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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 29, 1920)
y ! t i ih m vi IfrFi 1 Jr f:*/ NEW COMMITTEE Ni ON STUDENT m 4!' .FARE (Conti naed freM 1) THE BATTALION I liRhtly on th«ir unoffending to«s. ■jM Think wisely over the matter and -i- when the next Corps Dance is given, X add spice to the occasion by being there ^ ou rselfl 1 which you think will nmke this College a better place diacnss it with | some of the students jnou meet even- day. See What tlaey thinly about it. j If they agree with you tell the stu- ' dent committee member who repr ■ Rents your class. Be will tnake such recommendations as and improvejnent will p fee ted. The reason for Suggesting that you talk it over with others is that a 'member doesn't like to make representation to 1 fhe committee baaed upon the kie«a of one man. There are a lot of studerits is the College and a middle path must be followed which will conform to the ideas of the maijority’. • The Big Idea . is t«) make use of this committee. It plfers you the bast means you have ever had of making your wants known. Use it! QUEEN ATTRACTIONS X Something About “Nothing Truth" Hut the MATINEE NIGHT COUPS DANCE WELL ATTENDED Despite the inclement weather and the absence of many cadets on fur lough, quite a few couples were pres ent at the Corps Dance in the Mess Hall Annex last Friday night. The College Orchestra .RHtoMl “pep" in their rendition of the late fox trots and wsltzes, and everyone responded to this stimulant by exe cuting extraordinsry steps, possibly taken from the early Chinese. Under the chaperonage of several seniors nnly the strictest conventional danc ing was indulged in, bet it took sev eral lectures or. same l*fore they eeuld be< Christian'-ed along this line If you think it is easy to tell the , T are j necessary ! truth, the whole truth, and nothing y bly be sf- but Rie truth, for one whole wees waking or sleeping, try it, by pledg ing yourself to tall nothing but the truth, no matter Ttow it hurts. Such 1 is ths inpeniuus comedy thente of this side-splitting Taplor Holmes J farce. It all begins when “Bob** $ Bennett, a young society idler, wag- , ers $80,000—10.000 with each of tbtree men—-that he can tell the ab solute truth for seven days. Right away Bob is invited to a house party. The itvitation is for a wefek. His first ad venture in truth-telling is to slight the girl he loves. The^t he gets ^ into ihor? trouble giving Veracious ] account of sundry roof-garden ban- j penings ip which two, eldeny men | were involved. He tells thgir wives, j The eldetjy married men -Me in on the bei, but in a panic they seek to cancel it.) No use. * They think a ! gentleman should have lied politely; j biit Bob cant, under the terms of the wsger. | How he gets'into one com- | plication after another merely be- j cause he utters the stark truth, and ! how in the end he abandons himself to an Orgy of fabrication, is related • with a. multiplicity of hilarious in- ; cident and by-play that makes "Nothing But the Truth” even more mirthful on the screen than It was on SATURDAY, JAN. 31 ! 'll 'ALL ’ LIGHTS.. r MUSIC. 'MIXING *ndPP£TTY G/PLS il The First eal Joy oi the Season! at' rises pr< mptly 1:16 p. m. and 8:30 p. Be there. TOUR SEATS NOW I h I1«a prujJOntiorK |pforv th. orp now that these dances ar^ riven for yomj^buaefit and you should have enougV^tergy to bleaa them with a regular attendance. All the world Friday and Saturday wi h n#w Sunshine comedy, ‘‘The Scandal" and jazz music fbr every lie he needed and wanted to tell. Next week Mar guerite CUrk in “Luck in Paun' UndU MATINEE—S .50, NIGHT—$ .50, S .7^ TICKETS NOW SELLING. >1. and $1.00 and $1.50 iET YOURS TODAY. I« I- know Geraldine Farrar in “The World an 1 dances now and Tf yolk don’t kn< A,, to .x«:uU Wo „„Cn.Uinc. •tep., com. out. All ot the (trio ta "Eomt^htll SuUta- Bryan are very very considerate and T ^ 11 11:' • 1 . 'r N it is believed by thoee in authority j 666 has prosTn it will care Malaria, DICKENS RELICS SELL HIGH r I notice that “Grip”, the raven immortalised by Dickens in “Barna-^ by Rudge,” is to be sold by auction. It is more than thirty years since it was previously sold under the ham- ' P* 0 mer, and in that period Dickens nd- H'g ^ Binny in ^ ^ave appreciated In value, so that ££ J the bird may \bring more than the '*Y> er late Alderm^r $600 for whidh the that they will not even favor you with Chills sad Fever, Bilious Fever CoMa Nott *** Stained tt. ?ou Hop^o to t c.„ LoGrippo. ^ “ nol * i ■ 1 . * !■ Ijl 1 f •' I ' ' . :•* . I priefh pkM (for mementoes *of tnovelist. Here ar e a few: M\ m & { t * rr r* 1 ... V I'.l L’Srbi s ►3 ,4 ifuck l-v If - An old sundial and column, form ed of one of the balusters of old Rochester Bridge, and used by Dick ens in his garden, once brought $250. “Box's” writing slope, the in- ■ i ? IKi tT.ITT- n value of which was perhaps wrought $500 at a sale, qnd ler suction the table, c tair ling glass used by him sihile ’All the Year Rou id,” $425. than $475 was ence paid petty cash book which he •n he was s hoy of 16 flli a office.—Westminister (fax- i been spmtding IjDOO on new hotel worft in for the greatest tounet's story. * ! \r ill H 1 tn ilia srs the cheapest power , fj j ^ i * I i ' I » I *?* are between 300 and 400 #c- YO Do not have your picture made |^ut generation. The folks at hoi picture of yourself while you arf m| is small and the appreciation ORDER FROM YOUR ATIVE TODAY T BC El OOXaXaSI< 2F*axc>'ko«X'asg>aaai oft saova-as] The Elite Confectionery f GUDRUN WALBERG and a Cluster of Bi “MY SUNSHINE LADY” at the Lyric and Night. Saturday, Januai Broadway Beauties in Theatre, Matinee Janaary Slst. sveral times during a “others” are due a lege. The expense |H).“ IHORN NEG- iT m T TTX3 LOVlOXS. xo U \ i Now LUNCHES AND 4 In AH Pat ronagt* of Cadets ■ t • | \ Appreciated $ i $p $!M A li > f|A$ <A 5 j.