6 THE BATTALION $5;- i:p %- % 88^% % tfvSSS?'*#* ; ; M I \ (^hesterlieM smokers dont change wilh the winds/ : kw .. 6wt watch how olhcr smokers are changing to Chesterfield! . ■ - ill CHAS. MITCH Welcomes The old men and fish and reminds you that for 27 years we have been the Campus Tailors. Our shop is now located on Bryan Street, in rear of First State Bank. G'ive us your Tailoring, boys, and let it speak for itself. WEEK’S NEWS IN REVIEW S omcthing New and Different ,/7. dr c5fyT. C. Vanities, or Compacts. Bracelets, c Pins of all kinds. We make the Senior ring—also the miniature Senior ring for ladies. Call and let us show you many new things in Jewelry. Caldwell’s Jewelry Store Phone 5 BRYZIM, TEXAS (Continued from Page 1) will meet the following schools: A. & M., Southwestern, S. M. U., North Texas State Teachers’ College, Sim mons University, Trinity University, Baylor University, Austin College, and Texas Tech. The girl debaters will meet teams from Baylor, C. I. A., and North Texas State Teachers’ College. The questions to be used in the men’s debates will be: “Resolved, that America is justified in her for eign policy toward China, Nicaragua, and Mexico,” and, “Resolved, that capital punishment should be abolish ed.” For the girls the debate ques tion will be: “Resolved, that the Philippines should be granted their independence by the United States,’ and also the subject of American policy toward China, Nicaragua, and Mexico. * * * A Southern College Association in Chicago was started when representa tives of nine southern college alumni clubs met at the Congress Hotel and elected officers and mapped out a plan of organization which is expect ed eventually to include every South ern Alumni Club in Chicago. The purpose of the organization is to have every Southern College and Univer sity organize a Chicago Alumni Club which will bcome a part of the South ern College Association. The ma jority of these clubs have small mem bership and the Association will bring these clubs together so that the mem bers will be able to have all the ad vantages which a large alumni club offers. The Association will handle the entertainment of Southerners in Chicago and an invitation has been extended to every Southern college man in Chicago to join. The following Chicago Alumni Clubs are charter members of the Southern College Association: Duke University, University of Virginia, Vanderbilt University, Tulane Uni versity, University of Texas, Univer sity of North Carolina, Virginia Poly technic Institute, Georgia Tech, and Texas A. and M. 5jc :J: The A. H. Department now has a livestock exhibit making the round of a number of South Texas fairs. This exhibit first went to the Comal Coun ty Fair at New Braunfels, and from there to the Gonzales County Fair and to the Guadalupe County Fair at Seguin. It will proceed to LaGrange, Victoria, and probably Floresville and Nixon, according to D. W. Wil liams, head of the A. H. Depart ment. One of the features of the exhibit is the mare mule, “Beck,” with her stallion offspring, “Pat,” owned by the college. Other well-bred animals include four dairy cows, eleven hogs, and six sheep. There is also a large booth containing information con cerning the production of poultry, dairy and beef cattle, hogs, sheep, and horses. * ❖ ❖ Campus residents will probably have the convenience of natural gas in their homes some time in the near future, as arangements are being made to bring gas to Bryan and Col lege Station. The project is being undertaken by the Lone Star Gas Company and indications are that the installation will be completed by the first of February. * ❖ * A college night celebration, featur ing college songs and yells given by groups of A. & M. cadets and Se- wanee students, was staged in the Palace Theatre, at Dallas Friday night. Both the Aggie and Sewanee teams were presented during the per formance. Allen Peoples made his maiden stage appearance directing the Aggie representation in their part of the program. “Farmers Fight” and “Military” were given, and followed by “The Spirit of Aggieland.” The words to the song were shown on the screen and the entire audience took part in the singing. The rest of the celebration was taken over by the management and the Sewanee group. A SMILE A smile is a boquet that may be placed in the hands of the living but not on the bier of the Dead. It “drives anger from the face of a fighting man, fear from the lips of a child, and arrests the despondent thrust of self-destruction.” It is an emblem of universal friendship, a to ken of love and the greatest asset of the modern business world. A smile is a gift, the giving of which costs nothing but from which one reaps untold profits. So fellows forget those gripes and SMILE. An Intercollegiate Song Book of 280 pages has just been published by Thornton W. Allen, 113 W. 57 St., New York. This book contains the school songs of all the large colleges in the United States. It is being sold for $3.75.