The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 05, 1920, Image 8

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    8
THE BATTALION
BASKET BALL MEN NOW
ON ROAD AFTER FINALS
(Continued from Page 1)
SURE FIRE WINNER WITH ANY
AUDIENCE
gies are concerned, the champion
ship of the Southwestern Conference
in Basket Ball. Should they win a
majority of the games on this trip it
will certainly place them in a better
position to cop the pennant than any
other conference team.
The Longhorns got off with a rath
er bad start and lost one to the Mus
tangs, but are going at a fast clip
now and the Aggies are certain to
meet with hard sledding in Austin
Friday and Saturday nights. In
Dallas, basket ball fans will doubtless
see two of the fastest games ever
staged in that city when the Aggies
and the Mustangs meet, since should
the S. M. U. five drop both or even
one of the games it will practically
eliminate them from any claim on
championship honors, and then too
they remember the two defeats hand
ed them here last week, and will be
fighting not only for revenge but to
stay up in the running. On the
other hand the Aggies need these
games to strengthen their claim on
the conference title, thus it is seen
that a fierce battle will be staged.
When the Aggies travel to Waco
for two games with the Baylor Bears
they should not, unless the Bears have
made a wonderful improvement, ex
perience a lot of trouble. It will,
however, be recalled that the Baylor
five sprung a surprise on the Aggies
last year and gave them the defeat
that cost a Championship.
After six road games the Aggies
return to College where they close
the season by meeting the Longhorns
on February 20 and 21 and the Owls
■ r, £/LTfcffr; “
We have been re?l camp took a de-
Doug’s latest is farce comedy of
the variety which made him famous
back in the old Triangle days. It
opens with a subtitle and some
scenes which lead you to believe that
the story is to be taken seriously,
but which later is found to have been
used only to make plausible the
stunts which the star executes and to
excuse superstition in a man.
Inside of five minutes Doug is in
the midst of a continuing series of
his kind of athletic stunts and for
fully four reels the picture keeps up
its farce comedy tempo with a laugh
in every foot of film. It then slows
down long enough to allow Frank
Campeau to bring on the plot, same
being of the w.k. idea of the villain
trying to trim the heroine’s father
out of valuable oil property, with the
hero being falsely accused, etc., and
then gets a running start for an
other couple °f thousand feet of still
better athletic action and convinc
ing mechanical effects, which wind
up with a flood which would make
Noah green with envy. “After the
clouds roll by” Doug is discovered
up a tree, with his lady fair float
ing down toward him on the roof of
an uprooted house.
He then changes his temporary
residence to the approaching roof,
there to explain that all the trouble,
including the flood, which we will
suppose was of the villain’s planning.
This done, a church with a parson
clinging to the steeple comes floating
by a rl the knot is about to be tied
as the last scene fades out.
Fairbank’s cameraman and direc
tor are entitled to full credit for
producing a picture which will stand
as a masterpiece of its kind for many
****■*' *»* —p—'■* —I-****'****-—*-—I* •*'* *."**!* **-*'I'**P**- —c*!* *!**’*-*!**.* *■•**** *'*-****.- *P*v* .p*p*”*.p.p
cided drop after the two trimmings
given them by the Aggies last week
on their home court.
day.—Length, 5700 feet.—J. b.
It seems that the corps is going
to knock ’em dead when is comes
to dressing up and showing off in
Bryan and at Sunday evening retreat.
Why not wear a dark blouse and light
trousers for real di’ess occasions?
That A. and M. has some real
philosophers is shown by the atti
tude taken in regard to th e street
leading to Kyle Field.
In the old days we could stand
most any kind of a dinner and re
main cheerful in anticipation of
real cush. Now it is a subject to be
avoided and an article to create dis
appointment.
Proof Positive !
In a twenty-year test to de
termine the value of various
sources of Nitrogen, the New
Jersey Experiment Station
found “that crop yields and
the percentage of Nitrogen
rccooeren in the crop were greater
when nitrates were used,”
Official figures are:
“If we assign to Nitrate
Nitrogen a value of 100, then
the relative availability of the
four materials stands as fol
lows:
Nitrate of Soda 100.0
Ammonium Sulphate 70.1
Dried Blood 02.0
Manure 52.4
The details of this important
research were published in
“Soil Science.” Send for copy.
Win. S. Myers
Chilean Nitrate Committee
25 Madison Ave. New York'S^ 7
Dickerson.
The Cast
Daniel Boone Brown,
Douglas Fairbanks
Mark Drake Frank Campeau
Curtis Brown Ralph Lewis
Dr. Metz Herbert Grimwood
Hobson Albert Mac QuarHe
Lucette Bancroft . Kathleen Clifford
Bobbie Devere * . . . Daisy Robinson
Directed by Victor Fleming.
Assisted by Ted Reed.
Original Story and Scenario by
Douglas Fairbanks, assisted by Lewis
Weadon and Tom Geraghty.
G Company still has the same old
spirit hang together on hang sep
arately. This is shown by the fact
that only one man has left our com
pany for another organization.
* * *
By reason of several of the G1I
football stars being in the hospital
the game Sunday was forfeited. But
the setback is only temporary, and
the companies who reckon without
them may have another think com
ing.
LYRIC THEATRE
BRAND NEW SPECIAL FEATURE
Friday and Saturday
A Nightmare—such as you’ve never seen, never had and
never have heard about — that’s what he goes through!
and its only one of the many troubles that
DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS
is in for in his big new picture of a hundred laughs,
and a hundred thrills
“When the Clouds
Roll By”
Don’t miss it! And you’ll never forget the great flood
scene, a real flood, that sweeps his lost sweetheart back
to him. Don’t miss this good opportunity.
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GUARANTEED TO PLEASE. Adults 50c, Children 25c
Hours—1:00, 3:00, 5:00, 7:00 and 9:00 o’clock.
SPECIAL MUSIC BY PROF. SAUNDERS.
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UP 1 : t
WHY NOT, A VISITORS.’.. 1.1 ST? JJLYAN . B^-\prR OF STbl If
OF
MAKES DEBUT
People come to our dances and are
gone many times before their
friends know that they have been on
the Campus. When we have a foot
ball game we publish information
lists for our guests. Why can’t
someone publish a list of the guests
at our dances? Let each student
submit the name of his guest or
guests, then have published along
side his name. This list could be
distributed on the day of the dance
and everyone would know if any of
his friends were on the campus, and
would be able to find them by look
ing up the student whom they were
visiting . If not this make use of
the Bulletin or Battalion.
Mr. Ivan W. Barber, a well-known
member of the Senior Class, was an
nounced to society at the picture
show in Bryan last Saturday night
while in company with one of Bryan’s
charming young ladies. Mr. Bar
ber is to be admired for his audacity
in coming into society so late in the
year. His friends wish him every
success in his social activities and
feel assured that he will soon prove
to be the lion at every occasion.
It’s really pathetic to watch the
Bolsheviki boys up in Goodwin run
ning around after midnight hunting
for their beds.
666 has proven it will cure Malaria,
Chills and Fever, Bilious Fever Colds
and LaGrippe. 20
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THE LONE STAR SERVICE
LINE
Phones 348 or 300
f
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DAY OR NIGHT J*
One Seven-Passenger, Two %
£ Five-Passenger Cars. Stands £
T at Manhattan and White Front £
| Cafes. t
ALWAYS AT YOUR
SERVICE £
YOU
Do not have your picture made but several times during a
generation. The folks at home and “others” are due a
picture of yourself while you are in College. The expense
is small and the appreciation large.
ORDER FROM YOUR LONGHORN NEG
ATIVE TODAY AT
TZEUES CU O Xj Hi IH3 d- Tl2 S T XT X> I O
of XDiisctixa.ctioxx.
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! The Elite Confectionery
❖ Now Serving
% LUNCHES AND OYSTERS
£ In All Styles
% Patronage of Cadets Always Appreciated