“Yellow”
Ss ORS
TaE DAILY Buiely
Vol 3.
"College Station,
Texas, Wednesday ; Decem
ber 10, 1919 i
GRID CLASSIC TO
BE STAGED HERE
NEW YEAR'S DAY
“Tubby” Graves Selects Him-
self Captain of “Yellow”
Team at A. and M.
Who said the A. and M. College
football schedule for 1919 was com-
pleted ? Whoever said it made a
mistake, for there still remains un-
played the New Year's Day battle
between the A. and M. “Yellow”
team of CoHege and Bryan, and the
best talent in. Calvert and Franklin,
the game to be played on the Calvert
gridiron.
The “Yellow” team is captained by
Tubby Graves, self-appointed—no
election being held. Graves merely
deciding that he was the best man for |
The team is composed of |
(chief |
the place.
such men as “Cop” Forsyth,
all-American end); “Chicken” Har-
rison, half-back on A. and M.s ’19
team; “Ox” Ford, ex-captain ’17 A.
and M. team; Satterwhite, star tackle | cerns women.
| work by L. B. Fields, Associate Pro-
on Bryan High School team, ’19;
Cortemelia, star half-back on Bryan
High School team, ’19; “Gripe” Ang-
lin, center on A. and M. squad, ’19.
D. X. Bible who is leaving for a hunt-
ing trip in North Texas has signified
that he is a candidate for this team.
However, “Tubby” Graves has made
it emphatically clear that if D. X.
does not report in time for the one
day workout he will occupy the bench
on the day of this battle royal.
of the pick of the Calvert and Frank-
lin high schools, re-inforced by the
presence of “Nig” Dotson and “Yank”
Wilson of Baylor and they are out
for vengeance this season for the
team has never been de-
feated and has been meeting the
“Cal-Franklinite” team for the last
four or five years.
This game attracts much attention
throughout the state, many people
from Bryan, Calvert and Franklin
witnessing the classic.
—
—-
ALL ARRANGEMENTS
COMPLETED FOR THE
FORT WORTH CLUB DANCE
-
a
Final have been
made for a dance to be given by the
Fort Worth Club in Fort Worth at
the Glen Garden Country Club on
Tuesday evening, December 23.
All A. and M. men who will be in
Fort Worth on this date, and who
are not members, are invited to at-
tend. They can obtain invitations
arrangements
from Harkrider at 46 Mitchell.
al nn I IR ES Sa
SENIOR FAVORITES
Pictures of Senior Favorites are
due in immediately after the holi-
days. Have your girl get her picture
ready at once and bring it back with
you after Christmas.
INDUSTRIAL
EDUCATION FOR COACH COMPANY
WOMEN TWOFOLD FOOTBALL TEAMS
Miss Dorothy M. Sells of Aus-
tin Lectures to Vocational
Educational Students.
Miss Dorothy M. Sells of Austin,
Texas, who is in charge of the De-
partment of Industrial Education un- |
der the Simth-Hughes Act lectured
to
Haye’s class on Vocational Education
Monday - evening
Prof. M. L.
on the subject of “Women in Indus-'
»
try. These students take general
work along the lines of industrial ed-
ucation and this lecturer was ob-
tained by Prof. Hayes as a special
benefit to this class to enable them to
better appreciate that part of their
work which relates to women in in-
dustry.
Miss Sells came here from Houston
where she has been making surveys
of the industrial situation as con-
She was aided in this
fessor of Industrial Education who is
located in Houston training men
teachers who will later take charge
of classes learning trades to be taught
them by this department, under the
Smith-Hughes Law. She stated that
she was very much hampered in her
work of training women for industry
from the fact that there was very lit-
tle information obtainable relating
| to industrial women workers in this
The Calvert team will be composed
state, and that most of her time for
the present time will be used in mak-
ing these surveys in order to obtain
workable knowledge on the subject.
The result of her work in Houston
was to interest the public schools of
the city in beginning courses of in-
struction for waitresses in which
work she found that the women were
replacing the men in many eases.
She goes from here to Dallas to
carry on the same work that she did
in Houston, that is to make a close
personal examination of the needs for
industrial education for the women
and to inaugerate a system of instruec-
tion in the schools that will give them
this training.
During the war Miss Sells served
as employment agent in one of the
large munition factories. In this
capacity she hired all the women
workers for the factory which fitted
her particularly for the work which
she is now conducting among the wo-
men of this state.
In speaking of her observations
during her employment work she
stated that although many of the
women in the critical period of the
war discharged some of the most
strenuous tasks such as guiding the
monstrous cranes which moved the
mighty guns in the factories, for
which work only the ‘strength of a
man is fitted she did not approve of
this work for women, and went so
far as to admit that women were re-
cation for women is twofold that is
training them for a short period of
LETTER MEN T0
Intramural Contests Under Reg-
gular Schedule to Start
Shortly After Jan. 5.
Company football, under a regu- |
larly arranged schedule, is to be]
started at College shortly after the
resumption of school work on January |
5. Announcement to this effect was
made yesterday by Head Coach D.
X. Bible.
Each company team is to play
eight games and the team making the
highest percentage will be given
sweaters. In case of a tie a run-
off game will be played.
Letter men from. the first squad
have been assigned to the various |
companies as coaches under the di-
rection of Bible. The assignments
follow:
Companies A and B, Higginbotham
and Carruthers; C and D, Harrison
and Gouger; E and F, Wilson and |m
Knickerbocker; G and H, Askey and
Scudder; Company I and Band, Ma-
han and Alexander; Signal Corps,
Drake and Martin; Artillery, Wier
and Murrah; Casuals, Davis and Van-
dervoort.
Bible is hopeful that some material
may be developed in the intramural
contests which can be used in the
first or second strings next season.
—_———————————
SPECIAL MOVIE PROGRAM
The Wednesday evening picture
shows for December 10 and 17 will]
be special feature pictures for which
an admission of 15¢ will be charged’
the net proceeds of which will be used
towards sending our eighteen dele-
gates to the Students Volunteer Con-
vention which meets in Des Moines
December 31 to January 4.
stricted in industry.
women associates in business to
choose those tasks which are best
suited to herself and to stay in his
field of work.
She gave the average life of” the
working period of a woman outside
of her home as seven years. “This
short time will not permit women to
enter those departments of industry |
that require a long apprenticeship,
and in addition demands that they
have special training for any work
that they may take up in order to
enable them to accomplish something
definite in the limited time they re-
main at work” she said.
She also said that present day othe
approximately seven years in an in-
dustrial pursuits, and for the remain-
der of her life as a home-maker; and
here sh ecalled attention to the differ-
ence of her work and that of the Home
Economics department provided un-
| know its grade, its
‘tablished in more than ‘twenty cou
She wishes her |
{ine placing a
der the same law.
\GRICULTUR Es
CAUPAIGN P PLANK -
Pat M. Neff Gives His Views on
Farming in Speech at
Waxahachie, =
2
ay |
Pat M. Neff in opening his. Sis 2%
'natorial campaign -at Waxahachie
| last Saturday discussed the general
subject of agriculture in some detail,
repeating as true, although trite, the i;
statement that “civilization begins
and ends with the plow”. Tne State
must join hands with the farmer in
seeng that each acre of land dozs
Iits best. * % * 0] am. in favor. oh
working out a better agricultural
policy for this State. * * * T am in Bx 253
favor of the Agricultural and Me- 5
chanical College, the Deparment ul
Agriculture and all the sgrienlonial ©
agencies of the State assuming their
true responsibility to the people ‘
Texas and that we work. out a
brighter and better agricultural day, =
To do this some steps must be taken Th 3
which will enable the farmer to re-
ceive. a fair price from the ultimate
const mer for his products. The
5 i is that our system of sale” ne
bution of farm and ranch Ppro-.
dh is far less efficient than our
system of production. * * ie While
cot’ n is our chief commodity, - ou
distressingly unfair system of mark
eting robs the farmer every year of
untold millions. ~ When the farmer
offers his cotton for sale he does not
“staple or the
market price. He is ‘wholly at the
mercy of the’ buyer. *.** The. State
through its proper ‘agencies, has es-
ties of the State cotton classing and
marketing offices, through which
farmers may learn the gra
and market price of his 0
I am in favor of exten
wirketng spstem
put in operation th
Covernop Ss office to
al interests.”
secure a proper oi py sto
Opening Up New Lands.
In advocating the “opening up of Gh
our agricultural lands,’ EMri Neff
said that Texas ‘has 130,000,000 2
acres of uncultivated land, ‘most of
which is owned by a small ‘number o
GH “One,  peysen Is
ing for hi Ring purpos se: a: i
larger. than the State. i of Rhode