Show 5v ‘r fT w m' i —'! $(4WMl4MteK — f - 3 Where do horn glasses come from? What is the shortest jriver in Madagascar? Editorial o — —: S ' ' THE ADVENTURES OF AN EDITOR ‘ ‘ 4 Once more to mention Aggie Published weekly by the students Tradition f At Harvard they painstakingof the Utah Agricultural College Indifference If any one ly Entered ’as second class mail mat- hasfeign not heard of the famed Yale ter September 1908 at Logan Utah Bulldog Spirit let him raise his under the act cjf March 3 189L chubby little right hand and smile1 shamefacedly And there1 ever “Accuracy terseness and influence exists that phrase known' to al for the public good” Aggies “Utah Fights”— althougl : ! ? The room was empty Then I unlocked the door and stepp ed into the room I sat down and mused gloomily upon the trails of editors In answer to an editorial plea for contributions a letter had come to me I was to run' the letter For several hours I had vainly tried to read the missive A And yet my duty was obvious conscientious editor would give the letter space Yes I would do so My eyes wandered to a' small spqck on the top of Mount Logan and forgot the letter- - The speck disap peared— it was only a fly‘ crawling upon the window pane after all My attention thus left without any dis traction came back to the letter Ah well why worry about it Run the thing and be done with it So I de cided and here is the letter Read i for yourself City June 15 21 Dear Editor: Missche vitt itsepdj dditthe ithed-ha- d adnd andnd eitiieithe teehq eor tpewjdhr rhe mv xnehd ehr xhe vvnc eighs ehts tieieh th ttth jysmvms wpri suruw rhr whwal ‘ 778 1116447?)” “$ fghx I teti edisfjdj eofhs -- ’ - v Bar-roomFloo- PRAISES COLLEGE DEPARTMENT (Continued from Page 1) figures which the Department of Agri- culture has obtained indicate that the tractor will not economically supplant the horse on the farm but that it is a most valuable supplement to the power of horses — in fact the two supplement each other Owing to the necessity to economize in every way and use the most economical principles in farming as well as jn other business farmers who breed their own power will be in a better position than those who buy it either in the form of work horses or tractors I hope it will be found that the ood stock produced in Cache Valley the past will remain in its essence E s good and that useful brood mares will be used for further draft horse production when conditions seem to warrant this” In closing Mr Rommel congratulates President Peterson upon the excellent work being done by the Utah Agricultural College in animal industry v ' -- r”? - o " PLOWBOY 56wueu I ci 1921 j STUDENT LIFE arises with-determined air to say that often Solon R Barber Editor it does her no ‘ good And thus it goes But what have we of Tra dition? Wednesday June 3 1921 Arise the ruffled enthusiast to pipe loudly that the Utah AgriSUGGESTIONS FOR MR cultural College is a mere infant EDISON compared to Old Eli Nassau anc c In last week’s STUDENT LIFE the Red and White of Cambridge callec Hear ye the amateur patriot as an editorial appeared “Those Edison Questions” To- with flushed face he cries that the day we are submitting aclippec Aggie Shirt Tail Parade is an anGrantee list of questions for the eminent nual affair Granted without argument Again we ask inventor Since Mr Edisonfe famous list for Aggie Aradition The School has made a start of questions became known fto the public the number of people Scarce had the mortar dried behumorous and otherwise who tween the bricks of the North have come forward with sugges- Wing when “to beat the U”was Good luck tions for a new list is simply as- the battlecry of every ThanksBNGGHUI giving A few years later when tonishing is written in We offer below a fevv of the the path up the Hill had become Evidently the letter code questions which some people think well worn the Shirt Tail Parade o every educated person should be was instituted Then came Frosh ALLRED PREDICTS able to answer caps the Ag Club Ball the MiliGOOD OLD TIMES Is Fahrenheit the name of a Ger tary Ball and other things — events man river or a tire fabric? To what but scarcely traditions For Tra(Continued from Page 1) if extent any? be more than an event of the livliest student functions Can oysters see and would it do dition must poslife itself It mustbe could? if enthusi-asmhathem Any good s sible It is a fact in the past they STUDENT LIFE states proudWhat kind of leather is used in not been so easily aroused of Sole? is making Filet that ly Aggie Democracy truly at the Summer Quarter as it has been Bound Galli-Curwe Tradition an Here Aggie Who wrote “The Face on the during the other three Quarters of Was anything ever done have advanced In our Democracy the school year at the Utah Agri we possess something construc- cultural aboutit? We are trying to College in born was Skakespear tive solid sound and beneficial: Why remedy this condition this summer Stratford? What American playwrights write j Tradition should be construc- and so far we have succeeded” in English? To follow the first student reception tive It should be sound and beneDescribe the methods employed by ficial in principle else it were bet- of the Summer Quarter wlfich was actors in earning $1000 a week 10 and which Whom was the Prince of Wales ter that it ‘be absent Year by held on Friday June named after? proved to be so successful the exfact a characteristic of long year How many strikes is TUH? ecutive committee of the Student ' Where is the Ulna bone located? Aggie athletics has been present Body of which Mr Allred is chairWhich has been done oftener Harlem Eddie Kelley or the Old Oaken and that is the Aggie Spirit of man has planned several parties Bucket? Fair Play and ability to take "de- Each Friday will be marked in the diaries of the students — if they keep What is byszko? It it used ex- feat as digood sportsmanship ternally or internally? diaries—with a large red letter for Explain the Einstein theory in ctates that if should be taken a student body function is to be held words of one syllable This too has well nigh assumed on each Friday night There will be Where is Charles Ross? Monadhliath the proportions of a true Tradi- dances hikes bonfire parties and the Where are Mountains? tion canyon trips where the students will Where was the Serbonian bog and So with the above to build up be carried to and from the canyon in what entire armies were sunk therelarge trucks At least the plans are in? on let sudents of the Utah thq to that effect Who wrote “Mary Had a Little Lamb?” Agricultural College each year The next one will come on Friday bannalanna? is What add to jthe honorable construc- night June 24 Be there How many white beans on the tive elements of Aggie Tradition average to the bushel? 4 Maxfield Parrish's Where was As the aging walls of the Main For Flowers famous mural painting in regard to is more where And Building installed? Cole annually grow King Only exclusive flower ancLplant it now? vine and covered also let hoary Where was it that the learned Hoshop in town the dictates of Aggie Tradition boken John lectured? Cache Valley Floral Company What is meant by the term “free grow more binding and more uselunch”? ful in shaping the acts and des3 1 Federal Avenue Who discovered the moon? tinies of the Aggie Student Body Why are snakes? a ROMMEL By “Soraba” —Clipped AGGIE TRADITION ' Student Life v Tuesday June 21st STUDENT LIFE Page Two (By Carl Sandburg) ' Note from the gardeners ' Girls After the last red sunset glimmer Black on the line of a low hill rise Formed into moving shadows I saw A plowboy and !two horses lined against the gray Plowing in the dusk of the last furrow The turf had a gleam of brown -And smell of soil was in the air And cool and moist a haze of April t & I shall remember you long Plowboy and horses against the sky in shadow I shall remember you and the picture You made for me Turning the turf in the dusk 'f And haze of an April gloaming 4 w ‘ ! ‘ ' 4 ¥i A k ’ : EAGLE SHIRTS Attached collars are The thing’ This Summer’ ' In all colors and sizes WEAR GUARANTEED The MEN’S Shop Home of Hart Schaffner and r It |