THE BATTALION S CORPS TO DALLAS. (Continued from Page 1) Streets and will continue up Main Street to Preston Street. After the parade is over and the companies dismissed, the students will be free to do as they please until time for the game. The game will be played at Ownby Stadium at S. M. U., and all students are re quested to be out to the stadium long before the game starts. Any entertainment that the stu dents hope to have will have to come from the initiative of the student, for there have been no arrangements made for any entertainment for the Aggies. The dance which is being given by the Adolphus Hotel will attract most of the Aggies, and it will more or less be the official A. and M. Dance. They have engaged two orchestras out of Chicago and New York for the dance, and every Aggie that goes to it ought to have one more good time. The Adolphus Hotel has offered some rooms for the Band to clean up in, and this same Hotel will probably be the headquarters for the Aggies while they are in Dallas. For the return trip, two specials will leave the Union Depot at 11:40 and 11:50 Saturday night and two at the same times Sunday night. SOPHOMORES ELECT (Continued from Page 1) elected president. C. S. Shannon, Wharton, Texas, was chosen vice- president. R. L. Herbert, Lufkin, was elected secretary-treasurer J. D. Sellers, Mexia, was elected historian for the class. Sellers is a 'very cap able man and is though to be well qualified for the position. H. U. Bible, Jefferson City, Tennessee, a prominent member of the varsity foot ball squad, and R. F. Dwyer, Houston, were chosen to represent the class on the Student Wellfare Committee. Fatalities statistics for the past year failed to mention the large number who were tickled to death. BIG CONTEST. RULES: In the following short story there are four mis-spelled words. All you have to do is find the misspelled words, and bring them correctly spelled to 38 Puryear for a prize. The first 50 will get the prizes. Once upon a time, the famous fourth Earl of Chesterfeild, Philip Dormer Stanhope, was walking down a certain street of a certain town in England, when he was besieged by a small boy to buy him (the boy) a package of sie-arettes. The Earl promptly did what the little boy asked him to do. At this time two policemen walked up. Thav said, “Earl, you have done the wrong thing.” And then the Earl was truly worried at what he had done. He had probably gone against the wish of the little boy’s mother, in trying to satasfy the little boy. Bill—Please stay, Frances, I have only one fault. Frances—You’re a liar. Bill—Yes, that’s it. “NAUGHTY MARIETTA” TO BE OFFERED STUDENTS WHO MAKE CORPS TRIP Victor Herbert’s comic opera, “Naughty Marietta,” which has been given successfully at many of the leading colleges and universities over the United States, will be given at the Fair Park Stadium in Dallas the night when all the A. and M. stu dents are in Dallas. This opera is really a great masterpiece from the pen of a genius, and the A. and M. student who passes up the chance of seeing this show will really miss something worthwhile. The opera has its scenes laid in New Orleans, and is a very coloi'- ful story. It must be a good show to receive the acclaim that it has been receiving from the different colleges. Prof: Can you prove that the square of the hypotenuse is equal to the sum of the squares of the two sides of this triangle ? Stude: I don’t have to prove it; I admit it. r, r1i— ■ ■I'lTii An echo that circles the globe; Sightseers returning from the Alps never fail to babble of the marvelous echoes that re verberate so obligingly from peak to peak. But no such phenomenon matches a certain echo that keeps circling this whole mundane sphere. It is the best-known cigarette slogan ever coined — the Chesterfield phrase “They Satisfy.” Originated to describe a unique coupling of qualities seemingly opposed—“they’re mild, and yet they satisfy”—its descriptive accuracy was instantly perceived. Today it echoes and re echoes wherever cigarettes are smoked: “Satisfacen... ilssatisfont.. .THEY SATISFY!” And rightly enough, for Chesterfields are mild — and they JDO satisfy . . . and what more can any cigarette offer? Ch esterfi eld MILD enough for anybody., and yet . . T IS E Y SATISFY I JC.GETT £k MYERS ro.