The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 05, 1920, Image 3

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    THE BATTALION
3
| LET US REMIND YOU—
❖ That we are anxious to serve you
❖ in every way possible.
I OUR YEARSofEXPERIENCE
| ARE AT YOUR COMMAND.
PARK’S JEWELRY STORE
POST
OFFICE
BLOCK
The College Community
STORE
IS NOW OPEN
GIVE US YOUR ORDERS FOR
GROCERIES
G. 0. TURNER, Manager
.. EAT AT..
The NEW YORK CAFE
For Ladies and Gentlemen
when in the city.
S *
When in Bryan
AND IN NEED OF RAZORS, RAZOR BLADES ( POCKET
KNIVES, ELECTRIC LIGHT GLOBES AND LIGHT
HARDWARE OF ANY AND ALL KINDS
CALL ON US
Myers Hardware Co.
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i^c ^nsnltk ^tuhio
HIGH GRADE PHOTOGRAPHS.
GUARANTEED
ALL WORK
LARGE PHOTOGRAPHS OUR SPECIALTY
Postoffice Block. Bryan, Texas
•Jf*************************************^****}***** :*:*-***
HaswelFs Book Store
WE SELL
EASTMAN KODAKS AND SUPPLIES
ATHLETIC GOODS
Cadets Are Invited to Call
FURNITURE
RUGS, WINDOW SHADES, PILLOWS, COMFORTS,
BLANKETS. TRIPS MADE TO
COLLEGE DAILY
McCulloch-Gordon Company
PHONE 164
Slovacek-Novosad Music Co.
Bryan, Texas
Dealers in
CONN AND MARTIN BAND INSTRUMENTS
Selmer & Buffet Reed Instruments; Ludwig Drums; Degan
Bells and Xylophones; Lyon & Healy String
Instruments
PIANOS, TALKING MACHINES, DOLLS, RECORDS AND
MUSIC
OKLAHOMANS LOSE TO
TEXAS AGGIES 35-0
(Continued From Page 1)
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• •
»' • ■
Stephan Bottling Works
GEO. STEPHAN, Proprietor
CHOICE BOTTLED DRINKS, SODA WATER, ETC.
Boys Ask Dealers For Our Goods
*^4* ^ ^ ’W* •> *2 - •£* v *5* ‘J* 'k J t‘ 5 i* *4* ‘I* “J* *i" ‘I* '2* *! 1 •!* *1' -F •t 1 'i»4' “£•
ris of Texas each attempted long
placement kicks.
Only once did Coach Pixlee’s Okla
homa Aggie team reach striking dis
tance of the Texans’ line. In the third
quarter Oklahoma lost the ball on the
Texans’ eighteen-yard mark by a
technicallity. Three times inside the
Oklahoma five-yard line and Ray
booted the ball beyond the middle of
the field. Three of his kicks covered
sixty yards each and one went seven
ty yards.
Higginbotham made one long kick
of sixty-five yards another Texas scor
ing chance was lost when Weir, half
back, fumbled on the one-yard line and
Look abough for Oklahoma recovered.
Gouger and Nicholson opposing ends
for Texas and Oklahoma respectively,
were sent from the game in the sec
ond round for roughing. Five calls for
time out for injuries by Oklahoma
and eight by Texas added to frequent
interruptions by officials for measure
ment distances caused the game to last
more than three hours from the first
to final whistles. A soft field and a
strong wind handicapped the players,
each team fumbled three times all of
them costly. Captain Voyles of Ok-
lohoma, playing guard for the first
time was the outstanding player of
his team.
Time after time he broke through
and nipped attempted advances by the
Texas backs. Stafford, Lookabough,
Ray and Williams were other effective
Oklahamo men on the defensive. Nine
Texas penalties totalled eighty-seven
yards, three for Oklahoma totalled
forty-five.
Line-Ups.
Texas A. and M.—Wilson, left end;
Drake, left tackle; Murrah, left guard;
Pierce, center; Dietrich, right guard:
Carruthers, right tackle; Gouger,
right end; Morris, quarter back; Ma
han, captain, full; Weir, left half;
Higginbotham, right half.
Oklahoma A. and M.—Nicholson,
left end; Stafford, left tackle; Over-
street, left guard; Kroutil, center;
Voyles, right guard; W. Williams,
right tackle; Lourence, right end;
Ault, quarter back; Stubblefield, full
back; Lookabough, left half; Ray
right half.
Substitutes—Church for Nicholson,
Paxton for Kroutil, Blatter for Ault,
Freeman for Blattler, Johnson for
Lookabough, A. Williams for Stubble
field, Smith for Gouger, Anglin for
Pierce, Pierce for Morris, Martin for
Weir.
Punting, Ray for Oklahoma Ag
gies averaged 47 yards in 20 punts.
Higginbotham for Texas Aggies aver
aged 37 yards in 4 punts. Passes, Ok
lahoma Aggies 9, none successful.
Texas tried 3, none successful. Pen
alties, Oklahoma 3, for total 45 yards;
Texas 9 times for total of 87 yards.
Touchodwns for Texas, Mahan (3),
Gouger, Higginbotham. Goals from
touchdawns for Texas, Higginbotham
(5). Attempted placements kicks for
Texas, Morris Higginbotham
Time out for injuries, by Texas 8,
by Oklahoma 5. First downs by Tex
as 19, by Oklahoma 0. Scoring by
quarters, Texas 14, 0, 7, 14. Total 35.
Oklahoma 0. Officials, McBridge, (K.
C. Athletic Club), referee; Butler,
(University of Missouri), umpire;
Cross, (University of Oklahoma),
head linesman.
M. E. SOCIETY HEARS
INTERESTING LECTURE
♦
G. S. PARKER
LUMBER
PHONE 41
BRYAN,
TEXAS
.J. »J. .J. .J. rj. .J. .J. .Jo »J. .£. .J. .». .?. .J. .J. .J. ^ „J, o*. ^
Geo. B. Shaw
The Germ Crank
Hamburger Lunches
Gold Drinks and
Confections.
Opposite Interurban Station
M. H. JAMES
THE
LEADING DRUGGIST
Ours is the
REXALL STORE
Everything in Drugs and
Toilet Articles
*
*
*
*
♦
*
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-¥■
*
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■¥■
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-K-K-K-K-K-K-K-K-K-K-K-K-k-^-K-K-k-K-K-k-K-K-K-K-K^
JNO. S. CALDWELL
Graduate Optometrist and
Optician
Office: Caldwell’s Jewelry
Store
Bryan, Texas
C. S. Martin
MEAT MARKET
Fresh Meats, Fish, Oysters,
Eggs, Butter. Delivery
leaves for College every
morning at 9 o’clock except
Sunday.
2—PHONES—471
Us
i
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4® 4*
| BRYAN TIRE & REPAIR I
| COMPANY
H. G. Umland, Prop.
«!■
• •
Tires, Tubes, Gasoline, Oils *
and AH Kinds of Vul
canizing
4*
*!**£* a £ 9< & t £ , *3 e4i 2 M $ :a $**$ !i 'S oii9 $* e £ r
4* *
4* *$•
JAMES W. JAMES
REAL ESTATE
Post Office Block, Bryan
WE ARE SHOWING A COM
PLETE LINE OF
Fine
Stationery
JENKINS’ DRUG STORE
-k-k-k-k-k-k-k-k-k-k-k-k-k-k-k-k-k-k-k-k-k-k-k-k-k-k
4* 4® 4* 4* 4* 'I* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* ‘I 1 4* 4* 4* 4* *1* 4*4* *1* a I* *1* 4* 4* *1*
•f®
• •
• •
• •
• •
CAMPUS
BARBER SHOP
Eight chairs. One of the
best equipped shops in Tex
as. All kinds of
TONICS
Come to See Us
J. F. LAVINDER, Prop.
• ■
Up-to-Date Work Done at
the
CAMPUS
SHOE SHOP
,, Our prices are right and we
make old shoes look like
<» new.
HOLM & SON
Oilie Emmel j
Rear City National Bank j
Magazines
Periodicals, Sundries, I
Etc.
Box Candies
| W.E. CLOUD
j; MARKET
:: BUTCHERS AND LIVE ±
f STOCK DEALERS *
;; Call and See Us When in ;;
’• ’> Need of Our Pro-
!! ducts
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The M. E. Society held its regular
semi-monthly meeting Monday night
in the auditorium of the M. E. build
ing.
A short business session preceded
the regular program. The feature of
the program was an address by Prof.
Eaton of the Mechanical Engineering
Department. The subject of his lec
ture was, “The Design and Construc
tion of Aeroplanes.” Prof. Eaton
was connected with the aeroplane in
dustry during the war and the lecture
proved very instructive as well as in
teresting.
A good program is being planned
for the next meeting and all members
of the M. E. Society are urged to at
tend.
“How is the pig, Pat?”
“Faith, and he’s a great glutton.”
“How is that?”
^ “Be jabbers, he drank two pails of
milk, and when I put the little rascle
in the pail, he didn’t half fill it.”
The Elite Confectionery
—FOR—
COLD DRINKS, CANDY,
CIGARS, ETC.
When in Bryan the Boys Are Invited to Visit Us
Call COX & WORLEY For
SERVICE CARS
DAY OR NIGHT
Handsome Cars With Careful Drivers
666—PHONES—303
ow Large is an Atom?
/V TOMS are so infinitesimal that to be seen under the most power-
JL JL ful microscope one hundred million must be grouped. The atom
used to be the smallest indivisible unit of matter. When the X-Rays
and radium were discovered physicists found that they were dealing
with smaller things than atoms—with particles they call “electrons.”
Atoms are built up of electrons, just as the solar system is built up
of sun and planets. Magnify the hydrogen atom, says Sir Oliver
Lodge, to the size of a cathedral, and an electron, in comparison, will
be no bigger than a bird-shot.
Not much substantial progress can be made in chemical and elec
trical industries unless the action of electrons is studied. For that
reason the chemists and physicists in the Research Laboratories of the
General Electric Company are as much concerned with the very con
stitution of matter as they are with the development of new inven
tions. They use the X-Ray tube as if it were a machine-gun; for by
its means electrons are shot at targets in new ways so as to reveal more
about the structure of matter.
As the result of such experiments, the X-Ray tube has been greatly
improved and the vacuum tube, now so indispensable in radio com
munication, has been developed into a kind of trigger device for guid
ing electrons by radio waves.
Years may thus be spent in what seems to be merely a purely
“theoretical” investigation. Yet nothing is so practical as a good
theory. The whole structure of modern mechanical engineering is
reared on Newton’s laws of gravitation and motion—theories stated
in the form of immutable propositions.
In the past the theories that resulted from purely scientific re
search usually came from the university laboratories, whereupon the
industries applied them. The Research Laboratories of the General
Electric Company conceive it as part of their task to explore the un
known in the same spirit, even though there may be no immediate
commercial goal in view. Sooner or later the world profits by such
research in pure science. Wireless communication, for example, was
accomplished largely as the result of Herz’s brilliant series of purely
scientific experiments demonstrating the existence of wireless waves.
General®El© Ctrl c
Casiipany
s-> General Office
HY ■
Schenectady, N.Y.
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