The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 06, 1931, Image 5

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    THE BATTALION
5
Conference Standing
One Half Point—
(Continued from page 4)
Team—
G.
W.
L.
Pet.
A & M
8
7
1
.875
Texas
7
6
1
.857
Baylor
9
7
2
.777
Rice
8
3
5
.375
S M U
9
1
8
.111
T C U
9
1
8
.111
CONFERENCE SCORES
May 1—A & M 5, Baylor 3.
May 3—Texas 8, T C U 6.
May 2—Texas 7, S M U 0.
May 2 -A & M 16, T C U 3.
May 4—A & M 9, S M U 1.
TENNIS RESULTS
May 2—T C U 4, S M U 2.
May 2—Texas 6, Rice 0.
TRACK RESULTS
May 2—T C U 67y 2 , S M U 54^.
May 2—Rice 59y>, A & M 59, Texas
5i y 2 .
WHERE THEY PLAY
Baseball
May 7—A & M vs Rice at College.
May 7—Texas vs Baylor at Austin.
May 11—S M U vs T C U at Ft. Worth
Tennis
May 9—A & M vs Texas at College.
Golf
May 8—S M U vs A & M at Dallas.
Track
i May 8-9—Southwest Track Conference
Meet at Ft. Worth.
“A” Signal Corps
Leads Intramural
With the play ground ball season
virtually over and only golf singles
and swimming left on the calendar
the intramural sports season is rap
idly approaching an end.
Company A Signal Corps seems like
ly to take the banner with their clos
est opponent, F Battery Field Ar
tillery, trailing behind them by a mar
gin of sixty-six points. They have
held the lead almost all the year, and
with the completion of the wrestling
forged into an undisputed lead.
The following organizations
leading the race:
A Signal Corps
F Battery
E Battery
B Signal Corps
B Engineers
C Battery
D Battery
A Battery
B Battery
C Engineers
Sports Bits—
(Continued from page 41
tackier, and fast runner, but no credit
can be given a man who will not give
up those detestable cigarettes for col
lege honor.’
“W. A. Murray was coach of this
team, Hal Mosely was captain of the
team for the second consecutive year,
Charles Puryear was manager, Tom
Griffiths, assistant manager. The
team had a great season, winning
from Houston, Baylor, Tulane and
Louisiana and losing to Texas and
Sewanee.”
Camel Prize To
Be Announced Soon
College Station aspirants for prizes
in the $50,000 Camel cigarette cash
prize contest have been notified that
results of the contest will be announc
ed next week. More than two dozen
residents and students here, including
a majority of The Battalion staff,
sent in papers describing the benefits
of the new wrapping on the Camel
packages.
Thirty-eight prizes are to be award
ed, including a $25,000 first prize,
a $10,000 second prize, and a $5,000
third prize. Five awards will be of ;
$1,000 each, five of $500 each, and 25
of $100 each.
Frank B. Kellogg, former secretary
of state and author of the Kellogg
Peace Treaty, who is a Nobel Prize
winner, recently was given the degree
of doctor of laws by Occidental college
at Los Angeles.
are
738
672
610
589
583
561
550
538
523
518
THEM GOOD MALTED
MILKS
We Still Make Them!
King’s, Whitman’s and
Pangburn’s Candies
Holmes Bros.
Confectionery
Bryan Phone 221
Freshman Tossers—
(Continued from page 4)
Blinn to five. Saturday, White pitch
ed an air-tight game for nine inn
ings and was relieved by Fisher of the
first game in the tenth stanza. Rob
erts and Perrenot added nice hurling
to excellent fileding to annex the sec
ond. Weber singled with a runner on
third to bring in the winning tally in
the last of the ninth inning.
Fisk led the hitting with a triple,
a double and a single while Domingue
and Lowenstein each garnered a dou
ble and a single. Coach Lyons has de
veloped a smooth freshman club, no
errors being made in any of the games.
Friday and Saturday, the freshmen
tangle with the Lutheran Junior Col
lege of Seguin and probably Allen
Academy earlier in this week.
First Football—
(Continued from page 4)
ents of students became enlightened
concerning the plan and complained
to the college authorities that their
sons were getting “gypped.” By this
time, however, the football team was
paying its own way and a full time
coach could be employed by the newly
organized athletic department.
BRYAN NURSERY
& FLORAL CO.
BEAUTIFUL FLOWERS
FOR ALL OCCASIONS
Bryan Phone 266-R1
WEAR
Friendly Fives
The best shoe for
the price— See the
new sport styles dis
played in our College
store.
f X)aldropG(o
Bryan and College
had fallen some twenty yards behind
Holloway of Rice, on the initial lap,
Mimms regained this distance and ad
ded five yards, to which Addicks also
made an addition and Emmons breez
ed accross the finish line safely out
in front.
Slocumb and Harlan performed with
their usual brilliancy to win both hur
dle races. Harlin was victor in the
120 yard high hurdles while Slocomb
came through to win the 220 low hur
dle competition.
Harry Stiteler, conference pole
vault king, was forced to bow to Bal-
dry of Rice at the 12 foot six inch
mark. Stiteler defeated Baldry in
the conference meet last year when
he set a conference record, but an
early season injury spelled defeat
Saturday.
A & M failed to place in the 440
Dr. Lamar Jones
Dentist
X-Ray
Second Floor City National
Bank Building.
Telephones: Office 698;
Res. 464
Bryan, Texa&
In every
college town there
is one outstanding
smoking
At Illinois it’s ^
ALONG Green Street, where
■LX. campus leaders stroll ... in
the great slate-roofed fraternity
houses of Champaign . . . there is
one pipe tobacco which always rolls
up the biggest vote. At Illinois it’s
Edgeworth, every time.
A pipe—Edgeworth. That is the
smoking combination which has
won the college man. Harvard,
Cornell, Michigan, Stanford, Dart
mouth — all agree with Illinois.
Natural merit has made Edgeworth
the favorite tobacco in America’s
leading colleges and universities.
College men everywhere respond
to the appeal of pipes—packed with
cool, slow-burning Edgeworth. Be
guided by their verdict: try Edge-
worth yourself. Find it at your
nearest tobacco shop—15^ the tin.
Or, for generous free sample, ad
dress: Larus & Bro. Co., 105 S.
22d St., Richmond, Va.
EDGEWORTH
SMOKING TOBACCO
Edgeworth is a
blend of fine old bur-
leys, with its natu
ral savor enhanced
by Edgeworth’s dis
tinctive ” eleventh
process. ” Buy Edge-
worth anywhere in
two forms—” Ready-
Rubbed” and” Plug
Slice.”AIL sizes, 15#
pocket package to
pound humidor tin.
yard relay race, the 440 yard run and
the broad jump in the meet Satur
day.
Aggie Net—
(Continued from page 4)
Students of the Central Missouri
State Teachers College recently held
a kite flying contest for students of
the intermediate school.
conceeded the best contenders for the
conference net title.
This will be the first meeting of
season between the two schools. Tex
as will be represented by Barnes,
Kamrath, Taylor, and Lacoste. Capt.
Frank O’Bannon, A. M. Emery, J. L.
Cunningham, and A1 Saenger will be
on the opposite side of the nets for
A & M.
GOOD COFFEE AND
SANDWICHES AT
MRS. PARKHILL’S
Day or Night
‘till 12 p. m.
<
SERVING AGGIES
;
REMEMBER—
Since ’91
YOUR BEST FRIEND
Campus Shoe Shop
MOTHER
Over Exchange Store j
on
1
Sunday, May 10th
MAKE YOUR HEAD-
We have a nice assortment
QUARTERS WITH US
of Gifts and Cards.
WHEN IN
Call and let us help you.
Navasota
■
Colonial Cafe
Joe Kaplan & Co.
SHIRTS BREECHES
BLOUSES SLAUKS
“Tailor Made”
UNIFORM TAILOR SHOP
MENDL & HONAK, Props.
Casey Bldg.
f ' : y
LOOK
WHAT WE HAVE FOR YOUR GIRL
FRIEND’S
GRADUATION
—Aggie Pens
—Aggie Sabers
—Aggie Pennants
—Aggie Stickers
—Aggie Belts
—Aggie Pillows
—Aggie Bookends
—Aggie Desk Sets
I
You can find the very g-ift that SHE will Ap
preciate most at—
The Exchange Store
The Official Store of the College