The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 01, 1924, Image 3

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    THE BATTALION
3
A. AND M. COLLEGE IS NOW
BEING MODERNIZED
(Continued from Page 1)
logy Department. The building will
be completely equipped as a modern
laboratory building, and the latest
type of laboratory furniture will be
installed in the various departments.
The Poultry Husbandry Department
is to have new quarters also. The
Architectural Department has pre-
pared plans for a building to be used
by the Poultry Husbandry Depart
ment as a classroom and laboratory
building, which will be located on the
Poultry Husbandry Department
grounds just west of the railroad
tracks. It is to be of two stories, the
first floor of which will be used for
a laboratory and” the second for class
rooms. The building is to be of white
stucco and is to be covered with a
green or red slate coated composition
roof. The interior walls will be plas- (
tered.
The Department of Grounds and
Utilities, according to Mr. W. W.
Kraft, is keeping a full force busy on
the improvements mentioned. When
completed, the improvements will
add much to the beauty and attrac
tiveness of the campus..
CLASS OF ’25 LOSES
PROMINENT MEMBER
(Continued from Page 1)
might not catch the reflection of his
pain and fell, too, his hurt.
He had finished his Junior year at
college and it was only a matter of
a few weeks until he would have en-.
tered upon his senior year. He was
more than an average student and we
cannot say how remarkable or how
brilliant a career passed to the
tongueless dust of the centuries with
the dissolution of his last breath.
He was one of the most popular
men that has been entered our Alma
Mater. His personality was one to
touch the grimness of the most con
firmed cynic, to cast a halo of happi
ness. in the knowing of him, around
the head of the most optimistic. Truly
there is a Great Divine to have taken
from our midst such a character that
Heaven might be happier for his
presence there.
And though the nights shall be
lonelier and sadder now that he is
gone, and though the days shall be
less bright because he comes no more
to do that which the light of the sun
can never do—brighten the heart of
man; and though we shall never see
him again until we too, shall join
that tribunal before the throne of the
Maker when all shall come to be
judged by the Omnipotent there shall
come no stain to darken, no dark
cloud to blacken, no feeling of hurt
of rancor in the soul for our memory
of him shall serve to guide us through
all the wastes of territory, through
all the struggles of life, through all—
all that yet lies before us—to that
eternity to which he is gone.
I was not there to see the life-
light leave his eyes, to see the tired
eye-lids close, a heart-rending testa
ment that the soul had chosen to
leave the earthly body that had been
its domain for so long, and seek the
peaceful realms of Heaven. I was
not there to shed my tears as the cas
ket was lowered into the grave and
the sod rose into a mound, mute testi
mony that the last earthly rites had
been performed. But my spirit,
through the perfect communion of
true friendship, was there with him
to his last moment, was with him
when the last cares of human hands
were done; and I pray that to that
sublime realm where he has gone
he shall take that spirit and the spir
it of others that loved him to keep
with him until that time when we,
too, shall answer that last summons
that may come at the break of dawn,
in the hot noon-tide, or when twilight
comes to bring joyous peace to the
troubled heart.
There is an invisable mystery in the
plan of life. We cannot see our dawn.
And when our day is finished all—all
is no more. Even the pleasant mem
ories of our noon-time pass and are
ended with that last, breath which all
must take. God in His wisdom
chooses the moment when He shall
tell the grim reaper to “go forth for
the harvest is ready;” and there are
none who may say him no. Our best
friends are taken from our very side
and we have only tears of sorrow to
shed—visable. But our invisable mem
ory of him is imbedded in our hearts
where none may reach it to do it
sacrilege.
NOTE:—Hillery L. Peoples, Jr., 22
years old, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. L.
Peoples of 2507 Jeffries street, Dal
las, would have been a senior at A.
and M. this year. “Shorty” was one
of the most popular students in
school.
A. and M. students and ex-students
had an important part in his funeral.
Pallbearers were:
Active—William Ward, Gilmore
Harris, Miles Dart, E. Vance Smith,
John O’Callaghan and Joe Clark.
Honorary—John McCoy, John
Hall, James Lee, Paul Cowan, Cecil
Boyce, Ed Flowers, Clifford Dart,
Lawrence Boal, A1 Crafts, John Bur
gess, Frank Ford, Finley McWhirter,
Hal Bradford, Robert Handley, Fred
Tosch, Dick Bernhardt, Earl Sterling,
Johnnie Taylor and Palmer Bagley.
C. E. GRIESSER
Anything Electrical
PHONE 23
Let us supply your needs for |>
anything in the
ELECTRICAL OR RADIO
LINE
STACY-ADAMS
SHOES
FOR MEN
THE TOWNE
A Young man’s tan calf oxford.
Flexible shank.
$12.50
BRY/JN, TEXAS
QUEEN - FRIDAY
Saturday—Extra Special, Adopted from “Mary the Third,”
by Rachel Crothers
“WINE OF YOUTH”
A Master Metro-Goldwyn. Week-end sensation, with
Eleanor Boardman, Johnnie Walker, Niles Welch, Pauline
Garon, Jas. Morrison. Three ages. See them. All three in
one big picture. Only 40c with
QUEEN ORCHESTRA
And big comedy. See Saturday’s matinee.
PALACE - FRIDAY-SATURDAY
The Big Sensational Thriller from the Stage Play
“THE FIRE PATROL”
Featuring Anna Q. Nilsson, Madge Bellamy, with
PALACE ORCHESTRA
Matinee, Children 15c, Adults 30c. Nights 20c and 40c.
DIXIE SATURDAY
Extra Special—Big Western Knockout
JACK HOLT in “DARING CHANCES”
With a Big Comedy. Always Only 25c.
r
i.
A. MACKENZIE
Watches - Jewelry
Sheaffer’s Fountain Pens. Also a line of College Jewelry
consisting of Pins, Fobs, Belts, etc. Watch repairing a
specialty.
GIVE US A TRIAL
*
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|| JHctrupulitan ||
|><| Of Bryan, is a place that service cannot be excelled. Call
and see us for service
P. G. GAYLE, Manager
ite ^
I New York Cafe 1
Headquarters for
EATS
IN BRYAN
$
Strictly Sanitary. Expert Work
manship
THE SANITARY BARBER
SHOP
J. R. Fain & W. P. Taylor,
Proprietors
Next door to New York Cafe.
2623 South Main. Phone 835
Bryan, Texas
I Cadet Headquarters I
& Cigars, Cigarettes, Pipes, To- %
bacco, Razors, Brushes, Soaps, ^
Y ^
and Toilet Articles.
I #mit4tBru0 Co.!
X Bryan X
WANTED
One Senior or Junior
money durine-
112936