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About The Daily Bulletin/Reveille. (College Station, Tex.) 1916-1938 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 18, 1919)
I PA Sg AF SEA Sn Ri THE DAILY BULLETIN Vol 3. College Station, Tuesday, November 18, 1919 No. 54 TICKETS FOR JUNIOR SHOW NOW ON SALE The Livestock Novelty Show will be put on Wednesday night at 8:00 o’cloek in the Pavilion. Have you bought a ticket for it? Tickets go on sale today at room 54 Milner. Com= pany officers will be around tonight to offer you the opportunity of “show- ing your colors.” This Novelty Show is no excuse to collect money. It is going to be an up-to-date, peppy, exciting performance that will be worth double the price of admission. The Junior Circus will be the talk of the school for months. Are you go- ing to miss it? Every man in the student body ought to lend his presence and his fifty cents to support a team which will go to Chicago to fight for A .and M. at the International Livestock Judging Contest. Be for A. and M. 100 per cent strong. Get busy now and pick your man for the Goat Roping Contest. Each Battalion of Infantry, the Signal Corps and the Artilery will select a man to represent their respective organizations in the Goat Roping Contest. A prize will be given to the winner of this contest. Select your man now and then come out to help him win. The program of this Livestock Nov- elty Show is jammed full of exciting spectatular and novel feats which in- terest you, amuse you and amaze you! — ef BAe GEORGE MARTIN IN DALLAS HOSPITAL Ashburn, Commandant, that George Martin, fullback on the football team will remain in the hospital at Dallas for several weeks. Martin broke his leg in the game with the Horned Frogs last Saturday. ——————————— D. B. Milner, assistant professor in Mechanical Drawing, returned to College yesterday from a week end visit to Fort Worth. BOYS CHOSEN FOR TEAM TO GO TO CHICAGO W. T. Burns, W. B. Cook, W. W. Derrick, K. J. Edwards, L. R. Reed, and D. L. Stevens have been chosen for the International Stock Judging Team to go to Chicago, it was an- nounced yesterday. The boys were selected from the Senior Animal Hus- bandry students. This is the high- est honor an Animal Husbandry student can obtain and in fact is one of the highest honors of the College. Colonel Burns, Major Edwards and First Sergeant Reed were on the 1919 Oklahoma City and Fort Worth Stock Judging teams. W. W. Der- rck and D. L. Stevens were on the teams in 1918. The team will leave College Thurs- day night, November 20, for Chicago and will visit the University of Mis- souri, Ames Iowa, and stock farms around Des Moines on the way up. The contest will be held Saturday, November 29, at the International Livestock Exposition in Chicago. Teams representing fourteen institu- tions from United States and Can- ada will compete. After the con- test the boys will spend the rest of the week at the exposition. pen ele BIZZELL AND YOUNGBLOOD RETURN FROM CONVENTION President W. B. Bizzell and Direc- tor B. Youngblood of the Experiment Station returned yesterday afternoon from Chicago, where they had been attending the annual convention of the Association of Land Grant Col- — |leges and Experiment Stations. They Word has been received by Ike | also visited the Wisconsin Agricul- tural College at Madison and wit- nessed the Ohio-Wisconsin football game in which Ohio won by a score of three to 0. Dean Kyle of the School of Agri- culture and Professor LaRoche of the Architectural Department, also visited the Wisconsin school, and are at present at Ames, Iowa. They are expected to return the middle of the | week. CAMP OF AGGIES CHEERFUL OVER GAME SATURDAY Coach Bible announces that the A. and M. football team, although bruised, skinned and scratched; as a whole, came out of the game last Saturday, against the Horned Frogs, with few serious injuries and are in fairly good condition. One of the Aggie stellar back-field men, George Martin, suffered a broken bone in the leg and will doubtless be out of the game the rest of the season. The field on which the T.C.U. game was played was not the softest in the world and one of the players re- marked that a concrete floor would have been much nicer to play on, as it at least would not have contained wagon tracks or gravel pits. The Aggies will meet the repre- sentatives of Southwestern Univers- ity at College Station, Thursday, No- vember 20th, and while Southwestern is not as strong as in former years they always play their best game against the Aggies. Last year the Aggies nosed out a bare 7 to 0 vic- tory. It is entirely probable that Coach Bible will, so far as possible, use his second string men in this game, as a hard game now would not be the best for the men who are to battle the Longhorns only a week later. One player on the South- western team who will be watched very closely is Jim McMurray, broth- er of Danny McMurray, star tackle on A. and M.’s championship team two years ago. A. and M. coaches expect to have Jim McMurray on their squad next year. Another Wilson captains the Southwestern team, along with Woodraw Wilson of the Aggies and Yank Wilson of the Baylor team. This one is G. S. Wil- son, better known as Finis. Optimism is reigning supreme around the Aggie stronghold these days. The defeat of Oklahoma at the hands of Arkansas has caused a rift in the clouds and where every- thing was dark and gloomy and mud- dled before in regard to the South- west Conference Championship, now everything is bright and shinning for