This lab was located on the third floor of Agriculture Hall and according to the college catalog was "equipped for teaching general Entomology and fairly well equipped for advanced research work."
Originally annotated as "$20,000 gift given to student loan fund by: Nellie A. Shaver, James D. Shaver, and Delmer Shaver." Nellie Shaver gave the gift in honor her husband Delmer Shaver, and son James, who was a student in logging engineering at OSC. James drowned in the Marys River his senior year, February 28, 1926.
Originally annotated as "$20,000 gift given to student loan fund by: Nellie A. Shaver, James D. Shaver, and Delmer Shaver." Nellie Shaver gave the gift in honor her husband Delmer Shaver, and son James, who was a student in logging engineering at OSC. James drowned in the Marys River his senior year, February 28, 1926.
Originally annotated as "$20,000 gift given to student loan fund by: Nellie A. Shaver, James D. Shaver, and Delmer Shaver." Nellie Shaver gave the gift in honor her husband Delmer Shaver, and son James, who was a student in logging engineering at OSC. James drowned in the Marys River his senior year, February 28, 1926.
Seated left to right: Earl Aldrup, Marie Kittredge, Myrton Moore, J. K. Weatherford Jr., Elsie Jacobson, Ethel Swarts, "Bill" North, Florence Gradon, Edgar Copple, unidentified. Standing left to right: Mrs. John Loehr, John Loehr, Charles Cook, Beryl Jarmon, Evelyn Ragsdale, Olga Pauline Brucher, Miles Lowell Edwards, Agnes Margaret Behrens, Ruth Millicent Wilson, Thomas Griffith Cowgill, Harry J. Swarm, Velma Josephine Hylton, Alice Mary Wood, Catherine Ellen Barhyte, unidentified, unidentified, Hallie Margaret Jenks, Fred Arnold Wimer, unidentified, John Ralph Pubols, unidentified., The class was enjoying its annual breakfast at a park by the Marys River.
Two US Army men, one cadet, wearing post WWI issue high collar jacket with brim cap and high laced leather boots. The second, an officer, probably OAC Staff personnel with later rolled collar (1926 issue) dress jacket and Sam Browne belt. This was a common theme in military photographs depicting the tallest and shortest men in a particular unit.
Machine Gun training post WWI beside the Armory (now McAlexander Fieldhouse). Cadets are seen training with the Browning M1917A1 .303 Water Cooled machine gun. This photo, probably just after WWI shows training cadets in setting up and firing the gun.
Plot in foreground not fertilized. Plot in background fertilized with flowers of sulfur at the rate of 200 pounds to the acre. Antelope Clay Adobe soil.
Plot on left fertilized with superphosphate supplying sulfur at the rate of 100 pounds to the acre. Plot on the right received monocalcic phosphate supplying phosphorus at the same rate as on the superphosphate plot, but no sulfur. Note the dark color and heavy yield of the superphosphate plot, and the poor yield and very light color on the monocalcic plot. Antelope Clay Adobe soil.
Plot on left fertilized with muriate of potash and plot on right with sulfate of potash. The same amount of potash was supplied to the two plots. The muriate of potash contained no sulfur, while the sulfate of potash supplied sulfur at the rate of 100 pounds to the acre. Note the poor yield and light color on the muriate-of-potash plot and the heavy yield and dark color on the sulfate-of-potash plot.
Plot on left fertilized with nitrate of soda and plot on right with sulfate of ammonia. The two plots received exactly the same amount of nitrogen. The sulfate of ammonia also supplied sulfur at the rate of 100 pounds to the acre. Note the remarkable influence of the sulfur in the sulfate of ammonia. Antelope Adobe soil.
Plot on left fertilized with flowers of sulfur at the rate of 100 pounds per acre, producing a very heavy yield and dark green color. Plot on right not fertilized, showing very poor yield and light, yellowish color. Antelope Clay Adobe soil.
Plot on left fertilized with superphosphate supplying sulfur at the rate of 100 pounds to the acre. Plot on the right received monocalcic phosphate supplying phosphorus at the same rate as on the superphosphate plot, but no sulfur. Note the dark color and heavy yield of the superphosphate plot, and the poor yield and very light color on the monocalcic plot. Antelope Clay Adobe soil.
Plot on left fertilized with flowers of sulfur at the rate of 100 pounds per acre, producing a very heavy yield and dark green color. Plot on right not fertilized, showing very poor yield and light, yellowish color. Antelope Clay Adobe soil.