UTAH AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE BANCROFT LIBRARY BANCROFT LIBRARY o THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA COLLEGE 'BULLETINS Vol. 9, No. 2, July, 1909. r* PICTURES ~ of '/ -"^' The Agricultural College of Utah L THE HOME OF PRACTICAL EDUCATION Write for Catalogues and Circulars. VIEWS OF L'AUES Agriculture 4-13 Domestic Science and Arts 14-18 Commerce 19-21 Mechanic Arts 22-26 Miscellaneous ..'.. .27-38 BUILDING, wholly devoted to Domestic Science and Arts, is being equipped in the most up-to-date manner. It will be ready for use early in September, 1909. The classrooms, kitchens, laboratories, nursing rooms, sew- ing rooms, studios, etc., etc., will be supplied with the most modern, useful and labor-saving appliances. An elevator will carry the girls from floor to floor. A new, modern stockjudging pavilion, an incubator cellar, and a veterinary hospital are also in process of construction. Write for special circular dealing with the work in Agriculture, Domestic Science and Arts, Commerce, Mechanic Arts and General Science. Address, THE REGISTRAR, Agricultural College of Utah, Logan, Utah. PICTURES of The Agricultural College of Utah THE HOME OF PRACTICAL EDUCATION Write for Catalogues and Circulars. COLLEGE CALENDAR 1909-10 FIRST TERM. September 14, 1909 January 22, 1910. Holidays. Thanksgiving recess, November 24 30, 1909. Holiday recess, December 18, 1909 January 4, 1910. SECOND TERM. January 25, 1910 June i, 1910. Holidays. Lincoln's Birthday, February 12. Washington's Birthday, February 22. Arbor Day, April 15. b > from College Campus. Logan is an ideal College City. Utah Experiment Station. GENERAL VIEWS. This building is being remodeled and beautified to be used wholly for Do- mestic Science and Arts. It contains an elevator and all modern equip- ment, and will be one of the best Domestic Science and Arts build- ings in the whole West The Main Building. The Shops. Residence of the Director of the Experiment Station. THE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE OF UTAH. H rt 5*8 en 3 II ^3 bo 1 ^ rt en 8-.S AGRICULTURE. THE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE OF UTAH. The standard bred Percheron mares re- cently imported by the College. The Horse Barn. One of the agricultural laboratories. .,*, : \ - Fruit raising demands expert knowledi and industrious application. AGRICULTURE. Class in Stock Judging. The live stock industry, one of the greatest in the State, is as little understood as any. The few who are making the industry a profession are becoming wealthy. Veterinary Laboratory. There is room for one or two veterinarians in every county in the State. THE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE OF UTAH. Royal Blood. Utah Diamant, the six-months-old pure bred, on the College farm. . -.* --.;." - - X ;-' - The care of animals has come to be a science. AGRICULTURE. The hog industry has just begun to develop. Prize Winners. Sheep on an Experimental Diet. THE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE o? UTAH. Section of College Dairy. Dairy Showing Separator and Babcock Test. 10 Horticultural Students in Orchard. The development of agriculture will make it possible for every farmer to earn a handsome income and at the same time lead a 11 healthful, happy life. THE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE OF UTAH. Agricultural Physics Laboratory. In the Entomological Laboratory It was the entomologist who fought and van- quished the codling moth and gave us a worm-free apple. A student at work. 12 AGRICULTURE. Soil Analysis. The application of science to agriculture has made of it a distinct profession. The chemical laboratories of the College, being in connection with the Experiment Station, are the best equipped in the State. Surveying. 13 THE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE OF UTAH. In the Kitchen. Nowhere in the great field of human activity is there need for more training than in the home. The appearance of the finished product is an important factor in cooking. Preserved Fruit. A new building for Woman's Work modern and complete will be ready for the opening of the school year. 14 DOMESTIC SCIENCE. 7 he new building for Domestic Science and Arts will be ready for use September 1st, op. The new U' Oman's Building will be the finest in the IVest. Another View in the Kitchen. The manner of serving a meal adds immensely to the charm of home life. Implements. Absolute cleanliness is insisted upon. 15 Domestic Science is the science of home making. DOMESTIC SCIENCE. Plain and fancy Dressmaking. Costume of instructor The Laundry. and student. Dressmaking'. Remember the new Woman's Building. Agricultural College work in Domestic Science and Arts has won gold med- als at every exposition held in the United States for the last ten years. 17 An Afternoon Tea in the College Dining Room. The Students prepare and serve meals. THE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE OF UTAH. The new building for Woman's Work will be strictly up-to-date. Stationary Tubs in the Laundry. A Laundry View Artificial Drying Apparatus. 18 THE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE OF UTAH. In the Stenography and Typewriting Room. The College is unable to supply the demand made upon it for men and women trained in typewriting and stenography. Demonstrating a Duplicating Machine. The Commercial Club A Student Organization. 20 COMMERCE. The only school in Utah which gives a College Degree in Commerce^ Banking and Real Estate. Actual business practice forms an important part of the course. MECHANIC ARTS. Mechanical Drawing. To dignify the trades and make them desirable is the purpose of the School of Mechanic Arts. Carpentry. The wage of the common laborer is two dollars or less; the wage of the skilled worker is five dollars or more. 23 The Machine Shops. The demand for trained machinists is always great in an undeveloped country. The West needs hundreds of these men. Carriage Building. Training in the trades is a twentieth century demand. Rear View of Mechanic Arts Buildings. 24 MECHANIC ARTS. In the Machine Shops. The modern industrial school may be defined as a place where practical ex- perience is concentrated. There is no need of spending half your life learning a trade. 25 The Forge Room. You must be able to do something that somebody wants done. THE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE OF UTAH. 26 Corner in Assaying Room. Laboratory Work in Chemistry. Microtome Work. 27 Microscopic Work. Ample equipment makes it possible for every student to work at the point of highest efficiency. Agricultural Physics Laboratory. Physics Laboratory. Natural philosophy forms an important part of any education. The old style of training was to talk, the new style is to do. A Class Game. The roup-h places of life are made less difficult by a well developed body. SCIENCE AND ART. The Laboratory of General Chemistry. All departments of a liberal, thorough and practical education are represented. Zoological Laboratory. Microscopes, models, live and preserved specimens, prepared tissues, skel- etons, complete dissecting apparatus, and an otherwise complete museum and laboratory make this science largely a question of accurate observation. Athletic Types. While students are encouraged to enter the public life of the Institution they are held strictly to academic standards. THE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE OF UTAH. Life is not complete without Art. The art rooms are well equipoed with casts, models and reproductions of famous works of art. Another View of the Art Rooms. 30 SCIENCE AND ART. tuo o ^ 13 31 THE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE OF UTAH. 32 A Botanical Laboratory. One view of the conservatory, where an immense stock of common and rare plants is keot. A Cor- ner of the Conservatory The Mandolin and Guitar Club. THE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE OF UTAH. If be? 34 SCIENCE AND ART. Th~ hand. An organization which appears several times durinor the year in concert. The military band is a necessary appendage to the cadet battalion. The College Choir Which, in addition to furnishing mu- sic during devo- tional exercises, appears in ora- torio once or twice each year. The College Or- chestra. The different mu- sical organizations of the College have become fam- ous for their al- most professional efficiency. 35 THE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE OF UTAH. Across the Valley from College Hi] The Track Squad. Milk Wagon hauling milk for the Dairy. 36 SCIENCE AND ART. Across the Valley from College Hill. Company of Cadets. Team of Standard Bred Horses. 37 The Duck Pond. THE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE OF UTAH. Studying a traction engine for plowing purposes. Throwing the discus. Rifle practice. A corner in the laboratory of agronomy 38 The AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE OF UTAH OFFERS THE FOL- LOWING DEGREE COURSES: AGRICULTURE 1. Agronomy 2. Horticulture and Entomology 3. Animal Husbandry and Dairying 4. Irrigation and Drainage DOMESTIC SCIENCE COMMERCE GENERAL SCIENCE In addition, the College offers the following high school courses : Manual Training Course in Agriculture Manual Training Course in Domestic Science High School Course in Commerce High School Courses in Mechanic Arts 1. Carpentry 2. Eorging and Carriage Building 3. Machine Work High School Course in General Science or College Preparatory Course Furthermore, Winter Courses are offered in Agriculture, including Forestry Domestic Science Commerce Mechanic Arts A Summer School is held for five weeks each sum- mer. Instruction is given in all branches of industrial and general education. The Department of Music offers courses in all branches of that art. Write for Special Circular and Catalogue. NOTE CAREFULLY! OU will make no mistake in attending the UTAH AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE. You will find that although such practical subjects as agronomy, dairying, horticulture and ani- mal husbandry, carpentry, blacksmithing and machine work, cooking, sewing and millinery, bookkeeping, typewriting and shorthand receive especial emphasis, the older cultural subjects are by no means neglected. Strong courses are offered in English, mathematics, economics, history and modern languages. Art and mu- sic annually enroll hundreds of students. In short, the College furnishes a well-balanced education for any man or woman. You will find it difficult, if not impossible, to paral- lel, in the Intermountain Region, the equipment pos- sessed by the Utah Agricultural College for teaching industrial education. The shops, the barns, the orch- ards, the stock-yards, the laboratories, as well as the class rooms and library, are all supplied in a thorough- ly up-to-date fashion. The new building for Domestic Science and Arts, both in size and in furnishings, far outranks anything of the kind in the West. The Agricultural College teaches the New Educa- tion, which has come to stay.