); Inter-Fraternity Council
(3).
James Madison McCool, A. B.
$AG, 9A$, AKt, KB$
Okolona, Mississippi.
"I love the sunny south, and its peculiah accent."
MAJOR — Economics.
Baseball (1), (2), (3), (4); Wrestling (3); "C"
Club, Treasurer (4); Pearson's Dramatic Club (3). (4);
Junior Play (3); Vice-President of Class (3), Pres-
ident (4); All-College Dance Committee (4); Home-
coming Committee (4).
Mildred Oenone McMurtry, A. B.
$BK
1335 N. Nevada Avenue. Colorado Springs.
"She maketh glad the hearts of professors."
MAJOR — Greek. Certificate in Violin.
Henry Kendall College (1); Hypatia Society,
Secretary (3), (4); Euterpe, Vice-President (3), Pres-
ident (4); French Circle, Secretary and Treasurer (4);
Dramatic Club; Quartet (2), (3); Orchestra (4); Y. W.
C. A. Cabinet (2), (3), (4); Honors (2); High Honors
(3).
Bernice Madison Miles, A. B.
Hayden, Colorado.
"She surpasseth all."
MAJOR— Biology.
Minerva Society, Treasurer (3), President (4); K.
U. K. Vice-President (3), (4); Girl's Glee Club (1), (2),
(3), (4); Secretary (2); Vesper Choir (2); Student Com-
mission, Vice-President (4); Student Government (3);
Women's Athletic Board (2), Vice-President (3); Junior
Play (3); Dramatic Club Function Play (2); Sophomore-
Junior Play (2); Eager Heart (4); Y. W. C. A. Cabinet
(3); Inter-Society Council, Secretary (4); All-College
Picnic Committee (3); Dais.
Prank Marion Mobley, A. B.
b en, $b k
Colorado Springs, Colo.
"Would that we all had his ambition, ability and daunt-
less courage."
MAJOR -English.
Honors (2), (3); K. U. K. (3), (4); Pan-Hellenic
Council (4); Class Poet (4); Senior Representative to
Tiger Board.
John Pearce Moore, A. B.
K 2
324 E. Uintah Street. Colorado Springs.
"I'm so handsome that they all love me."
MAJOR — Economics.
Freshmen Football (1); Class Treasurer (2); Stan-
ford University (3).
Elizabeth Ann Morgan, A. B.
r $b
Denver, Colorado.
"Little — but oh! my!"
MAJOR — Romance Languages.
Hypatia Society; Girl's Glee Club (3), (4); Student
Government (3), (4); Student Commission (4); Dra-
matic Club Function Play (3) ; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (4) ;
Dramatic Club; Dais; Denver University (1), (2).
Ruth Emily Morrison, A. B.
1219 W. Pikes Peak Avenue. Colorado Springs.
"True she is, as she has proved herself."
MAJOR — History.
Athenian Society (3), (4); Dramatic Club; French
Circle (3); Vesper Choir (3); Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (4);
Dramatic Club Function Play (3); Sophomore- Junior
Play (3); Girl's Glee Club (3), (4); Librarian (4); Fort-
nightly Sketch Club (4).
Helen Mackenzie Morton, A. B.
1928 N. Nevada Avenue. Colorado Springs.
"A quiet, gentle maid."
MAJOR — Economics.
Minerva. Custodian (4); Dramatic Club; French
Circle (2), (3); Town Girl's Board (4); Sophomore-
Junior Play (3); Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (3), (4); Athenian
(3), (4).
Lena Leona Murphy, A. B.
Rifle, Colorado.
"Serious to learn and know."
MAJOR— History.
Minerva Society, Treasurer (4); Spanish Club (2),
(3); Girl's Glee Club (2); Eager Heart (3), (4); Dra-
matic Club.
Mrs. Martha Givens Parr, A. B.
717 N. Tejon Street. Colorado Springs.
"We may forget some, but how could we forget you?"
MAJOR— English.
Minerva Society, Custodian (3); Secretary, Pres-
ident (4); Town Girl's Board (2); Dramatic Club.
Agnes Maud- Pearson, A. B.
723 N. Tejon Street. Colorado Springs.
"She speaks, behaves, and acts just as she ought."
MAJOR— English.
Contemporary Club, Vice-President (4); Girl's
Glee Club (2), (3), (4); Costumer (3); Junior Play (3);
Eager Heart (4); Vesper Choir (2), (3); May Festival
Costumer (3); Fortnightly Sketch Club, Treasurer (2),
Vice-President (3), (4); Dramatic Club.
Raymond Foote Purintox, A. B.
$A0,AKf
Denver, Colorado.
"An honest man is the noblest work of God."
MAJOR — Economics.
Baseball (2), (3); "C" Club, Secretary (3); Class
Treasurer (3); Manager All-College Picnic (2); Assist-
ant Manager "Hitchy Kow."
Neva Lola Ritter, A. B.
2B K
Glenwood Springs, Colo.
"A sweet, attractive kind of grace."
MAJOR — Economics.
Minerva Society; Nugget Board (3); Y. W. C. A.
Cabinet (4); Class Vice-President (1); All-College
Dance Committee (3); Dais.
Lucile Fraxces Sargent, A. B.
Wiley, Colorado.
"Thy modesty is a candle to thy merit."
MAJOR— Chemistry.
Contemporary Club, President (4); Women's
Athletic Board (3), President (4); Y. W. C. A. Cabinet
(3); Dramatic Club; Dais.
Margaret Scilley, A. B.
Loveland, Colorado.
"Good and courteous, withal most noble."
Contemporary Club (3), (4); Dramatic Club;
Athenian (3), (4); Student Government (4); Y. W. C.
A. Cabinet (4).
wmm
Angelo Scott, A. B.
Colorado Springs, Colo.
"A convincing speaker."
MAJOR — Economics.
Student Commission (4); Pan-Hellenic Council (4);
Tiger Staff (2), (3).
Miriam Phyllis Scribner, A. B.
708 W. 18th Street. Pueblo, Colorado.
"With her moods of shade and sunshine."
M A JOR — Psychology .
Contemporary Club; Student Commission (2);
Women's Athletic Board (2); President Tiger Club (4);
Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (3); Home-Coming Committee
(4); All-College Dance Committee (4); Enthusiasm
Committee (4); Manager Senior Minstrel Show (4);
Dramatic Club; Dais.
Spencer Crane Scribner, A. B.
$TA,AKt
708 W. 18th Street. Pueblo, Colorado.
"Every man is a volume if you know how to read him."
M A JOR — Economics .
Tiger Staff (1), (2), (3); Editor (4); Nugget Board
(3); K. U. K. (3), (4); Home-Coming Committee (4).
Frank Livingston SeelEy, A. B.
B0n,AKf
3725 Grove Street. Denver, Colorado.
"Clean limbed and straight and strong."
MAJOR — Economics.
Apollonian; Men's Glee Club (2), (3).
(4)
WilhelminaMannie Spingler,A.B.
1120 N. Tejon Street. Colorado Springs.
"Meek and mild."
MAJOR — Mathematics.
Dramatic Club; Fortnightly Sketch Club (4);
Spanish Club (2), (3), (4). Treasurer (4).
Helen Staff, A. B.
*B K
1343 N. Nevada Avenue. Colorado Springs.
"With downcast eyes and modest grace."
MAJOR — Biology.
Contemporary Club, Vice-President (3), Factotum
(4); Junior Phi Beta Kappa; Honors (2), (3); Perkins
Scholarship (3); Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, Secretary (3)
Women's Athletic Board, Secretary and Treasurer (2)
Student Commission (4); Town Girl's Board (4)
French Circle (4); Dramatic Club.
Clara Stanton, A. B.
524 North Cascade Ave. Colorado Springs.
"Her disposition is known by the smile she wears."
MAJOR— Chemistry.
Boulder (2), (3); Pharmacist, Assistant in Chem-
istry (4).
Ruth Stevens, A. B.
Burke, South Dakota.
"Truth, friendship and love surrounded her."
MAJOR— Biology.
Hypatia Society, Treasurer (4); Mandolin Club
(2); Girl's Glee Club (4); Student Commission (4);
Student Government (3); Dramatic Club Function
Play (2); Sophomore- Junior Play (2), (3); Y. W. C. A.
Cabinet (3); Vesper Choir (2), (3); Dramatic Board (4);
Manager French Orphan Fund; Scholarships; H. Strong
(3), (4), Hawley (4), McAllister (3); Dais.
Benjamin E. Sweet, A. B.
2X.T K A, A K^
2345 W. 33rd Avenue.
Denver, Colorado.
"The world belongs to the energetic."
MAJOR— History.
Football (1), Manager (4); Tennis (1), (2), (3);
Question Club; K. U. K. (2), (3), (4); Men's Glee Club
(1), (2), (3), President (3); "C" Club; Student Com-
mission, President (4); Athletic Board (3); Home-
coming Committee (3), (4); President of Class (2);
Manager All-College Picnic (3); Debating (2), (3),
Manager (3); Manager "Hitchy Kow;" Chairman All-
College Dance Committee (2), (3); Winner of Hite
Drill Medal.
Dart Wantland, A. B.
2X,KB$
1333 High Street. Denver, Colorado.
'Great works are performed not by strength but by
perse verence."
MAJOR — Civil Engineering.
Manager Freshman Football (1); Assistant Man-
ager Football (3), (4); Assistant Manager Baseball (2);
Manager Wrestling (4); "C" Club; Pearson's Dramatic
Club (4); Spanish Club (2); Manager Nugget (3); Tiger
Staff (2), (3). (4); Junior Play (3); All-College Picnic
Committee (2); Treasurer Tennis Association (3).
Marian Elizabeth Ward, A. B.
1534 11th Street. Greeley, Colorado.
"For she is clever."
MAJOR— Biology.
Contemporary Club; K. U. K. (3), (4); Nugget
Board (3); Junior Play (3); Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (2), (3);
Inter-Society Council (4); Dramatic Club, Costumer (2),
Vice-President (3); Dais.
Sidney Graham Winter, A. B.
2X 1 *BK,AK* t 6A$
2530 Orchard Avenue.
"Born for success, he seemed!"
Ogden, Utah.
MAJOR — Economics.
Manager Baseball (3); "C" Club; Class Treasurer
(2); Junior Play (3); French Plav (2); Pan-Hellenic
Council, (3), (4), Secretary (4); Athletic Board (3);
Student Commission (3); Men's Glee Club (1); Pear-
son's Dramatic Club (1), (3), President (4); Tiger Staff
(2), (3), (4); All-College Dance Committee (3).
Clarence K. Young, A. B.
Peking, China.
"With hues of genius on his cheek."
MAJOR — Romance Languages.
Band (4); Debating (4); Political Science Club (4).
Thomas LEE Brown, A. B.
Colorado Springs, Colo.
"He the sweetest of all singers."
MAJOR — Economics.
College of Emporia (1), (2); Class President (2);
"Hitchv Kow"; Men's Glee Club (3), (4); Junior
Play (3).
Ralph Hunt, A. B.
$A9
Denver, Colorado.
Arthur Adole Gutmann, A. B.
222 N. Weber Street. Colorado Springs.
"Independent and reserved."
MAJOR — Economics.
Tennis.
1 LY i. tw,z uvi C£XX3 iVAT 1V\T > EXX
VV1T l v > r 1 VJ> T iYIVl TAVi T / V 1 J A \l I
The Nugget Staff
Editor-in-Chief Eino LEino
Manager George Bruce
Assistant Editor Edmond Crockett
Assistant Editor Doris Haymes
Associate Editor Suoma LEino
Associate Editor Gladys Glendenning
Associate Editor Mary Clegg Owen
Associate Editor Thomas Simmons
Associate Editor Ian Mackenzie
Art Editor Adelaide Brown
Athletic Editor Malcolm McDougall
Assistant Manager George Lusk
Assistant Manager Myron Carter
CONTRIBUTORS
Pictures Florence Green
Tid-Bits Paul Sundbury
Junior Class
OFFICERS
President, Doris Haymes Vice-President, Frank Briggs
Secretary, Mary ClEgg Owen Treasurer, Don McMillan
Manager of Junior Play, Ian Mackenzie
ROWENA HAMPSHIRE
Junior Activities — Minerva; French Circle;
Vice-President ; Student Commission ; First
Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; Junior Play.
Reincarnation of Heloise.
LESTER MacTAVISH
Beta Theta Pi; Kappa Beta Phi
Junior Activities — Football; Basketball;
Track; "C" Club.
Reincarnation of Apollo.
FRANK BRIGGS, Jr.
Phi Delta Theta; Kappa Beta Phi
Junior Activities — Football ; Baseball ;
Track; "C" Club; Pan-Hellenic Council;
Home-Coming Committee; Enthusiasm Com-
mittee; Vice-President, Junior Class.
Reincarnation of D'Artagnan.
MARY KEMP
Junior Activities — Dramatic Club; Girls
Glee Club; Town Girls' Association.
Reincarnation of Marie Antoinette.
MARY CLEGG OWEN
Junior Activities — Minerva; K. U. K.;
Dramatic Club; Town Girls' Association;
Nugget Board; Tiger Staff; Y. W. C. A.,
Treasurer; Secretarv, Junior Class; Junior
Play.
Reincarnation of Florence Nightingale.
VERNON SCOTT
Alpha Nu
Junior Activities— Track; College Band;
College Orchestra.
Reincarnation of Victor Herbert.
NORMA BRIGHT
Junior Activities — Dramatic Club; Fort-
nightlv Sketch Club; Eager Heart; Y. W. C.
A.; Tiger Club.
Reincarnation of Queen Phillipa.
NEWTON FOWLER
Hagerman Hall Association
Reincarnation of Solomon.
EDMOND CROCKETT
Phi Delta Theta: Alpha Kappa Psi; Phi Beta
Kappa
Junior Activities — Nugget Board ; Perkins
Scholarship.
Reincarnation of Colonel House.
FAYE LILLEY
Junior Activities — Hypatia ; Dramatic Club ;
Girls' Glee Club; Town Girls' Association;
Junior Play.
Reincarnation of Sarah Bernhardt.
THOMAS GEROWE SIMMONS
Phi Gamma Delta
Junior Activities — Cheer Leader ; Glee Club ;
Nugget Board; Tiger Staff; Junior Play.
Reincarnation of Al Jolson.
LORENA BERGER
Junior Activities — French Circle; Girls'
Glee club; Nugget Board of Control; Y. W.
C. A. Cabinet.
Reincarnation of St. Cecilia.
«8P$rai
DELLA SCOTT
Junior Activities — Dramatic Club; Town
Girls' Association; President, Athenian.
Reincarnation of Miss Rankin.
GEORGE LAYDEN
Beta The/a Pi
Junior Activities — Glee Club; College Band
"Hitchy Kow."
Reincarnation of John Philip Sousa.
DELSIE HOLMOUIST
Junior Activities — Hypatia; Dramatic Club;
Student Government, Ticknor House Presi-
dent; Home-Coming Committee, Manager of
Banquet at Bemis; Manager of May Festival.
Reincarnation of Portia.
donald mcmillan
Phi Gamma Delta
Junior Activities — Football; "C" Club;
Treasurer, Junior Class.
Reincarnation of Shylock.
BEECHER FAWCETT
Pi Kappa Alpha
Junior Activities — Track, "C" Club; Pan-
Hellenic Council.
Reincarnation of Copernicus.
MARTHA TUCKER
Junior Activities — Stage Manager, Girls'
Glee Club Concert; President of French Club;
Y. W. C. A.; Town Girls' Association.
Reincarnation of Corinne de Montesson.
CHESTER SHAFFER
Reincarnation of Sir Humphry Davy.
JOSEPHINE MILLER
Junior Activities— Dramatic Club; Spanish
Club; Mandolin Club, President.
Reincarnation of Rosalinde.
CHARLES PAGE
Pi Kappa Alpha
Junior Activities — Track; "C" Club.
Reincarnation of Mercury.
FLORENCE GREENE
Junior Activities — Dramatic Club; Spanish
Club; French Circle; Town Girls' Association;
Y. W. C. A.; Tiger Club.
Reincarnation of Juliette
ALBERT LYLES
Alpha Nu; Sigma Delta Psi; Kappa Beta Phi
Junior Activities — Track; K. U. K.; "C"
Club; College Band; College Orchestra; Pan-
Hellenic Council; "Hitchy Kow."
Reincarnation of Bonar Law.
GLADYS GLENDENNING
Junior Activities — Hypatia; Costumer,
Dramatic Club; Nugget Board.
Reincarnation of Psvche.
THELMA KAUFMAN
Junior Activities — Dramatic Club; Town
Girls' Association.
Reincarnation of Carrie Chapman Catt.
HARRY NEWMAN
Junior Activities — Track ; Tennis.
Reincarnation of Thomas A. Edison.
LUTIE MARSHALL
Junior Activities — Minerva; Women's Ath-
letic Board; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet.
Reincarnation of Vesta.
IRA HICKS
Junior Activities — Football; Track; "C
Club, Honorary Membership; "Hitchy Kow;'
Stage Manager, Junior Play.
Reincarnation of General Putnam.
Jin\iors
SUOMA LEINO
Junior Activities — Minerva, Factotum; K.
U. K.; Dramatic Club, Vice-President;
Student Government, Montgomery House
President; Nugget Board; Eager Heart; Tiger
Club; McAllister Scholarship; Tiger Board,
Junior Representative.
Reincarnation of Mrs. Daniel.
BEN WENDELKEN
Sigma Chi; Tail Kappa Alpha
Junior Activities — K. U. K. ; College Band ;
Debating, Manager.
Reincarnation of Socrates.
THELMA TURNER
Junior Activities — Euterpe ; Dramatic Club ;
Representative of Junior Class on Advisory
Board of Student Commission; Junior Play.
Reincarnation of Lodore.
EARL LYONS
Beta Theta Pi
Junior Activities — Honorary "C
Football; Track.
Reincarnation of Tallvrand
Club;
j ■ '
1I1H
GEORGE BRUCE
Beta Theta Pi; Kappa Beta Phi
Junior Activities — "C" Club; Nugget Board
of Control; Pan- Hellenic Council; Business
Manager of Nugget ; "Hitchy Kovv."
Reincarnation of Charley Schwab.
serena Mcintosh
Junior Activities — Hypatia; Girls' Glee
Club; Town Girls' Association and Board;
Dramatic Club; Junior Play.
Reincarnation of Anna Pavlowa.
EINO LEINO
Beta Theta Pi; Alpha Kappa Psi
Junior Activities — K. U. K.; Editor of
Nugget, '22; Assistant Editor of Tiger;
Nugget Board of Control; Argo Scholarship.
Treasurer, Alpha Kappa Psi.
Reincarnation of Clarence P. Dodge.
JESSIE MORROW
Junior Activities — Spanish Club; French
Circle; Town Girls' Association and Board,
Junior Representative.
Reincarnation of Martha Washington.
(5)
FERN PRING
Junior Activities — Secretary, Dramatic
Club; Vice-President, Science Club.
Reincarnation of Atalanta.
ZEBULON MONTGOMERY PIKE
Phi Gamma Delta
Junior Activities — Glee Club; Football
Assistant Manager; Junior Play.
Reincarnation-
'Nuff sed.'
ELIZABETH KNOX
Junior Activities — Dramatic Club; Student
Government.
Reincarnation of Queen Elizabeth.
HERBERT JOHNSON
Phi Gamma Delta
Junior Activities — Track; Glee Club;
"Hitchy Kow;" Assistant Manager, Basket-
ball.
Reincarnation of Bacchus.
HARRY TAYLOR
Phi Delta The/a, Theta Alpha Phi
Junior Activities — Pearson's; Glee Club;
College Band; Men's Christian League, Pres-
ident; "Hitchy Kow;" Junior Play.
Reincarnation of St. Peter.
NINA SHAFFER
Junior Activities — Minerva; Dramatic Club;
Town Girls' Association and Board, Vice-
President ; Manager, Town Girls' Dance.
Reincarnation of Ruth Law.
EVELYN ARKWRIGHT
Junior Activities — Dramatic Club; Town
Girls' Association; Y. W. C. A.; Tiger Club;
Poster Committee of Y. W. C. A. ; Fortnightly
Sketch Club.
Reincarnation of Rosa Bonheur.
RALPH HANKINS
Kappa Sigma
Junior Activities — Tennis.
Reincarnation of Julius Caesar.
VIRGINIA NEWMAN
Junior Activities — Tennis; Dramatic Club;
Town Girls' Association, Junior Representa-
tive to Board; Mandolin Club, Accompanist;
Tiger Club.
Reincarnation of Madame Engelbert van
Bevorsvoorde.
STANLEY BIRDSALL
Beta Theia Pi
Junior Activities — Basketball; "C" Club;
"Hitch> T Kow."
Reincarnation of Adonis.
MERLE LOVE
Junior Activities — Dramatic Club; Eager
Heart.
Reincarnation of Lydia Pankhurst.
ian Mackenzie
Beta Theta Pi
Junior Activities — Football; Tennis; "C"
Club; Nugget Board; Junior Play, Manager;
John Gabbert Scholarship; Secretary', "C"
Club.
Reincarnation of "Stonewall" Jackson.
RALPH ROUND
Kappa Sigma; Kappa Beta Phi
Junior Activities — Glee Club: Pan-Hellenic
Council; Assistant Manager, Track.
Reincarnation of Cassius.
MARJORIE O'BRIEN
Junior Activities — Town Girls' Association ;
Tiger Club.
Reincarnation of Peg o' my Heart.
STUART ARMIT
Phi Delta Theta
Junior Activities — Assistant Manager of
Football.
Reincarnation of Baron Munchausen.
ADELAIDE BROWN
Junior Activities — Hypatia; Euterpe; Dra-
matic Club; Girls' Glee Club, Treasurer;
Fortnightly Sketch Club; Nugget Board;
Tiger Staff; Eager Heart; First Cabinet Y. W.
C. A.; Tiger Club; Girls' Glee Club, Concert
Manager.
Reincarnation of Jane Addams.
DORIS HAYMES
JuniorActivities — Hypatia; Dramatic Club;
Town Girls' Association; Student Commis-
sion ; Women's Athletic Board ; Nugget Board ;
Home-Coming Committee; President, Junior
Class; Junior Play.
Reincarnation of Madame Clemenceau.
VAN KIRK BUCHANAN
Reincarnation of Don Quixote.
LOIS GOULD
Junior Activities; Dramatic Club; Tiger
Club.
Reincarnation of Joan of Arc.
HOWARD LINGER
Phi Gamma Delta; Kappa Beta Phi
Junior Activities — Football; "C" Club;
Chairman, "C" Club All College Dance.
Reincarnation of Clemenceau, "The Tiger."
«Hre&i
ARTHUR DAILY
Beta Theta Pi
Junior Activities — "C" Club;
Board; Basketball, Manager.
Reincarnation of Atlas.
Athletic
DOROTHY MATHEWS
Junior Activities — Dramatic Club ; Town
Girls' Association.
Reincarnation of Lady Jane Grey.
ADNA WARDWELL
Sigma Chi
Junior Activities — Pearson's; College Band;
College Orchestra; Tiger Staff; Pan- Hellenic
Council.
Reincarnation of Father Joseph.
CARMAN FREYSCHLAG
Phi Gamma Delta; Kappa Beta Phi
Junior Activities — Pearson's; Glee Club;
Pan-Hellenic Council; Home-Coming Com-
mittee; Enthusiasm Committee; Debating;
Manager of Pearson's Play; Junior Play.
Reincarnation of Chief Silver-Tongue.
WINONA JEWETT
Junior Activities — Factotum, Contempor-
rary; Student Government; House-President
of McGregor; First Y. W. C A. Cabinet.
Reincarnation of Brunhilde.
CHARLES BALL
Sigma Chi; Kappa Beta Phi
Junior Activities — Football; "C"
Athletic Board.
Reincarnation of Friar Tuck.
Club;
MARION LITTLE
Phi Beta Kappa
Junior Activities — Contemporary; Dramat-
ic Club; Town Girls' Association; Second Y.
W. C. A. Cabinet; Tiger Club; Perkins Schol-
arship.
Reincarnation of Pallas Athene.
MALCOLM MacDOUGALL
Phi Delta Theta; Sigma Delta Psi
Junior Activities — Football; "C" Club;
Nugget Board; Manager, All-College Picnic.
Reincarnation of Captain Kidd.
ROBERT HART
Phi Gamma Delta
Reincarnation of Raphael.
DOROTHY HOON
Junior Activities — Dramatic Club; Town
Girls' Association; Tiger Club.
Reincarnation of Theda Bara.
ALLEN RICE
Pi Kappa Alpha
Reincarnation of Mr. Statler.
ELEANOR BARTLETT
Junior Activities — Dramatic Club ; Town
Girls' Association; Women's Athletic Board,
Honorary Member.
Reincarnation of Miss Davis.
SSbKbI
JOHN JACKSON
Phi Delia Theta; Kappa Beta Phi;
Sigma Beta Kappa
Junior Activities — Football;
"Hitchy Kow."
Reincarnation of Cellini.
"C" Club;
OLIVE HAUN
Junior Activities — Dramatic Club; Town
Girls' Association.
Reincarnation of Lillian Russell.
ROY WILLARD WALHOLM
Phi Gamma Delta
Junior Activities — Track; Pearson's Secre-
tary; Glee Club, President; Band, Drum
Major; Athletic Editor of the Tiger; Junior
Play; Hitchy Kow.
Reincarnation of Pasha El Kay.
WARREN LEISY
Pi Kappa Alpha
Junior Activities — Wrestling; "C"
Honorary Member; College Band;
Hellenic Council.
Reincarnation of Sir Isaac Newton.
Club,
Pan-
HELEN HARMON
Junior Activities — Dramatic Club; Town
Girls' Association.
Reincarnation of Helen of Troy.
FLOYD BLEISTEIN
Beta Theta Pi
Junior Activities — Football; Baseball; "C
Club; "Hitchy Kow."
Reincarnation of Nero.
SHERMAN BUSHNELL
Alpha Nu
Reincarnation of The Duke of Wellington.
DWIGHT SKINNER
Kappa Sigma
Junior Activities — Football; "C" Club,
Honorary Member.
Reincarnation of Falstaff.
ORLANDO McCOY
Junior Activities — Spanish Club.
Reincarnation of Don Juan.
ERNEST SHEPPARD
Junior Activities — Track; "C" Club.
Reincarnation of Venus.
FAMOUS JUNIORS GETTING
DEGREES
Roy Walholm as the Sultan in a
Harem at 93.
Frank Briggs as the Pope and his
Bull.
"Pat" O'Brien as the bashful queen
of Ireland.
Doris Havmes as the faithful wife-to-
be.
"Heavy" Linger as the devoted hus-
band-to-be.
Serena Mcintosh as the celebrated
shimmy artist.
George Bruce as the Nugget manip-
ulator.
Malcolm MacDougall as the B. S.
Degree giver.
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1023
Sophomore Class
OFFICERS
President, Malcolm Graham Vice-President, Vera Eddins
Secretary, Alice Sweet Treasurer, Carl BrumfiEld
Manager of Barbecue, Thomas Strachan
Class of 1Q23
Aitken, James Alexander Colorado Springs
Allen, Florence Colorado Springs
Amidon, Albert Pueblo, Colo.
Amos, James Ellwood Colorado Springs
Anderson, Herbert Colorado Springs
Archibald, Howard Guy Pocatello, Idaho
Armstrong, Helen Denver, Colo.
Atteberry, Laura Louise Farmington, N. M.
Barnes, Russell Denver, Colo.
Beauchamp, Sara DeWitte South Haven, Mich.
Beckman, Edith Josephine Denver, Colo.
Bemis, Charles Harris, Jr Medford, Mass.
Bennett, Kate Denver, Colo.
BERGNER, Merton N Colorado Springs
BickFord, Earl Hanks Colorado Springs
Blaurock, Irma . . . Denver, Colo.
Brumfield, Carl Arthur Aztec, N. M.
Bumstead, Harriett Way Colorado Springs
Burghart, Clara Bertha Colorado Springs
Bullack, Charles G Colorado Springs
Busey, Lester Allen Lazear, Colo.
Bushnell, Joseph Perkins Georgetown, Colo.
Cannon, Theodore Baxter Colorado Springs
Cannon, M. C Colorado Springs
Carter, Charles Russell Greeley, Colo.
Carter, Myron Edwin Denver, Colo.
Childs, J. C Denver, Colo.
Chick, William Keith Welda, Kansas
Chapman, N.I Calhan, Colo.
Clay, Muriel Winona Ellicott, Colo.
Cole, BoxlEy Colorado Springs
Crawford, Buell Spurgeon Read, Colo.
Cummings, I. R Colorado Springs
Daniels, Ralph W Kenton, Ohio
Daywalt, John Hamilton Aspen, Colo.
Drake, Martin Woodbury Colorado Springs
EarlE, William Frederic Colorado Springs
Earnest, Mildred Marie Montrose, Colo.
Edgar, Lea Blanche Colorado Springs
Eddins, V. D Denver, Colo.
Ellis, Margaret Florence Denver, Colo.
Finlay, Helen IsabellE Pueblo, Colo.
GalE, Leta Fern Colorado Springs
GarbER, W. F Cripple Creek, Colo.
Gilbertson, Mildred Jean Fort Morgan, Colo.
Gildea, Vincent Colorado Springs
Gordon, Kenneth Llewellyn Fort Collins, Colo.
Graham, Malcolm Duncan Colorado Springs
Graves, Dorothy Madden Colorado Springs
Graves, Virgil Voris Colorado Springs
Green, Ray Carr Grand Junction, Colo.
Gunsolus, Helen Marie Colorado Springs
Harwood, Leslie George Merrill, Wis.
Havens, Kate Denver, Colo.
Haymes, Ralph Owen Colorado Springs
Hegener, Ruth McKinnie Colorado Springs
Herzog, Anna Alzina Fort Morgan, Colo.
HERTEL, H Golden, Colo.
Hicks, Mary Loretta Colorado Springs
Hine, James David Colorado Springs
HinTon, Curtis Barkla Grand Junction, Colo.
Hixson, Verna Maude Simla, Colo.
Hixson, Bryant Colorado Springs
Hopkins, Allen Sawyer Manitou, Colo.
HouTz, Gladys Colorado Springs
Hoyt, Anniss Helane Golden, Colo.
Hughes, Simmons Leon Muskogee, Okla.
Jackson, Florence Roxana Colorado Springs
James, Gladys Madeline Sidney, Iowa
Johnson, Irene Wright Pueblo, Colo.
Johnson, Mary Louise Colorado Springs
Johnston, Eugene Pueblo, Colo.
Kell, Gertrude Colorado Springs
KELLER, Mildred Dale Montrose, Colo.
Kidder, Bradley Denver, Colo.
Kissinger, Donovan Wayne Fort Collins, Colo.
Klein, Gertrude Margaret Golden, Colo.
Knuckey, Maude LucilE Holly, Colo.
Koerner, Lawrence Frederick Colorado Springs
Lawrie, Glen Douglas Colorado Springs
Lawson, Florence Eleanor Garden City, Kansas.
Mahan, T. W Colorado Springs
McBride, Harold Evan Denver, Colo.
McClary, John Stewart Pueblo, Colo.
McCampbell, Eunice Willard Russell Gulch, Colo.
Maher, Martina Colorado Springs
McConnell, Paul Stewart Colorado Springs
Massey, I Colorado Springs
McIlvaine, Robert S Lamar, Colo.
McKinnEy, Helen Mary Austin, Colo.
Mason, Harriett Lowell , Greeley, Colo.
Meyer, Lois Caroline Lamar, Colo.
Miller, Dorothy Jeannette Colorado Springs
Monroe, Mabyn Frances Colorado Springs
Morris, Robert William Florence, Colo.
(6)
Morris, M. A Texas
Morton, Hugh McLEOD Colorado Springs
Mower, Laura Lois Delta, Colo.
MungER, LiLA* Denver, Colo.
Newbold, Charles Colorado Springs
Norton, Esther Sophronia Colorado Springs
O'Brien, Edward James Colorado Springs
Parfet, Ralph Emerson Golden, Colo.
Park, James Caldwell, Jr Florence, Colo.
Phillips, Clyde Crawford, Jr Colorado Springs
Rankin, Mary Louise Colorado Springs
Rhodes, Marion Denver, Colo.
Ronan, {Catherine Frances Victor, Colo.
Scott, Rex Rogers Grand Junction, Colo.
Scribner, Eunice Kershaw Pueblo, Colo.
Seeman, Grace Denver, Colo.
Senning, William Charles Colorado Springs
Sheldon, Fanny Cornelia Colorado Springs
Shoemaker, Frank Denver, Colo.
Sim, Frances Morrison Colorado Springs
Staff, Ruth Colorado Springs
Stoneham, Eleanor Colorado Springs
Strachan, Archibald Reith Denver, Colo.
Strachan, Tom Curr, Jr Colorado Springs
Stream, Macy Elizabeth Castle Rock, Colo.
Sundbury, Paul William Holdrege, Nebr.
Sutton, Agnes Whitney Colorado Springs
Sutton, Elizabeth Brundage Colorado Springs
Sweet, Alice Mae Denver, Colo.
Tapp, Clifton Eugene Colorado Springs
Thomas, Margaret Clare Colorado Springs
Thompson, William Andrew Colorado Springs
Valore, Richard BartlESON Littleton, Colo.
Van Horn, Edna Marjorie Pueblo, Colo.
Vannice, Lorin Wallace Grand Junction, Colo.
Waegele, Vera Caroline U cross, Wyo.
Wagner, Frances Ruth Tyndall, S. D.
Waiss, Harold Andrew Colorado Springs
Wallis, Lynn Bodien La Junta, Colo.
Wandell, Wilbur Huntington Colorado Springs
Wells, Catherine Helen Colorado Springs
Wilson, Harriet Esther Pueblo, Colo.
Wilson, James Maxwell Lucerne, Colo.
Winans, John Gibson Colorado Springs
Winans, Theodore H Colorado Springs
Wright, Marie Antoinette Santa Fe, N. M.
Ziman, Louis Colorado Springs
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Freshmen Class
OFFICERS
President, Kenneth Wendell Vice-President, Helen Thebus
Secretary, Edna Copeland Treasurer, Thomas SEELEY
Representative to Commission, Bertram Crockett
The Class of 1Q24
Adams, Erma Marie Colorado Springs
Albert, Augustus James Colorado Springs
Anderson, Bruce E Boulder, Colo.
Anderson, Helen Mae Eaton, Colo.
Arps, Elwyn Albert Denver, Colo.
Bartholomew, Gladys Farrel Steamboat Springs, Colo.
Benbow, Marion Ruth Colorado Springs
Bennet, Margaret Brashire Colorado Springs
Blaine, Thelma Aline Colorado Springs
Bliss, Ellet Denver, Colo.
Bolitho, Mabel Alice Golden, Colo.
Bollinger, Anna Marie Denver, Colo.
Bradley, Thelma Elizabeth Colorado Springs
Bronstine, Anna Denver, Colo.
Brooker, Jane Adelaide Colorado Springs
Brown, Elizabeth Alice Denver, Colo.
Brown, Zella Vivian Creston, Iowa .
Bryan, Dorothy Aloysius Colorado Springs
Burch, Dana De Witt Colorado Springs
Burghart, Robert Colorado Springs
Burleigh, Ida Leona Fountain, Colo.
Capps, OlEn D Colorado Springs
Carter, Margaret Denver, Colo.
Chapman, William Bennet Colorado Springs
Clark, Cora Linn Canon City, Colo.
Clay, Hubert Kennett Colorado Springs
Clements, Dorothea Alice Paonia, Colo.
CloppER, Elma Jane Manitou, Colo.
Clow, Herman W Denver, Colo.
Coleman, Margaret AllETTa Denver, Colo.
Collier, Alice MarjoriE Denver, Colo.
Cooke, Bryson Denver, Colo.
CopELAnd, Edna Denver, Colo.
Cox, Genevieve Canon City, Colo.
Cramer, Louis Colorado Springs
Crockett, Bertram Waide Pueblo, Colo.
Crockett, Catherine White Pueblo, Colo.
Croll, George Greeley, Colo.
Crowder, Donald Colorado Springs
Daily, Charles Robert Colorado Springs
Darling, Ray Willard Greeley, Colo.
Darnes, Clitus John Denver, Colo.
Davis, LucilE Katherine Delta, Colo.
Davies, Colby William Colorado Springs
Dearborn, Stina Helen Colorado Springs
Dern, Joseph Jackson Colorado Springs
Dounan, La Verne Fort Collins, Colo.
Downer, Leo Denver, Colo.
Drake, Delma Jane Colorado Springs
Dunn, Annabel Frances Akron, Ohio
Earnest, Nellie Montrose, Colo.
Easly, Mary Adelaide Colorado Springs
EblE, John Amand Lyons, Kansas
EblE, MaxinE Lyons, Kansas .
Echols, OlliE Matador, Texas
Eckstein, RomaynE Otto Wichita, Kansas
Eddins, Earl Stonewall Denver, Colo.
Edgar, Robert Colorado Springs
Emery, Ralph Waldo Colorado Springs
EngsTone, Bernice LucilE Holdrege, Nebraska
Essex, Mrs. Elsie Bennet Colorado Springs
Evans, Ruth Mt. Pleasant, Ioiva
FagENBURG, Phoebe Colorado Springs
Farmer, Marie Elizabeth Canon City, Colo.
Farmer, Ruth Columbia St. Joseph, Mo.
Ferguson, Keith Marshall Denver, Colo.
Finlay, Mildred Irene Pueblo, Colo.
Fisher, William Roland Colorado Springs
Fitzell, J. Alvine Denver, Colo.
Frank, George Albert Alamosa, Colo.
French, Charlotte Mancos, Colo.
Gagliano, John Pueblo; Colo.
Gallavan, Ella Mae Ordway, Colo.
Galvin, Elvera Marie Benton, Illinois
Gardner, Rebecca Colorado Springs
GjERDE, Ora JEANETTE Denver, Colo.
Gaff, Joseph Richard Colorado Springs
Gregory, John Booker Mexico, Mo.
GreineR, Percy Pohlman Denver, Colo.
Hale, Danforth Ramson Colorado Springs
Haley, MarjoriE Isabel Buena }'ista, Colo.
Hall, Donald Colorado Springs
Hanes, Wilbur G Colorado Springs
Harmon, Myron E Pinon, Colo.
Harvey, Joseph Earl Denver, Colo.
Hasswood, Leslie George Missil, Wisconsin
Hathaway, Esther Colorado Springs
Heckenlively, L. Joan Ramah, Colo.
Heckman, John Read Colorado Springs
Hetherington, Janet Welsh Colorado Springs
Hitchcock, Anna Jane Florence, Colo.
Hollingsworth, K. Helen Columbia, Ohio.
Hood, Catherine Canon City, Colo.
Houtz, Gladys : Colorado Springs
HOWBERT, Edgar Cogswell Colorado Springs
Hulbert, Marion Elizabeth Colorado Springs
Hunter, Russell Palmer Colorado Springs
Hupp, Lura Rhoda Colorado Springs
Illingworth, Kenneth Colorado Springs
Jackson, Edith Adeline Matador, Texas
James, Karl Edward Denver, Colo.
James, Helen Black Rock, Utah
Johnson, Ruth Edna Durango, Colo.
Johnson, LEE Denver, Colo.
Kay, Ryan Thomas Pueblo, Colo.
Kell, Gertrude Cornelia Colorado Springs
Kelly, Wayne C Colorado Springs
Kemp, Charles Robert Colorado Springs
Kendall, Paul G Lamar, Colo.
Kesling, Bruce Delta, Colo.
Keif, George Pueblo, Colo.
Kier, Sadie Marie Colorado Springs
Kimble, Charles Allen Pueblo, Colo.
Kingsbury, Kenneth Kermit Colorado Springs
Kirby, Jean Colorado Springs
KnowlES, Gladys Isabel Colorado Springs
Koch, Marie Louise Colorado Springs
KoehlER, Ray Charles Delta, Colo.
Koontz, Gladys Colorado Springs
KurtlE, Allisan Ian Colorado Springs
Laska, BerylE Charlotte Denver, Colo.
Leiser, Sadie H Pneblo, Colo.
Lewis, Martin Charles Colorado Springs
Lilyard, Lucille Evelyne. Denver, Colo.
Little, Ruth Agnes Colorado Springs
Lloyd, Mildred Emma Colorado Springs
Logan, Paul Stewart Canon City, Colo.
Louthan, Earl E Littleton, Colo.
Luce, Amos Bartholomew Colorado Springs
Lusk, Harold Victor Greeley, Colo.
Lynn, Rachel Louise Boulder, Colo.
McAdoo, Nelia Benton, Illinois
McConnel, Paul S Colorado Springs
McKenzie, William Okalona, Mississippi
McMurtry, James G., Jr Colorado Springs
McNulty, Harold Charles Colorado Springs
MohnckE, Marie Dorothy Colorado Springs
Mann, Russell Elliot Alliance, Nebraska
Mantz, Frank Jensen Colorado Springs
Marschat, Lawrence E Ashley Falls, Mass.
Marsh, Jean Greeley, Colo.
Marty, Sylvia Elizabeth Trinidad, Colo.
MarTz, Amy LucilE Denver, Colo.
Massey, Erwin H Colorado Springs
Matlock, Bruce King Denver, Colo.
Marryman, Mary Evans Colorado Springs
MiTLER, James Robert, Jr Colorado Springs
Miller, Mary Christina Colorado Springs
Millisach, Katherine Pauline Denver, Colo.
Mitchell, Ethel Marie Nowata, Oklahoma
Mohrbacher, MaxinE Denver, Colo.
Moody, Lorraine Pueblo, Colo.
Moore, Ethland Brooks Colorado Springs
Morris, Russell Earl Denver, Colo.
Mott, ArrabellE Scott City, Kansas
Mott, Jessie Scott City, Kansas
Moulton, Winifred Bosbyshill Pueblo, Colo.
Mullen, James Gordon Colorado Springs
MuncasTER, Edmund Howard Independence, Colo.
Murray, Wesley Grand Junction, Colo.
Mussey, John Denver, Colo.
Nelson, Earnest Colorado Springs
Nelson, Franklin John Willmar, Minnesota
Nelson, John Wilber Colorado Springs
Nichols, Proctor Wallace Manitou, Colo.
Nicholson, Ruth Colorado Springs
Niccals, Dorothy Elizabeth Burlington, Iowa
Nunn, Marshall Colorado Springs
Nyhus, Dorothy Elizabeth Raton, New Mexico
O'Brien, Emma Mary Parker, Colo.
Oliver, GlEnora Pueblo, Colo.
Olson, Rueben Emmanuel iurora, Nebraska
Ovenholt, Clyde Ray Denver, Colo.
Owens, Ralph Pike View, Colo.
Pace, HartseL Wesley Delta, Colo.
Padgett, Floyd Colorado Springs
Parker, Frank Colorado Springs
Patton, Ruth Virginia Colorado Springs
Patrick, Grace Esther Colorado Springs
Patterson, William Edward Colorado Springs
Peck, Isabel Denver, Colo.
Powell, Lester B Las A nimas, Colo.
Ralston, James Lawrence Belvedere, Illinois
Randolph, Ernistine Bernice Eskdale, Colo.
Raney, Margaret Janet Colorado Springs
Rice, Campbell R Colorado Springs
Richardson, Harold Albert Grand Junction, Colo.
Rivers, William Louis Philadelphia, Pa.
Robinson, Clark Smith Colorado Springs
RockaFELLOW, Gerald Canon City, Colo.
Roddish, Wilma Jean Denver, Colo.
Rose, Lois Montrose, Colo.
Rowe, Eunice Amacia Greeley, Colo.
Rupert, Viola Emma Grand Bend, Kansas
Rule, Mildred ElbERTa Wichita, Kansas
RussEL, Mary Colorado Springs
Ryan, Francis Colorado Springs
Saffold, Glenn William Denver, Colo.
Sandford, Thomas Manitou, Colo.
Sando, Stanley Stewart Versailles, Ohio
Sapp, Robert Milton Bethany, Mo.
Schneider, Vincenz Milwaukee, Wisconsin
SchoEFER, HERBERT Denver, Colo.
Shoemaker, Frank Marion Denver, Colo.
Schsimer, Mary Agnes Victor, Colo.
ScillEy, Florence Susan Loveland, Colo.
SEELEY, Thomas Colorado Springs
SewELL, David Liston Pueblo, Colo.
Sheehan, John Francis Colorado Springs
Shepherd, Jack Harlow Denver, Colo.
Sherk, Gertrude Genevieve Greeley, Colo.
Skinner, Martha LucilE Colorado Springs
Salt, Irene Sarah Fort Morgan, Colo.
Smith, Frank E Grand Rapids, Mich.
Smith, Mabel Gladys Pecos, Texas
Spencer, Paul REEFus Denver, Colo.
Stanley, Marion 1 urora, Xebraska
Stannard, Evelyne Denver, Colo.
Steady, Kink H Colorado Springs
Stetson, Julia KathERYN Colorado Springs
SwEnson, Lillian Juliette Colorado Springs
Tait, Cecil Colorado Springs
Taylor, DwighT Daniel Colorado Springs
Taylor, Ray Nathanial Doyhstown, Wisconsin
Telk, Charles Valentine Denver, Colo.
TessiER, Miriam Isabel Colorado Springs
Thatcher, George Walbrach Colorado Springs
Thebus, Helen Kay Denver, Colo.
Theobald, Edna Mildred Colorado Springs
Thomas, Edward Gaskin Colorado Springs
Thomas, Francis Wesley Colorado Springs
TrallER, Alfred L Manitou, Colo.
Tressler, Willis Colorado Springs
Usher, Rollin Newell Florence, Colo.
Van FlEET, Glen Bert Alamosa, Colo.
Varmy, Katheryn Ruth Thermo polls, Wyoming
VorriETER, Clara Loveland, Colo.
Wallace, Edna Paris, Texas
Watkins, Pearl Wichita Falls, Texas
Walker, Bonnie Marguerite Colorado Springs
Wendell, Kenneth Johnson Buttes, Colo.
Wesson, J. Theodore Denver, Colo.
White, Ramona Cripple Creek, Colo.
White, Juanita Del Norte, Colo.
Wilbur, Simeon Denver, Colo.
Williams, Bernice Geraldine Fort Morgan, Colo.
Williamson, Rawdon Alfred Grand Junction, Colo.
Williamson, Ruth Colorado Springs
Williamson, Wilfred Steiner ". . . . Colorado Springs
Wilt, Arline Josephine Rossville, Kansas
Wolfe, Lawrena Warren Colorado Springs
Wood, John Souther Bristol, Colo.
Wyatt, William Charles Denver, Colo.
Yates, Grace Colorado Springs
Yates, Smith Colorado Springs
Young, William Gould Colorado Springs
College Collection of Petty Phrases
'Take it to heart," Briggs.
'You inebriate imbecile," MaeTavish.
'As a matter of fact," Palm.
He is an awful interesting man," Bramhall.
'I lived in beautiful eestacy." Phinney.
You can readily see," Swart.
I like to Wheeler," Burch.
T could love Isobels by the Peck full," Freyschlag.
'The world to me is a gambling den," Mobley.
Take me skating," Capps.
'Quit your kidding," Vera.
I'll love 'em all but six," Jackson.
'No, Ralph dear, not now," Martz.
'Don't get rough," Kate H.
'Evelyne is my dream girl," MacDougall.
'Where is my little Sims girl," McCool.
'Dis is Pussy Willow," Brumfield.
'I'm looking for a man," Sarah.
'Whose girl am I, Slant's or Ball's?" Pat.
'Martina is a peach," Lusk.
'Jump out of it and snap to it," Copeland.
'Where can I get some loving," Shoemaker.
'I've got to behave or she won't have me," Sweet.
T like football fullbacks," Neva.
'I'm engaged now, too," Lesher.
'Well I'll be — — and can you feature that," Mooney.
'That's quite the hot stuff," Wessen.
No one loves me any more," Jean.
'He would make a nice husband but he is a poor lover," Helen.
'How would you like to be on Pike's Peak with only a tie and glasses
on?" Telk.
'Lay off or I'll knock you for a row," Mai.
I'll meet you in Palmer at the end of the fourth hour, Doris," Heavy.
I'm ready for my Barnes's nest," Kate Havens.
'I'm so Irish that I'm color blind," Flaherty.
COACH PARSONS
Poss Parsons, with all his drive and fire, has
spent another year as Tiger Mentor. Through
a hard season on the gridiron, a fast season on
the gym floor, a trying period on the diamond,
a regular workout on the cinders and patient
practices on the golf course he has turned out
a fighting football machine, a scrappy basket-
ball quintet, a fast baseball nine, a speedy track
team and an accurate golf squad.
Working hard with the athletic board he put
on a basketball tournament for the High Schools
of Southern Colorado that caused Boulder to
feel uncomfortable for its tournament. Al-
though accused by the up-state school of using
unfair means, Coach Parsons has Colorado Col-
lege behind him for conducting a fair tourna-
ment, reflecting credit to his school and honoring
the nine high schools that participated for the
Southern Colorado High School Basketball
Championship.
COACH DONALDSON
With Coach Parsons, Coach Donaldson has
been giving his services to the football, basket-
ball, wrestling and track men. Since wrestling
has been made a major sport in the conference,
"Shorty" has worked with Tiger matmen, giving
them the benefit of his successful experience in
the wrestling game. Every afternoon he coached
his men on the mat and in the matches with the
state schools his men have made creditable show-
ings of work well done. Much credit is due
"Shorty" for the way in which he has re-
sponded to give Colorado College supremacy
in its athletic contests.
Football
Thirty-five eligible candidates for the Varsity Football squad reported
on Washburn Field for the first time Monday, September the thirteenth, under
the tutelage of Coach C. L. Parsons and Assistant Coach Tway. There were
thirteen letter-men in this aggregation and so prospects for the coming season
looked good.
The following week the squad was cut and the Training Table was
established, as the result of the efforts of Coach Parsons and Pat Patterson
and the generosity of the business men of the city.
NEW MEXICO
Following the schedule worked out by the Conference, the Tigers easily
won their first game, October ninth, by an overwhelming score of 41 to 3.
The stars of the game were Honnen, Shoemaker and MacTavish. Immediately
after this game Ed Honnen, the giant Tiger tackle, was declared ineligible by
a ruling of the Conference Representatives. This loss was greatlv felt by the
Tigers and a desperate fight was made to have him reinstated, but it was of
no avail.
UTAH
On October the sixteenth, the Tigers started their Conference season
by defeating the Utah Mormons by a score of 20 to 2.
By outfighting and outplaying the fast, heavy team from Utah, the
Tigers took revenge for the defeat suffered last year at Salt Lake. The game
was hard fought for three quarters without a score on either side. In the
first part of the fourth quarter, Shoemaker, the speedy Tiger halfback, plunged
thru the line and ran sixty-five yards through a broken field for a touch down.
The other two touch downs were made by hard smashing plays by Earl Mac-
Tavish, the Tiger's hard-hitting fullback. After Shoemaker's sensational run,
the Tigers were masters of the Mormons. This was one of the most sensational
games played on Washburn Field for many years and really showed in what
class the Tigers were.
DENVER UNIVERSITY
The Tigers added another victory to their list on October the twenty-
third, by defeating Denver University 21 to 0. Denver outfought and out-
played in the first half with neither side making a score; the Tigers came back
in the second half and brought home the bacon.
The Tigers seemed to be asleep during the first half, but when they came
back on the field in the second half they had revived old scrappy custom, and
for the rest of the game showed the brand of football they played in the Utah
game. "Big Mack" crossed the Ministers' line for the first touch down soon
after the second half opened. A long forward pass from Jackson to Shoe-
maker led up to this. The second score of the game came in the latter part
of the third quarter when Don MacDougall made a spectacular run of twenty-
five yards through a broken field for a touch down. In the fourth quarter,
after a series of line plunges the Tigers again scored.
COLORADO UNIVERSITY
"Pio-Vitintr t<-> thp last c\\trh in a hiinrlinp- snow storm and on a field covered
Football
Thirty-five eligible candidates for the Varsity Football squad reported
on Washburn Field for the first time Monday, September the thirteenth, under
the tutelage of Coach C. L. Parsons and Assistant Coach Tway. There were
thirteen letter-men in this aggregation and so prospects for the coming season
looked good.
The following week the squad was cut and the Training Table was
established, as the result of the efforts of Coach Parsons and Pat Patterson
and the generosity of the business men of the city.
NEW MEXICO
Following the schedule worked out by the Conference, the Tigers easily
won their first game, October ninth, by an overwhelming score of 41 to 3.
The stars of the game were Honnen, Shoemaker and MacTavish. Immediately
after this game Ed Honnen, the giant Tiger tackle, was declared ineligible by
a ruling of the Conference Representatives. This loss was greatly felt by the
Tigers and a desperate fight was made to have him reinstated, but it was of
no avail.
UTAH
On October the sixteenth, the Tigers started their Conference season
by defeating the Utah Mormons by a score of 20 to 2.
By outfighting and outplaying the fast, heavy team from Utah, the
Tigers took revenge for the defeat suffered last year at Salt Lake. The game
was hard fought for three quarters without a score on either side. In the
first part of the fourth quarter, Shoemaker, the speedy Tiger halfback, plunged
thru the line and ran sixty-five yards through a broken field for a touch down.
The other two touch downs were made by hard smashing plays by Earl Mac-
Tavish, the Tiger's hard-hitting fullback. After Shoemaker's sensational run,
the Tigers were masters of the Mormons. This was one of the most sensational
games played on Washburn Field for many years and really showed in what
class the Tigers were.
DENVER UNIVERSITY
The Tigers added another victory to their list on October the twenty-
third, by defeating Denver University 21 to 0. Denver outfought and out-
played in the first half with neither side making a score; the Tigers came back
in the second half and brought home the bacon.
The Tigers seemed to be asleep during the first half, but when they came
back on the field in the second half they had revived old scrappy custom, and
for the rest of the game showed the brand of football they played in the Utah
game. "Big Mack" crossed the Ministers' line for the first touch down soon
after the second half opened. A long forward pass from Jackson to Shoe-
maker led up to this. The second score of the game came in the latter part
of the third quarter when Don MacDougall made a spectacular run of twenty-
five yards through a broken field for a touch down. In the fourth quarter,
after a series of line plunges the Tigers again scored.
JACKSON J. I
goodi My"
«lced hirt with the Ih- Tiscrj landt-j ■
Football
COLORADO UNIVERSITY
Fighting to the last ditch in a blinding snow storm and on a field covered
with mud and water, the Tigers and Colorado University came out of the game
played on Washburn on October the thirtieth, with a tie score of 7 to 7.
The University did not get their score until the fourth quarter, after their great
advantage in weight had begun to tell on the Tiger line. Due to weather
conditions, both teams were below par and it would be impossible to judge the
ability of either eleven from the score.
WYOMING UNIVERSITY
In what was probably the fastest football game seen so far this year on
Washburn Field, the Tigers emerged victors over the University of Wyoming.
The Tigers' burst of speed in the first part of the game gave them the advantage
over their opponents, who were somewhat slower in developing speedy work.
Shoemaker, Linger, MacTavish and Briggs were the Tiger stars.
COLORADO AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE
With the disadvantages of a wet, slippery field, and overpowering
weight, the fighting Tigers were defeated by the Colorado Aggies. The scrappv
little bunch of Tigers well deserved the name of "Fighting Tigers," for thev
fought the beefy Farmers to a standstill all through the first half. The great
weight of the heavy farmers began to tell and early in the third quarter the
Aggies put across their first touch down.
The Tigers then took the ball to the one-yard line by a series of line-
bucks, end runs and passes, but could not put it across and so an end run was
tried and the ball was lost on downs. Wessen, who up to this time had been
playing on the second string, was given his first real chance to show just what
he could do, and he certainly came thru in all-conference style.
Captain Briggs, Linger, E. MacTavish, MacKenzie, D. MacDougall,
Brumfield and Shoemaker all played their steady, consistent, hard fighting
game, and the Tigers team fought for all that was in them and gave all that
they had.
HONNEN KICKING GOAL
(7)
COLORADO SCHOOL OF MINES
Ending their football season with a 13-7 victory over the Mines Thanks-
giving day on Washburn field, the Tiger team landed second place in the
Rocky Mountain Conference. The men that did especially good work in this
game were Capt. Briggs, E. MacTavish and Linger.
Both elevens used the forward pass to great advantage. The combi-
nation of a pass from D. MacDougall to Briggs and from Big Mac to Shoe-
maker were both very effective. In this game, Heavy Linger's toe proved to
be the salvation of the Tigers, for he scored two goals from field and gave the
Tigers the long end of the score.
On the All-Rocky Mountain Conference team chosen by the coaches,
Capt. Briggs and E. MacTavish of the Tigers were chosen on the first team.
Brumfield, Linger and Shoemaker were all picked by some of the indi-
vidual sport writers as all-conference men and were well up the list for places
on the team picked by the coaches.
The men to receive their letters for football were as follows: Captain
F. N. Briggs, I. V. MacKenzie, J. F. Bickmore, H. Waiss, J. T. Wessen, R. J.
Brumfield, H. K. Linger, L. MacTavish, E. MacTavish, Pike Bruce, D.. Mac-
Dougall, F. Shoemaker, J. B. Jackson, D. McMillan, D. Lesher, C. Ball, M.
MacDougall and Manager Sweet.
Freshmen Football
When Coach Harry Holman called for candidates for freshmen football
there was a hearty response and a great many of the new men of the school
appeared for practice, Monday, September 19. The squad of freshmen this
year is the huskiest in the history of the school and the remarkable success of
the varsity this year was partly due to the good practice and the strong offensive
and defensive work of the freshmen. The Frosh had a scrappy bunch, and
under the watchful eye of Coach Holman they were soon groomed into a smooth
working team, and the men and the Coach deserve special mention for their
spirit and their untiring efforts to do what was in their power to help make
the varsity a real team.
The Baby Tigers had two scheduled games and they certainly did do
justice to the name of Tigers in both. Their first practice game was with the
Las Animas sailors at Las Animas, and the Baby Bengals came home with the
bacon by defeating the husky sailor bunch 59-0. Their other game was played
here and it gave all of the football fans of the city a chance to see them perform.
When the Frosh met the team from the State Teachers' College it was a rare
day for ducks and the Frosh slid over the goal in the mud to a 7-0 victory.
The team had no chance to show the brand of football that they were capable
of playing.
The following men were awarded their numerals: Capt. Downer,
Albert, Rice, Tait, Cook, Wilson, Lusk, Saffold, Burghart, Morris, Murray,
Thomas, Rippey, Patterson, Ryan, Harvey, Clow, Kief, Pace, MacKenzie,
Greiner and Manager Fitzell.
BMIBfUJ!
Basketball
The first call for candidates for berths on the basketball team met
with the heartiest response of a great many aspiring basketball men when over
fifty men reported and received equipment on November 30.
The loss of Captain E. MacTavish and Honnen was keenly felt but
Coach Parsons had the following letter men from last year's squad to build
the nucleus of his team: Lloyd, Newbold, Yates, Birdsall and Les MacTavish.
Aside from these letter men there was a wealth of material from the various
high schools of the state. The whole squad was divided into six teams as
nearly equal as it was possible to divide them and the squad was picked from
the showing of each of the individual members.
The followers of C. C. in basketball had their first opportunity to see
them in action on December 16, in a practice game with the University of
Denver. In this game Coach Parsons used the entire squad and the Tigers
came out with the long end of the score by defeating the boys from the big
city by a score of 34-23. Next in turn for the Tigers were the All-Stars from
Pueblo. There were many former collegiate stars on the visiting team but the
Tiger attack was too fast for the Smelter City boys and they went down to
defeat 74-18. In this game Coach Parsons used his entire squad and theie
were four separate teams used.
NORTHERN TRIP
The Tigers took a trip to the northern part of the state and played the
Wheatridge Athletic club, defeating them 32-18. The next night they played
their first conference game and won from the University of Wyoming at
Laramie. This was a hard fought game and to beat Wyoming on their own
floor means that real basketball must have been exhibited by the Tiger quintet.
The score was 32-18. The next in turn on the trip was the Ault American
Legion. This was the easiest game of the entire trip and the Tigers won by a
big margin 31-17. The three day trip resulted in three decisive victories for
the Tigers and these teams are considered among the best in the northern part
of the state. The one conference game to their credit shows that the team was
one of the best.
The five-man defense was a factor in the Tigers favor at Laramie but
it proved pregnable here on January 29 when it resulted in a 36-32 victory
for the Cowboys. The Tigers played desperately but their combination was
unable to get by the visitors defense for short shots. The victory for the
visitors came from their ability in getting the jump on the Tigers at the very
opening of the game. The game was a brilliant one from the point of a spec-
tator, close and exciting all the way thru. It was not until the last few seconds
of play that the visitors were able to break the tie and when they started,
the baskets came fast and clinched the game up for them.
Friday, one week later, at Denver, the Tigers played their best game
thus far this season and defeated the Ministers by a score of 43-16. The
Ministers played a good brand of basketball but were clearly outclassed. The
old Tiger machine had hit their pace and there was nothing in the style of a bas-
ketball team in this conference that could have stopped them. In this game
Patterson was high point man with a total of 29 points. The work of Harvey,
MacTavish, Ryan and Bruce was all that could have been expected of the
very best of them.
The game here on January 29, with the Aggies was easy for the Tiger
team. After the first team had been sent in and had gained a sufficient lead,
the other three teams were all given a chance and they all held their own with
the Aggies. The Aggies apparently were unable to play basketball and the
Tigers would not, so the game was slow and not full of excitement. The final
score was 31-11.
In the fourth conference game of the season the Tigers went down to
defeat at the hands of the quintet from the University of Colorado on the
Boulder floor. The team and floor work of the Tigers was excellent but they
could not judge their shots. The Tigers fought well and outplayed their
opponents the whole game but the comeback of the team in the second half
was remarkable and from that time on they were more accurate and gained
back a large percentage of the odds that were against them at the close of the
first half. The game was a hard one to lose and the team and backers had
rather have won it than any other game that was to be played except the one
left to be played here with the State University. The game ended with the
score 32-26 against C. C.
The basketball game with the Colorado School of Mines scheduled for
February 12, was postponed on account of illness of seven of the Tiger team and
when a date for the playing of the game was open it was decided not to play
the postponed game because the conference standing was then determined for
Boulder.
The crucial game of the season for the Tigers was the game played here
on February 22 with the State University. For the first ten minutes of this
game the Tigers played the up-state quintet off their feet and at the end of
that time the score was 17-2. But the men from Boulder were old heads and
did not let such a start get the best of them and in the second half they came
back strong. This was one of the most sensational games played on Cossitt
floor the whole season and as the teams were evenly matched the scores did
not vary a great deal at any time during the game except at the very start.
The last whistle found the men from Boulder riding the long end of the score
and the game ended 36-30.
The night following the Boulder game here, the Tigers played the Miners
at Mines and they played the same style of basketball there as they played here
against Boulder. They held a big lead for the first part of the game and then
the Miners speeded up and at the end of the game they were the victors by a
score of 39-31.
The Tigers finished their basketball season in whirlwind style by first*
defeating the Aggies 28-22 on their own floor on February 25. The Aggies
basketball team improved greatly between the time we first played them and
the last time. They beat Wyoming University and so it was much credit to
the Tiger aggregation to be able to take them into camp at their best.
The following night the team came home and played their last game of
the season. They took the University of Denver to a cleaning, 63-27. They
played the best brand of basketball in the whole season; their passing was accur-
ate; their shots were well directed and they covered all of the floor in real style.
If the Tigers could have played the invincible brand of basketball all season
that they exhibited against D. U. the conference standing might have been
somewhat different. As it was the Tigers finished third in the race.
The men to make their letters were: L. MacTavish, F. Ryan, K.
Harvey, J. Bruce, E. Patterson, C. Lloyd, S. Birdsall and Manager Daily.
In the All-Conference team, chosen by the coaches, four Tigers received
honors. Patterson made the first All-Conference team and Harvey, Mac-
Tavish and Bruce were placed on the honor roll.
Les MacTavish was elected Captain of the basketball team for the
season 1922.
The Southern High School Basketball
Tournament
Under the Auspices of Colorado College
Ten high schools from Southern Colorado participated in the contest
for the championship of the Southern High School Basketball Tournament.
Invitations had been sent to most all the schools and the nine best were se-
lected to fight it out on Cossitt Gym. Aggregations came from Pueblo,
Rocky Ford, Fowler, Trinidad, Palisade, Manassa, Monte Vista, Cheyenne,
Durango, and Colorado Springs to play scheduled games on March 3, 4, 5,
and 7.
Three games were played March 3 between Cheyenne and Manassa,
Trinidad and Fowler and the Terrors and Monte Vista, resulting in victories
for Manassa, Trinidad and the Terrors. The Terrors thus far seemed to be
far from being touched.
The games on Friday resulted in victories for Rocky Ford against
Palisade; Centennial against Durango; Trinidad against Manassa; the
Terrors against Centennial; Rocky Ford against Durango; Monte Vista against
Palisade; Manassa against Cheyenne; and the Terrors against Trinidad.
Saturday's games upset the dope on the Terrors when they were beaten
by Rocky Ford 31 to 30. Monte Vista hung it on the quintet from Manassa;
Centennial defeated Trinidad and Centennial battled Monte Vista to a defeat;
then lost to the Terrors thus eliminated from the finals to meet Rocky Ford.
In one of the most sensational games of the tournament, the Terrors beat
Rocky Ford which meant that the championship game must be played the
Monday following.
Rocky Ford was no match for the Terrors Monday night when they
suffered defeat by a score of 42 to 17.
The all-star team as selected by coach Parsons, Jones and Evans, the
tournament officers, Bill Tway, athletic editor of the Evening Telegraph and
Prep McLeod, athletic editor of the Gazette was made up of Vanderhoof of
Rocky Ford for center; Bryden of Trinidad for forward; Broyles of Colorado
Springs for forward; McOuaide of Pueblo for guard and J. Phelps of Colorado
Springs for guard.
Jean Broyles was the high score man making eighty points for his team.
A white sweater was awarded him by Barnes- Wood. The Colorado Sporting
Goods Co. awarded each member of the winning team with a silver basketball
charm and the team as a whole with a silver loving cup. The Tournament
pennant given by the Lucas Sporting Goods Co. was awarded to Rocky Ford.
Although Boulder contested the tournament, Colorado College was the
host at a very successful tourney. Each Fraternity kept a team at its house
and furnished entertainment for its visitors. Meals were served by the College
in Cossitt Dining Room. Bemis hall was the scene of a dance Saturday night
after the Terror-Rocky Ford game. Enthusiastic crowds attended all the
games welcoming the visiting aggregations to Colorado Springs and to Colorado
College.
The Terror of the Basketball Tourney
Coach Dan Kline
Forward Broyles
Forward G. Ryan
Guard J. Phelps
Guard C. Ryan
Center Warner
Substitute Center Winters
Substitute Forward Strain
Substitute Guard F. Phelps
&m
ROILIH0
.*
Wrestling
Shortly after the close of the 1920 football season the candidates for
the Tiger wrestling team took up their work under Coach Donaldson.
Seven veterans of last year's team reported and prospects for the Tiger
wrestlers looked promising. But only three of the veterans were able to stay
out thruout the season. This left only Captain Brumfield, Bemis and McCool
as experienced men.
The success of the Tiger matmen is not wholly based on the number of
matches won for if it were the showing would not look good in print but fortun-
ately the number of matches won is not the only deciding factor in the measure-
ment of success in this line of Athletics. The Tigers won from D. U. and lost
to Boulder, Mines and Aggies. Thruout the season the Tiger matmen made
a very creditable showing, winning three places on the All-conference team.
The men winning the places were Captain Brumfield, heavy weight; Wesley
Murray, light heavy; and Charles Bemis 135 pound class. Wesley Murray,
altho a new man, proved a valuable asset to the Tiger team.
The season opened with a match with D. U. here on March 5th. The
match was held in the afternoon as entertainment for the Southern High School
Basketball teams that were here for the basketball tournament. The C. C.
grapplers won five out of seven matches from the Denver University men. The
Tigers took the 135, 158 and 175 pound class and heavy weight bouts. The men
taking them were Bemis, Nelson, Murray and Captain Brumfield, respectively.
They lost the 115 pound class and the 125 pound weight matches.
The lighter weight wrestlers from C. C. were unable to compete favorably
with their men from the University but the men in the heavier class outclassed
the opponents from the up-state school. Padgett of C. C. wrestled fifteen
minutes to a draw, Bemis wrestled to a draw and Murray and Captain Brum-
field won their matches. The score of the C. U. and C. C. match was 18-14 in
favor of Boulder.
The Tiger grapplers lost the third match of the schedule by losing to
the School of Mines at Golden on March 19, by a score of 19-13. Padgett
wrestled to a draw, Bemis wrestled to a draw, Murray won his match and
Captain Brumfield received a decision.
The Tigers journeyed to Aggie town for their last match of the season
on March 26. The score in this match was 22-6. The Aggie matmen proved
too much for the majority of the C. C. grapplers. The only point getters for
C. C. were Bemis, who was awarded a draw, and Briggs, who was also awarded
a draw. It was his first time on a mat and he met with some pretty fast men
in the wrestling game. His showing was creditable and in the future "Shorty"
should be able to use him to good advantage in some of his matches. Captain
Brumfield wrestled to a draw with his opponent who was picked as an All-
conference man but he had been thrown and Captain Brumfield had not, and
so the berth on the All-conference team for the heavy weight class went to
Captain Brumfield.
The Tiger grapplers should all be commended for the good showing
made. The men to receive their letters were Murray, Bemis, Padgett and
Captain Brumfield.
\
5$ " 1*0
(8)
Baseball
The first game of the season was a practice game with Sacred Heart
College of Denver. The Tigers played fast ball and shut out the fast Sacred
Heart team for the first six innings. Chuck Newbold held their sluggers safe
and the Tigers shut them out. Then some of our second-string pitchers were
put in, and the Sacred Heart team gathered enough hits and runs off of them
in the next two innings to win the game.
The first conference game was with Boulder. Boulder made two runs
in the first inning and at the first glance it looked as tho it was going to be bad
for the Tigers, but not so. The Tiger batters tied into Willard and made two
runs in less time than it takes to tell. It was a very cold and stormy day and
the game was called off at the end of the second inning with the score tied, 2
to 2.
The next conference game was with D. U. The Tiger wrecking crew
got going and knocked D. U.'s iron man, MacKenzie, all over the lot and won
14 to 6. The Tigers played good ball and things looked good for a winning
team.
Mines was next on the list and they took the Bengals in for two games.
Their hard hitting at opportune times won both games for them. Newbold
pitched the first game and was very effective after the third inning, but the
damage was done and the Tigers could not overcome their lead.
The following morning the Tigers took the Mines on again. Ed Hughes
was in the box and pitched good ball, except for one inning, when the Miners'
sluggers got him and the Tiger infielders for 7 runs.
The Tigers then journeyed to Denver to tangle with Sacred Heart
again. The team got going in this game and took the Denver collegians into
the tune of 4 to 2.
Boulder was next in line. In a game replete with hard hitting and
much run making the State team took the score, 14 to 8. They hit Hughes
hard and at opportune times, but the Tigers did some hitting on their own
hook; not enough however, to overcome the lead against them.
The Aggie team then came to Colorado Springs and played in the
Bengals' own back yard. The Tigers were right and took them in for two
games. The first one was a close contest and was featured by good hitting
and fast fielding on the part of both teams. The Tigers scored 10 to the
Aggies 6.
The next day the wrecking crew got going again. Broiller pitching for
the Aggies was easy picking for the Tigers' luggers and they all fattened their
batting averages. At the same time good fielding and pitching held the Aggies
safe, with a score of 17 to 4.
The last game was lost to D. U. in Denver. It was a pitchers' battle
and the Denver pitcher got the best of the argument. Both teams played
good ball on the field and many possible scores were cut off by fast infield
work. The C. C. wrecking crew didn't wreck and lost the last conference
game of the season, 5 to 1.
The following men were granted letters for making the baseball team:
W. Hughes, E. Hughes, Newbold, Kyffin, MacDougall, Wilkin, Bleistein,
Briggs, Flegal, McCool, Goessling, and Manager Winters. Don MacDougall
was re-elected captain for the following year.
Inter-Fraternity Baseball
Six girls of the senior class were chosen, by popular vote of all the wo-
men of the college, from which the May queen was to be chosen. Then each
fraternity drew one of these names and she was to be its candidate for May
Queen, the method of finally deciding on who was to be the winner in the
baseball series of the campus league. The following were the girls chosen
and the fraternities which drew them: Non-Fraternity men, Annis Keener;
Beta Theta Pi, Harriet Prince; Sigma Chi, Helene Paine; Phi Gamma Delta,
Marnie Eppich; Kappa Sigma, Helen Scott; and Phi Delta Theta, Ruth Brown.
The Phi Delts were the winners by a large margin. Their battery
consisting of Shoemaker and Collins was almost invincible and they won most
of their games by decisive scores. Many of the games pitched by Shoemaker
were shoutout games. His pitching was not the only winning feature of the
winning team for their batting and fielding was of the highest caliber.
As a result of their victory, Ruth Brown was proclaimed May Queen.
Inter- Fraternity Indoor Baseball
Indoor baseball was introduced as a new form of Inter-Fraternity
competition by Coach Parsons. It was a new thing to most of the budding
athletes of the different fraternities, and at first the games were mostly mara-
thon races, the one that lasted the longest won out. Soon the games began to
look like real ball games and some were hard fought and very close.
The competition was at its highest pitch when the Sigma Chis won a
game from the Phi Delts who had up to that time not lost a single game.
The championship was at stake in a final game between these two teams.
The Phi Delts were not to be denied again and with superb team work and
hard hitting they downed their rivals by a score of 20 to 10. All the games
were attended by enthusiastic crowds and the favorites were well supported.
The Phi Delts were presented with a banner by the Colorado Sporting Goods
Company for winning first place. They also awarded a silver loving cup to
the best batter of the league, Don MacDougall.
Dual Meets
After the Christmas holidays the track men were called out. At this
time Art Wilson was elected captain of the team. The men were given daily
work and gotten into shape gradually. Many of last year's veterans reported
for practice and things looked good for a successful season. The most promis-
ing of the new men was Mai Graham, who holds the high-school state record
for the 100 and 200-yard dashes.
The state conference meet was for the first time to be held on Washburn
Field, on May 22. The track schedule called for four dual meets and the
conference meet for the Tiger cinder artists.
The first dual meet was held with D. U. on Washburn Field. The Tiger
sprinters romped away with the meet to the tune of 93 to 29. The Tigers won
first place in eleven events and Denver got three firsts. The showings made
were not exceptional, due no doubt to bad weather conditions. The most
exciting race of the day was the 440-yard dash. Howe of Denver barely
nosed Brown out of first place by six inches. Mai Graham won first in the
100 and 220-yard dashes and second in the 220 low hurdles.
Mines was the next victim. The thinly clads showed them many clean
pairs of heels and won the meet 91 to 40. Mai Graham tied the state record in
the 220-yard dash when he made the distance in 21:3 seconds. Brown won
the 440, Les MacTavish won the broad jump, and Schreiber won the 880-
yard dash.
Luck was broken in the next dual meet when the Tigers lost to Boulder.
The track was in poor shape and no good time was made in any event. Davis
was the only Tiger man to come up to form when he won two firsts, in the pole
vault and high jump. The meet was lost by a score of 80 to 36, the team win-
ing only four firsts, the high jump, pole vault, 220-yard dash, and the javelin
throw. One of the surprises of the day was the fact that Mai Graham lost
to Lee Willard in the 100-yard dash. The little sprinter came back, however,
and won the 220-yard dash.
The Conference Meet
The Tiger track team won second place in the conference meet, getting
40 and a half points to 54 and a half points gathered by Boulder. Aggies were
third, getting 30 points, D. U. 10. The University of Wyoming was the only
team out of the state to enter, but they won no points in the meet.
Mai Graham won the 100 and 220-yard dashes in two of the most
exciting races seen on Washburn Field for a long time. He defeated his great-
est rival, Willard of Boulder, in both of these feature events. Davis won a
second place in the pole vault and broke the state record in doing it. A new
conference record was established in this event, the record now being 12 feet.
The conference record in the javelin throw was broken twice in two minutes
and the new record is 157 feet 7 in. In a very pretty race, Brown of C. C. won
the 440-yard dash. He was boxed until he reached the last curve, when by a
brilliant burst of speed he passed all competitors and came in winning. His
time was 53 flat. Les MacTavish won the broad jump when he jumped 21 ft.
6 in. Bickmore won third place in the mile run, Briggs tied for third in the
pole vault, Hughes won the high hurdles in 16:1 seconds, Carter won second
place in the high jump, Faweett was third in the javelin, Schreiber was second
in the 880-yard dash, and the relay team, made up of MacTavish, Lyles, Parks
and Brown, won second place.
Ken Brown was elected Captain for the ensuing year.
*****
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Kappa Sigma
Founded at the University of Virginia in 1869.
Beta Gamma in 1905. 911 North Nevada Avenue.
Frederick Bisehof
Ruford Blair
Dwight Skinner
SENIORS
JUNIORS
Ralph Hankins
SOPHOMORES
Charles Bemis
Ray Green
Robert Morris
James Park
John Dawson
FRESHMEN
Elwyn Arps
Keith Ferguson
George Frank
James MeMurtry, Jr.
Floyd Padgett
Thomas Seeley
Francis Thomas
William Young
Monroe Heath
Angelo vScott
Ralph Round
Vincent Gildea
Frank Mahan
Hugh Morton
Lawrence Wolfe
Ellwood Amos
Wilbur Haynes
Bruce Kesling
Martin Lewis
Earl Louthan
Harold Richardson
Paul Spencer
Glenn Van Fleet
Kenneth Wendell
PLEDGES
Milton Nelson
Ryan Kay
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Sigma Chi
Founded at Miami University in 1855
Beta Gamma in 1905
Charles B. Freeman
Sidney G. Winter
SENIORS
Dart Wantland
JUNIORS
1117 North Nevada Ave.
Benjamin E. Sweet
J. Franklin Bickmore, Jr.
Ben S. Wendleken
Robert D. Adams
Charles R. Ball
A. R. C. Wardwell
SOPHOMORES
Malcolm D. Graham
W. Huntington Wandell
Edward J. O'Brien
C. Russell Carter
FRESHMEN
Ray W. Darling
Leo A. Downer
Rawden A. Williamson
Ralph W. Emery
George B. Croll
PLEDGES
Allan S. Hopkins
John H. Daywalt
Curtis B. Hinton
Harold A. Waiss
Karl James
Cecil Tait
Bronson F. Cooke
Campbell F. Rice
James A. Albert
William R. Fisher
Phi Gamma Delta
Founded at Washington and Jefferson in 1848
Chi Sigma in 1908 1122 N. Cascade Avenue
FACULTY
Dr. A. A. Blackman Guy H. Albright
SENIORS
Tom Lee Brown Charles Henry Lloyd Spencer Crane Scribner
JUNIORS
Carman P. Freyschlag
N. Herbert Johnson
Z. Montgomery Pike
Howard K. Linger
SOPHOMORES
M. Charlton Cannon
John H. Chiles
Robert S. Mcllvaine
Frank A. Parker
J. Jack Dern
Edgar C. Howbert
J. Earl Harvey
Ruben Olson
FRESHMEN
Gerald Rockafellow
PLEDGES
Robert Edgar
Robert A. Hart
Donald C. McMillan
T. Gerowe Simmons
Roy Walholm
Earle H. Bickford
Boxly H. Cole
Earl Y. Park
Joseph W. Bruce
Russell P. Hunter
J. Harper Hartel
W. Edward Patterson
Francis S. Ryan
vSmith Yates
Phi Delta Theta
Founded at Miami University in 1848
Colorado Beta in 1913 1319 North Nevada Ave.
SENIORS
K. V. Brown
R. J. Brumfield
L. T. Burgess
H. B. Coldren
S. Y. Armit
F. N. Briggs
L. O. Collins
E. A. Crockett
C. A. Brumfield
M. E. Carter
R. W. Daniels
G. D. Lawrie
JUNIORS
SOPHOMORES
G. Tobin
M. Hardy
D. S. MacDougall
J. M. McCool
R. F. Purinton
J. B. Jackson
M. W. MacDougall
H. F. Taylor
R. M. Yates
H. E. McBride
J. S. McClary
O. G. McDonald
T. C. Strachan, Jr.
H. W. Clow
B. W. Crockett
P. P. Greiner
FRESHMEN
G. Kief
B. K. Matlock
W. M. McKenzie
H. W. Pace
F. Shoemaker
T. Wesson
(9)
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Beta Theta Pi
Founded at Miami University in 1839
Gamma Delta in 1914
727 North Nevada Ave.
Frank L. Seeley
Erwin F. Meyer
George H. Bruce
Eino N. Leino
Edward French
Lester C. MacTavish
James A. Aitken
George E. Lusk
Charles G. Bullock
Edward G. Thomas
Howard E. Muncaster
Harold V. Eusk
George W. Thatcher
John F. Sheehan
FACULTY
James G. Brown
SENIORS
Frank M. Mobley
JUNIORS
George E. Layden
Earl E. Lyons
Floyd A. Bleistein
Earl D. MacTavish
SOPHOMORES
Eugene C. Johnston
Ralph O. Haymes
Rex R. Scott
FRESHMEN
Dana De W. Burch
Olen D. Capps
Russell E. Morris
PLEDGES
Earl S. Eddins
Edward J. Allen
Hugh F. Flaherty
Stanley W. Birdsall
Arthur F. Daily
Ian V. MacKenzie
Edward H. Honnen
Buell S. Crawford
Ralph E. Parfet
Reith A. Strachan
William G. Saffold
Franklin J. W. Nelson
Robert A. Burghart
Wesley L- Murray
Lee Johnson
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Pi Kappa Alpha
Founded at the University of Virginia in 1868
Beta Rho Chapter in 1920 805 N. Cascade Avenue
FACULTY
Frank M. Okey
SENIORS
Ralph D. Maxwell
JUNIORS
R. Warren Leisy Charles B. Page
Allen D. Rice Beecher W. Fawcett
SOPHOMORES
Lynn B. Wallis Kenneth L. Gordon
Donovan W. Kissinger John G. Freeman
J. Gibson Winans Theodore H. Winans
J. Wilbur Nelson Leslie R. Green
Lawrence F. Koerner Reginald A. Crosby
George A. Rader
FRESHMEN
Simeon E. L. Wilbur Stanley S. Sando
Kenneth K. Kingsbury Ralph A. Owens
PLEDGES
John S. Wood Russell E. Mann Rae N. Taylor
Alpha Tlu
Local Founded in the Spring of 1920
Sherman N. Bushnell
Lester A. Busey
Clyde C. Phillips
William C. Wyatt
Lester B. Powell
FACULTY
Ralph Gilmore
SENIORS
David B. Lesher
JUNIORS
Vernon G. Scott Albert C. Lyles
SOPHOMORES
William K. Chick
Paul W. Sundbury
FRESHMEN
Theodore B. Cannon
William C. Sennings
Lawrence E. Marschat Clyde R. Overholt
Marion E- Stanley
PLEDGES
Ellett G. Bliss Alfred Trailer
The Inter- Fraternity Council
President, Professor C. C. Mierow
Vice-President, Charles Lloyd
Secretary-Treasurer, Sidney G. Winter
Faculty Representative, Professor Palm
Representative to Student Commission, Angelo Scott
Kappa Sigma — Angelo Scott, Ralph Round.
Sigma Chi — Sidney Winter, A. R. Wardwell.
Phi Gamma Delta — Charles Lloyd, Carman Freyschlag.
Phi Delta Theta — Donald MacDougall, Frank N. Briggs
Beta Theta Pi — Frank Mobley, George Bruce.
Pi Kappa Alpha — Beecher Fawcett, Warren Leisy.
Alpha Nu — David Lesher, A. C. Lyles.
Colorado College Student Commission
President, Ben Sweet Vice-President, BernicE Miles
Secretary, Martha HowberT Treasurer, Edward Allen
REPRESENTATIVES
Men's Organizations
Athletic Board Donald McDougall
Pan-Hellenic Council Angelo Scott
Non-Fraternity Men J. P. Bushnell
Women's Organizations
Dramatic Club . Ruth Stevens
Student Government Elizabeth Morgan
Town Girls' Association HELEN STAFF
Women's Athletic Association Doris Haymes
Y. W. C. A Rowena Hampshire
Inter-Society Council Helen Erps
Joint Organizations
Freshman Class Bertram Crockett
Sophomore Class John Chiles
Faculty Member Mr. TilEston
Young Women's Christian Association
OFFICERS
President, Margaret Felt Vice-President, Lottie Crabtree
Secretary, Elizabeth Morgan Treasurer, Mary ClEGG Owen
Student Commission Representative, Rowena Hampshire
FIRST CABINET
Devotional MarjoriE Hankins
Social Neva RiTTER
Social Service Margaret Scilley
Membership Mildred McMurtry
Church Affiliation HazaEL Jolly
World Fellowship Lutie Marshall
Rest Room Ruth Morrison
Conference Winona Jewett
Reception Evelyn Austin
Publicity Adelaide Brown
Student Government Irene Hamilton
Town Girls' Association Evelyn Campbell
Student Volunteer Band Thelma Bradley
Young Women's Christian Association
SECOND CABINET
Papetown Marion Little
Day Nursery Harriet Mason
Girls' Club Helen Morton
Common Room Macy Stream
Finance LoRENA BERGER
World Fellowship Gertrude Farr
Social Fanny Sheldon
Poster Norma Bright
Music Neata Green
Colorado College Men's Christian League
Established in the Fall of 1920
CABINET
President, Harry F. Taylor
Secretary, Wesley L- Murray
Bible Study, John C. Wood
Church Affiliation, Kenneth V. Brown
Mission Study, Y. L. Mason
Papetown, James M. McCool, C. H. Bemis
The Colorado College Men's Christian League was organized last
October because it was felt that the men of the college should be included in
an organization similar to the Young Women's Christian Association to carry
on Christian work. The organization was represented at the State Council
of the Y. M. C. A. held in Denver. Their program as listed above in the
Cabinet calls for the various kinds of work that the world calls for today in
all its parts. Professor Drucker has been working with the Papetown committee
at the settlements located near the coal mines north of Colorado Springs.
Weekly meetings are held on Wednesday nights at which time Christian
problems are discussed and addresses are given by men and women who have
been out in the world doing such work.
Euterpe
OFFICERS
President, Mildred McMurTry
Secretary, Gladys STEELE
Vice-President, Ruth Brown
Treasurer, Majorie Drake
MEMBERS
Dean Hale
Donald Hale
Danforth Hale
Beryl Griswold
Winona Berggren
Clara Vorrieter
Emma O'Brien
Lillian Barkhurst
Lois Myer
Juanita White
Lucile Skinner
Janet Duncan
Jean Strang
Alice Allen
Perizade Barr
Katharine Millisack
L. Roberts
Laura Miller
Elma Ruth Johnson
Gladys James
Miss Sterling
Josephine Miller
Ruth Evans
Florence Ball
Adelaide Brown
Mrs. Friedman
Esther Norton
"C" Club
OFFICERS
President, Roy Brumfield Secretary, Ian Mackenzie
Treasurer, James McCool
K. E. Hedblom
EXECUTIVE BOARD
H. G. Sinton Harry Black
Jack Taylor
Coach Parsons
C. R. Ball
C. H. Bemis
J. F. Bickmore
S. W. Birdsall
F. A. Bleistein
F. N. Briggs
K. V. Brown
G. H. Bruce
Joe Bruce
R. J. Brumfield
F. M. Shoemaker
B. E. Sweet
Mai Graham
Charles Newbold
ACTIVE MEMBERS
J. H. Daywalt
B. W. Fawcett
H. K. Linger
C. H. Lloyd
J. B. Jackson
Don MacMillan
L. C. MacTavish
I. V. MacKenzie
T. J. Wessen
Harold Waiss
Sidney Winter
Charles Freeman
D. B. Lesher
Harvey Donaldson
Don MacDougall
Mai MacDougall
J. M. McCool
R. F. Purinton
R. M. Yates
Francis Ryan
Edward Patterson
Claude Harvey
Albert Lyles
Wesley Murray
H. B. Coldren
C. B. Page
A. F. Daily
Gerowe Simmons
HONORARY LIFE MEMBERSHIPS
Bill Dotterer
Pete Woods
Pat Patterson
Charles Shorb
Bill Jones
Otis Mclntyre
Dr. Woodward
Dr. McKinnie
Dr. Mullin
Dr. Schaefer
Governor Shoup
Dr. Blackman
B. S. Crawford
J. A. Aitken
Leo Downer
William MacKenzie
Lester Busey
Martin Drake
HONORARY MEMBERS
M. Carter
Kirk Hinton
Earl Park
Howard Muncaster
P. P. Greiner
Dwight Skinner
Ira Hicks
Warren Leisy
James Park
Herman Clow
William Fisher
Frank Parker
William Young
George Kief
(10)
Sigma Delta Psi
Founded at Indiana University in 1912
Established at Colorado College 1914
ADVISORY COMMITTEE
President Duniway, Ex-officio C. L. Parsons, Director
M. A. Jencks, Field Judge A. B. Hulbert, Field Judge
W. D. Copeland, Secretary
Albert Lyles SENIOR MEMBERS Frank Briggs
Malcolm MacDougall Malcolm Graham
Lester MacTavish JUNIORS Franklin Bickmore
REQUIREMENTS
Senior Standing — 100 yard run in 11 3-5 seconds; 220 yard (low)
hurdles, each 2 ft. 6 in. high, in 31 seconds, leaving all standing; running high
jump 5 ft.; running broad jump 17 ft.; shot put for men 160 pounds in weight
30 feet, being scaled down accordingly for men of lighter weight; pole vault
8 ft. 6 in.; throwing baseball 250 feet on fly; punting football 120 feet on fly;
100 yards swim (continuous without floating or other rest); 2 mile run in 12
min. 15 sec; 10 mile walk in 2 hours and 30 min.; Tumbling hand-stand main-
tained without walk for 10 seconds, posture, erect carriage especially head
(candidates should be observed by judges for this requirement when they are
not aware of being watched).
Junior Standing — 100 yard run in 12 sec; 220 yard low hurdles in 33
sec. leaving all standing; running high jump 4 ft. 6 in.; running broad jump
15 ft. Shot put same as senior standing except distance is 25 ft.; pole vault
7 ft. 9 in.; throwing baseball 200 ft. on fly; punting football 90 ft. on fly; 50
yard swim continuous without rest; 2 mile run in 14 min.; 10 mile walk in 3
hrs.; Tumbling hand-stand; same as for senior. — National Athletic Fraternity.
Hagerman Hall Association
OFFICERS
President, Joseph P. Bushnell Vice-President, Charles B. Page
Secretary-Treasurer, Earnest J. Sheppard
SENIORS
Reignson C. T. Chen Lewis Mason
Clarence K. Young
JUNIORS
Newton P. Fowler Charles B. Page
Earnest J. Sheppard
SOPHOMORES
Joseph P. Bushnell Robert S. Mcllvaine
John C. Wood
FRESHMEN
Hubert K. Clay
John Mussey
Stanley Sando
Myron E. Harmon
Thomas H. Sanford
Glenn G. Scott
Colorado College Band
OFFICERS
Director, Fred Fink Assistant Director, Carl Brumfield
Secretary-Treasurer, Edward Allen Manager, Kenneth Brown
Drum Major, Roy Walholm
MEMBERS
Vernon Scott
Gerald Rockafellow
Clarinets
Glenn Scott
Warren Leisy
Albert Lyles
Cornets
Carl Brumfield
Glenn McLaughlin
Kenneth Brown
Fred Fink
Saxophones
Adna Wardwell
Paul Spencer
Altos
Russell Mann
Gibson Winans
Ellwood Amos
Ted Winans
Bass
Arbor Fuller James Duncan
Baritone
Ralph Haymes Harry Taylor
Trombone
William Thompson
Drums
Ben Wendelken Joseph Bushnell Liston Sewell
Kappa Beta Phi
President, Charles Freeman Vice-President, James McCool
Secretary-Treasurer, Dart Wantland
SENIORS
Charles Lloyd Charles Freeman
James McCool Dart Wantland
Rov Brumfield
JUNIORS
John Jackson
Lester MacTavish
Charles Ball
Frank Briggs
Albert Lyles
Howard Linger
George Bruce
Carman Freyschlag
Phi Beta Kappa
Founded at William and Mary in 1776
Chapter Granted at Colorado College in 1904
President, C. C. Mierow Vice-President, E. D. Hale
Secretary-Treasurer, J. G. McMurtry
FACULTY MEMBERS
C. A. Duniway
F. H. Loud
J. G. McMurtry
R. J. Gilmore
Barton Hoag
C. C. Mierow
A. B. Hulbert
E. D. Hale
Edith Bramhall
C. T. Latimer
SENIORS
Frank Mobley
Helen Erps
Margaret Felt
Ruth Gilliland
Martha Howbert
Mildred McMurtry
C. T. Chen
Sidney Winter
Monroe Heath
Helen Staff
JUNIORS
Edmond Crockett Marion Little
National Scholarship Fraternity
Girls' Glee Club
President, Lottie Crabtree
Secretary, Elizabeth Morgan
Librarian, Ruth Morrison
Vice-President, FayE LiLLEY
Treasurer, Adelaide Brown
Director, Mrs. John Speed Tucker
FIRST SOPRANO
Marie Bollinger
Evelyn Campbell
Mildred Earnest
Faye Lilley
Frances Tucker
Lucile Skinner
Adelaide Brown
LaVerne Donnan
Neata Green
Serena Mcintosh
Martha Tucker
Elma Ruth Johnson
Thelma Blaine
Lottie Crabtree
Ruth Gilliland
SECOND SOPRANO
Juanita White
Lillian Backhurst
Mildred Finlay
Mary Kemp
Joan Heckenlively
Lois Myer
FIRST ALTO
Ruth Morrison
Agnes Pearson
Lorena Berger
Arabelle Mott
SECOND ALTO
Elizabeth Morgan
Harriet Penner
Ruth vStevens
Men's Glee Club
Director, E. D. Hale
President, Roy Walholm
Manager, Frank Mahan
Soloists, Brown and Taylor
Quartet, Johnson, Walholm, Edgar, Brown
Readers, Walholm, R. Brumfield
Oriental Dancer, Simmons
Accompanists, E. D. Hale, Blair
Jazz Quintet, Johnson, Lusk, Kief, Bates, Layden
FIRST TENORS
Brown R. Brumfield Pike Taylor
SECOND TENORS
Blair * Hale Robinson
Spencer . Winans
FIRST BASS
Emery Edgar James
Freyschlag Freeman Sundbury Walholm
SECOND BASS
Bishof C. Brumfield Johnson
Mahan Round
PROGRAM
Bedouin Love Song Club
Marcheta Club
Solo Harry Taylor
My Rosary Club
My Lady Chloe Club
Quartet Numbers Quartet
Solo Tom Brown
Hearest Thou Club
Little Wise Men Club
SECOND PART
Opening Numbers Jazz Quintet
Reading Roy Brumfield
Solo Dance T. G. Simmons
Reading Roy Walholm
Comic Songs . . : .- Quartet
Finale Club
Town Girls' Association
President, Evelyn Campbell
Vice-President, Nina Shaffer
Secretary-Treasurer, Marion Little
Tiger Correspondent, Ruth Staff
Student Commission Representative, Helen Staff
Senior Representatives, Helen Morton, Agnes Flanagan
Junior Representatives, Virginia Newman, Florence Allen, Jessie Morrow
Sophomore Representatives, Margaret Thomas, Fanny Sheldon
Freshmen Representatives, Ruth Little, Sadie Kier
Pearsons Dramatic Club
OFFICERS
President, Sidney Winter Vice-President, James McCool
Secretary, Harry Taylor Treasurer, RuFord Blair
Faculty Advisor, William CopEland
MEMBERS
Ellwood Amos
Monroe Heath
Roy Walholm
Adna Wardwell
Russell Hunter
Robert Morris
V. F. Schneider
Francis Thomas
Dart Wantland
Karl James
Harry Taylor
Sidney Winter
James McCool
Ruford Blair
William Copeland
Carman Freyschlag
The Dais
President, Gladys Layman Treasurer, Florence Fabling
THE READER'S GUIDE
The Atlantic Miss Phinney
Hearth and Home Evelyn Austin
The Periodic Francelia Eldridge
Current Opinion Helen Erps
Cosmopolitan Florence Fabling
St. Nicholas Gertrude Farr
Christian Herald Margaret Felt
Review of Reviews Ruth Gilliland
Contemporary NeaTa Green
Judge Irena Hamilton
The Advocate MarjoriE Hankins
Voodoo Eleanor Hobbs
The Country Gentleman HazaEL Jolly
Photo Plays Katharine Kauffman
The Red Book Gladys Layman
The Silent Partner Helen LytlE
Woman's Home Companion Helen Marsh
The American Boy Bernice Miles
Little Folks Elizabeth Morgan
Needlecraft Lena Murphy
The Youth's Companion Neva Ritter
Farm Journal LucilE Sargent
The Independent Margaret ScillEy
Elite Miriam Scribner
The Designer Ruth Stevens
Puck Marian Ward
Girls' Dramatic Club
President, Bernice Miles Vice-President, Suoma Leino
Secretary, Fern Pring Treasurer, Anna Herzog
Chairman of Costume Committee, Gladys GlEndEnning
Chairman of Properties Committee, Gertrude Klein
Chairman of Make-Up Committee, Faye Lilley
Representative of Student Commission, Ruth Stevens
DRAMATIC COMMITTEE
Miriam Scribner Elizabeth Morgan
Rowena Hampshire Mary Clegg Owen
Frances Tucker
Tau Kappa Alpha
Established at Colorado College in 1916
President, Kenneth Brown Secretary, Ben Wendelken
Treasurer, John McClary
FACULTY MEMBERS
Professor Swart Professor Pattee
William Copeland
MEMBERS
Hugh Flaherty
Ben Sweet
Kenneth Brown
Ben Wendelken
John McClary
Donald Crowder
Monroe Heath
Robert Mcllvaine
Carman Freyschlag
Charles Kimble
Clarence Young
C. T. Chen
National Oratorical and Debating Fraternity
(ID
Question
Alpha Kappa Psi
Established at Colorado College in 1919
OFFICERvS
President, Sidney G. Winter Secretary, Ben E. Sweet
Treasurer, Reignson C. Chen Editor, Spencer C. Scribner
FACULTY MEMBERS
William D. Copeland
Frank C. Palm A. P. R. Drueker
Jacob Swart
M. A. Jencks
John F. Bickmore
Eino N. Leino
James M. McCool
Ben E- Sweet
STUDENT MEMBERS
Kenneth V. Brown
Frank L. Seeley
Raymond F. Purinton
Reignson C. Chen
Max Hardy
Edmond A. Crockett
Sidney Winter
Spencer C. Scribner
Alpha Kappa Psi is a business fraternity with a national standing
and purpose of fostering good business. This year the fraternity was fortunate
in being able to have men from all over the United States speak to them when
they were here at the Convention of the Retailers Merchant Association.
Whenever an opportunity is offered of hearing some prominent man speak
on business or economics the fraternity tries to engage him to speak to them.
Only Juniors who have passed majors in business, economics or history
with an average of 80 per cent, are eligible for initiation.
Girls' Mandolin Club
OFFICERS
President, Josephine Miller
Director, Mrs. Bowling
Cater Hathaway
Rachel Lynn
Josephine Miller
Marjorie Drake
Virginia Newman
CELLO— Lois Myer
MANDOLINS
Elizabeth Morgan
Gertrude Farr
Evelyn Stannard
VIOLINS
Ida Burleigh
PIANO
Clara Vorrieter
Agnes Flanagan
Mrs. Bowling
Harriet Mason
Juanita White
DRUMS
-Winona Berggren
Girls' Athletic Association
President, LuciLE Sargent Vice-President, Lutie Marshall
Secretary and Treasurer, Fanny Sheldon
Representative to Student Commission, Doris Haymes
HEADS OF SPORTS
Tennis Vera Eddins
Hockey Martina Maher
Baseball Frances Tucker
Volley Ball Roxanna Jackson
Track Muriel Clay
Colorado College Orchestra
Professor Edwin Dietrich Director
LucilE Cook Piano
Mildred McMurtry First Violin
MarjoriE Drake First Violin
Thelma Blaine First Violin
Alice Allen First Violin
Victor Ritter First Violin
Jean Strang First Violin
Hyman Ledder Second Violin
William Christian Second Violin
Curtis Hanpt Second Violin
Anna Jane Hitchcock Second Violin
Ida Burleigh Second Violin
Lois Myer Violoncello
Arbor Fuller Bass Viol
A. R. C. WardwEll Saxophone
Kenneth Brown Cornet
Carl Brumfield Cornet
Albert LylES First Clarinet
Vernon Scott Second Clarinet
Theta Alpha Phi
Founded at Oklahoma A. and M. College
Established at Colorado College in 1919
Sidney Winter William Copeland James MeCool
Ruford Blair Harry Taylor
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OFFICERS
President, Marjorie Hankins
Secretary, Mary ClEgg Owen
Vice-President, Bernice Miles
Treasurer, Spencer ScribnER
MEMBERvS
1921
Franklin Bickmore
Reignson Chen
Margaret Felt
Marjorie Hankins
Eino Leino
Albert Lyles
1922
Bernice Miles
Frank Mobley
vSpencer Scribner
Marian Ward
Suoma Leino
Ben Wendelken
Mary Clegg Owen
1923
Reith Strachan
1924
Joseph Jackson Dern
FACULTY MEMBERS
Jacob vSwart
Archer B. Hulbert
Athenian Debating Society
OFFICERS
President, Della Scott
Vice-President, Evelyn Austin
Secretary, Edna Van Horn
Faculty Advisor, Miss Hutsinpillar
MEMBERS
Ruth Gilliland Katharine Kauffman Helen Morton
Ruth Morrison Margaret Scilley Margaret Felt
Helen Finlay Gertrude Klein Helen McKinney
Florence Eawson Agnes Flanagan
Spanish Club
President, Paul McConnell
Secretary, Leta Gale
Martha Hovvbert
Wilhelmina Spingler
Mrs. J. W. Chaney
Josephine Miller
Jack Dern
Myron Stanley
J. W. Chaney
Miss Van Diest
Miss Landers
Vice-President, Martha Howbert
Treasurer, Josephine Miller
MEMBERS
Leta Gale
Dolores Garcia
Florence Green
Robert Mcllvaine
William Earle
Paul McConnell
Professor Skidmore
Professor Fraker
Professor Latimer
Milton Nelson
French Club
President, Martha Tucker Vice-President, Rowena Hampshire
Secretary-Treasurer, Mildred McMurtry
MEMBERS
Margaret Bennett
Marie Bollinger
Jeanne Brooker
Martha Tucker
Rowena Hampshire-
Monroe Heath
Martha Howbert
Miss Landers
Professor Latimer
Mildred McMurtry
Miss Van Diest
Lorena Berger
Margaret Coleman
Margery Collier
Florence Green
Miss Hartness
Anna Herzog
Jean Kirby
Beryl Laska
Paul McConnell
Professor Skidmore
Professor Fraker
Tuanita White
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Fortnightly Sketch Club
President, Maud Allen
vSecretary, Jessie Foster
Susan Learning
Charlotte Learning
Mary Louise Rankin
Martha Parr
John Freeman
Helen Finlay
Norma Bright
Sidney Potts
Florence Mack
Marjorie Dudley
Margaret Ellis
OFFICERS
Vice-President, Agnes Pearson
Treasurer, Mr. Frank Smith
MEMBERS
Ruth Farmer
Leslie Green
Harlan Shattuck
Daisy McEntire
Eloise Cleveland
Irma Blaurock
Catharine Bensberg
Laura Sebring
Elma Clopper
Ruth Morrison
Adelaide Brown
Student Government Association
OFFICERS
President, Irene Hamilton Vice-President, Margaret Scilley
Secretary, Winona Jewett Treasurer, Harriet Mason
REPRESENTATIVES
Y. W. C. A Margaret Felt
Student Commission Elizabeth Morgan
Senior Ruth Gilliland
Junior FrancELIA Eldridge
Sophomore Harriet Mason
Freshman Juanita White
HOUSE PRESIDENTS
Bemis Margaret Scilley
McGregor Winona Jewett
Ticknor DelsiE HolmouisT
Montgomery Suoma Leino
ADVISORY BOARD
Senior Helen Marsh
Junior Thelma Turner
Sophomore Eleanor Henaghan
Freshman Clara VorriETER
Minerva Literary Society
Founded 1891
Colors: Blue and White
Flower: White Rose
OFFICERS
First Semester Second Semester
Bernice Miles President Martha Parr
Marjorie Hankins Vice-President Neva Ritter
Martha Parr Secretary Hazael Jolly
Lena Murphy Treasurer Lena Murphy
Mary Clegg Owen Custodian Helen Morton
Suoma Leino Factotum Nina Shaffer
SENIORS
Margaret Felt
Hazael Jolly
Helen Morton
Marjorie Hankins
Helen Lytle
Lena Murphy
Neva Ritter
Eleanor Hobbs
Bernice Miles
Martha Parr
Rowena Hampshire
Mary Clegg Owen
JUNIORS
Suoma Leino
SOPHOMORES
Macy Stream
Lutie Marshall
Nina Shaffer
Contemporary Literary Society
Founded 1899
Colors: Red and White
Flower: Red Carnation
OFFICERS
First Semester Second Semester
LucilE Sargent President .Evelyn Campbell
Agnes Pearson Vice-President Marion Little
Neata Green Secretary CrETa Hanes
Evelyn Campbell Treasurer Ruth Gilliland
Factotum, Winona Jewett
Ruth Gilliland
Neata Green
Agnes Pearson
Miriam Scribner
SENIORS
Margaret Scilley
Lucile Sargent
Creta Hanes
Helen Marsh
Marion Ward
Irena Hamilton
Evelyn Campbell
Helen Staff
Gertrude Farr
JUNIORS
Winona Jewett Marion Little
SOPHOMORES
Gertrude Klein Anna Herzog
Ruth Staff Harriet Mason
(«)
Hypatia Literary Society
Founded 1903
Colors: Green and White
Flower: White Daisy
OFFICERS
First Semester
Martha Howbert President
Helen Erps Vice-President
Mildred McMurtry Secretary Mildred McMurTry
Ruth Stevens Treasurer Ruth Stevens
Gladys Layman Factotum Gladys GlEndenning
Delsie Holmquist
Second Semester
Martha Howbert
. . . Gladys Layman
SENIORS
Martha Howbert
Helen Erps
Mildred McMurtry
Lottie Crabtree
Gladys Layman
Ruth Stevens
Elizabeth Morgan
JUNIORS
Gladys Glendenning
Serena Mcintosh
Delsie Holmquist
Doris Haymes
SOPHOMORES
Harriet Bumstead
Faye Lilley
Adelaide Brown
Martha Tucker
Wc\t ©niora&n (ftnlteg^ ©ig^r
Colorado College Newspaper
Twenty-third Year
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R».o. Uoyd md Biid-
The Tiger Staff
Spencer Scribner Editor
Franklin BickmorE Manager
EDITORIAL STAFF
Charles Freeman Associate Editor
Gerowe Simmons Athletic Editor
Dart WanTland Line Editor
Marjorie Hankins Women's Editor
Adelaide Brown Assistant Editor
Eino LEino Assistant Editor
Mary Clegg Owen Assistant Editor
Paul Sundbury Associate Editor
Roy Walholm Assistant Editor
Max Hardy Assistant Editor
John McClary Assistant Editor
Sidney Winter Feature Editor
Jack Dern Freshman Representative
Lorraine Moody Freshman Representative
ASSISTANT MANAGERS
J. Albert C. Cannon B. Kidder C. F. Rice
M. Stanley C. Overholt J. Wardwell R. Olsen
Stuff That Does Not Get By
Don MacDougall fussing Evelyne all the time.
Scribner's Editorials in the Tiger.
Monroe Heath and his Phi Bet Key.
Jean Graham and her trials of playing the vampire.
Chuck Lloyd as Enthusiasm Chairman.
Coach Parsons trying to get hard boiled.
The student body trying to Bolshevik on the Nugget.
The dean of women attempting to censor the Tiger and the Nugget.
Sidney Winters trying to be the big man of the college.
Loving parties in the Pit and in the hall in Palmer.
Vera carrying a load of books for the impression that she studies.
Giving out the dope that you are wild (Edna).
Archibald motoring with Virginia.
Dern's economic troubles.
Shakespeare's rough stuff read in English 9.
Albright and his thrice cursed mathematics.
Bemis tea parties when men are present.
A whiskey flask from Tobin and others not Phi Delts.
A Tiger managership from the Sigma Chis.
Tea dances or house parties from the Kappa Sigs.
Boneheads from the Kappa Beta Phi Beer Mug Clan.
Disfiguring the College flag-staff with foolishness.
An examination paper through Palm's hands with an A.
Bible students who take religion for the credit only.
Copeland and his English Classes.
Wolfe and his temper in indoor games.
Britzman when he appears on the Tiger Gym.
A suit of clothes from Les MacTavish.
A day that Heavy does not see Doris.
A good looking girl from Briggs.
The spending of Dad's good monev for Pantages.
A Pantages bill that the Phi Gams and Betas do not see.
The opportunity of learning a dirty story from Whiz Bang.
The Misses Blauvelt and Latimore kidding Mai MacDougall.
Cuffless pants on college men.
The wrangle between Mary and Paul over Line Plunges.
Shorty, when the Mrs. is around.
Women's long dresses and cotton stockings.
Miss Bramhall's speeches on personal experiences with big men.
An opportunity of seeing a girl getting on the street car.
A man who does not like a wild time with a wild woman.
Monroe Heath's loud laughter at the Senior Minstrel Show.
The Phi Gam burglar feature advertising stunt in the Gazette.
Senior Class Play, 1Q20
"THE COUNTRY COUSIN"
By Booth Tarkinglon and Julian Street
June 12th, 1920.
Manager, Arthur Wilson
Directors, Professor and Mrs. R. H. Motten
CAST OF CHARACTERS
Mrs. Stanley Howitt Annis Keener
Eleanor Howitt Dorothy Keith
Sam Wilson Roy Brumfield
Nancy Price Helens Paine
George Tewksberry Reynolds III Albert Ainsworth
vStanley Howitt Philip Wilkin
Athalie Wainwright Louise Thompson
Mrs. Jane Kinney MarniE Eppich
Cyril Kinney Edgar Garvey
Mrs. Maud Howitt Louise Fowler
Archie Gore Samuel KnowlES
Pruitt Thaddeus Holt
Sophomore -Junior Play
"THREE PILLS IN A BOTTLE"
Coach, Suoma Leino Stage Manager, Bernice Miles
Costumer, Gladys GlEndenning
CAST OF CHARACTERS
Tony Harriet Bumstead
Widow Sims Della Scott
Gentleman Gertrude Klein
His Soul Margaret Ellis
Scissors' Grinder Anna Herzog
His Soul Alice Sweet
Scrubwoman MERLE Love
Her Soul Serena McIntosh
"Hitchy Kow"
First Annual Musical Comedy of "G" Club.
Managers, Ben Sweet, Ray Purinton
Directors, F. C. Palm, C. L. Parsons, Dr. Brown
Property Man, Charles Page
Electrician, Harry Newman
Chorus Directors, Misses Eleanor Davis,
Helen Thebus
CAST OF CHARACTERS
Professor Know-It-but-Can't-Teach-It Roy BrumfiELD
Midnight James McCool
Reginald Charles Freeman
Harley Thorpe Roy Walholm
Brick MeFadden Malcolm McDougall
Aida Tom Brown
Priscilla Gerowe Simmons
Hayseed Ira Hicks
Grapevine Albert LylES
Miss Avoirdupois Dave LeshER
The Kow Russell Yates, John Jackson
SELECTMEN
Bury 'Em H. Johnson
Home Brew Carl Brumfield
I. M. Hick Harry Taylor
CHORUS
Girls.
Fatima Lloyd Omar Bleistein Melachrino Bruce
Milo Graham Murad Aitken
Boys.
Bo McMillan Do Park Strangler Bemis
Iron McKenzie Hit 'Em Ball
ORCHESTRA
Frank Palm Gene Johnson George Lusk
George Layden Wesley Murray Stanley Birdsall
"Eager Heart' '
A CHRISTMAS PLAY
Epilogue, Neata Green Coach, Mrs. Roger H. Motten
CAST OF CHARACTERS
Eager Heart Suoma Leino
Eager Sense La Verne Donnan
Eager Fame Frances Tucker
First King Adelaide Brown
Second King Florence Lawson
Third King Norma Bright
First Shepherd Ruth Staff
Second Shepherd Marie Bollinger
Young Man Lorraine Moody
Old Man : Irene McClelland
Mary Agnes Pearson
Joseph Lilla Munger
SINGING ANGELS
Neata Green Ruth Stevens
Lorena Berger Gladys Steele
Freshmen Play
COURT SCENE— "MERCHANT OF VENICE"
Coach, Helen ThEbus Costumer, Marion Hulbert
Properties, Catharine Hood, Catharine Crockett, Lorraine Moody,
Juanita White
CAST OF CHARACTERS
Duke of Venice Marjorie Collier
Antonio Thelma Bradley
Bassanio Mary Schriver
Nerissa Emma O'Brien
Gratiano Anna Jane Hitchcock
Shylock Ernestine Randolph
Clerk Marie Bollinger
Portia Helen Thebus
Spectators — Florence Scilley, Mabel Bolitho,
Charlotte French, Genevieve Cox, Marie Farmer
Salonio Edna Theobald
Dramatic Club Function Play, 1920
"MICE AND MEN"
By Madeline Lucett Ryley
Coach, Mr. Leon Snyder Manager, Bernice Miles
Costumer, Gladys GlEndEnning
CAST OF CHARACTERS
Mark Embury Olive Haun
Roger Goodlake Harriet Wilson
Captain George Lovell Suoma Leino
Sir Harry Trimblestone Frances Tucker
Kit Barniger Ruth Morrison
Peter Laura Mower
Joanna Goodlake Eleanor Hobbs
Mrs. Deborah NeaTa Green
Peggy Elizabeth Morgan
Matron Nina Shaffer
Beadle Louise Hoepner
Molly Helen McKinney
Junior Class Play, May 7, 1921
"MISS BUMPSTEAD-LEIGH," by Harry James Smith
CHARACTERS
Justin Rawsin Roy Walholm
Miss Rawsin, his sister Rowena Hampshire
Jeoffrey, his younger son Lowell Collins
Anthony, his elder son Carman FrEyschlag
Mr. Leavitt Montgomery Pike
Mrs. Leavitt Mary Clegg Owen
Peter Swallow Gerowe Simmons
Kitson Harry Taylor
Mrs. De Salle Faye Lilley
Violet De Salle Serena McInTosh
Mrs. Bumpstead-Leigh Doris Haymes
Nina Thelma Turner
Coach, Miss SchEnk Manager, Ian Mackenzie
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ANNUAL
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All-College Picnic
February 22, 1921.
Several things worked together to make the 1921 All-College Picnic
the best ever.
The weather was good all day!
The eats were in the hands of a most competent committee and cer-
tainly none of them went to waste.
There was ample opportunity for the ambitious to climb the Gateway
Rocks (of course the picnic was in the Garden of the Gods) for a view of the
surrounding country and nearly the whole big crowd tried it.
The games, superintended by Coach Parsons, were well supported,
especially by the Sophomores who carried off nearly all the honors. There
were tugs-of-war for the girls this year as well as for the men, centipede races,
dashes, medicine ball throws and faculty races.
Jiggs, the Phi Gam dog, was undoubtedly the most enthusiastic guest
a college party ever had — he was into everything. Surely he was the most
peppy member of the crowd.
(13)
Colonial Ball
February 25, 1921.
A Letter from Martha Washington to her Husband after her Spirit's
Visit to Earth:
My Dear George:
I have just returned from a dancing party given by some college girls,
termed by them a "colonial ball" — such as you and I used to enjoy. How
strange it was! Their dances seemed to me shockingly absurd, their music
screechingly loud; the ladies looked sweet and pretty but queer; and the men —
how shall I describe them? — apparently men of all classes, to judge from their
clothing. I was wishing myself back with you until about nine o'clock when
the floor was cleared and a short program began.
Six girls sang some carols I used to sing. Two danced a Minuet that
you and I have danced numbers of times. Another danced alone — something
out of our times and more pleasing, too. I enjoyed watching these, but when
the Minuet began, with twelve lovely ladies and carefully groomed men, I
just couldn't sit still — I longed so to be out there with them, curtseying low
while my partner bowed graciously, turning under his arm and curtseying
again. This music was beautiful — such a contrast to what had been played
before!
I wonder why these modern maids do not see how much prettier our
dances were and adopt them for theirs.
With much love,
Martha.
Class Scrap
September 17, 1920.
Although outnumbered four or five to one, the Sophomores were vic-
torious in the flag rush which occurred the Friday morning after school opened
at 6 o'clock.
The Sophomores — only fourteen strong — tied themselves around the
foot of the pole and awaited the whistle which gave the Freshmen the signal to
start from Hagerman Hall. The campus was flooded when the fight began
but most of the water and a lot of the mud was soaked up into the clothes of
the fighters by the end of the struggle.
When the melee had gone on for some seven minutes, loud shouts called
the attention of the spectators to a reserve force of Freshmen which had been
marshalled secretly behind Cutler and which now came running to the rescue
of their classmates. But it was all in vain — the Sophomores having had ex-
perience in flag rushes, instructed their guard for the flag to climb higher and
he perched near the top of the pole and defied his opponents to follow him.
So the freshmen were destined to wear postage stamp caps until Wash-
ington's birthday, but thanks to the mild winter weather, there were no
casualties.
Sophomore Banquet
September 30, 1920.
The Sophomores sure slipped one over on the Frosh this year! Fooled
'em absotively !
In the first place they went to Bruin Inn for dinner! But the Frosh
discovered their exit from the campus and somehow found out their destination.
Fearing they were too late to catch the Sophomores at the Inn they built an
extensive blockade across the road, parked themselves behind it and waited
for the headlights of the returning cars to appear. They didn't talk; they
didn't smoke! And they waited and waited and waited. After a while they
sent a scout out to hurry up the fight, and when he cautiously crept up to the
Inn, he found it deserted. The Sophomores had left it hours before, driven
back to town over the High Drive, where autos are forbidden to go, by city
ordinance, and were at that very moment on the campus, riding around the
quadrangle and shocking the girls with the unadulterated Washington and Lee
version of "Colorado C. Men."
Maybe there weren't some sheepish looking Frosh at school on October 1.
(Thev felt about six months ahead of time.)
Hitchy Kow
February 21, 1921.
The first annual musical comedy of the C. Club, "Hitchy Kow," was
produced in Perkins Hall on February 21.
The plot was woven around the appearance of a cow in the classroom
of Prof. Know-it-but-can't-teach-it on the morning of Washington's birthday
(a take-off in a similar event in Colorado College on May 10, 1920). The
search for the individual who committed the offense and the explanations of
the cow's appearance make up the rest of the show.
The song hits from Hitchy Kow — "My Charming Aida" and "Hitchy
Kow" are to be published and already they have taken places near the top in
the long list of College songs. The show was offered an engagement at the
Burns and the Rotary Club backed the plan.
"Hitchy Kow" was truly a home-made product. Prof. Palm composed
the music, the book was written by Bill Tway and Coach Parsons with the aid
of Butch Brumfield, McCool, Walholm, Kidder and Simmons; Howbert,
Hunter, MacDonald and Strachan helped to write the lyrics.
Roy Walholm as "Harley Thorpe" the athlete hero of the school, and
Tom Brown as "Aida," the Egvptian vamp, undoubtedly made the hits of
the evening. Pete Simmons as "Pricilla" gave a charming song and Butch
Brumfield, the professor, consistently kept up his accent and vain efforts to
explain things. The three Selectmen were well made up and their song, with
the professor, was one of the best.
The chorus deserves special mention and certain 1 got howling atten-
tion. It's hard to imagine Colorado College's stalwart football, track and
baseball heroes in short fluffy skirts, bobbed hair, paint and powder, but they
were there and their appearances always brought forth gales of laughter.
The chorus was composed of the following ladies: Fatima Lloyd, Omar
Bleistein, Melochrino Bruce, Milo Graham and Murad Aitken, ably assisted
by Bo McMillan, Do Park, Strangler Bemis, Iron MacKenzie, and Hit 'em
Ball who danced gracefully (?) in "soup and fish."
The Kow herself, who gave a solo dance, did the most difficult feat in
tfie whole show. How well her feet kept together and in what perfect time!
We got our money's worth in two hours of side splitting laughter from
this production. Let's have more "Hitchy Kow's."
Y.W.C.A. Circus
March 19, 1921.
The minstrel show, "The Razzberry Review" was by far the most
striking feature of this year's Circus. It had a plot! The senior men were
invited, but contrary to expectations, only about ten came. Do they realize
yet what they missed?
The story of the show is about a Colorado College alumna, who having
inherited a plantation in Alabama, invites some friends, also of C. C, to a
house party. The negroes sing and crack jokes upon hearing of the white
folks' coming and in the evening put on a real entertainment.
The junior girls, dressed in red and white — their class colors — sang
some pointed songs between acts.
The circus attracted a larger crowd than ever. The sideshows were
especially good. Ice cream cones, pop corn balls, pink lemonade and candy
were never sold faster. A parade around the quadrangle and thru Bemis
gave a sample of Colorado College's activities to the members of the Women's
Educational Society which was meeting there.
Frances Tucker and Miriam Scribner, who managed the circus and
ministrel show, deserve much credit for their unquestioned success. The
Y. W. C. A.'s coffers especially appreciate their efforts.
Alpha Kappa Psi
December 2, 1920.
The marriage ceremony of Miss Doll R. Mark to Mr. Les Work was
proceeding toward its end when a bushy whiskered tramp jumped off the bal-
cony in Perkins Hall and rushed toward the couple shouting that he was a
Bolshevik and objected to their wedding.
During the confusion that followed Miss Mark was married to Mr.
I. Will Skinnem, son of Mr. W. E. Skinnem.
The disappointed groom, Mr. Work, declares that there must have been
a collusion between the bride and this ruffian and says he sees nothing in the
whole affair except an attempt to humiliate him.
Now this thing really happened, but as the fair young bride had a manly
swagger and Mr. Skinnem's shoulders a familiar droop, an investigation was
started which revealed the fact that the whole event was staged as part of
the mock initiation of the pledges of Alpha Kappa Psi — national business
fraternity with a chapter at Colorado College.
The cast included Edmond Crockett, Franklin Bickmore, Max Hardy,
Kenneth Brown, Frank Seeley, James McCool, Ray Purinton, Professor Jencks,
Eino Leino.
Insignia Day
November 23, 1920.
Junior girls in white, and junior men in dark clothes, each one holding
a spray of red and white flowers, entered chapel first and formed an arch down
the middle aisle under which the faculty members in full regalia marched to
the stage.
The Seniors, donning their caps and gowns for the first time and feeling
extremely self-conscious, followed the faculty. How learned they looked!
President Duniway spoke of the coming responsibilities of the class of
'21 and the part it would have to play in the world after graduation. The
whole audience sang two hymns.
Nothing new or startling happened during the service — one of the
prettiest of the whole year — until the Seniors began to play three-deep and
drop-the-handkerchief outside of chapel. Then it was that one long, tall,
skinny man, while pursuing one of his very short classmates, skidded while
rounding a curve and fell flat — a most undignified position for any one —
especially a Senior so newly marked.
Home-Coming
October 29-31, 1920
Home-coming opened with a bang Friday morning when the whole
student body, on foot or in ears paraded thru the business section of town to
advertise the coming contest with the school up north "which claims to be a
university." Each fraternity had a float and they ranged from the sublime
to the ridiculous — from the Tiger in all his glory to the funeral procession of
Boulder, eldest child of the Rock family.
In the afternoon the fraternities had open houses for old grads and
Hypatia gave a tea for her alumnae and the other societies.
The Sophomore Barbecue was next on the program. After the speeches
the girls sang a song some of them had written and the frosh put on a clever
stunt depicting the coach at the above mentioned "university" putting his
football squad thru its final practice before the game with Colorado College.
A jitney dance followed the eats which were served in the stadium.
Minerva, Contemporary and Hypatia initiated their pledges Saturday
morning and gave luncheons, or breakfasts in their honor afterwards.
The football game, described elsewhere in this volume, occupied the
afternoon. The weather had never been more awfulllll — great lumps of wet,
sticky snow fell so fast they hid the plays and thoroly soaked the crowd of more
than five thousand. But the enthusiasm kept up till the gun fired for the
last quarter — strange as that may seem.
The men banqueted in Cossitt and the women in Bemis and both
crowds heard informal talks from old and new students.
The week's festivities ended with a big all-college dance in Cossitt,
where former students met new ones, new ones met other new ones and former
ones renewed old friendships and every one had a real good time.
"The campus looks just the same, Cossitt and the other buildings are
not changed a bit — but whoever saw such weather before in Colorado Springs?"
they all said on leaving.
I i
' : h
All-College Dances
Three and one-half all-college dances took place in the first semester of
the year 1920-21. The first was on October 2, in Bemis Hall. A huge crowd
attended. This dance was held for the purpose of getting every one acquainted.
It was fairly successful.
The second dance was in connection with the Home - Coming day and
took place in Cossitt. It was less formal than the first and consequently more
enjoyable.
On January 15, in Bemis Hall the third all-college dance took place.
This time the whole college was the guests of the C. Club, who managed the
affair. It was different from all other all-colleges in that there were absolutely
no wall flowers and very few wall nuts. There was a big crowd and every one
present had a thoroughly enjoyable evening.
During the Southern Colorado High School Basketball Tournament the
half all-college dance was arranged. The girls entertained for the visiting
teams and the C. Club. Coach Parsons directed the stunts which mixed
up the crowd. It was at this party that some little maid innocently asked
Franklin Bickmore what high school he came from and if he intended to come
to Colorado College next year. Guess her class!
BRowr/
APRIL
1. 1922 Nugget editor begins to note events for the calendar. We learn from Prexy that
tuition for the year will be $120. Earl MacTavish makes All-Conference guard. Lester
is the high scorer for the Tigers, with 63 points.
2. Spring recess begins. Ethel Beckman goes to Denver wearing a Kappa Sig pin, and Bob
Round goes to La Junta with the proverbial smile.
3. Boulder distance men win Denver Post cross-country race. Briggs came in fifth and Cole
finished sixth.
12. Spring vacation ends. Prof. Moore, the Harvard Exchange Professor, arrives.
13. Sacred Heart trims the Bengals in baseball, 10 to 7. Gildea was palpably nervous.
14. The Athletic Board has a proposal to cover the big Stadium to seat 3,000 spectators. Miss
Hutsinpillar becomes acting dean of women, due to the illness of Miss Phinney.
15. "Butch" Brumfield, Jack Day wait, "Pug" Elliott and "Chuck" Bemis are awarded grappling
letters for their mat work.
16. Little, Copeland and McLeary clash with Wyoming on the arbitration question and win an
unanimous decision. Earl MacTavish elected captain of basketball for 1921.
17. Big athletic carnival tonight. Parade at 1:00 and cafeteria supper at 5:30. We ride the
Engineers' shoots, the Sigma Chi aeroplane, and visit the Kappa Sig hell, the Phi Delt
minstrels, and dance to Beta music. The Tigers tie Boulder in a two-inning game 2-2, in
a raging blizzard.
18. We rest while the managers of the carnival count our shekels given to them the night before.
19. Kappa Sigs win the scholarship honors, Phi Delts second and the Betas third. The Kappa
Sigs should, with bookworms like Heath.
20. Carnegie Foundation gives $75,000 to C. C. annuities. Frosh win the interclass cinder
meet with 68 points, Sophs second with 38. Mai Graham is the individual star, with
16 points.
21. We fuss to and from chapel and donate a few coins to Murray's for cokes, much to Prexy's
disgust.
22. An announcement comes that the Tiger editorial and managerial staff is to be chosen in
two weeks. Scribner, Birney and Little engage in politics.
23. Y. W. C. A. hold elections and Margaret Felt is elected president; Lottie Crabtree, vice-
president; Elizabeth Morgan, secretary; and Rowena Hampshire, representative to the
student commission.
24. Tiger ball tossers win from D. U., 14 to 6 at 10 a. m. At 2:30 the Tiger track team takes the
D. U. stakes, 93 to 29. Fraternity night. Phi Delts have formal at the Broadmoor,
the Phi Gams at the Antlers, the Betas at their house, the Sigma Chis hike to Bruin, the
Engineers hike to Mount Manitou and the Kappa Sigs conclave in Denver. Evelyne,
Serena, Persis, four Helens, two Kates, Doris, Edith, Marnie and Martina attended the
hops.
25. We recuperate from the formals the night before. The morning after the night before is
hell.
26. The squirrel number of the Tiger is in preparation. Don MacDougall wins the loving cup,
with a batting average of .650. Dean McMurtry startles the boys in Bible, "Any man
who kisses any woman besides his mother, wife or sister, ought to be shot." If that's
the case, the engaged people like Hankins, Cannon, Lesher and Linger must face the
firing squad.
27. Coach "Poss" Parsons has signed up for another year as mentor for the Tiger teams. Prof.
Motten reads the "Melting Pot" to the girls' dramatic club.
28. One Sophomore had a keen date for a jungle walk. In the park he proposed, only to be
slapped by the object of his quest. He got mad and told her to go to h — ome.
29. The dean gets riled and talks of red and blue citizenship, concerning the May parade.
30. John Carter, Sevitz's big man in college, holds it down in chapel. Are we going to wear
overalls in preference to our neat, nifty and natty apparel? Can you see Les blush when
Mooney greets him?
31. vStag ball postponed until next year. That's all it is, only one damn thing after another.
The hall girls sneek out to attend the Antlers' dance. The Tiger Yellow sheet comes out
with 999 r ( bunk, advocating a chapter of S. O. L. — simple and odd looking.
MAY
1. Tigers lose second game of baseball to the Miners, 11 to 4. But the track team leaves the
Mines in the dust, 91 to 40. Graham ties record of state in the 220, time 21:3, The
C. Club holds its dance in Cossitt.
2. Athletes of college rest after their annual dance. Ask Vera about the "jazziest jazz," and
Ian about what he did.
3. Prof. Motten announces his resignation from C. C. to enter International Rotary work.
We'll miss your line in Eng. 1 and Eng. 2a, so Briggs says.
4. Fraternities of the baseball league are sponsors for candidates for May Queen. Non-fra-
ternity, Annis Keener; Kappa Sigs, Helen Scott; Sigma Chis, Helene Paine; Betas,
Harriet Prince; Phi Delts, Ruth Brown; and the Phi Gams, Marnie Eppich. Scribner
and Bickmore elected editor and manager of the Tiger.
5. Alpha Kappa Psi pledges Chen, Sweet, Brown, Foote and Scribner. Juniors find Senior
Piker Day picnic at the Shoup ranch. Pa'son McCool conducts burial of Seniors in
chapel, "Friends and Sophomores, lend me your ears. I come to bury the Seniors; far
be it from me to praise them."
6. Betas wallop Fijis in baseball, 7 to 4. Doris Haymes and "Pat" O'Brien have breakfast
with "Heavy" Linger and Floyd Bleistein at McRae's.
7. Tigers beat Sacred Heart in Denver, 4 to 1. Nebraska Wesleyan defeats C. C. debaters.
Kappa Sigs outbat Sig Chis, 12 to 7. Alpha Nu recognized as local by the faculty.
8. Tiger nine suffers at the hands of U. of C, 14 to 8. Fielders blow up behind pitching of
Ed Hughes. C. C. loses dual track meet to U. of C, 80 to 36. Non-fraternitv men out-
class Phi Gams, 7 to 3. Phi Delts trim the Sig Chis, 10 to 8.
9. What did we do today, go fussing or swimming at the Broadmoor? The marriage of Carl
Schweiger to Sannie McKinney, which had been kept secret since February 7, is made
public.
10. C. C. was an agricultural school by impression. A pair of nags — a pair of cows were loose
in Palmer — there to browse. Briggs acted as cowboy. Prof. Motten did a lot of
thinking not fit for print. Can you blame him?
1 1. Sevitz relieved of the Tiger editorship. Ben Sweet elected president of the student commis-
sion; Bernice Miles, vice-president; Martha Howbert, secretary; and Ed Allen, treasurer.
12. Helen Marsh reads paper on "Americanization of Colorado" and Marion Ward reports on
the Canadian Labor Gazette before Bus. 201.
13. Nugget board for 1922 elected — Leino editor and Bruce manager. Seniors elect Carter,
class orator; Helene Paine, class prophet; and Harriet Prince, class historian.
14. Alpha Kappa Psi holds a fussing dinner at Cossitt. "Doc" and Jeanette were there. College
men organize a Republican club.
15. Terrors beat East Denver and Pueblo Centennial in triangular meet, 79 to 46. "Mice and
Men" presented by the girls' dramatic club in Cogswell.
16. Men invited to the formals of the literary societies start campaign for boiled shirts, pumps,
studs and evening suits. Some start in borrowing and end up in lending.
17. Contemporary formal at the Burns to see Miss Nellie of New Orleans. Imagine Linger and
Hughes in evening clothes sitting in a box. Hypatia was there, too, with MacTavish and
Holt looking so sweet. Pearson's stagged that night.
18. Miss Harlan will go to Spain this summer and then to teach with Prof. Hills at Indiana U.
The Spanish students don't regret it.
19. In Business seminar. Marjorie Hankins read a paper on "Women in Industry During the
War."
20. Tigers wallop the Aggies, 10 to 8. Newbold was the master tosser. Debating team wins
from New Mexico by a 2 to 1 decision. Mr. and Mrs. W. G. McAdoo have tea with Mrs.
and President Duniway.
21. Last fraternity night of the year. Sigma Chis have formal at the Acacia, the Kappa Sigs
at the Broadmoor, the Phi Gams have a theater and lawn party, the Phi Delts dance at
San Luis school, and the Betas have a lawn party. It rained; so what did the Fijis and
Betas do? Tigers beat the Aggies bad, 17 to 2.
22. 150 athletes participate in the conference track meet. Results, U. of C. 54; C. C. 40; C.
A. C. 30; and D. U. 10. The Seniors give "The Country Cousin."
25. We talk about the parties Friday, particularly about the girls present.
24. Dais initiate 19 in Cogswell. Leonard Wood Club organized. We Greeks meet tonight.
25. The present Senior class is given the R-a-a-aspberry by the class of 1920. Vera Eddins
takes first place in the girls' track meet, with 23 points.
26. 1921 Nugget put on sale only 25 days late. We might put her out late, too. This editor's
job is hell and lots of work. They can crab all they want to, but we put out the book
good or bad.
27. We hear a lot of announcements in chapel.
28. The girls work on veils for tomorrow's May festivities. These veils are not from the tra-
ditional dance of seven veils with six in the laundry. The last all-college dance is held in
Bemis, in which Bruce made his debut.
29. Big May Festival in the Jungle. Phi Delts win inter-fraternity baseball championship and
Ruth Brown is crowned May Queen. Martina Maher wins prize for the Freshman
Garland Dance. Preachers beat Bengals in baseball, 5 to 1.
30. Memorial Day.
31. Boulder forfeits baseball game to the Tigers by non-appearance on Washburn field.
JUNE
1 . Track and baseball men awarded letters. McDougall elected captain of baseball and
Brown captain of track. Boneheads initiate McCool, Birney, Lloyd, Briggs, Wantland,
MacTavish and Jackson, with Persis.
2. The Tiger didn't come out Tuesday, so it came out today, which happens to be the last
issue this year.
3. Editorial staff on the Tiger relieved of jobs as cub reporters.
4. The fussers take advantage of the weather. The library is dead and the jungle is full of
youths and maidens strolling hand in hand.
5. Final exams begin, and we regret that we did too much fussing in May.
6 Study for more finals on Monday (a few of the book grinds). The Broadmoor pool is full
of college men and women.
7. Prof. Okey takes school of surveying to Manitou Park.
8. More exams — we drink cokes and black coffee. Some of us have the old stuff — old John B.
and Four Roses.
9. More exams and, thank God, the last ones.
10. Betas receive a letter, on fashionable paper, from Bruce in Manitou Park.
11. The Seniors give "The Country Cousin." The Music department gives a commencement
recital.
12. Minerva has an early breakfast. Mr. and Mrs. Duniway are hosts at a supper for the
graduating class.
13. Rev. Fred Staff delivers Baccalaureate address in Perkins Hall.
14. Senior class-day exercises in Chapel. Faculty meets. Senior reception.
15. Board of Trustees hold annual meeting.
16. Commencement day. President Norlin of U. of C. is the speaker of the occasion. No more
school until September 14, registration day.
SEPTEMBER
13. Thirty-five candidates report to Coach Parsons for varsity football. Coach Holman will
beat the Frosh into shape. Fraternities stop at no limit in rushing.
14. Fifty-seven men appear on the campus wearing various fraternity pledge pins. Kappa
Sigs observe their traditional custom by pledging an army, in hopes that one out of the
motley crew may be a good man.
15. Sophs win flag rush but they roll in the mud with the Frosh in very good style. Tait leads
his warriors to battle, to tear Clark from his place on the pole with the colors. Pete
Holm and Dorothy Loomis are married.
16. Prexy Duniway appoints nineteen faculty members. We don't know what they all will do;
they may try to pound something into heads like Round's and Tobin's.
17. All-college reception for the students and faculty at Cossitt. Miss Blauvelt serves light
refreshments; yes, damn light. Beta orchestra performs.
18. Prof. Gilmore appointed to take Prof. Motten's place as representative to the Rocky Moun-
tain Athletic Conference. Prof., you've got to go some to beat R. H. M's. line.
19. The fraternities display their life to the new pledges by sleeping late and missing church.
Frosh study their little Tiger Bibles.
20. Blue Monday. We begin to feel that it's about time to get down to study and ban the
nitting.
21. Student commission holds its first meeting. We are to be afflicted by a tag day for funds
for a training table. Lloyd to head the enthusiasm and Freeman to manage the all-
college dance.
22. First issue of the Tiger appears, containing all the scandal of the school from September 13
to September 22. We read that many of our alumni became victims of Cupid during
the summer months. Many more good men gone wrong.
23. Ben Sweet, president of the student commission, gets applause on his first appearance in
chapel. McCool, Doris Haymes and Graham elected presidents of the Senior, Junior
and Sophomore classes, respectively.
24. Big pep meeting tonight in the Stadium. The Frosh do their duty and have a big bonfire.
All day the pretty girls nagged at us to swell the fund for the training table. They know
a man's weakness.
25. Two varsity teams buck each other for twenty minutes, ending with two touchdowns apiece.
26. We read in the Denver Times that Crockett and Little were finally eliminated in the race
for the Rhode's Scholarship.
27. Sophs bring out the blanket and toss "Shorty" Ryan, Clow, Wendell, Tait, Thatcher and
Dern, who goes up and comes down through the blanket to the ground. Consequently
he uses a cane for a few days.
28. K. LT. K. meets tonight with Frank Mobley as leader. Two Chinese students, Lewis and
Young, enter college.
29. Personnel of the men's glee club chosen. If you passed Perkins this afternoon, you'd of
thought that something was being done by the way discord came out through the window.
30. Duniway receives $5,000 for the Argo Scholarship from Mrs. R. G. Argo. Fifty-four Sophs
fool the Frosh by getting away with a banquet at Bruin Inn and then returning over the
high drive.
OCTOBER
1. The editor is remitted a check for $200 from the Argo fund. MacKenzie and the Mac-
Dougall brothers win memorial scholarships of $100 each.
2. The Varsity and the Frosh battle. The Tigers rip the Baby Tiger line to a tune of 27 to 0.
Big all-college dance. Mowry donated the punch (water with a little coloring). Betas
co-operate with the Republicans and are hosts at big dinner for Governor Lowden at
the Antlers. Later they hold places on the platform in the Burns.
3. The women in the halls discuss the all-college dance thoroughly. Can you blame them and
can you blame the men?
4. Frosh girls appear on the campus with their hair parted in the middle and suspended in
two braids, tied with green ribbons. That was the only day that girls' ears have been
seen this year. Twenty-five rehearse for the band.
5. Slant emits salad from the training table about the varsity football team. Ben Sweet
officially swears abstinence from the filthy weed.
6. Seventeen faculty committees appointed. Fitzell elected manager of Frosh football.
Onions are Bill Tway's favorite fruit.
7. Big rally in chapel for a special to Aggies, Armistice Day. Davies said that Cox and Hard-
ing would flunk in his class. If he flunks them, what would he do to us?
8. Big pep meeting tonight before the New Mexico game. Jean Graham sings. Tway,
Jencks and Palm spread a line. Briggs tells us to "take it to heart."
9. Tiger machine outclasses New Mexico, 41 to 3. That night the C. Club held their dance.
What did Keyte's geologists do in Salida besides gather a half ton of rock? The Frosh
wallop Fort Lyons, 59 to 0.
10. Prof. Motten arrives in town to spend a few days. Christian Men's League formed with
Taylor as president and Murray as secretary. Can you teach a college man religion?
1 1. The campus is up in arms when news comes that Honnen is declared ineligible. McMillen
and Briggs Co. open up business in Cossitt.
12. Sixteen committees of twenty each are drawn up by the Y. W. C. A. How can twenty
girls come to an agreement?
13. Dais springs into prominence when Gladys Layman is elected president. We have shin-
ing parlors, manicuring and marceling establishments over at the halls to raise money
to take us to Aggies, November 1 1.
14. Thirty candidates howl in try-outs for the men's glee club. Wendell is elected Frosh pres-
ident. Tennis becomes popular when the Colorado Sporting Goods Co., the Lucas
Sporting Goods Co., and the Arcularius Jewelry Co., offer prizes.
15. Second pep meeting is held in Cossitt. Prexy suggests that we alter our "C" song by dis-
continuing the use of Biblical terms.
16. The Tigers beat the Mormons, 20 to 2. MacTavish and Shoemaker star in the backfield
and Linger and MacKenzie hold the places in the line. First fraternity night, and the
pledges see a real function for once.
17. Marjorie O'Brien and Floyd Bleistein hike to Bruin Inn.
18. Colorado College mourns the death of Prof. Strieby, who had been with the college forty-
two years.
19. Pearsons Dramatic club meets in Cossitt to discuss plays. (This was written February 22,
and yet they have given no plays. It must be a lively organization.)
20. Fifteen Boulder students campaign here for the Educational amendments and chapel is the
center for the distribution of propaganda. Miss Phinney discusses citizenship at Y. W.
C. A. meeting.
21. Bertram Crockett is selected Frosh representative to the student commission.
22. Burial services for Professor Strieby held in chapel. Reverend Staff delivers the funeral
oration.
23. The Bengals take the game from the Ministers, 21 to 0. Earl MacTavish and Don Mac-
Dougall carried the pig skin for the points.
24. Doris Haymes and Marion Benbow spend the day with Kate Bennett in Denver.
25. Epsilon Sigma Alpha buys the Strieby residence at 805 North Cascade. Plans placed on
foot for the big home-coming day. We celebrate the D. U. victory in chapel.
26. Not much doing today. Dead as the proverbial door-nail. Chapel always makes us feel
dead.
27. The school of music gives a recital in Bemis. Boulder editorial staff begins fight for re-
instatement in the university. That's the way they treat you at Boulder.
(14)
28. Coach Parsons says, "Boulder claims to be a university." Tom Strachan arouses our
curiosity in the Barbecue by a little tip.
29. Home-Coming Day. Hardy and McCool parade the streets in baby rompers. Girls'
societies and fraternities hold open houses for the old Alumni. Big Barbecue with an
imitation of a Boulder football training tea. Jitney dance in Cossitt.
30. Damn it to hell, we tie Boulder again in a field of mud and snow. Rotary club parades
with C. C. The business men back the College by closing their stores for the afternoon.
The home-comers' banquet and dance in Cossitt.
3 1 . The men still cuss Boulder.
NOVEMBER
1. Miss Bramhall conducts a straw vote in chapel. Harding gets 221 votes, Cox 89, Palm 1
and Duniway 2.
2. Glee club has 18 men on the roll at practice. Simmons is to to be the Hula dancer and
Walholm the dogger and the reader. Presidential election was held today. How many
students took enough interest to vote?
3. C. C. Morris advises girls to set a standard for the college man. We'll admit we need a
standard, but how about some of the girls?
4. Athenian Society debates the question of Irish Freedom, and the affirmative wins. Hoo-ray
for the Irish in them.
5. Frosh appoint a committee to gather wood and to arrange a date for the Frosh hike. That's
the dope, Frosh, begin right.
6. Tigers beat the Wyoming Cowboys, 20 to 17. Shoemaker, Linger, MacTavish and Briggs
are the stars. Fraternity night again. The Kappa Sigs have a barn dance. What do
they think this is, an agricultural school?
7. Alice Wheeler and Catherine Crockett spend the day in Pueblo.
8. President receives $75,000 from the Carnegie Foundation. The C. C. endowment fund now
totals $1,609,000. Now Prexy can go East again.
9. A. E. Howard speaks in chapel and gives a check to send a special from C. C. to Fort Collins.
10. Debating will be extensive for the C. C. arguers. They may take an extensive trip into the
Middle West.
1 1 . The special goes to the Aggies with 200 rooters. We lose the game because the Aggie team
was a better team, 28 to 0. It is no disgrace to lose to an honorable team like the Aggies.
12. The faculty vote today as a holiday. They're a good bunch of sports, when pressure is
brought to bear upon them.
13. Frosh slide over goal to victory in mud against the State Teacher's College, 7 to 0. Morris
and Patterson make the score. Murray and Saffold dive in the mud frequently.
14. We begin to think about school after three days of vacation.
15. C. C. will be given $300,000 by the Rockefeller Educational Board if the college can raise
$600,000 in three years.
16. Miss Picken, a C. C. alumna of 1914, now missionary in India, speaks to K. U. K. The
athletic board will present numeral certificates to all the athletes on graduation.
17. Rev. Garvin speaks on "Self Reverence" in chapel. Don McMillan devises plan to dun
the Juniors for assessment money. He hasn't gotten it all yet.
18. Vera Eddins awarded a silver loving-cup by the women's athletic association for her tennis
work.
19. Rev. Garvin speaks on "Self Control." Seventeen men get Y. M. C. A. scholarships of
$100 each.
20. The Fijis have an open house. The lights go out several times and we were left in the dark
with the girls. But the chaperones were on to their duty. Seniors entertain the Juniors
at Bruin Inn.
21. Saffold, Bruce, Lavden and Nelson almost go on a big rabbit hunt. Thev don't get up until
11:30.
22. Prexy announces that the upper-class women drop a few notches in scholarship. C. Club
will give a Musical Comedy, "Hitchy Kow," February 22.
23. Prof. Gilmore says, "a good bluffer is a good man." Therefore, C. C. has a lot of good men,
for many bluff and bull themselves through various courses.
24. Getting ready for the Mines game. The men watch guard over the buildings. All are
anxious to tangle with the gold diggers.
25. We beat the Mines, 13 to 7. Then we mix with our fists between halves. Muncaster
battles with "Dad" Bruce. Men and women combine to eat the fat fowls at Bemis,
$1.25 a plate. A banquet is given to the football men. Linger is chosen captain.
26. Earl MacTavish makes all-conference fullback and Briggs all-conference end. Vacation.
The Betas hike to Twilight and the Phi Delts go to Denver.
29. School opens after Thanksgiving recess.
30. Rumors are current that the Men's Glee Club will take a coast trip. That's what they say
every year, but it is never realized.
DECEMBER
1. Everyone hears that stunts are to be pulled off in chapel Thursday. Curiosity is aroused
to such an extent that Thursday will find a full attendance in chapel.
2. Alpha Kappa Psi pledges fake rough wedding. Seeley tried to marry Bickmore to Purin-
ton. Girls' Glee Club renders a selection as advertisement for their concert Friday
night.
3. Women's Glee Club concert at Perkins. Helen Thebus dances to vocal music rendered by
Elizabeth Morgan.
4. Fraternity night. Betas put on a costume dance at the Broadmoor. Silks and satins,
low-neck dresses and short skirts were in evidence.
5. This is a day of rest, so the Good Book says.
6. Basketball squad starts scrimmaging. Thirty-five report to "Shorty" for mat work.
Boneheads pledge Hunt, Ball, Linger, Bruce, Freyschlag, Newbold and Lyles to the
Society of the Ivory Dome or the Key of the Beer Mug.
7. Mobley publishes a poem on "The Psalm of Life" and bursts into popularity!?) among the
girls. Sixteen men receive consideration for debating.
8. The Y. W. C. A. reports on a budget system. We thought women spent money without a
thought of doing it systematically.
9. Tiger pins are given to Winters, Scribner, Wantland, Freeman and Birney for the faithful
work they did on last year's Tiger staff.
10. We're all eager for Christmas vacation. Some of the girls begin to pack their trunks.
1 1. "Eager Heart" is given for the eleventh time. Kappa Sigs conclave in Denver. They must
amuse themselves some way.
12. The hall girls carol to men of the fraternities and members of the faculty as Christmas
season opens.
13. Frank Morrison doesn't get by, although he has been secretary of the A. F. L. for 23 years.
He would with the hicks in Pueblo. "Curly" Parfet eats a Porterhouse steak at McRae's
costing $3.50. Bill Dotterer buys him a cigar to go with it.
14. Men and women mingle in Bemis for the Christmas service held by Prof. Hulbert.
15. Question Club holds dance at the Broadmoor Art Academy. What did they have the
bottles for besides programs? Colorado College only raises $7.20 out of a quota of $200
for Red Cross Christmas seals. This is the result of too many campaigns for money.
16. Copeland urges students to give publicity to C. C. during the holidays. Tigers defeat the
Ministers in a practice cage game 34 to 23. The girls in the halls play Santa Claus.
17. Prof. Palm leaves for his home in Min — soo — ta. Ira goes to Illinois. They scatter east,
west, north and south to mamma, papa and sweethearts. Merry Christmas echoes from
student to student, and from student to faculty.
JANUARY
1 . The Betas have a house dance. Many college people feel the effects of the parties at the
Broadmoor and Antlers the night before. Ask Mobley and McBride.
2. Some of us are still sobering up from the New Year's parties. Prof. Bemis becomes the
father of a daughter, Ruth.
3. Kappa Sigs and the Betas stage parties at Bruin Inn. Ethel Reasoner becomes popular
among the college men. The faculty hike to Crystal Park.
4. School begins. The girls howl at the arrangement of the basketball seating, because they
are banned from the lower floor. K. U. K. has feed at Prof. Swart's.
5. "Curly" Parfet is run over by an automobile, resulting in a crushed ankle. China and
and Julia should have offered him a little feminine sympathy.
6. Prof. Palm is elected Sunday school superintendent at the First Congregational church. Can
you feature Prof, leading Linger, Barnes, Briggs or MacTavish to Sunday school?
7. Palm, McMurtry, Gilmore, Drucker and Copeland go to Denver.
8. The Tigers trim the Pueblo All-Stars, 74 to 18. You know that Pueblo is Kief's and John-
ston's home town.
9. We don't do much but "bull." Marjorie Hankins and Hazel Jolly have a spread for Miss
Bramhall.
1 0. Golf becomes a minor sport in Colorado. A tournament may be held for the Denver Times
trophy in May. Armit, Jencks and Hulbert are quite the hot stuff on the golf field.
11. The registrar mails out over-cut notices. Tobin has 46 and MacTavish 45. Sigma Chis
beat the Phi Delts, 9 to 5.
12 Fifty-eight young women report for Miss Davis's swimming class at the Broadmoor. But
men, we are barred from seeing the college bathing beauties. Serena Mcintosh and
Eunice McCampbell dance a minuet at the Broadmoor Art Academy.
13. Wheatridge is backed off the gym floor by the Tiger cagers, 32 to 18. Ian MacKenzie is
elected manager of the Junior Play.
14. Cutler bell peals out Tiger victory over Wyoming to the chime of 32 to 18. Mrs. Florence
Bartlett entertains the Minervas at her home. What does Neva know about Cowboy
ballads?
15. The Quintet brings home the bacon from Ault, 51 to 17. C. Club holds the all-college
under its auspices. Walholm jigs while the Fiji quartet warbles.
16. We comment on the good (?) time we all had at the C. Club all-college dance. Prof, and Mrs.
Sisam entertained the single faculty members at their home. Herby was there.
17. Brumfield, Winters and McMillan receive $75 apiece from the state C. of C. Pretty soft
for tough guys.
18. A high school tournament for Southern Colorado schools will be held here March 4 and 5.
Boulder trys to put in a conflicting date, but the Coach tells them where to get off at.
19. The social committee makes a survey of social activities for the second semester. Freshmen
town girls entertain the upper-class women in Ticknor.
20. The college howlers announce that they will tour the Western Slope beginning January 31.
They perform in chapel — Brumfield bawls out in low tones.
2 1 . Some of us begin to study for finals. Some go to the Antlers dance. How about some of
the girls in Montgomery?
22. Wyoming defeats us, 36 to 32. The spectators yelled for once and showed real pep. The
Betas enjoy a real session with Simpson of Wyoming until the wee hours.
23. Exams begin tomorrow. We regret that we nitted and didn't study. Every dog has his
day and now we've got ours.
24. Our dog's life continues.
25. Still struggling on, but we begin to drag.
26. Losing hope and sleep.
27. Getting down in the dumps.
28. We celebrate the closing of exams by going to a dance.
29. The Tigers revenge themselves on the Aggies, 31 to 11.
30. The Farmer lads go home feeling pretty blue over the results of the night before. Pledge-
night. All the fraternities are in the race for new men but the Kappa Sigs, who only have
twenty-three pledges now.
31. New semester opens, but we haven't registered as yet. Forty track men report to Parsons
The Glee Club start on their tour.
FEBRUARY
1 . Issue of the Tiger comes out after suspension during the exam week. Forty men report for
track to Coach Parsons. K. U. K. hikes to Bruin Inn and initiates Strachan and Dern.
Minerva is entertained by Nina Shaffer and Mary Clegg Owen.
2. Vera entertains George Bruce, Earl Bickford, Earl Eddins, Howard Linger, Doris Haymes
and Kate Bennett, at dinner in Bemis. P. W. Sundberry edits line plunges.
3. We are still registering. The Dean and Registrar become irritant at us. Harriet Bumstead
and Alice Wheeler are hostesses at a card party for the fairest on the campus.
4. The Men's Glee Club sings at Delta. Heavy Layden is at home in his old home-town.
Seventeen Frosh, two Sophs, one Junior and seven specials added to the College roster.
Phi Delts beat the Kappa Sigs, 5 to 4. The Sigma Chis beat the Pi Kaps, 4 to 3. Mines-
C. C. game postponed.
5. Boulder defeats the Tigers, 32 to 26. The Church Trustees request an explanation of the
Jazz act given by Walholm in the church at Montrose.
6. The girls begin to think and wonder, who shall be my valentine. Saffold and Honnen have
quite an argument over hearts.
7. The Glee Club sings at the wicked town of Salida on their way home. The social schedule
comes out for the second semester. Gertrude Kell visited friends at Pueblo.
8. The Glee Club hits town. Mai MacDougall is appointed chairman of the all-college picnic
committee. Alpha Kappa Psi meets in Cossitt.
9. "Bubbles" enrolls in C. C. Now Lesher has a mate in the heavy-weight class.
10. Dr. S. W. Shaefer gives us the dope that he has stepped off and will be married to Miss
Mabel Hutzler of Baltimore in April of this year.
1 1. Doris Haymes entertains Hypatia at her home. Contemporary throws hop for the Hyp's
and the Min's at 7 o'clock in Bemis.
1 2. The girls give a valentine dance for the men in college. Too bad this year wasn't a leap year.
13. "Hitchy Kow" characters begin wondering where they can get ladies' dressing apparel and
how to get it without getting embarassed. Who borrowed Kate's and Pat's?
14. Kappa Sigs give a Valentine dance. That's all they do in school besides fighting tea.
15. "Hitchy Kow" chorus appears on the front page of the Tiger. Such legs and ankles were
never seen on girls before.
16. The Nugget Board meets and Manager Bruce announces that the book will cost five dollars.
17. The chorus of "Hitchy Kow" performs in chapel dressed in skirts. They sure tossed them
high, wide and handsome.
IS. Boulder quintet hangs it on the Tigers, 39 to 30. The Girls' Dramatic Club present "Three
Pills In a Bottle." We think of a bottle as a thing of the past, now.
19. The Miners hang it on us, 39 to 31. What is the trouble, Tigers? This is fraternity night
and six organizations do the Camel Walk and the Toddle.
20. The squad returns from Golden feeling pretty blue. The Sigma Chis initiate.
21. "Hitchy Kow" is presented and James Aitken is styled the best looking girl. We saw
Professor Brumfield, Hero Walholm, Aida Brown and Midnight McCool.
22. Three hundred participate in the all-college picnic at the Garden of the Gods. Coach
Parsons was at the height of his contentment with an old stogy and gun. The Sophs
won the athletic tournament.
23. Scribner starts something in the Tiger and now we shall see what happens. It is the best
editorial yet written.
24. Manager Bruce announces in chapel that unless five hundred subscriptions are taken for the
Nugget there will be no annual published. The student body is an indifferent one to
vital matters.
25. The Tigers defeated the Farmers, 28 to 22. The Sophomores dance at the Colonial ball.
Serena Mcintosh and Martina Maher danced quite prettily.
26. The Tigers romp on D. U., 63 to 26. The Betas beat the Kappa Sigs, 13 to 8. The C. Club
dance at the San Luis school. Doc Woodward entertains the dancers with a dance of
his own.
27. Nobody does anything. Mai MacDougall fusses Marnie Eppich.
28. Phi Beta Kappa initiates ten. Frank Mobley was initiated in his bed at Bethel hospital.
How Sid Winters beat Ben Sweet out of the Key is still a mystery. Coach issues call
for ball tossers.
MARCH
1. Coach Donaldson chooses grapplers to meet D. U.; Nunn, 115; Padgett, 125; Bemis, 135;
Marchart, 145; Nelson, 155; Murray, 175; Brumfield, heavy weight.
2. Phi Delts initiate 8 men. We see our friend Jack Logan is to be the star in the "Perfect
Crime." Bruce is proud of his old girl.
3. Fuzz Flaherty gives the best speech in chapel this year. "Pardon me Doctor," a salute
and away he goes on talking on the Nugget, 500 subscriptions or bust. Bemis Hall
with its chattering and laughing inhabitants pose for a picture for the Nugget.
4. A holiday for the Basketball tournament is granted by the faculty. All that do not go to
Denver, Pueblo or to the hills attended the games. Popular election of the student
commission officers is put under the opposing foot.
5. The Tiger wrestlers defeat the D. U. Preachers by taking 5 out of 7 falls. Minerva, Hypatia
and Contemporary pledge 12. The Terrors beat Rocky Ford in a close game, 26 to 2 1 .
6. Patterson is chosen All-conference forward. Harvy makes guard on the second team.
MacTavish and Bruce receive honorable mention.
7. The Terrors beat the Melon Pickers, 42 to 17. Coldren is selected manager of the Senior
play for May 28. If he makes any money on it, there's a trick to it. Frank Mobley is
elected as class poet. Eleanor Hobbs as historian and Max Hardy as prophet.
8. Prof. Allin talks to K. U. K., Bus. Seminar and the Pol. Sci. club. Two kinds of coffee were
served, one coffee, the other without. The drive for the Memorial Flag Pole is started
with the Alumni.
9. Boulder charges Coach Parsons with spreading malicious propaganda because their High
School Tournament was not supported. Yes, they said the mental standard of the C. C.
students were low, too. A school that says that of a sister college is as low as a pup in
a gutter.
10. Because of the whims and wails of the student body, the Nugget board decides to go on
with the work regardless of all opposition. Dates were set and it was surprising how
the Bolsheviks toned to their own places again.
1 I. The C. C. elite dance at Annabel and Hazel Dunn's home. The Mandolin club holds a
dance (jitney) in McGregor Gym. Jean Graham tried to vamp again and what two
looked into each others eyes during a complete dance and who finally weakened?
12. The Tiger matmen lose to the U. of C. team, 18 to 14. Murray and Brumfield threw their
men. The Nugget board of control meets and the prices are not changed. The board
is determined not to compromise.
13. The Phi Delts are still in Denver and Fort Collins installing a new chapter at the Farmer
College.
14. Sad but true. Mary doesn't rouge her lips, neither does she paint. Is she a hit among the
men? You know damn well she ain't. Maybe that is the reason Pan Hell votes to have
no interfraternitv dance.
15. An extract from the Tiger editorial. "The college man looks for a jazz partner for a jazz
dance. What is more natural? The clever college woman who wants to have a good
time, hides her intellect behind jazz, gets dates, hands out a line and the bargain is com-
plete." That is why the Palm Gardens are so popular.
16. George Kief plays the part of a lover in the "Rosary." Guess he got his experience from
Gertie Kell. Les MacTavish is elected captain of basketball for 1922.
17. Marjorie said that Christ was born in Nazareth; Lyles said Huckleberry Finn wrote Tom
Sawyer. The Fiji dog performs on the stage for the students and the Senior Minstrel
show stunt.
18. Minerva gives a formal dinner dance at the Broadmoor. Between the Betas and the Kappa
Sigs, there were two Sigma Chis present. Parker took Mrs. Duniway; and wait till
Prexy returns!
19. A Senior Minstrel Show is given to which the Senior men were invited. One spicy joke was
pulled off by mistake. Evelyn and Neva had the colored ladies backed off the map,
when it came to darky shows. Fraternity night and romance once more.
20. It was a bad day and it spoiled many social plans, such as tea dances and automobile rides.
21. Juniors and Seniors begin to flock to Emery's and to Fults' to have their pictures taken.
Many of them said they were not going to be represented in the annual but only three
seniors and four Juniors did not have pep enough to take an interest in their book.
22. Dean McMurtry reads more notices in chapel than Carter had hay last year and he had a
bumper crop.
23. Albright says that we must go to chapel and that he is not going to issue clearance slips of
overcuts as extensively as he had up until this time. The President or Dean must
have jacked the old boy up a bit.
24. Spring vacation begins and the editor and manager begin to sweat blood for the Nugget.
25. Adelaide Brown deserves much credit for the art work in the Nugget. Her assistant, Bob
fell down on the job; hence his name does not appear on the Nugget staff.
26. The editor and manager rush the studios to death asking for pictures and solios. And yet
the students cuss about high prices and in their minds think that the manager is unearth-
ing a gold mine. They don't know, that's all.
27. Easter Sunday. Did your bunnie lay you some colored Easter eggs?
28. Hell. The students work on the campus; they don't do much in the way of wielding a shovel.
29. More hell. Seniors and Juniors neglect to order several solios.
30. Still more hell. And the Nugget goes to press tomorrow.
31. Hell is perennial. The Nugget goes to press unfinished.
When Greek Meets Greek
KAPPA SIGMA
No one is concerned to gray hairs when this fraternity is mentioned.
They pledged an army this fall in order to make up for the loss of their only
good man, Bob, who got married. We cannot blame him from wanting to
get away from faked femininity and live with real womanhood. Several sisterly
brothers are now engaged. Now are they tired of their life? They do have a
neat house-mother who can be said to be responsible for the success of their
parties and dances. A question comes to the writer and he is puzzled as to
how they get away with so many of their parties.
With such insignificants as Green and Gildea; such creatures as Heath
and Blair; such fussers as Hankins and Bemis; such absent minds as Kesling
and Kimble the fraternity ranks about as high as the bottom of the Pacific
ocean. We can hand it to the K. Sigs in that they have a man of ability in
the older Mierow. The other fraternities don't even think about the oldest
group on the campus. They see Bill occasionally and remark, "there goes one
of them!" By the way, Wendell was elected class president and now he goes
about with his head up in the clouds. He'll wake up some of these days and
find himself in the gutter. All good Kappa Sigs aim high but they always
slip back when some pledge sends in his pledge button.
SIGMA CHI
This group of brotherly hearts have the right spirit, for they see that
their student commission president is well defended against the big (?) Tiger
editorials. They are the managers of the affairs, football, the Tiger, and
debating. They have a big man, the opposite of Summer, who beat a Sweet,
deserving man out of the Key. One reckless brother Adams by name, is seldom
seen on the campus with anything other than the old army flannel. They
have a hard working man in Bickmore, but not in Daywalt, who can be classed
as a liability. Of course Downer of Denver is idolized (?) by the other Denver
Freshmen, Clow and Morris. Old Spud, though, is one of the up streets and
he combs his hair in the middle like some of the Betas. Williamson is the
conservative. We thot they did no fussing, but recalling an incident we can
say there are no more consistent lovers than Cook and Mohrbacher (the latter
name of course is a girl's). Judging from the scholarship records we assume
that Adams, Ball, Waiss, and Tait burn the midnight oil not in the house at
1117 North Nevada but at Baum's. Graham has raised the Sig stock con-
siderably in athletics since the departure of Garside, Liljestrom and Thomas.
The boys are found at Murray's where Eddie may or may not hand out the
eats gratis. We don't accuse him of this but it is not impossible.
PHI GAMMA DELTA
Proud of the fact that C. C. had a Fiji basketball team and an editor
of the college paper, they assumed to dictate the policy of the Tiger school.
They met opposition from the Sigma Chis and now their reforms regarding the
student commission are buried. Scribner, outside of being a Bolshevik and a
newspaper man, is a Fiji and a Senior in school. Walholm no doubt brought
the chapter from underneath the bonds of probation. The girls like the
chapter stunt that each loyal brother must pay particular attention to a woman.
Is that why John fusses Kate, and Edgar and Yates trot with Vera? We would
say that Roy, John and Howard were the pillars of this motlev crew. They
have come to the front but they are doomed to fall like any other bunch would
with swell heads like theirs. Bruce thinks that he is the little tin God and that
what he says should go as final. Simmons isn't so bad but Hertel is better.
Linger seems to be the big man with a captaincy and a girl. They are happv
we know. The chapter raised its stock when Thad moved his belongings from
1122 North Cascade to somewhere else. Lloyd happens to be a man of some
importance for he did appear in chapel and tried to speak without using a
salute when the listeners laughed. Albright is a Fiji and has a line of dry
humor that needs watering. He is also popular as a math. prof, and a chapel
officer. What happened to their scholarship 3
PHI DELTA THETA
This fraternal group lives in the suburbs of Denver and that is the reason
that Briggs is always on time to his classes. He misses Motten so bad that
every night he prays that he may be taken care of in the wicked city of Chicago.
This bunch is talented in the person of Jackson who, they say, can arrange the
real parties of all kinds, a special kind when he and Flaherty get together.
They have a demon fusser in Don who must stay awake at nights arranging
dates with Evelyne. If we were he we would use a little more discretion in
our affection. Kief, you know, is the piano-ist at 1319 North Nevada. Be-
sides playing with Jean and Gertrude he is an actor and yell leader. They
are like the Phi Gams in that they have two men, Yates and Strachan, who
think that they are pretty good.
We h^ve a great deal of respect for "Butch" and Wessen. We wonder
why the brothers did not wish to affiliate Archibald. What happened to
Prof. Palm this year? He does not bum with the Delts as much. We guess
that he found out that they were not the bunch for him. It seems that Mai
is trying to outcompete Ed by bringing Marnie down to the functions. But
did not she take Ed to the formal Minerva dance? It is interesting to watch
Orlando and Howard bump their knees on the table sides at the Plaza in aiding
the fair MacDonalds to their chairs. They monopolize varsity and inter-
fraternity baseball teams.
BETA THETA PI
This group of musicians, namely, Johnston's orchestra, has monopolized
playing for the Antlers and the Palm Gardens. It seems as though that since
they began plaving at these places the whole Fiji chapter has turned out to
support them. They are the smooth boys, for they comb their hair in the
middle and wear the upstreet styles of clothes. We noticed that handsome
Lester and slick Haymes received publicity in the daily papers some time ago
in the form of clothes models. With all their smoothness they of course must
have their teas and so they planned one for the hall girls. As was mentioned
once before the Irishman and the Swede get along first rate on their parties.
We cannot understand how they got the scholarship cup when we could not
find anyone home when we called at the mansion at 727 North Nevada. They
were either out fussing or at a show. With the Fijis they support the Pantages.
Bruce and Leino came to the lime-light when the Nugget was raised to $5.00.
Since that time they are classed as crooks and liars (if the editor doesn't change
this there is a trick to it). Here we have two opposite types, Seeley and
Layden. Layden would and Seeley wouldn't. We would class Burch and
Bleistein with Shoemaker and "Hub " Johnson when women are discussed.
They should know as they have had the experience. The Betas do love their
sleep.
PI KAPPA ALPHA
As the coach said we have a new fraternity, the Pi Kaps. They have a
queer bunch of dukes and between Fawcett and Leisy no one else seems to
hold the reins. They do have a man in Prof. Okey, whom we admire very much.
He above all other profs is human. He is one of the fellows. What the
trouble with Maxwell is, no one seems to know; but something is wrong that is
certain.
They bought the old Strieby residence and for several weeks in the
Tiger the fact was brought to our attention that they had nine fireplaces.
What good do they do them when they have no dates? Fawcett was the idol
in the indoor games, for his arm was red hot when an out was desired by his
team. But Leisy is their big man. Without him the chapter might boost
their stock some 30 per cent. We must not forget Nelson. The meetings would
be disturbing the neighbors if the walls of the house were not of brick. When
once he gets started he puts Trotsky to shame with oratory. What they need
is a dozen new members with some ideas of what a fraternity should mean.
Yes, they are young, and they must face the troubles a Greek organization has
to meet.
ALPHA NU
This local deserves much praise from all fraternities for the way they
have gone into the fraternity game. They have a real brotherhood, something
different from the Pi Kaps. Lesher and Lyles, although being opposite in
form, seem to get together on the big things. Now that Dave has become
engaged he can not be held accountable for his actions. P. W. Sundbury
seems to have taken over the line plunges and we at once noticed that he had
thought too loud in print for the Dean of women. Who would have thought
that Pink Lyles was a Kappa Beta Phi? Every fraternity has its sharp
students, that is referring to the blunt end of the tack. Bushnell seems to be
O. K. Because the fraternity is so small its faults are few. So no one should
regard the roast editor as being partial to the Alpha Nus. We are through
with the local for the present, but when it becomes a national it mav expect
something similar to the roastings that the six nationals have had to bear.
Soup — "That girl reminds me of Bull
Durham."
Fish— "How's that?"
Soup — "She rolls her own."
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Patronize the Nugget Advertisers
It is only thru the medium of their
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SOME DO AND SOME DON'T
(Tune of Marching Through Georgia)
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As treading down the street
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Chorus
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POOR PRUNELLA
Wildly he dashed into the bare, drab
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In a mad frenzy he dashed across the
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Prunella was taking a bath in the
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(15)
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FACING ACACIA PARK, IN CENTER OF CITY
J. W. ATKINSON, President and Manager
BETTER YET
Slumming for atmosphere in a no-
torious cafe dance hall in east Los
Angeles, Tod Browning, the film director,
asked the Negro saxophone player if he
knew "Japanese Sandman."
"No suh," said he, "but ah knows a
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Ding — I see that they started a new
women's society in Los Angeles.
Bust — Zatso?
D — Yep. They had a plan of put-
ting their names on their stocking, and
when two members would meet each
would raise her skirt and show her name.
B~Yah?
D — But the police had to stop it.
Some of the names were too long.
—Wampus.
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Hitchy Kow
What do the girls think of Miss Avoirdupois as seen in the picture of
the east of Hitchy Kow? Her leg is the subject.
What is the matter with Bleistein's face in the same picture?
What was Johnston doing with his arm around Pete Simmons?
Did you ever see such bowed legs as those of Bleistein's and Graham's
and Bruce's.
Lloyd and Aitken looked sweet and innocent, but looks and being are
not the same.
We didn't know that Parsons was a playwright. He put a muffler on
his language to make the show a fit production for the opposite sex in the
school.
Tom Brown acted timid, but do the girls know him? If they don't
it is about time they were finding out.
We've got to hand it to Palm when it comes to music. Without him
there would have been no Hitchy Kow.
Congratulations are in order for the men who put the cows and horses
in Palmer hall last May 10. The men who did the job knew their stuff and
their book real well.
BILLIARDS
CIGARS
MEET ME at BALM'S
114 EAST PIKES PEAK AVE., COLORADO SPRINGS, COLO.
Headquarters for Colorado College Students
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A SENIOR'S LEGACY
To whom it may concern : I cheer-
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She is a good dancer physically and
morally.
She is a good looker.
vShe is a good listener.
She isn't too good.
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She has, to the best of my knowledge,
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My sole and simple reason for quit-
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Treat her right. She likes to be treat-
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PHONE 230
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Warehousing Co.
PHONE 160
Fireproof Storage WareJioitse
GOOD SERVICE PAYS
11-=
m
m
Y OU can generally judge the standard of a store by the
merchandise it sells, just as you can determine the
character of a man by the company he keeps. What then,
is your verdict of a shop like ours that offers such famous
lines as Manhattan and Excello Shirts, Crofut Sz Knapp
and Henry Heath Hats and Caps ; Fashion Park and
... Society Brand Clothes? We sell
f^3 these, as well as every other high
type article of Men's Wear.
2&2^
Man s
Shop
Eight and Ten
S. Tcjon
=The=
PRINCESS
"The Avenue's Favorite Theatre'''
showing
Paramount Pictures
Torchy, Christy and
Mermaid Comedies
-FOX NEWS
Princess Concert Orchestra
m
As I Was Walking Down the Street
A sign board caught my eye.
The advertisements on that board
Would make you laugh and crv.
The wind and rain had washed and blown
Most half that sign away,
The other half remaining there
It made that sign board say:
Oh smoke Coca Cola, Catsup cigarettes,
See Lilian Russell wrestle with a box of
cascarets!
Heinz Pork and Beans will meet tonight
In a ten round whirlwind fight;
And Chauncey Depew will speak upon
vSapolio tonight.
Your teeth extracted without pain
By an old Virginia cherut;
Come vote for Buffalo Bill
And wear Uneeda Biscuit suit.
John Drew and Peter Daily
Anheuser, rum and Schlitz;
Jim Jeffries will be here tonight
To do Red Raven Splitz.
m
11
BOTHILDA E. CURTZ
American Bank and Trust Co.
Denver
RAY W. TRAXLER
Ordnance Dept.
Washington, D. C.
ELVA MARINE
Hendrie & Bolthoff Mfg. Co.
Denver
Men and Women Need
Business Training
■
EVERY man is compelled by circumstances to take part in busi-
ness — and it is becoming true that every woman must know
something about business to maintain her proper place in woman's
sphere. Thousands of young men and voung women are attending
accredited Commercial Schools in order that they may learn
Stenography, Accountancy and Banking, or to prepare for Commercial
Teaching or Secretarial positions, in which fields there is always a
scarcity of competent applicants.
The Central Commercial College, now in its thirty-fourth year, offers
thorough training in all these courses. Summer and Fall Sessions.
A Catalogue giving complete information about the school
will be mailed on request
(Lfye Central Commercial (College
Fifteenth and Cleveland Streets .... DENVER, COLORADO
Member National Association of Accredited Commercial Schools
m
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The J. C. St. John
Plumbing & Heating Co.
Incorporated
\ \ /E invite you to ask
* * for estimates on any
Plumbing or Heating Work
you may have, from the
largest to the smallest job.
226 NORTH TEJON STREET
PHONE MAIN 48
VOL- UNSTEADY
"John," began the wife sternly, "I
noticed your coat on the hall stand this
morning all covered with mud. How
did that happen?"
"Sorry, my dear," responded hubby
meekly. "It dropped in the gutter as
I was coming home last evening."
"Ah, and were you in it?"
AN EARLY TRAGEDY
Adam found Eve in tears one day.
"What's the trouble?" he asked symp-
athetically.
"I do have the very worst luck,"
mourned Eve. "While I was in bath-
ing a caterpillar came along and just
ruined my new fall wardrobe."
GIBSON INSTRUMENTS
•<■►
Hiltbrand Music Co.
THE BEST ASSORTMENT OF SHEET
MUSIC IN THE CITY
Phone Main 913 125 1 2 N. Tejon St.
Established 1871 y^ With the Town
The
Edw. W. Kent Realty Co.
Real Estate
Investments
and Insurance
Burns Building, 19 E- Pikes Peak Ave.
11;
Wiring
Fixtures
Repairing
All Kinds of
Electrical
Supplies
T
► ■•4
▲
the Whitney
ELECTRIC CO.
208 N. TEJON ST.
PHONE M 906
m
11'
=m
Front View The Broadmoor Hotel at Colorado Springs
At a State Dinner in Tokio, Japan, in September, 1920, a distinguished
diplomat paid The Broadmoor Hotel this remarkable tribute:
"Strange as it may seem, the finest hotel in America is located at the
comparatively little city of Colorado Springs, Colorado. It is named The
Broadmoor."
The Evening Post of New York recently said:
"There is a hotel in Colorado that is not a mere hotel, but a creation
of art — an institution. It is called The Broadmoor, at Colorado Springs."
The Broadmoor Hotel is in a class by itself. It has set a new stan-
dard for places of delightful recreation the world over. At the same time
its rates are comparatively lower than those in the first-class hotels of
Europe, New York, Atlantic City, Cuba, Florida or California. The fun-
damental principle of its management has always been that a satisfied
customer is the best advertisement. It is open the year around, and
every season of the year in the Pikes Peak Region has its own peculiar
charm.
^BRODMOOR
COLORADO SPRINGS
m
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&&&^&^&W\fi^
It will be your Pleasure
to Shop Here
and ours to Serve You
Flower-like Frocks, oddly unusual Suits,
Stunning Coats, Saucy Jackets, thai
would woo even the winds to flirt with
them — and Skirts that are beyond the ken
of mans understanding — these are the
Spring Clothes Giddings & Kirkwood
have secured for the College Girls.
Stock Terms Used by the
Seven Calculators
Ham bones dip your gravy.
Come on bones call that cash call.
Come on bones lick your chops.
Pay day dice, speak my name.
Gallopers, stay lame on seven.
Harvest babies, pick yo' cotton.
Honey-bee babies, git yo' stinger hot.
Shotgun dice, spout yo' lead.
Key cubes, unlock de han' cuffs.
Squirrel dice, ketch de top limb.
Mule bones, resurrection morn.
Brakin'.on de B. and O. — bust and out
Lady dice, git lovely.
Snake babies, coil 'round the coin.
Grub cubes, 'semble yo' rations.
Army gallopers, as you was.
Weddin' dice ring yo' bells.
Lady Luck stan' by me.
Preacher bones, make 'em bow down.
Riveh dice, high and dry.
Li'l snow flakes, sof ly fall.
Come on dice C. O. D.
Eagle bones, see kin you fly.
Telegraph dice, click fo' de coin.
Turkey dice, gobble dat coin.
Grass cutters reap dem greens.
Ise a wild cat for revenge, an' Ise on my
prowl.
Houn' dog, head home wid rabbit hair
in yo' teeth.
Hot dam, and the green clickers read
seven.
Let it lay, bo, I'll get it. Let it lay.
Ise fades you, so come on eleven.
THAT'S WHY
Mrs. Henry Peck: "She's very pretty,
but she never says a word. I can't im-
agine why all the men are in love with
her."
Mr. Henry Peck: "I can."
M"
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Your Suit
honestly and truly tailored
for Just You
#][ Pick the goods from a house full of Woolens.
oJ We have the ultra as well as the regular
styles. You'll find just what will please you
in our store, and $ $ saved.
124 E. Pikes
Peak Ave.
MIND-READING STUFF
Irene, belle of the village green, was
in the drug store with her ardent swain
absorbing an ice cream soda when her
straw became bent.
"Hey," she called to the clerk, "my
sucker's broke."
The swain colored. "Ding it!" he ex-
claimed pettishly. "How'd you know I
Vht
Graftwood Shop
Burns Theatre Building
FUTURIST STUFF
A veil of wispy green, dulling the glow
of a fading horizon. A mystery of grays.
The blue-black vault of infinite space.
Whispering waves, hungry, phosphores-
cent, conspiring. The silhouette of a
ghost ship, slipping westward. A world
of sky and water, silent, calm, omnipo-
tent. vSuddenly a ringing voice, dis-
tinct, commanding in tone:
"Hey, you blankety-blank, dod-rot-
ted, blinking blank-blanks! I been up
in this blatted crow's nest five hours.
Where the limpin' hell's my relief?"
THE PIKES PEAK
CONSOLIDATED FUEL CO
Producers •*• Wholesalers
Retailers
T T T
T
General Offices
125 E. PIKES PEAK AVE.
Telephone
MAIN 577
@H
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Sodas, Drinks.
Every C. C. student knows the Busy Corner Drugstore — where
it is, what it is, and what it sells. And most of them recognize
the Busy Corner as the down town headquarters for drinks
and eats. It's so easy to slip in the Busy Correr for a "Coke"
or a dainty sandwich while awaiting a car — In fact most of .he
College students have the habit.
THE BUSY CORNER
{Robinson Drug Co.)
Prompt Efficiency is what Ambulance
Service Demands. That is tkkWHYov
LAW'S
SUPER-
SERVICE
Ever-Ready *4 mbula nee Department
THE D. F. LAW CO. Main
1 16 NORTH NEVADA AVENUE 166
COLORADO SPRINGS, COLORADO 968
CITY
SUB -BITUMINOUS
COAL
The Best by Every Test
CITY COAL MINES
5 E. PIKES PEAK AVE.
Phones 67 and 120
D. S. GILMORE
President
E. J. ROESCH
Secretary
THE
PROMPT
PRINTERY
"When it is 12-14 E. Kiowa St
Promised" Telephone M. 536
Patronize Nugget Advertisers
11;
m
[p
$6 to $12
The Smartest of
Smart Shoes
FOR ALL OCCASIONS
White, gray, brown — in leathers
and satin — for evening and
party wear and models for street
and semi-dress occasions
WulffShoeGO.
HOSE TO
MATCH
=11
The Quality Store
S. M. Duncan
fainter
and
Decorator
n
PHONE MAIN 1732
15 EAST BITOU STREET
O TELL US WHY
My Dear Alice:
As I sit here alone, crushed and
broken, I cannot realize that we have
parted. Of course, I am also to blame,
but I had always thought that our views
were mutual until —
Do you remember our long walks to-
gether; our little talks in which we were
so frank with each other; the hours so
happily spent in planning the home,
our home, where we were to face life's
battles together? And again those
long winter evenings — beautiful because
we were together. Remember the trust
we placed in each other and now —
It is all over. I shall always think of
you dear. Time can never erase what
has been so indelibly written on my
heart. I can say no more. There is
nothing to say but —
0, Why Did You Bob Your Hair?
COLORADO COLLEGE HEADQUARTERS
Opposite the Campus
We're always behind the Tigers
GEO. H. KEENER
Manager
m
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FO
R
ST YL I
S H C LOTH E S
S E
E
N.
A
. HYDEN
Merchant Tailor
FOR
MEN AND WOMEN
204 North
1
Tejon St.
Phone Main 1209 Colora
do Springs
1
Here's to the girl that has jilted me—
I drink to her health, because
It's better to have been a have-been
Than to have been a never-was.
The Place for
Exclusive People
CAMPBELL'S
Sanitary Barber Shop
JOHN C. CAMPBELL, Proprietor
12 South Tejon Street
Phone Main 490
Electric Hair Dryer
A ppointments Made for Outside Work
THE
SUN REALTY
COMPANY
Insurance, Real Estate
Loans, Rentals
Main 209 23 V 2 North Tejon St.
Commercial Work
Enlarging
Lantern Slides
Hand-Colored Views
of Colorado
Amateur Work
H. L. STANDLEY
'Photographer
22 East Bijou
Street
Colorado Springs
Colorado
Hi
m
(S
Retail
PA INT
A LITTLE CHEAPER
A LITTLE BETTER
Wholesale
PAINT SUPPLY CO.
113-115 E. Bijou
Street
G. A. MUEHLHAUSEN
THE COLLEGE BAKERY
jlND LUNCH
We Specialize in Cakes for Parties
and Receptions
105 East Cache la Poudre Street
Colorado Springs
"■
-■
VOLSTEAD I AN STRATEGIST
Two football fans were talking it over.
"I wonder who invented the drop
kick," said the first.
The other, who had been on a home
brew party the night before, stroked his
brow painfully.
"John Barleycorn," he answered with
conviction.-
THE
TIGERS'
SHOP
JAMES HOWARD
BARBER SHOP
Modern
Strictly
First-Class
19 East Bijou Street
Colorado Springs
m=
m
11'
m
EVERYTHING IN
FLOWERS
104 N. Tejon St.
Phone Main 599
STANDI SH
HOTEL- • • 2w
c. c.
HEADQUARTERS
CALIFORNIA STREET
Between
Fifteenth and Sixteenth
S. C. HOOVER, Proprietor
HIS LIMIT REACHED
"Now, Mary, I don't want to be
misunderstood in this matter. I am
willing that you should be a suffragette,
I am willing to get up in the morning,
split the kindling, light the fire, cook
the breakfast, wash the dishes and
dust the parlor, but I'll be doggoned if
I'm going to wear pink ribbons in my
nightie to fool the baby!"
OUT OF SIGHT
The topic under discussion was the
advantage of a woman's stocking as a
bank.
"Nowadays, women wear hose so thin
that you can read the serial number on
the bills in the bankroll," advanced the
New Fangled Guv-
"Oh, I admit the principle is all right,
but the money draws altogether too
much interest," persisted the Old Moss-
back.
Absolutely Fireproof
European Plan
The
NTLERS
COLORADO SPRINGS' LARG-
EST AND BEST HOSTELRY
CHAS. A. SCHLOTTER, Manager
Restaurant Famed
We Specialize in Parties and Banquets
of any size
■'
•
The
EMERY
Studio
High - Class
Photography
For more than a quarter of
a century the College Stu-
dents' Photographic Shop
Make Appointments for Sittings
Phone Main 41
CORNER CASCADE
AND KIOWA
SIXTEEN YEARS WITHOUT A LOSS
First Mortgage Farm Loans
The reputation of an investment house is the main consid-
eration. No investor has ever suffered a loss of any kind on
any farm mortgage security purchased from us. Every mort-
gage made by us is subject to the strictest investment tests,
which tests have been developed by us thru years of experience.
Invest your funds with a permanent, time-proven organization.
We collect the interest and look after all details until maturity.
Call for our booklet, " Farm Mortgages," and circulars de-
scribing our individual loans.
Vhe Western Securities Investment C°-
— ^— — — — — — Farm Mortgages — — — — — — — —
C. C. Bennett, Pres.
T. B. Stearns, Vice-Pres.
Harry K. Brown, Vice-Pres.
H. A. Bradford, Treas.
Suite 410 First National Bank Building
Denver, Colorado
Telephone M a i n 18 6 6
SIXTEEN YEARS WITHOUT A LOSS
m
m
®1
m
The COPPER HALFTONES
AND ETCHINGS IN THIS
ANNUAL Were MADE BY
STEWART BROS.
ENGRAVING CO.
COLORADO SPRINGS, COLO.
WE MAKE HIGH GRADE
HALFTONES AND ETCH-
INGS FOR ALL KINDS OF
:: :: PRINTING
(16)
m
'11
COLORADO I"IN«»
COlOMAOO
Imported
Weaves
East
Bijou
Street
FOR the man who cares to
select the cloth for his
garments from a broad assort-
ment, we offer splendid im-
ported woolens in best of
weaves.
LINDBLOM
A I LOR
"HOOCH"
It was a nice day in October,
Last vSeptember, in July;
The moon lay thick upon the ground
The mud shone in the sky.
The flowers were singing sweetly,
The birds were in full bloom.
vSo I went into the cellar,
To sweep an upstairs room;
The time was Tuesday morning,
On Wednesday, just at night,
I saw a thousand miles away,
A house just out of sight.
Co llege Hi k ers
know the joy of the great
outdoors. And they also
know that to enjoy the
outdoors to the utmost, one
must be properly outfitted.
We are outfitters for scores
of students.
THE OUT WEST
TENT & AWNING CO.
The walls projected backwards,
The front was round the back,
It stood alone with others,
The fence was whitewashed black.
It was summer in the winter,
The rain was falling fast,
The barefoot boy with shoes on
Stood sitting on the grass.
It was evening and the rising sun,
Stood setting in the night,
And everything that I could see,
Was hidden from my sight.
While the organ peeled potatoes,
Lard was rendered by the choir;
While the Sexton rang the dishrag
Some boob set the church on fire.
"Holy Smoke," the preacher shouted
In the rain he lost his hair;
Now his head resembles Heaven
For there is no parting there.
It was midnight on the ocean,
Not a street car was in sight,
The sun was shining brightlv,
And it rained all day that night.
A cross from
the Campus
Mowry's
Maybe a "cone" between
classes; perhaps the ice
cream or sherbet at those
parties — but sometime or
other Mowry's has to do
with the pleasures of Colo-
rado College life.
Phone Main 1184
He
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11'
'II
The
Cnssey & Fowler
Lumber Co.
Builders'
Supplies
As we operate our own plan-
ing mill we are in a position
to furnish your needs in this
line promptly.
117 to 123 West Vermijo Ave.
Fill Niches
in C. C. Life
n
Derngood Saturday
Candy Features
Derngood Freshly
Roasted Coffee
Nearly every C. C. man or
woman has enjoyed some of the
hundreds of pounds of Derngood
Candy Features offered each
Saturday.
And Derngood Freshly Roasted
Coffee has helped to make the
hikes and picnics and parties
enjoyable.
■ ■
Derns
26 S. Tejon
Eats for
any event
The thick, juicy steaks
for camp-fire broiling —
the wienies — the fruits
— sandwich materials —
cakes — cookies. All
Sommers' foods are se-
lected — quality — foods.
14
omniers
SOUTH TEJON
4 PHONES M.
4100
Zim's
BETTER
Bread
fflAUL HARK and
HCOTED p aslr j es
PERHAPS you may — in some
instances — pay a little more for
Zim's BETTER products. Hut
fresh eggs and pure butter and such
things cost a little more to use.
Downtown store at 109 South
Tejon, Aunt Mary's Bake Shop, at
125 North Tejon, and grocers all
over town.
The Zimmerman
Baking Co.
m
m
■=
BRUIN INN
North Cheyenne Canon
Open All the Year for
Supper Parties and Hikes
=-11
Phone —Long Distance.
LEE SWENSON, Proprietor
Nature's Great Outside with
Every Room
Alta Vista Hotel
CONWAY BROS., Props.
Colorado Springs, Colo.
Beautiful
Theater
Home of
Good Pictures
It's a pretty safe practice to
make a habit of "goingto the Amer-
ica." Pictures here are carefully
selected — we review them before
they are presented to you — and
you may be sure that the best only
will be shown.
As for the music, our big Hope-
Jones Organ furnishes it — that's
enough.
jiuthorized
Eastman Agency
Send Film
Rolls by Mail
for Developing
and Printing
Having our own developing and printing
department we naturally take especial
pains to get the most possible from every
picture we finish for you.
Our films are always fresh because we
sell so many rolls.
pRENCH PERFUMES
and TOILET GOODS
Main 90-750
Corner
Opposite
Postofnce
11:
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The Hamilton Jewelry Company
1 2 North
Tejon St.
For the
Practical
needs
of Students
or the
Special
Gifts
that are
inseparably
interwoven
into
student
days
Gold and Silver, Optical and Crystal Wares
MEET AT MI IR R AY'.Stef)
Where College Students are always welcome
and always feel at home
Text Books and all Supplies for
Colorado College Students
Exclusive Agents in Colo. Springs
for Whitman's and Baur's
Chocolates and Confections
The Murray Drug Company
SUPERIOR SERVICE STORES
Main Store, 21 South Tejon
North Store, Opposite Campus
m
(Ins.)
m
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HARD WARE ^ FARM
IMPLEMENTS
STOVES and Wagons, Queens -
ware and Tinware, Primrose
Cream Separators, Glass, Paints,
Varnish, Oils, Tinning, Plumbing, Sheet
Metal Work, Complete Harness Depart-
ment, Steam Fitting a Specialty, Guns,
Ammunition. Monarch, Cole's Ranges.
Yours for Servi
ce:
THE STOCKHAM
Qtudebaker
and OVERLAND
AUTOS
United States and
Fisk Auto Tires
Auto Accessories
W. B. STOCKHAM, Pres.
A. H. STOCKHAM, V-Pres.
J. H. PLOGER.Sec'v-Mgr.
S. J. KYFFIN, Asst. S-Mgr.
HARDWARE CO. E^
a, Colorado
Senior Minstrel Show
Suoma Leino is disloyal to her college. She likes Lyons better than the
Tigers.
The Betas did not have a dance March 19. They were Minerva's
guests the night before at a formal dinner dance at the Broadmoor.
Brumfield said, "If I don't get my shoes soled I'll be on my feet again."
Neva and Marian imitated Yates and Jackson in the role of Hitchy Kow
as the Kow.
The Junior stunt was a farce. No one knew their songs. They did not
get by. That's all right girls, no balling out at all.
Some of the coonegettes did not have on any too many clothes. Some
skirts were pretty short. They probably forgot that men were to be present.
The men did not object.
As was demonstrated at the show, the girls do know a great deal about
love. Neata and Evetyne put on a real party.
Bernice Miles will make a wife for someone that can not be beat. This
is serious.
Monroe Heath was again rapped with his Phi Bet Key.
What coon said, "Ah'm too low to chin the flooi^?"
The show was called "The Raspberry Review." The Berries were to
come from the audience in the nature of Razz.
(1:
m
\ ■ J V., UK
i
Scenes of the
All-College Picnic
February 22
May Festival
May 29, 1920.
The May Festival was entitled "Through the College Looking Glass
and What Alice Found There". Alice Wheeler played the title role. The
play was a sketch of the college career of an ordinary college girl and Alice sees
bits of the events that are peculiar to each year — like the Colonial Ball and
Barbecue for the second year and the Pikers' Day for the senior year.
In the last act Ruth Brown was crowned Queen by Margaret Felt,
president-elect of the Y. W. C. A. Miss Brown was the candidate of the Phi
Delta Theta fraternity which won the pennant in the Campus Baseball League
and thus earned this honor for her.
Supper was served in the jungle, cafeteria style, to a large number of
students, faculty and townspeople and the day's festivities ended with an All-
College dance in Bemis Hall.
Boulder Pep Meeting
IP
'11
Two Acres of Floor Space
devoted to serving every need
of the motorist
The Marksheffel Motor Co.
Cadillac Motor Cars
Colorado Springs
Main 238
Dodge Brothers Motor Cars
THAT FATAL METAPHOR
The young man was telling his sweet-
heart how he had been attracted to her.
"You were a lovely flower and I was
a bee.
"I was a mouse and you were a piece
of cheese."
And then he wondered why she arose
and left the room.
M. K. MYERS
Jeweler
WE GUARANTEE TO TAKE BACK
ANY DIAMOND AT FULL PRICE ANY
TIME WITHIN TEN YEARS IN
PART PAYMENT FOR A
LARGER OR MORE
VALUABLE ONE
25 S. Tejon St.
Colo. Springs
This modern laundry
is a clothes saver
Time and again it has been proven that
Elite laundering methods really prolong the
life of a garment. You can prove it yourself.
Dry Cleaning in our own plant
Clothes which we dry clean in our own separate
dry cleaning plant may be worn within a few hours
after you get them. There's no clinging odor.
\ &&n Laundry
Main 82 or 86
1 1 7 North Tejon Street
Ei
m
-.
11
Approach to Women's Quadrangle
Colorado College
m
/§\FFERS advantages of the
^-^ same grade as those in the
best Eastern institutions
Founded in Colorado Springs,
Colorado, in the year Eighteen
Hundred and Secenfy-four
=♦♦♦=
Ms
FOR INFORMATION, APPLY TO
CLYDE A. DUNIWAY, President
m
II 11
CLYDE A. DUNIWAY, President
Department of Arts and Sciences
♦ ♦ ♦
Department of Business
Administration and Banking
Course designed to meet the needs of students planning to enter
Business, Banking and the Consular Service and the like.
♦ ♦ ♦
Department of Engineering
Electrical, Civil and Irrigation Engineering.
♦ ♦ ♦
Department of Forestry
♦ ♦ ♦
Department of Fine Arts (Affiliated)
THE MISSES LEAMING, Directors.
♦ ♦ ♦
Department of Music
Courses in Vocal and Instrumental Music, Composition
and Orchestration.
EDWARD D. HALE, Dean.
m m
m
m
f nu htfll fiuii nur "Mnb? So&ag" (Eaniiipa an&
§>iiim iFountatu 8>perialttes to pxcpI in
(Quality — m\b tl?r prirr is rtgtit
LET US SERVE YOU
HIGH AND STEEP
Gladys: "Madge has a high
color, hasn't she?"
Gwen: "Yes, the dear girl.
That kind costs ten dollars a
box."
"Isn't it too bad about Peggy?
"Why, what happened to her?"
"She's been to so many dances
lately she's muscle bound from her
waist up."
Support Your College Annual
THE College Annual, as the mirror of
student life, is entitled to the best
support of the students, faculty,
alumni and advertisers. The co-operation
of these many groups makes possible the
publication of a book of which the college
community may well be proud.
Bankers Trust Company
Denver
Equitable Building
Capital and Surplus, $1,250,000
BANKING INVESTMENT SECURITIES TRUST
m
m
ORIGINAL
"Tflamtm
99
Sparkling Water
and Ginger
Champagne
Bottled at the Origi-
nal Group of Springs
at Manitou, Colorado
The
Manitou Mineral
Water Co.
Manitou, Colo.
For June Brides
Give something worth while for the new home.
Hardware Gifts are really useful gifts. We have
a wide selection of Wedding Gifts that are practical
as well as charming.
Suggestions for Wedding Gifts —
PERCOLATORS
ELECTRICAL TOASTERS
SILVERWARE
VACUUM BOTTLES
CARVING SETS
ALUMINUM SETS
PYREX DISHES
GLASSWARE
For the " SHOWER " we have Aluminum Ware,
Cooking Utensils and Housewares
of all kinds
Make your selectio?is for
Graduation Gifts liere
LOWELL-MESERVEY
HARDWARE CO.
Phone 307 106 S. TEJON ST. Phone 327
HIBBARD &
COMPANY
DEPARTMENT STORE
1 7 South Tejon
Hi
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[S
'11
Qoloicu>o c>piiito^,@iouiu>o
YOUNG MOTHER HUBBARD
Young Mother Hubbard she went to
the cupboard,
To get her bathing suit there.
Though she looked like a peach she was
pinched at the beach
Because her cupboard was bare.
CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE
Counsel: "Now where did he kiss
you?"
Plaintiff: "On the lips, sir."
Counsel: "No, no. You don't un-
derstand. I mean where were you?"
Plaintiff: "In his arms, sir."
M. B. RICH
SHOE CO.
10 North Tejon
Bright, Snappy Styles in
Dependable Footwear
OFFICE PHONE
Main 13
parties; & jWarben
Plumbing and Heating
DUNHAM
HEATING SERVICE
206 N. Tejon St., Colorado Springs
Agents for B. B. B. and Kaywoodie Pipes
o
$M3
SBORN
CIGAR
CO
v - >v - / - 32 North
Tejon St.
IMPORTED and DOMESTIC CIGARS
(S
m
11'
'11
Headquarters for
Cleaning & Pressing
The average college man is
rather particular about the way
his clothes look. That's one
reason why we like to do his
work — he appreciates our way
of taking care of a suit. When
you come back next fall, make
Coutures your cleaner.
Phone M. 1288
TheALAMO Cafe
The place where you can
really enjoy a meal of qual-
itv and service unexcelled.
Special Dinner Served
every night between <£
5 :30 and 8 p. m. Price <P I .OO
218 N.
Tejon
Coutures
Cleaning and
Dyeing Company
BEST SHINE IN CITY
National Shoe
Shining Parlor
104 E. Pikes Peak
HATS CLEANED AND BLOCKED
Strengthen Old
Friendships with a New
Portrait
— the gift that exacts nothing in return, yet
has a value that can only be estimated in
kindly thoughtfulness.
Phone Main 510 for that Appointment
STUDIO FULTS, Burns Building
Phone M. 510
11=
m
[p
Fireproof and Non-Fireproof Storage
When Your Trunk is
Packed Call Main 97
n
When you get ready to go home,
for vacation, pack the old trunk,
and then phone the W. & L. Mov-
ing Service. You can forget all
about it then, because we'll check
your trunk from your room right
through to your home.
And when you come back next
Fall, remember we'll still be on
hand to meet your baggage at the
station.
♦«♦
Main 97
11
North
Tejon
Street
WANDELL
&L0WE
Transfer and Storage Co.
EVERYONE A PLACE
Ours is Dry Goods and Garments
We try to do our bit in our own way, to
build morals in our own store — so we may
be a fit representative of our great city.
A city which inspires the best in anyone
— one so much nearer to nature, away and
above anything more ordinary. Among
these stately mountains and peaks and the
purest of atmosphere — environments of-
fering the most splendid opportunity for
character building. Could there be a more
ideal spot for a college, a more desirable
place to send your boy or girl?
They cannot come here without the
greatest constructive benefit, intellectual
as well as physical.
Pikes Peak and all the lesser lights, to
whose towering stature all pay reverential
homage, will welcome you with a sunshiny
smile that never, hardly ever comes off.
We all take pride in our efficient and
well conducted College and you will be
welcome by the business interest of the
town as well as the College, and your
comfort and needs as well as your educa-
tional aspirations will receive the best
there is in us. We are making Dry Goods
and Garments our specialty.
THORSEN'S
Court House Corner Colorado Springs
EASY
Bones — "Where can I find ladies
garters?"
Clerk — "Oh sir, can't you guess:*"
There was a young maiden named
Bender,
So sweet you wanted to defend her,
But in a bathing suit
She wasn't so cute;
Ye Gods, I'll sav she was slender.
The most up-to-date Clothing Store
on the Western Slope
Park-Davis
Clothing Company
DELTA
COLORADO
"When you think of
drugs, think of Woods"
An Invitation
to Wood's
Fountain
In the recent remodeling of our store
here at Wood's, we have paid especial
attention to the Soda Parlor and
Luncheon booths. We feel that now,
for the first time in years, Colorado
Springs has a completely modern and
entirely up-to-date fountain service
In addition to our service from the
Soda Fountain, we will serve light
1 uncheons. We believe that a service
of this kind should appeal to you
coll ege people — we want you to feel
that we are more than glad to have
your patronage.
-WOOD-
The COMPANY Drug
18 N. Tejon
Main 491
Wf
11'
Here's a Valuable Tip
01
@S3
HEN you leave Colorado Springs after
you've finished your College Course, or
on vacation — you'll want to keep in
touch with vour friends here. Subscribe to
ulff? lEhpntttg uWrgrapfy
and have it sent along to your new address in
any part of the world. It will keep you posted
on College sports and supply you with informa-
tion about what your friends and acquaintances
are doing in Colorado Springs.
The Price, 55c. Per Month
^he Evening telegraph
Publishing Co.
He: "My dear, I wish you wouldn't
keep singing that song about the 'Fall-
ing Dew.'
She: "Why not!"
He: "Because it always reminds me
of a falling roll.
HE PIC-
TURE and
FRAME
STORE OF
COLORADO
S PR I N G S
THE PHOTO-
CRAFT SHOP
One -One -One North Tejon Street
m
=H
For Commencement Presents
DIAMONDS, PEARLS, NOVELTIES
AND A WIDE VARIETY OF
GOLD AND PLATINUM JEWELRY
=♦♦♦♦=
Watches for the man or woman,
dependable and in proper
selection
The Mahan Jewelry Company
26 East Pikes Peak Avenue
Use
More Milk
WHY?
BECAUSE IT IS THE
Best
Balanced Food
A .VD
Contains the Necessary
Vitamines
THE SINTON
DAIRY CO.
SP styl?es FOOTWEAR
OXFORDS, SLIPPERS
STRAP PUMPS
W>&\QJ
\[
f
Our Selection
'SHOESTHAT SATISFY " ; will please
22 S TFJONI ST
you
Hosiery in the Better Grades
11'
'11
C. C. men call "The Boys
by their first names
One of the biggest compliments paid "The Boys"
by C. C. Men is the practice of calling us by our
first names. <-*
And it's a sign of friendship and goodfellowship which
we appreciate in the fullest measure.
Then, too, we feel privileged to "return the compliment"
in most cases.
Stratford Clothes
Dunlap Hats
Ambassador Shirts
Vassar Underwear
Phoenix Hose
Trade with " The Boys"
BisselTs
Pharmacy
fi
or
PURE DRUGS
STATIONERY
CANDY
SODA and
CIGARS
♦
♦ ♦♦
♦
Corner Dale and Weber
Phone Main 980
We Make it a Point
To call for and deliver all Laundry Work intrusted
to us as soon as possible, but we do not slight the
work on that account It has to be done well or
we will not allow it to be sent out. We have a
fully equipped steam laundry with every facility
for doing good work quickly.
The Pearl Laundry
Company
329-331 N. Tejon St. Phones M. 1085-1086
The Laundry that uses Ivory Soap
m
m
Appearance
always will
count big
Colorado Springs
Home of
Hart Schaffner &
cMarx Clothes
Clothcraft Clothes
Stetson, (Also
"Berg Hats
Holeproof and
Luxite Hose
Emery Shirts
cMunsingivear
Ralston Shoes
To look the part of success is to feel
that success is a certain achievement.
For a generation, this store has
helped men to "look the part" from
school days to positions of real success
in business.
It is a matter of great satisfaction
for us to know that a Robbins' cus-
tomer continues a Robbins' customer
year after year.
28-32 South Tejon
Colorado Springs
11'
■ ■-
o
verland
-tr< Billiards and Bowling
1* Parlors
10 Tables and 4 Alleys
8 and 10 North Nevada
LIGHTNING
SHOE SHOP
w
E Repair Shoes by
the Goodyear Welt
Repairing System.
OUR WORK GUARANTEED
1&Y 2 NORTH TEJON STREET
'11
m
As soon as high skirts became the
rage the bootmakers trotted out their
high shoe styles. Some fellows can't
let well enough alone.
WHAT HE SAID
Prof. — "So, sir, you said that I was
a learned jackass, did you?"
Freshie — "No, sir, I merely remarked
that vou were a burro of information.
INSPIRATION
She was young and pretty.
He was young and clever.
They kissed.
He wrote a poem commemorating the
event.
Again they met.
The events which occurred during
their walk along the country road were
rich, rare, and racy.
They were parting.
"You should be able to write a book
now," she whispered.
Vulcanizing
Retreading
Solid Tire Service Station
Goodrich De Luxe Tires
Distritutors for Diamond Tires, Dealers in
Goodrich and Goodyear Cord
or Fabric TlRES
111-113 N. Cascade
Phone Main 202
EAT
Meals that are tastily prepared to please
the most particular and dainty appetites.
AT
The most fully equipped and up-to-date
Cafeteria in the Middle West.
JONES
Stands for cleanliness, quality and strictly
home prepared food, and there is
no better service than
CAFETERIA
Service, where you can see before you
order, and you only pay for what
your appetite desires of our end-
less variety of appetizing food.
Breakfast Hours, 6:30 to 9:45
Dinner, 11:30 to 2:30
Supper, 5:00 to 7:30
JONES CAFETERIA, 19 East Kiowa
W. I. LUCAS
SPORTING GOODS CO.
"EVERYTHING
SPORTY
BICYCLES SPORTING GOODS
119 N. TEION MAIN 900
m
m
Hemenway's
The House of
Prompt
Service
VA/E carry the most complete line of
Groceries, Meats, Vegetables and
Fruits in the city.
CjJ We buy in large quantities, at good discounts
and our customers get the advantage.
Thirty years in business under this
name and at these street numbers IW 113-115 South Tejon St.
1201 North Weber St.
Negro (reading Almanac) - "Say,
.Sambo what's all dis diplomacy stuff 3 "
vSambo — "Dat is powhful hawd to
explain but it's like dis: B'foh de wah
I was a bell hop in a hotel, 'an one night
I bus' inter a room without knockin'.
My Lawd, dere was a lady sittin' in a
tub washin' herself. Niggah, I was
sure paralacized, but I backs out de
room, closed de doh, and sez, 'X-cuse
me suh-h-h.' Dat's Diplomacy."
A contest to discover the most beauti-
ful pair of ankles is being conducted in
New York. We wonder if they both
have to belong to the same person.
"Take care" the skipper bellowed,
As the ship slid o'er the swell,
"If we strike on yonder sand-bar,
'Twill knock us all to pieces."
THE
CHAS.T.FERTIG
INSURANCE AND
INVESTMENT CO.
109 Ea s t K i o w a Street
CHAS. P. BENNETT H. N. SHEELENBERGER
The
Bennett- Shellenberger
Realty Company
□
Real Estate
Insurance and Loans
D
2 EAST PIKES PEAK AY EN UK
Tires
Vulcanizing
Herrmann - Reagle
Motor Co.
Hudson :: Essex
P. Cx. CLARK
Salesman
Phone
M. 287
C. F. Arcularius
Jeyoeler
Everything a college student desires
in the way of Jewelry.
9 S. Tejon St., Colorado Springs
m
THE YOUNG ME N'S
CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION
BIJOU STREET AND NEVADA AVE. :-: COLORADO SPRINGS, COLORADO
Welcomes you when you are down town. Make
this your down town home. The Association
offers you the opportunity for fellowship.
Meet your friends here.
OPEN EVERY DAY IN THE YEAR
COMPLIMENTS OF
The
Democrat Publishing
Company
The House that Sercice Built "
28 North Nevada Fhone M. 304
EVERYTHING IN PRINTING
Loose Leaf Memo Books and Fillers
The
Honeymoon
Creamery
224 North
Tejon vSt.
Phone M. 637
COLORADO SPRINGS, COLO.
THE MODERN
SHOE SHOP
whU
YOU
I WAIT
QUICK AND FIRST - CLASS
WORK AT MODERATE PRICES
P H O N E MAIN 1276
m
m