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About The Daily Bulletin/Reveille. (College Station, Tex.) 1916-1938 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 17, 1920)
THE DAILY BULLETIN, SUNDAY, OCT. 17, 1920 | ®ffirial Notices ARTILLERY AND CAVALRY TO GET MOUNTED PASSES Headquarters Agricultural and Me- chanical College of Texas units of the Senior Division of The United! Training | Military | States Reserve Officers Corps (Department of Science and Tactics), tion, Texas. Mounted passes will be issued to the field artillery and cavalry on ap- plication to the P. M. S. & T. L. R. DOUGHERTY, Major F. A.| NO PHYSICAL TRAINING FOR FRESHMAN FOOTBALL PLAYERS Headquaters Agricultural and Me- chanical College of Texas Units of of the Senior Division of the Uni- ted States Reserve Officers Train- ing Corps, (Department of Military Science and Tactics), College Sta- tion, Texas. The following named freshmen hav- ing reported as members of the fresh- men football squad are excused from freshmen physical exercises during the period they are members of said squad. O’Neal, J. C., Co. “B” C. S. Steffens, L. D., Co. “F” Inf. Whitehouse, B., Co. “B” Inf. Evans, A: J., Coops. C. Dickson, D. S., Co. “B” Inf. Marshall, D. O., Battery “A.” Johnson, W. D., Tr. “A” Cavalry. Smyth, J. F., Co. “A” Inf. Maufrais, H. L. Wilson, T. F. Lawson, W. J. LOUIS R. DOUGHERTY, Major F. A. LESSON ASSIGNMENT FOR HORTICULTURE 201 (Official) Next lesson for Horticulture 201, section 50, will be Ch. 7 and Ch. 8 to; paragraph 150, “Plant Propagation,” | Koins. FRED W. WESTCOURT, Instructor. ABSENT STUDENTS. (Official) J . : The following students who were upon. painted oceans. Font NE of Asiatic absent on the date specified below | ny ET fe in the American Museum of Nat- | come under the following paragraphs WILL the fellows who borrowed the | of the absence rule: following books please return them: ¥ : .- 18 ¢ Crganic Chemistry; Economics; Ento-| & October 16, 1920. ; | (a) Crawford. C. H. mclogy; Genetics. R. H. Ramsey, 54 8 Davis, E. A. Milner. i —— ell Po McCullough, C. C. : > ’ i Reg Mayben, R. E. SOUTHWEST TEXAS CLUB 2 OF CHARGE Mullane, W. A. HOLDS MEETING TONIGHT Tips, C. L. ; = Torbit, W. C. | [here will be an important meeting | po - | of the Southwest Texas Club in 76% Stocks. A. B. : : £ Ir . | Legett immediately after dinner to-|& {(b) Brinkman, E. : : | & Tones. P.B day. All men from the following coun-| & es C M | ties are urged to be present. Kinney, | 5. Sprott, C. M. s at Uvalde, Medina, Bandera, Zavalla, © IKE ASHBURN, Frio, Dimmit, LaSalle, Duval, Jim | § Commandant. r | INGINEERING TEACHERS College Sta-| TO HOLD CONFEREN{E (Official) Phe first meeting of the Enginear- ing "Peachers Conference for the ses- i ston gill be held in Room 301, Klee. tircal Engineering Building, on Mon- day, "October 18th, beginning at 4:30 P. M. Teachers of engineering stu- dents in all departments of the col- lege are ipso facto members of the conference and are expected to at- i tend the meetings, which will be | called ‘at intervals of approximately i one month. At the first meeting no | regular program will be presented | but organization will be effected and | the members willl have an opportun- | ity to become mutually acquainted. J. C. NAGLE, Dean of Engineering. A delightful comedy-drama. Nowhere. J } MORE SHIPS THAN BEFORE. DIXIE MONDAY She’ll Win Your Heart—Surely— SHIRLEY MASON Is positively irresistible in Denison Clift’s story The Little Wanderer A romance of a beautiful EXTRA—“HER LUCKY DAY”—COMEDY Tuesday—Wm. Russell in “The Man Who Dared.” Wednesday—Douglas Fairbanks in “The Good Bad Man.” Thursday—Frank Mayo in “The Marriage Pit.” Friday—Mary Miles Minter in “ennie Be Good.” Saturday—Owen Moore in “A Poor Simp.” girl from Baltimore American: The new reg- | ister book, just issued by Lloyd’s, | | discloses the surprising fact that the | shipping tonnage in world use, in- | cluding all types, was on July 1 last, | greater by 8,225,000 gross tons than! it was at the end of July, 1914, or, at the acme of shipping tonnage of | the antebellum period. The destruc- | don of the U-boats has not only | ' been replaced, but the replacement has been nearly doubled. There was an immense construction of shipping curing the year that ended last June, and at the end of the last fis- i cal year the United States had in use| 16,649,000 gross tons of commercial shipping. The British tonnage at the { same time was 18,330,000 tons, and of all other countries 22,935,000 ‘tons, | | thus, representing a world tonnage of | 1 57,214,000 tons. banks. chance. the star of “Everywoman.” QUEEN MONDAY This Great Attraction for Two Days Only. | MAY ALLISON In the screen drama of tremendous power and Thrilling Climaxes. HELD IN TRUST Romance lives in this wonder story of a golden girl and her EXTRA—“HIS MASTER'S BREATH"—COMEDY Wednesday and Thursday—“The Cost,” featuring Violet Demming, + Friday and Saturday—*‘“The Mollycoddle,” featuring golden Douglas Fair- | In spite of this indicated enormous expansion of shipping available for i commercial uses, there seems to be | | vet a shortage of ships in respect to the greatly expanded world com- merce. Great Britain is - still build- DEER HORNS IN THERAPY. R. C. Andrews in “Asia” for Sep- tember: The next afternoon four | ing ships with frantic speed, and. iL. deer gave me a hard chase up though there has been considerable | and down three mountain ridges. | slow-down in the construction work | I'inally, we located the animals in i of American yards, all the ways of | a Koomae : > BOA | a deep valley, and I had an oppor- | the beste . wd A —— lants | he p alley, be ) b < Pp vie bestequipped American plants | {unity to examine them through i are yet occupied by ships in process } ver glasses Much to my disgust, I jof sonsemction CE : | saw that the “velvet” was not yet | The wooden ship is nearing the | ot their antlers and that their win- { vanishing line. Of the 57,000,000 { {ir coats were only partly shed. | tons of commercial shipping now in They were valueless as speciniens | use, 50,000,000 tons is of iron or steel and forthwith I abandoned the hunt. | construction... The United States has; 1p summer the sika deer is one of ia greater number of wood ships of | the most beautiful of all deer. Its all classes than any other country.!hrioht red body, spotted with white, There are now more than 100 wood t is, when seen among the green ships of the Denman type swinglsg | leaves of the forest, one of the love- in the James River below Richmond | liest things in nature. We wished which are as idle as painted ships | to obtain a group of these splendid | ural History, but the specimens had to be in perfect summer dress. My hunter was disgusted beyond expression ‘when I refused to shoot the deer. The antlers of the sika when in the velvet are of greater value to the natives than those of any other species. A good pair of horns in full velvet sometimes sell for as much as $450. The growing antlers are called shueh-chiso (blood-horns) by the Chinese, who consider them of the highest efficacy as a remedy for certain diseases. Therefore the deer are persecuted relentlessly and very few remain ev- en in the Tung Ling. —— LOST—O. D. Stetson hat, size 7, at Bible School Social Thursday night. Took wrong hat by mistake. Owner of one I have may get same at 352 Bizzell. —31 Hogg and Brooks. hahah abet tte fete ge loo teted adele ee ed Fe dC Cg og eed TT To Too ot oT Toto oro ror FOR THE CONVENIENCE OF OUR CUSTOMERS WE HAVE A NEW LUT OF KODAKS THAT WE WILL LET YOU USE FREE COME GET ONE TODA Y THE COLLEGE STUDIO EXPERT KODAK FINISHING PROMPTLY DONE A TO 08 08 0x 20x x x 3 2 07 x 0x 00 3 08 0 0 0 0 0 nr 0 on oo oon Qe eo ox oo a & * Redefetofeiedofeiofofedodedotodotol tot goratote: