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About The Daily Bulletin/Reveille. (College Station, Tex.) 1916-1938 | View Entire Issue (March 13, 1920)
Saturday, March 13, 1920 THE DAILY BULLETIN Published each morning, except Monday, by the Publicity Department of the Agri- | cultural and Mechanical College of Texas. Official Publication of the College. Dis- tributed free to all students, instructors And ur- | Campus resiaents. Advertising rates nished on application. Office: : Room 113, first floor Academic Building WILLIAM BENNETT BIZZELL President of the College FRANK ©. MARTIN Secretary of Publicity “CHEAPER CUTS.” The Department of Justice has been | hogan efeeobedeleobeded i ENROLLMENT AT A. AND M. I + COLLEGE UP TO NOON +# | 4 YESTERDAY bh ge + | + rr oo XS a E 1770 3 | desforecforfocferd A THE RURAL LIFE VALUABLE FACTS Material Gathered Concerning the Community and Church Conditions of Various Counties. working since October, last, to find | some relief from the high cost -of liv-| ing. After great travail it has brought forht a solution of the difficulty. It is to eat well forward on the steer or hog! After some months of study, these great minds have discovered that the front of the hog is not so desir- able as the hindquarters, and that the public has been massing its attacks on the loins or thereabouts. Seeing that the shoulders and neck are tough and stringy, it will lower the cost of liv- ing if the gentle public will buy these parts at a lower price, and so relieve the strain on the hindquarters. This is a noble conception, and will justify forever the policy of forming com- missions to investigate for the people. Seeing that the recommended fore- quarters are so tough, it may be that the Justice Department will see to it that a Government dentist is employ- ed in every comniunity to sharpen the teeth of the shoulder-and-neck-eaters. This must be done, for if the people are to get their own teeth ready, what is saved in the cuts will be lost in the dentists bills. If no free dentists are available, it will be necessary to do the next best thing and have these cuts ground up, and by this artificial and preparatory mastication relieve the strain on the molars. There's al- ways a way out. It may be that some critically dis- posed person will say that the Justice Department has missed the whole point. Was the inquiry started to find out what are the coarsest and cheap- est parts of the steer, or was it to| lower the price of any and every cut, fore and aft? These eminent men might investigate the price of cloth- ing, and after some months discover | that if one would get a shoddy or cot- | ton suit, it would be cheaper. As cheap cuts and cheap clothes are no economy, and as the buying of cheap cut does not lower the price of a good cut, the critic has some It looks like chasing the devil of high cost around the butcher’s block. This revelation of legal wisdom prepares the mind for an announcement to the case. effect that the way to reduce the high of cost railroad travel is to walk. This is a free country, and a man is entitled to eat as far back as he wants to. The Pullman is the last and choice car on the train, and the hams are the pullman of the hog. That’s where we all want to ride, but we do not want to pay drawingroom prices for an upper berth. Close to the engine in both hog and train may | be cheaper, but for eating and sleep- ing get far back.—San Antonio Ex- press. Less than 400 attorneys practiced in England in the reign of Edward III. Reverend Millar | of the Rural Life Survey, of Texas, under the Inter-Church World Move- a a oe 2 | S Jurrows in charge | ment and of the Rural Welfare League | cerning the existing conditions re- lating to communities and churches in the surrounding counties. The total population of dicates a . decrease of nearly three hundred since 1910. due to drought; and rains have since of the population is scattered in the open country, districts. people are Americans from parts of Texas; seventy-five percent of them have lived in the county over fifteen years. There are no negroes in the country districts. Of the one hundred and fifty miles of road, not any is hard-surfaced, but one hundred miles is improved in other ways. The total amount spent $15,000. Sterling county has a high school | and ten elementary schools for four | but fifty Mexican herders are found | on the roads in the last five years is | of Texas is gathering some valuable | as well as interesting material con- | Sterling | county is estimated at 1200 which in- | This decline was | brought some people back. Two thirds | Most of the | other | — | w 2 z 0 eels 2, . Lo >. oe a "J: * ey dil, | son’s Rackets and Balls. SURVEY REVEALS § A. M. WALDROP & CO. oO TTR NITEM TRITININTENMBNMNNRNERN Ts ae . Co A A AE BE AR A A A A A RE a 2 al i ah di be » LI) back CERIN . The rest of the roads are mere sand HT TE RRA New shipment of Spalding and Wright and Dit- Tennis Shirts, Tennis Hats, Tennis Shoes. White Duck Pants —all sizes—now in stock. TE . LIOR » ar aa ad Cdl ald a Sd ae ed ald . CHAS. Ni Seah. a4 Rate als 2% 2ake alin abe abe abeateabaabaats alaska ak, a C 2 dil ud i i i aA i ad af ai No a Se f o » 0) TCH 1 LICE AK SO RS rere * v veleetes “0. * » AJ ald 0) * + i THE CAMPUS TAILOR k %# Invites new and old students to call and see i 5 his lines of tailoring—the very best the market af- + + fords. KX . NEW SPRING STYLES JUST RECEIVED kx A fit guaranteed in the very latest model and 3 + prettiest pattern the market affords. = CALENDAR FOR THE WEEK beds, no one ever attempting to run |Saturday, March 13. a car through them. Practically all | the traveling is done on horse back. of which, however, it has been impos- | sible to find teachers. The high | school has thirty-five pupils; the ele- | Hn mentary schools a total enrollment of | 21% Ing two hundred and fifteen or an aver- age of thirty-six for each of the six in operation. The institution ranked first in im- | portance is the church and that ranked | second is the school. Brewster County it is divided into only three commun- ities averaging about one person to | a square mile. The total road mile- age is four hundred and eighty-one miles, all of which is ungraded. The only mineral resource is quicksilver. | The county lacking in vegetable resources, only stock raised is cattle and horses. Of the total population of about eight thousand nearly six thousand live in is entirely the and the village of Marathon and the town of Alpine, only two thousand live in the open country and small hamlets. Every community has a school and Alpine has a Mexican school. The total enrollment for the elementary | schools is three hundred and twenty with seven teachers. Willacy County. Sixty-five per cent of the county is owned by a wealthy rancher, Mr. | Kennedy, who is the leader in bus- | iness, social, and political life; while | Mrs. Kennedy leads in religious mat- | ters. The only regular road in the | entire county is the eight mile road | from his $175,000.00 home to Sardis. | school system. Its area is 5935 square miles, and eeleele RECO hundred and fifty-six, and one hundred is one four whites and twelve Mexicans, all in small hamlets | The chief source | On the and open country. of income is cattle raising. ranch near Sarita, cattle, horses, sheep and swine are raised. In one | community poultry is raised. No | newspapers are published in the | county. in the county county. The county has a government of its own, con- chiefly of a county judge who is also county school superintendent, and is an employee on the Kennedy ranch. He is in entire control of the In a word this county is little more than the huge ranch of one man. till ——)- Howell: George Washington never told a lie. Powell: At least he never told that one.—Cartoons Magazine. Beare treteeteeteeteeteotootoed .. LR) CIC 0. x 2 LARC Mt Ma at) “. ee LARC MY Leele LE eeleeles Fae" » . * eee 4 ah hat Ae A 00 be be CIRCE 2a Ae CR JR) ve ee 00 LIAM MS LICR CO LARA Sate sd $e. CIR) eas re ee 0. IUCR JOC JOC INC WK aoe PARA AOD AR RAL ‘eo 40 * * oe ote ok LE LR) .. aeleeteoctes «0 * » 2. - FRA CIR fergee Poteet + There are no public libraries | . LTCC JC JNK * Dr ar ea ar ir a er a al i at a at ald Fs SRN, see rear eenle Appealing New JTCodels in Mitchell Dresses are here. ‘Che materials are of TAFFETA and GEORGETT, in superfine qualities. Ladies, we invite you to call. Sam B. Wilson & Co. EE, 2 2» Ria RAN. Loo ar’ lo oges ar Sar a ar air ar er ar ar ar an’ 30r 30 se a efestes] ard Picture show Airdome, 7 o’clock, free. | The total population of the county |Sunday, March 14. forty] Bible School 9:15 Guion Hall. Preaching Service, 10:50 Guion Hall, Rev. J. P. Boone, pastor of First Baptist Church, Waxahachie, speaker. Mass Meeting all Religious || Groups in Guion Hall at 2:30. Dr. E. O. Brown, Speaker, Auspices || Inter Church World Movement. Y. M. C. A. Chapel Service, Guion Hall: 26:30, “Dr. E. O. Brown,|] Speaker. Episcopal Services, Room 10, C. E. Bldg., 9 o’clock. Mass for Campus Catholics, Room | 19, C. E. Blde., 9:30. of Monday, March 15. Sam Lewis Company, Guion Hall, || 8 o’clock. Tuesday, March 16. Social Science Seminar, Y. M. C.. A. Chapel 7:30. Wednesday, March 17. ) Picture Show, Airdome, 6:30. Ad-H mission fifteen cents. 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