4 THE BATTALION. will make each and every Cadet ready to help his college out and be proud of her success. £ £ Foster Hall is almost completed and it is certainly a fine building, adding much to the looks of our already beau tiful Campus. The work on the Agri cultural Building is also progressing nicely and we hope that it will be com pleted by the opening of the next ses sion. I wish that the members of the Corps would he more liberal with their con tributions to the pages of our paper. Some of the boys are very liberal in this line and we appreciate it very much, but there are some others who could contribute a great deal to pro mote the interest in our paper, but they won’t. I hope that in the future they will be kind enough to send us a few lines for the Battalion. — ^ ft • ^ rrrrtTlZZZZZ*- ONL>Y TOO TRUE. i unbuttoned my coat with a sigh of relief, Soon after a tussle with a slice of beef, And pulling on my slippers I started to “dig” For the reason that I’d soon be ques tioned in “Trig.” But somehow or other the “Trig” grew remote, My thoughts began to wander as gos samers float, And slowly, unconsciously, in a dreamy kind of way I began to ponder on the happenings of the day. This College is the worst place for pests of all degree. Forinstance, there’s the “Bum”—he's fio stranger to me, With his cigarette paper, “Can you fill this prescription?” And “got a stamp?” All have heard requests of this description. And there’s the grumbler. He’s the worst beef in the herd. Kicking about the grub or having lost a bird. He’s equipped wih brains enough to carry him. through a flying If he’d only use them rightly and stop his constant crying. There’s another type of youngster. Now isn’t he a bird? He’s the good-natured fellow of whom, perhaps, you’ve heard. He’s a hearty, well-met fellow for any mischief willing, But as for lessons and the like he’s worth the killing, whom, perhaps, you’ve heard. I’ve forgot the “Sport” with his four- inch collar. You’d think him a millionaire, but he hasn’t got a dollar. Red tie, tan shoes, fond of his own re flection. Put him under a microscope, he won’t stand inspection. And there’s that nuisance. What? Taps? By Joe! And four lessons to-morrow—a hard row to hoe. Speaking of freaks—don’t I take the cake? At Zero in Math and 85 to make. S. H,——, ’01,