The Daily Bulletin/Reveille. (College Station, Tex.) 1916-1938, May 18, 1920, Image 2

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    the Aeris | Christianity has | 11
s- [is the Strongest: force i in the orld.
} ry BENNETT FR
BATE os Mere y the College. i
FRANK O. MA VE
retary of i FI
a a ful, solertiul process where but |
few survive. ay “
silege is no place for a ‘man “who
3 not willing to pay the price of a
olle re ‘education. If a man has any
other ‘motive in coming to A. and M.
3 - ay; as well stay at home. ~ This
Ys ily to pay the price and it is not
; » for any others with other
Some. of you are unhappy
0 I am considerably eomcerned over
: Rg ‘the matter of your having kept the
faith, I wonder if you are going
‘back home good boys. I wonder if
you have had the manhood to keep
‘the faith. Many boys forsake the
religious practices of their boyhood
when they go to college, but I say to
you that only by anchoring your life
to very definite principles of moral
a conduct can you keep from dishon-
; esty, and immorality. This has been
a remarkable year for good conduct
and I am very proud of it.
students have been dismissed for bad
> eonduck this year.
In many ways this has been the
i papplest year we. have ever had here
“and I thank vou and each officer of |,
the College. There has never been a
finer relationship existing between us
all, there has never been a finer spirit
a there by the student body, and if
we keep up this record of loyalty
there is no telling what the College
will be within a few years. I want
here more men who are willing to
sacrifice for the College.
1 assure you of my appreciation of
the courtesy that you have extended
~~ me for the great help that you have
~ given me. I am very grateful for
it. I have long ago realized that a
. college is a great cooperative enter-
prise and not the work of any one
man,
Evening Service.
BE. Friley spoke on “Practical
Religion” at the evening service
in the ¥. M. C. A. Chapel Sunday
C.
{three
Only six
pat
Re footie. and Honestly in this world.
= = |Soberly as ‘regards ourselves, right-
| eously as regards our neighbor, and
_{ Godly as regards our God.
“We have a great Jack of shoal
_ lity at present, not only in business |
and social life but in socalled re-
Tgious life. Wu are aecustome ed to
loudly calling for remedies. There
are two ways to get remedies. One
is to yield to the pressure of the
times. This way is called worldli-
ness but is really cowardice and
treason to our consciences. We are
afraid to = put our doctrines to a
crucial test. The other remedy is to
run away from the evil. This meth-
od is seen in the ancient hermits who
fled from the vice of cities. They
feared to subject themselves to the
|vice round about them and sought
lonely places in the mountains. Or
they did as St. Cyr who took his
abode on the sumit of a mountain
and subjected himself to the winds
and fury of the elements in order
to inherit future happiness. The
citizens around about came to ad-
mire and wonder and they made a
saint ‘of him. These men who fled
from vice lost all chance to help the
world and gave up the best method
of fighting evil, by actual encounter
with the enemy. :
“We do not need to segregate our-
selves in order te improve our re-
ligion. We are being tested now
and can improve our religion now,
All around us exists extravagance
and waste. Are we strong enough
to stand against the tide of discoa-
tent?
“Every man at some time real-
izes that the extent of his religion
is going to be the gauge of his suc-
cess. The Inter Church World
Movement is an active concrete at-
tempt to remedy present day ills by
bringing people back to the religion
of our fathers. If is important that
we see the religion of Christ in its
true light. It has often been
brought against the college boy that
his education draws him away from
the underlying . forces of religion
which mold him. This is not the
case, as really religious boys are
strengthened by their increased
knowledge. They realize the need
for help in the increasing complex-
ity of modern life.” X
Be, . As sA EER SDSL L F.0b
His talk was in part as follows:
“There is an inborn religious na-|
ture in every man from the lowest
savages to the = highest societies. |
The early inhabitants of the earth |
had a relizion but it was local, being
adapted to its particular tribe i
not extending without the confines |
of the tribal limits. As ages passed
the tribes grew and a political in-|
fluence was felt. Two thousand |
years ago the world came under the
The
rious
time was
influence of
control.
relig
dominant
ripe for a
strength.
the Roman Empire.
“The time needed Him.
was rampant. Vice was considered |
virtue. The great games and orgies |
in the ccliseums were
cruelty. The Christian religion took |
vy
01
clothes on
Christ came at the heighth | hasn’t any to hang, She just folds | taken from
| them up in her vanity box and clad] | by Anthony Wharton, will be shown
QUEEN TONIGHT.
The newest fad in bathing costumes
is one that you can put in your vanity
¢ | box. This is the style that Constance
Talmadge sets in “Two Weeks”. But
{it is not for the beach in broad day-
light. Goodness gracious, No!
Miss Talmadge, spending a fort-
night in the house of three bachelors,
in the lake.
a hickory limb, for she
ime | in moonbeams and firefly glow she | at the Queen Theatre today.
plunges into the lake.
But horrors, she isn’t the only one |
galaxies of | that bathes by moonlight and she is| Saturday Nazimova
And the three bachelors |
discovered.
In these |}
: essentials = you have, a well | B8
| rounded life.”
She doesn’t hang her | |r
few Spring St
x Come in and pick yours out.
AM
P
Choice Selections
G
PARK THE
a
HART SCHAFENER & MARX ‘ard SOCIETY BRAND
© Smart Single and Double-Breasted Models 3
Post Office Block. Bryan
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BEFORE YOU LEAVE
Let us supply you with whatever
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Even glance at our SHIRTS. Like ‘em?
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Our HOSIERY and UNDERWEBR are also the right
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HOUSE PAINTING
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o> ’
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rout. “Two Weeks” Miss |
almadge’s latest comedy drama,
the play “At The Barn,”
Tomorrow brings Tom Mix in his
best thriller “Cyelone”, Friday and
in “Stronger
Than Death.”
HARDING-WITHERS CO.
AUTO, SIGN AND OUTDOOR ADVERTISING.
(OLD HANDLY SHOP)
Ea a a a a a 3
AFTER COMMENCEMENT
H. & T. C. R. R. will operate two special trains on May 25th
for the accomodation of students returning home.
North bound special will leave College at 5:00 p. m., for
Dallas, Fort Worth, and Waco.
the trip to Houston in three hours.
Googoedsefoatosfesfesfesfecfonsefootoatoatoatosfoedsnfocionosoaeafoefocfecfocfocecrcosfosfocfesfondunoceafosfoafosfacfrcfecororoconforfonied
Roman rule, being united under one slips out at night to take a plunge | are put to
AND DECORATING
AUTOS A SPECIALTY
E: COLLEGE AVE.
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ECIAL TRAINS
e College 4:30 p. m., making
R. E. GEORGE,
T.P. A.
9..90.9.9.0.9.0.0. 9.0.90 .0.90.0.0.0.0.0.9 0 0.0.9.0 0.9.9.0. 0 0.0.0.0 0
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ae * Foedees vel Joeted] oars Fane's ge Prae's Geefeefeededts
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& VICE CAR STATION
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ls Leave orders there ¥
4 for Cars. &
$ COX & WORLEY I
FAAS
PR
|