The Daily Bulletin/Reveille. (College Station, Tex.) 1916-1938, January 10, 1922, Image 1

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    Che Daily Bulletin
« Vol. V.
College Station, Texas, Tuesday, January 10,1922.
No. 80
- ®EASY VICTORY
Pit
OVER TRIANGLES
Injection of Keen in Second Half
Was Big Factor in Winning of
Aggies.
The Aggies held closely in the
first half of the basketball game
with the Houston Triangles here Sat-
urday night, picked up in the second
and made the final score
thirty-six to sixteen in their favor.
The first few minutes of the game
was a close hard fought contest with
both sides taking role as leader in
scoring, The lead of the Triangles,
however, was short lived, coming
from the bottom of a four to three
count they led the Aggies by one
and then two points for a few sec-
onds in the early part of the game
The remainder of the first was a ter-
rific fight, being about as rough a
scrimmage as was ever seen here.
The score at the end of the first
half was thirteen to ten in favor of
the Aggies.
At the beginning of the second
half “Tiny” Keen the huge tackle
went in for the Aggies and his spec-
Yacular playing seemed to dumb-
found the Triangles. Stretching his
big form across the court, ran inter-
ferance as he never was permitted
to do on the football field and his
facility at smearing plays, intercept-
ing passes and ringing goals gave
 % fans some idea of the part he is
to play in the
games.
The work of Dwyer and Gill at
guarding the Aggie goal was the
other feature of the game. Except
for their strong defense the score
would have been much different.
Johnson and Longscope did the
scoring for the Triangles.
coming conference
The Lineup:
Triangles
Johnson
Wr hoscope
Forbes C.
v Davis R. G. Dwyer
St. John L..G. Gill
Substitutes for Triangles: Cannon,
A. and M.
Ehlert
Williams
Darby
340 - Pound Cake is
Expression of Sub-
sistence Department
To Team and Corps
Logically the expression of the Sub-
sistence Department of the College in
thankful appreciation for the honor
that was brought to that and every
other department of the institution by
the victory over the Centre College
eleven should be made to the team and
the corps in a production of its cul-
inary art, and hence there was no
great surprise to the corps when they
marched into the Mess Hall yesterday
at noon and met directly in their path
a huge pyramid cake topped by a foot-
ball, inscribed in icing letters with
words of, “Greetings,” “Farmers,”
“100 Per Cent A. and M,” “1922”, “A.
M. C) “T.” “To Class of 22,7 Ag-
gies,” “Welcome,” ete., and resting in
a field of icing decorations with other
letters, emblems, and signs further
recalling the greatest victory.
At first sight the cake surpassed
any boyish conceptions as to how big
a cake could be but the real facts
about the size and content of the mass
of baked dough forced an even larg-
er conception. From the bottom of
the first layer to the tip of the mound
that supported the football it meas-
ured 37 inches. The base of the pyra-
mid, or the first layer measured 26
inches in width and 37 inches in
heighth. The cake rested on a table
and extending from it on two sides in
decorative layouts were more figures
in icing which made the real base of
the th'ng 85 inches in length.
The icing used in decorating was in
eight colors, with maroon and white
predominating and blending beau-
tifully with shades of those colors.
According to the figures of W. H.
Moore, chef in the Mess Hall who
made the cake, there was put into it
340 pounds of baked dough, or 340
one pound cakes as he expressed it.
When these pound cakes were assem-
bled into the whole 40 pounds of jel-
ly was placed between the layers, and
then 50 pounds of icing was used in
the decorations, giving the completed
Jackson: for A. and M., Keen, Me- cake a total weight of 430 pounds. It
garity and Jones.
(Continued on Page 4)
COULTER MAKES
STRONG APPEAL
Largest Attendance Ever Registered
At a Voluntary- Religious Ser-
vice was Had.
The biggest volunteer service ever
held in College Station was held
Sunday night in the Y. M. C. A.
Chapel when over 500 students and
members of the faculty heard L. A.
Coulter, State Secretary of the Y.
M. C. A. deliver his address on
“Chains that Bind,” according tc
Secretary L. G. Jones.
The service was started at 7:30
and for one hour the audience’s at-
tention was held by the appeal of
the speaker to maintain the single
standard through life. Example af-
ter example was cited to show that
although God through Jesus Christ
may forgive the repentant, mother
nature never forgives; that ‘“whatso-
ever a man soweth, that shall he al-
so reap;”’ that although a man may
not pay in his own life, his wife,
daughter, son or grandchild may
have to pay the penalty and price
of momentary thoughtlessness.
Blindness, insanity, lack of vitality
are some of the natural results of
dissipation. Physical, Mental, moral
and spiritual arguments force one
to ponder before taking a chance
step. Ones duty to his mother, his
sister, his = wife, children, all
womanhood presents a strong bar-
rier to wrong doing. A red blooded
man has temptations, but if he con-
siders his responsibility, he would
sooner see his arm cut off than to
gin against a woman. One example
occured in Richmond. A blustering
man remarked in a crowd that “every
woman had her price.” A strong
Christian bystander,-a youth in col-
lege stood forward and asked point-
blank, “Sir, what: is the price of
your sister?” The bolderado had to
admit defeat.
After the service, Mr. Coulter
called for those to stay over who
would pray with him. About a hun-
dred remained and a very devout
service followed.
—p er eee
FOUND: One gold eversharp pen-
cil. N. H. Abrams, 10 Pfeuffer. 80