Image provided by: Texas A&M University
About The Daily Bulletin/Reveille. (College Station, Tex.) 1916-1938 | View Entire Issue (April 9, 1924)
The Daily Bulletin Vol. VII College Station, Texas, Wednesday, April 9, 1924. No. 157 COLONEL ASHBURN ~ OFF ON TRIP NORTH Will Meet with Exstudents in Wash- ington, New York and Chicago; Will Return Here April 19. Colonel Ike Ashburn, executive sec- retary of the Exstudents’ Association has gone to the University of Virgin- ia at Charlottesville, Virginia to at- tend the convention of American As- sociation of Alumni Secretaries com- bined with the meeting of the Edi- tors of Alumni Magazines which will be held at the University April 10, 11 and 12. From Virginia he will go to Washington thence to New York and return by Chicago reaching Col- lege on April 19. In Washington, New York and Chicago he will meet with associations of A. & M. ex- students. The meeting at Washing- ton will be on April 13, and the one in New York the following even- ing at 6:30 in the Trades Club build- ing. He will spend the next day in New York also and reach Chicago for the meeting with exstudents there on the 17th. He will then go to Saint Louis and depart from there the next day for College. In New York Colonel Ashburn ex- pects to meet about 50 2xstudents who live in the city and its environs. There are also” approximately that number in Chicago and vicinity. ———————— i ———, DEBATERS WILL PRACTICE FOR OKLAHOMA TONIGHT wv The debaters who are to represent A. & M. next Monday night against the Oklahoma A. & M, Messrs. G. D. Holland and S. IL. Fitzhuch, will debate the League of Nations ques- tion tonight with Messrs. L. E. Ha- gan and A, Bayless. Hagan and Bay- less rearesenting the affirmative. The Debating Society will meet for this purpose at 6:45 p.m. in room 212 Main Academic Building. Visi- tors rill be welcome, S. A. DEBNAM, Club President. Te En nr EXTENSION WOMEN WILL: ENTERTAIN SOCIAL CLUB The Women of the Extension Ser- vice will entertain the members of the College Women’s Social Club on Fri- day afternoon at 2:00 o’clock in the parlors of the Y.M.C.A. ‘CONSOLIDATED GIRLS WILL GIVE STYLE SHOW AT THE P. T. A. MEETING TOMORROW A style show given by the sew- ing class girls of the A. & M. Con- solidated School will feature the April meeting of the Parent-Teach- er Association which will be held in the Assembly Hall tomorrow after- noon at 3:00 o’clock. The girls will appear on the stage in the garments that they have made 2nd the winners of the sewing con- test will be name at this time. The entire work of the class will be on exhibition. Following the style show a short business session will be held. Of- ficers for next year will be elected at this time. Friends and patrons cf the School are cordially invited to attend. eet dee AGGIES WIN FIRST TENNIS MEET OF SEASON FROM T. C. U. The Aggie courtmen won their meet with the T. C. U. Frogs last] Saturday by taking four of the six matches, three of the four and one of the doubles. Results 0f the, meet: Rounds (A. & M.) defeated ‘Newcomb 6-1, 6:4; Busch (T. C. U.) defeated Darby 6-4, 6-4; Hinman (A. &‘M.) defeated Tubbeville 6-4, 6-2. Underwcod (A. & M.) defeated Tomlinson 6-8, 7-5, 6-2. Newcomb and Busch (T. C. U.) defeated Rounds and Darby 6-4, 0-5, 6-4. Hinman and Underwood (A. & M.) defeated Tomlinson and Tubbe- ville 6-4,1-6,6-1, “THE ETERNAL THREE” AT PICTURE SHOW TONIGHT Marshall Neilan’s Gceldwyn produc- tion, “The Eternal Three,” will be the feature of the picture show in the as- sembly Hall tonight. The picture is from a speical Cosmorolitan story, and the cast is led by Hobart Bos- worth, Claire Windsor, Raymond Griffith and Bessie Love. There will be a good comedy, and music by Ag- gieland. W. H. Matthews, Y.M.C.A. secre- tary, stated yesterday that in view of the fact that this is an unusually good picture, admission would be raised to 25¢ tonight, the extra L0¢ to be added to the new piano fund. | R.A AL SDNINWNINNZL§ALAéhAéILIMMIhAZ $A p Love and seasickness can not described they must be felt. singles be STRENGTH GIVEN OLD THEME BY NEW FACTS | Strength of Reasoning and Graceful Oddity Recommend Dr. Evans to College. Replete with serious conviction avd embellished with a most delightfully | exotic humor the addresses of Dr. | Arthur Walwyn Evans on the Campus Sunday took place among the memor- able scholarly offerings at the insti- tution. A platform demeanor of graceful oddity and unusual vocal inflections contributed attractiveness to his personality. At the Sunday morning service he took a trite theme on which has been appended more banal phrases than any other platform subject and gave it etheral ascendency by his deep per- ception, usuance and art. It was the | age old subject of service versus sel- fishness, exhibited in the man who works to help his fellowmen and the man who sees only material profit at the end of his ambition. These two characters were personified by Dr. Evans in Louis Pasteur, a noble servant who discovered a cure for An- thrak,’a ‘malady that formerly took the lives of one-tenth of the cattle in the world, who formulated the germ theory of disease that has saved nil- li-ns of lives and given happiness to billions more on which the whole structure of medical practice, the greatest boon to mankind has been erected; and on the other hand Napo- leon Bonaparte who valued human lives only by the strength they gave to his warring battalions, only so far as they served his purroses of material gain. He further developed his subject of service by exemplary information showing that in literature, discovery. ind education the most worthy men | have been those who had a higher | conception cf human values than the | crass materialistic crowd who worked | for gain in gold and power, those with | a spiritual impulse. “He profits | most who serves best—out of the | heart are the issues of life—As a | man thinketh so doeth he” were the | Biblical excerpts used to base his | statements. : | The greatest English writer in his estimation was not the greatest sch- (Continued on Col. 1, Page 4)