Show :i'AaE-siX- ' STUDENT LIFE school games which are being inti oduced into the grades Professor Bishop of Iowa gave a series of lectures on Nature Vcrn C Woolley L D S High Study which were of rpecial inSchool Salt Lake City terest to College people in that Anna C Christensen Manti he advocated very strongly the High School Alumni Mot es The Class of 1911 The largest class ever graduat- ed from our Alma crater is that of 1911 numbering sixty-fou- r V Elizabeth Frazee Logan City membeis It is very significant Schools t a ile great majority of these Elda llavenor Salt Lake City Alumni are engaged in high Schools bools The following is a par-- Lueilc Jensen Brigham High i i ial list of the 1911 teachers School Clarence E Jones Cedar City j Coral Kerr Instructor in DoUtah mestic Arts IT A C Junius M Andrews Lewiston Clara Parrish L D S High School Salt Lake City High School Salt A E Bow’man Assistant AgroGeorgiana Smurthwaite Lake City Schools nomist U A C R Ivan Egbert Smithfield ALUMNI VISITORS High School Fillmore Wm LeRoy Jones Among the prominent alumni High School James W Sessions Manti High ivsitors at the College during the summer was W M Jardine ’04 School Charlei Snow Jr San Luis Professor of Agronomy in the Kansas Agricultural College Mr Stake Academy Colorado Harry P Barrows Brigham Jardine spent two weeks in Logan High School Mr F D Farrell ’07 was at the LeRoy ' BeagleyW ellsville High School College in August on his way to Abram C Cooley Sandy High Washington I) C w’here he is at School present employed as investigator Alma J Knapp Fielding Acad- in charge of crop rotation and cultivation experiments in the ofemy Paris Idaho Mathew A Nelson Instructor fice of Grain Investigations of the in Zoology II A C Bureau of Plant Industry IIe reWilliam J Quayle Instructor signed the directorship of Idaho i in Chemistry IT A C to accept the federal Grace appointment Alfred E Stratford Mr J rl Jardine ’05 of the High School Idaho George L Zundel Instructor in Division of Forestry of the DeBotany IT A C partment of Agriculture spent a Merrill P Maughan Millard day in Logan visiting his parents Stake Academy during the summer Mr Jardine Lehi High is at present engaged in range inEphraim T Ralph School vestigations in the department S L I) Lars S Christensen Much of his field work is done in Business College Idaho Colorado and Oregon Snowflake Connish Newel If Utah Stake Academy Arizona Ed Brossard ’ll is visiting Ik in Instructor Peterson Canute college this week and Typewriting Stenography IT A C SUMMER SCHOOL SUCCESSJames A Armstrong Mt Pleas-an- t FUL sub-statio- Linoleums and Draperies Agents for Limbert’s Dutch Furniture Universal Ranges and Hot Blasts McDougall Kitelun Cabinet Special Prices and Terms to intrdouetion of Agricultural edHe ucation into all the schools maintained that all grade training in the rural districts should centre around agricultural prob- Students J SpandeFurnitureCo I “Furniture Worth While” lems The session was marked by the attendance of a large number of school principals from Salt Lake City who were preparing along industrial lines It’s in Up Stairs Mitchell’s 4 Foolish Fletcherizer The teacher was giving a lesson Barber Shop natural history 65 North MainStreet “And now children” she said “what animal do you ‘think show’s — the least amount of intelligence gm::tt:::::wnH:ntKKnntnnnmm Johnnie Jones you may answer” “Please ma’am the cow” “And why the cow’?” The Place to Eat “Because ma’am it eats first 30 West Center Logan Utah and Fletcherizes afterward x nnnnimtttnnnnmtmmmtiwan: VIENNA CAFEll ”-E- VACATION DAYS Are now over and the MANHATTAN CAFE (West Centre C Co-o- p the opposite Drug Co) is now open to the STUDENTS and the public in general and has the finest ladies’ dining room in Cache County Hoping to receive your patronage Your’s for Business ROGERS & LOCHEAD Parties and Banquets a Specialty Open Night and Day ns The Cream Separator by Which all others are Judged For more than thirty years the DE LAVAL has been ac- knowledged as the World’s Standard You may hear it said of some separator that “It’s as good as a comI)E1 LAVAL” or if some salesman-wantto make peting his argument particularly strong lie’ll say “It’s better than a I)E LAVAL” The concern with a cheaply and poorly constructed s machine savs “Just as good as a DE LAVAL and costs less” But everywhere the I)E LAVAL is recognized by experienc- ed erenmerymen and dairymen and even by makers of would-b- e competing machines as the High School Henry Thomas Plant Richmond High School Ira A Cole Logan City Schools August L Hansen Instructor in Woodwork II A C Sara Huntsman Instructor in English U A C Walter A Lindsay Ilyrum High C WE Carry Everything in Fucniture Carpets Rugs The Summer School held at the College during June and July of this year was in many respects a very successful session The attendance was larger than at any previous session and the special lectures were more noteworthy Dr Curtis the national authorSchool ity on Play Grounds and an adRobert L Wrigley Branch Nor vocate of reform in school methmal Cedar ods so as to provide more opD Earl Robinson Instructor portunity for outdoor work by in History IJ A C the students was the principal Diamond WtndelboePork City special lecturer Ilis series of talks included a demonstration of High School j ' World’s Standard The cream separator is more frequently used than any other machine on the farm and for that reason if for no other only the very best should ho purchased and that’s the I)E LAVAL The more you come to know about cream separators the more certain you will be to buy a DE LAVAL TheDE LAVAL SEPARATOR COMPANY NEW YORK CHICAGO BAN FRANCISCO SEATTLE ‘ |