) / tr * “Srom.nnLgj' H^dZen^-’s X3C©-‘ts There’s an air of Incfependence about them that Speaks for Itself WE HAVE just recieved another big stock of the latest blacks in Fall Hats for Swell Young Dressers that smack strongly of SWAGGt^t-tOOJM The Most Perfect Models Ever shown in STIFF HATS are now to be found in Our Stock in the new BROWNS AND BLACKS. Every New Shape and Color produced this season either to meet the trade of the City Swell or “College Student” Is now being shown by us. Don’t fail to see our stock Before you buy. MEN’S FURNISHERS M. H . JAMES THE Leading Druggist BRYAN, TEXAS Stationery, Pipes, Tobacco, Toilet Articles of ail kinds TRAIN SCHEDULE. I. & G. N. R. R. No. 101 Sonth bound 5:12 p. in. No. 102 North bound .10:30 a. m. H. & T. C. R. R. No. 3 North bound 1:26 p. m. No. 5 North bound 12:36 a. m. No. 2 South bound 3:49 p. m. No. 6 South bound . 2:57 a. m. Local Miss Lucy Board visited Mrs. Bennett Sunday. Miss Maggie McDougald came out to the Lyceum lecture Friday night. Douglas $3.50 gun metal shoes have no equal. Sold only by Wilson & Derden. 9 Mr. LaFlamm will lecture Tues day night at the chapel under the auspices of the Y. M. C. A. Drill overshirts, belts, gloves, sheets, pillow covers, table covers, etc, 9 Wilson & Derden. Quite a number of the cadets went down to see the carnival; all came back reporting an excellent time. New arrivals in men’s underwear shirts, neckwear, gloves, hose, etc. 9 Wilson & Derden: T. C. U. has installed a printing outfit, which prints their weekly, The Skiff, and other College work. Douglas Shoes do not soften in the c ounters. Try a pair next time. 9 Wilson & Derden. Cadets, if you want the best shoe made for college men buy W\ L. Douglas S3.50 gun metal. Sold only by Wdlson & Derden. 9 At the T. C. U. game, after A. and M. had made about four touch downs, a Freshman was heard to re mark: “Well, I believe we’re going to win!” The annual contest for the How ell Bros, medal for the best stcck judging student in the Sophomore Class came off this evening at the barns. Rugs curtains, shades, blankets, comforts, etc. Call and see us. Wilson & Derden, Exchange Hotel block 9 Wilson & Derden are showing the season’s latest models and materials in the celebrated Kuppenheimer make of clothing. Prices $15.00 to $25.00. 9 Join the Austin Literary Society as an honary memder and feel a pride in the work they are doing, if you do not have time to do your duty as an active member. The A. and M. College has no more ardent admirer among the news papers than the Fort Worth Star. Its bouquets are frequent and fra grant. —Bryan Eagle. Miss McClellan of Hillsboro, who visited the campus some years ago as a very young girl, has returned tb take the position of stenographer to the assistant director of the experi ment station. At the next meeting of the Publi cation Society the subject of adver tising will be thoroughly discussed by the members. Every member should have something to say on this im portant phrase of publication work. The new nurse for the hospital, Mrs. Britnelle, came last week. She is a graduate of the John Sealy Hos pital, Galveston. She takes up the work performed so capably for the past two years by Miss Ida J. Craig, whose unexpected resignation at the beginning of the session caused much regret on the campus, and who is now at the home of her brother, Mr. John A. Craig of Oakmore, near San Antonio. Mrs. T. C. Bittle came out from Bryan last Tuesday to visit Mrs. Ness and Mrs. Hutson. She has been entertained almost every day of her visit by some one of her old friends. Thursday Mrs. Giesecke en tertained her with Mr. Beale Bittle and Mrs. Hutson at dinner. Friday Mrs. Fraps invited her, with Mrs Hutson, to dinner, and this week she is to be entertained by Mrs. Sbisa and Mrs. Brown. Announcement of the successful prize winners in the stock judging contests at Dallas have been made for cattle and hogs, M. M. Cole man, a sophomore from Lubbock, winning first money in both events. B. Gist and C. E. Jones were second and third on cattle, while W. H. Furneaux and John Sharp Williams were second and third in the judging of hogs. The results of horses and sheep are not yet announced. First prize was $15.00, second $8.00 and third $5.00. Twenty-six students took part in the contest, representing all classes. They go next week to San Antonio to compete in a similar contest. Miss Alberta Adams of this city appeared in the flower parade of the Houston carnival, with the party riding in the Elks’ gorgeous turnout. The Houston Post says of this float: “It was a magnificently decorated vehicle drawn by four white horses. There was a wealth of purple in the decotations, and with this was used the California pampas grass, the long fiber being hung in profusion over the entire rig. The horses wore huge plumes of this grass, and about their hoofs, which were gilded, were tied long bows of pnrple ribbon. A huge elk’s head occupied the place where the driver would ordinarily be, and the horses were led by attendants. The vehicle was occupied by Misses ArabePa Gibbons, Alberta Adams of Bryan, WIHie Sameson of Palestine, Jane Percival and Annie Martin.— Bryan Eagle- CAMPAIGN OP SANTIAGO DE CUBA Col. Sargent’s New Book Reviewed in Journal of the Military Ser vice Institution. In the Journal of the Military Ser vice Institution for November-Decem- ber. General Charles King, the author, writes as follows of Col. H. H. Sar gent’s new book: As a result of six or more years of careful study and three of careful writ ing, Colonel Sargent has at last given us “The Campaign of Santiago de Cuba,” and as a result of reading it, small wonder can there be if one say, “Thank God, it wasn’t France, Ger many or John Bull we had to deal with!” Smaller wonder need there be that Bismarck once said, “God looks after the fools and—and the United States.” These words of the Iron Chancellor had not reached the general public in 1889, but that they were known to Congress and serenely accepted there, we have reason to believe. Nothing less than implicit faith that the Al mighty would “look after the United States” can explain, even though it cannot excuse, its utter failure to pro vide the nation with an adequate fight ing force. Everything that educated officers—army or navy—could say or do had been said or done to arouse Congressional comprehension of our needs, but while congress may have comprehended, it failed to provide, for it left the richest nation in the world with the poorest means, pf all the pow ers, of either waging war or keeping peace. With miliary resources second to none, our military strength was really second to all. Ship for ship, and gun for gun, as Sargent shows, Spain and the United States were not unequal; but in Cuba and Porto Rico alone, at the outbreak of the war, Spain had ten times as many regular soldiers as we had in the entire army. And yet it fell to that little army to invade, to attack, and, after giving a brave and well-equipped adversary abundant time to concentrate and crush the invading force, to “win out,” as the Yankee loves to say, in a way nothing short of miraculous. How it was done, in spite of lack if system, staff and preparation, in spite of num bers, climate and conditions, Sargent tells the soldier or the layman in the FOR CADET SUPPLIES GO TO Cavitt’s Drug’ Store WE SELL Bull Dog Pipes, Fancy Smoking and Chewing Tobaccoes, Ready-Made Cigarettes, Cigars, Huyler’s Candies, Foot Ball Goods and Maga zines, Etc. - - - We Want Your Business Cavitt’s Drug Store fascinating pages of an almost match less military history. It is ten years since he won the critics at home and abroad by the praise and recognition of the keenest terse, luminous style, and clear and forceful descriptions of “Napoleon’s First Campaign’ and “The Campaign of Marengo.” There was observable in them all the simplicity of Grant’s “Memoirs,” the almost Doric severity of Humphreys’ “Virginia Campaign of 1864-1865,” and the cold blooded accu racy of detail of the German staff re ports. Yet they were so free from what the Springfield Republican styled “technical verbiage” that they admirably served the purpose or their being, “for the soldier and the civil ian.” And now self-schooled in this clear and lucid method, the modest writer of these earlier studies comes forward with a work that bears to the war with Spain the same relation that the history of the Comte de Paris holds to the Civil War in these United States. But he is no longer the sub altern, conscious of his powers, yet cautions in their play.^;He speaks now with the ring of authority. He writes with the yim of absolute conviction. He marshals his facts, las the-master of his art arrayed his /forces on tbs' field of battle, and he has given us a work that outstrips the earlier efforts as Gettysburg outranks Bull Run. There may he those in both army and navy who will not take kindly to some of his conclusions, but he gives his reasons in the soldierly “Comments” with which he closes every episode. Without once being betrayed into sev erity of censure, and only once or twice into possible overglow of praise the result of generous and soldierly admiration of soldierly heroism—he parcels out criticism and commenda tion with his facts behind him, and it will be hard for those who differ to re ply. The navy may not fancy that a landsman should take issue with Sampson, Evans, Harry Taylor and Chadwick and sharply question their ability to take Havana. There may be resentment of his criticism of “Sampson’s wild goose chase to Porto Rico” at the moment when Cervera could have entered any one ot the prin ciple ports of Cuba. (What infinite luck for us he chose the one he did.) He will meet with less opposition as to Schley’s start for Key West at the very moment when he should have clung to Santiago; but the navy must own that the soldier writer of today comes out veheminenly against the soldier fighter of ’98, who insisted that Sampson and his ships should force that hell-mined, tortuous entrance to Santiago Harbor to make sure of San tiago town. Facts—and Captain Ma han—are with our author, and, so far as the naval operations are concerned, it may be said that if we blundered once or twice, our blunders, like our land forces, were outnumbered ten to one by those of Spain. Cervera was sent across when he should have been held at home; and he chose Santiago when he could have had Cienfuegos or Havana—chose Santiago and stayed until the mournful fate he foresaw, be fore ever he left the shores of Spain, befell the fleet under his command. Like our officers jie had dared tp lay be fore the home government the defects and needs of their navy, but unlike ours, he had no sympathetic secretary to aid him to the limit of his resources. One matter made very plain in what may be called the Navy Volume—the first of the three into which the work is divided—is the worry at Washington over the defenseless state of the At lantic Coast. Having neither forts nor guns fit to cope with modern war ships, even those of Spain, Congress was sore bedeviled by a frantic con stituency bordering the sea from Maine to Mexico, clamoring for protec tion. What would become of a score of cities if Cervera were to leave Cuba to take care of itself (as well it might) and swoop upon our seaboard towns? Seeing only their own peril, the sovereign people dmanded of their representatives that what there was of the navy should be split up and sent (Continued on Page 4) EXCHANCE Shaving; Parlor BATTLE BROS., Props. 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