*>o )o <3-0 oo ■Off ■a-o oo •»■& -o-o- ■o-o <>-0- •o-o- -o-o- -o-o- •o-o- oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo You Are Especially Invited To make our store your headquarters when you come in town. Leave your grips and packages with us while you take in the sights. This store has been College headquarters for the past 19 years. We make a specialty of catering to College trade, and carry in stock, at all times, the very latest up-to-date styles in Young Mens Clothes, Shoes, Hats and Furnishing Goods You take no chances when you trade here. You are sure to find the styles right and the prices right. We make a specialty of College Pennants and carry in stock a large assortment of Pennants and Pillows of all principal schools and colleges. A. M. Waldrop A Company BRYAN’S BIG CLOTHING STORE oo -o-o- -0-0- -0-0- -0-0- -0-0- -0-0- -0-0- -o-o* -0-0- -0-0- -o-o -o-o- -0-0* -0-0- -o-o- -a-o- -0-0- -0-0- -0-0- -0-0- -0-0- -0-0- -0-0- -0-0- -0-0- -a-o- -0-0- •0-0- -0-0- -0-0- -0-0- -0-0- -0-0- -a-o- oo oo oo oo oo FARMERS DEFEAT INDIANS BY A SCORE OF 24 TO 0. (Continued From Page 1.) punted 55 yards. Oklahoma made first down. Everett returned Okla homa’s punt 50 yards. A. & M. fum bled, A. & M. was penalized 5 yards for off side. Oklahoma made 30 yards on an end run. Collins replaced Spen cer. Then Everett carried the ball 60 yards thru a broken field for a touchdown. Tyree kicked goal. Score, 24-0. Fry replaced Brown. Oklahoma kicked off. End of quarter. Rollins tried two forward passes, both failing. A. & M. was penalized 5 yards for off side. Oklahoma re covered A. & M.’s fumble. Dickie re placed Faber. Oklahoma tried a field goal from the 50-yard line, but it fell a little short. Everett made 15 yards on an end run. Tyree charged 5 yards thru the line. Coleman passed 30 yards to Collins. Everett made 5 yards on a line buck. Oklahoma in tercepted Coleman’s pass on the 15- yard line. A. & M. recovered the Indians’ fumble. Coleman tried a field goal without success. Oklahoma made 20 yards on a forward pass. Spencer in, Collins out. End of game. Score: A. & M. 24, Oklahoma 0. The lineup: A. & M.— Oklahoma—- Brown . .. . Right End. Braumiller Right Tackle. . Campbell Butler . .. . Right Guard. Havenstrite Cawthon . Center. . Scrivener Faber .... Left Guard. Settegast . Left Tackle. Spencer .. Left End. Gilflllan . . Left Half. Everett . .. Right Half. Coleman . . Fullback. Bell Quarter. Refree-—Etay, A. & M. Umpire—Weis, West Point. Head lineman—DeWare, A. & M. Time of quarters—15 minutes. OF INTEREST TO CLUB AND SOCIETY MEMBERS, To those who are members of the many different student organizations it will be interesting to note that each of these organizations will have a space reserved for them in the college annual on which to place a picture of their club or society. This may be either a group picture or a plate of individual pictures. The management of the Long Horn takes this oppor tunity of making it clear to all who wish to have their picture with their club in the annual that they must have their pictures taken and finished by the 10th of December or make spe cial arrangements with the editor. The plates for these pictures will be sent in to the engravers before Christ mas. When individual pictures are to be placed on the plate, the pictures will have to be taken as soon as possible in order to give the photographer time to finish them properly and have them ready to hand in by the 10th. Each club member should see his president as soon as possible and get on order on the photographer for his picture. Each club will be allowed to design its own plate and it is advised that some original design which is typical of the section of the State that the members are from or is representa tive of the purpose of organization or the work of the club be placed on these plates. In this way each one will have something which sets bis I section of the annual apart from the I others, and relieves the plainness which has always been so common in this section of the book. Before any attempt is made to design this plate the one designing it should see either the editor or Mr. Ellis and get the proper cardboard and instructions. This is a good opportunity for some of our artists to make themselves known and to get some of their Avork in a prominent place. J. R. JARVIS. ENGINEERING NOTES. A number of the graduates of the Department of Mechanical Engineer ing are joining the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, which is the leading association of mechanical en gineers in this half of the world. The mechanical engineering stu dents recently organized the Mechani cal Engineering Society, and the prospects are that a strong and active work will be done by the society this session. Douglass B. Netherwood (“Pike,” the original), in a recent letter, tells of some of his recent experiences since having charge of the shops and motors of the First Aero Squadron of the Signal Corps of the United States Army, now located at San Diego, Cal. Mr. Netherwood gradu ated from the mechanical engineering course in 1911 and has been in the military service of the United States since that date. He says in part: “I am getting along quite agreeably and take a nice ride up in the air occa sionally, although I have not done any flying for the past two or three weeks as I am patiently or impatiently wait ing to completely recover from the ef fects of an interview I recently had with the blades of an eight-foot pro peller making about 9,500 revolutions per minute. Three broken bones in my left hand and a few more or less gentle (?) taps on the head represent the most important of my injuries. At the present time we use a pro peller for loading the motors for test; but I am at present making drawings for an Alden dynamometer outfit de signed to fulfill our needs for testing areonautical motors, as the air cur rents produced by the propeller are very annoying and inconvenient. “I have hopes of getting a testing laboratory rigged up in the near fu ture so that we may make some very full and interesting tests. I find this very interesting work and should be glad to have any suggestions you might see fit to make.” The Department of Mechanical En gineering has just received a new projection apparatus which is design ed to use lantern slides and drawings or illustrations. This equipment, to gether with the motion picture ma chine, forms an outfit that is very complete, and which should prove very useful for the work of instruc tion and entertainment. SENIORS, HAVE YOUR PICTURES MADE FOR THE LONG HORN. Now is the time for the senior class to get together and show how much they are willing to help in the publi cation of the “Long Horn.” If we want to make our book a success we must all get together and help as much as possible where we can. Every senior must have his picture in the “Long Horn.” Don’t let anyone hang back, but everyone go over to the studio this week in uniform No. 1 and have his picture taken. Give the photographer plenty of time to get out your picture and he will make you a good one. If you rush him he may not. All the senior and club pictures must be in before Christmas and in order that good work may be done on all the pho tographer must commence work now. Every man who has his picture taken in the next week makes the work that much lighter on the editor, and those who don’t make it that much harder. He has plenty of work now. J. R. JARVIS. DR. ALGIE BENBOW DENTIST Office Over First National Bank BRYAN, TEXAS CHARLOTTESVILLE WOOLEN MILLS Charlottesville, Va. Manufacturers of HIGH GRADE UNIFORM CLOTHES For Army, Navy, Letter Carriers, Police and Railroad Purposes. And the largest assortment and best quality of Cadet Greys, in cluding those used at the United States Military Academy, at West Point and other leading military schools of the country. Prescribed and used by the Cadets of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas They’re not short-lived The Jerseys THE AMERUCAN JERSEY CATTLE CLUB 324 W. 23d St.. New York City