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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 10, 1915)
oo •»«• Oi> 0-0- 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 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 oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo Long Horn Rush is About Over I> 4l J> 1> I> O 1> J> X> I> 1> X> o 0 O ^ I> J> J> O ^ ^ <J C! ^ ^ Jj! j> I> 0 J> <» 4« >> »> J> X> 1> 1^ <1 0 I> 1> 1> I> <X J> J> X> 4s O !> l)[ I> J> ^ 1> X> X> ^ ^ 1> l}[ <> S> O 1> J^2> <1 J> <11^ X> 1^ <t X> We can now fill your reorders from your Long Horn plate which we have on file. Special prices will be given on reorders. Yon will also be given credit for the “Dollar” already paid in onjthese plates. Have a flashlight picture made of your room while it is looking its best. Don’t Wait Too Long! We Are Now Delivering the Goods! frgfrg #_gjxQ» g»Og»4s4s4s4s4s4s4s4s4s4r4s<s4sO4s4s4s<s4s4s3»4s4s»4s4si0; $ sXssfrgfrp »»»$ O $ $ O O 4* $ ^ 4s« 4s 4s 4:4>: S> 4x :4s C 4s O 4z 4! 4s x> i> 4s 4s 4z 4s 4? 4s 4x 4? 4s 4s 4s 4x O 4s 4s 4s 4s 4s 4s 4s 4s 4s X> 4s 4s 4s 4s 4s 4s 4s 4s 4s 4s 4u 4s 4s 4s 4z 4s 4s 4i! ^ ^ L> o 4s4s 4s 4s 4s 4s 4* 4s~4s s^4s”^ SMITH BROS. CAMPUS STUDIO tt-O- oo •Q--Q- OO O-D- -Q’-Q- 0-0- oo oo oo oo oo •&-0- oo -Q--0- •0-0 -o-a- -o-o •0-0- -0-C5- 0-0- -0-0- -0-0- -0-0- •0-0- -o-o- -o-o- -o-a- -0-0- -0--0- -0--0- -o-a- oo oo oo -0-0- -0--0- -o-o- -o-a- -0-0- -0-0- -0-0- -oo- -o-a-. -o-a- 0-0- -o-a- -o-a- oo oo -o-o- -0-0- -0-0- -o-a- -0-0- ■0-C3- -0-0- -0-0- -0-0- -0-0- -o-o- -0-0- -0-0- -o-a- -a-o- -0-0- -a-a- ■o-o -o-a- -o-o- -o-o- -o-o- -o-o- -o-o -0-0 oo oo oo Sg§g||SggSSSS?SI??IISS?g2SS?SSggS§g?§§?S?SSS?SSIISSISS$Sg$gg?S§g§2SggSSSISgSg$gSgSgSS§§SSSg?SSSS?ggggSSS§S2 hearing the addresses of those on the two programs held for the dedication. T. C. U., Feb. 7.—Forty men reported for baseball practice on the first day, last Thursday. Coach Boles thinks that the prospects for a sti^ong team are flattering. T. C. U. Feb. 7.—Considerable tal ent was displayed by the advanced students of Spanish in the presentation of the Spanish tragedy, “ O Locura, O Santidad,” in the Auditorium Saturday night. The play was given in Span ish, and a large number of students who had never studied the language enjoyed the play immensely. T. C. U.—Feb. 7.—Eight men are ex pected to try out for the honor of rep resenting T. C. U. in the State Ora torical Contest in the preliminary con test, which will be held Friday night. One of the men represented Polytech nic College in the contest last year. C. I. A., Feb. 7.—Invitations are out to the Middle-Senior dance which is to be the 13th of February. The af fair promises to be more brilliant than ever before. The campus is being im proved daily by the laying of new side walks. Rubers now are of no use while hitherto boots have been con sidered a necssity. Phe athletic staff has recommended to the association that a field day be observed this year. An attempt was made to have one last year, but, due to the low interest taken by the girls, it was a failure. The new athletic field has been prepared, tho, and it is hoped that this will encourage more interest. MIND AND MANNERS. The dean of Brown University has interjected a theme not often discust when educators are attempting to ac count for their calling and its results, says the Christian Science Monitor. That is, it is not usually debated by college and university presidents or deans as to whether or not good man ners shall be insisted on or fostered among students under their care. But Dean Randall is disposed to ques tion whether a man is being rightly educated, even though he makes Phi Betta Kappa, if he is not in some way taught how to conduct himself acceptably in the presence of men and women of refinement, and if he is not made to know that reverence is due persons representing academic authority and scholarship. As it is, Dean Randall finds that on the campus, at the table and in the draw ing room the bearing and conduct of many students is “deplorable.”— Waco News. Education is mental refinement. But mental refinement is not all the refinement there is. Physical re- fienment is almost equally important. So, if one trains his thoughts and neglects his manners he is only half educated. What shall it profit a man, in happiness, to have the cholarship l of a cloistered savant and the deport ment of a Digger Indian? A school that does not in some manner teach politeness is on a par with a church that does not teach humility. What would you think Of a g:uest at’your table who could j discuss' the Oophrni- i ■■■■' . i. no f»otmifari' f) can theory in words of five syllables, and square the Nibenlungen Ring with a twist of the wrist, yet who ate his bread with a knife and fork and tackled scrambled eggs with his bare hands? You would be disgusted, of course, and after lie was gone you would call for a finger bowl and wash your hands of him. There is no real culture which does not include social grace along with mental stimulation. To be wise inwardly and wild out wardly is to be only half domesti cated. To have brains like Napoleon and manners like an aborigine is to be as ill-endowed as a mermaid who has a head like Psyche and a tail like a fish.—State Press in Dallas News. HELEN KELLER IS TO APPEAR AT BAYLOR Helen Keller, the deaf, dumb and blind wonder of the world, will ap pear in Waco and deliver her famous lecture on ‘ ‘Happiness” in Carroll Chapel February 26 at 8:15 p. m. Miss Keller will appear under the auspices of the Woman’s Shakespearean Club. Miss Macey, the teacher of this wonderful woman, will speak for an hour, relating the manner whereby she was enabled to educate Miss Kel ler. After Miss Macey has spoken it is planned for Miss Keller to speak for thirty minutes on “Happiness” and then devote thirty minutes to answering questions propounded by the audience, illustrating how she is able to understand under the adverse conditions of being deaf, blind and dumb. She will also tell how she is enabled to understand what is asked and the manner where she can de scribe the person asking the ques tion.—-Baylor Lariat. r- .?• •- f ' - . DIXIE THEATRE Grand Two-Reel Feature Saturday, With BEAUTIFUL ALICE JOYCE An Extra Good Bill Saturday, See It Sure QUEEN THEATRE Thursday, Feb. 4th, Edward Abies in “Ready Money,” Five-Reel Paramount Saturday, Feb. 6th, Extra Grand, “The Goose Girl,” with Little Marguerite Clark Thursday, Feb. 11, That Grand Stage Suc cess, “The Man From Home.”