i •* K L • ^Physician Claims He Can Give Ten Years of Life With Elixir ■„ Loodon, Cnff.—(IP)—At • Lo»- V medical exhibition which waa 'up#Md hart last weak an elixir of Ufa waa shown, the invention of an Italian phjrattian, which, it is claim ed will add tan years to the life of an old parson. The physician is said to have | qpent twenty years of research in perfecting the elixir, which consists of solutions of ffold, platinum, pal- I tedium, brain extract, iodine, for mic acid, phosphorus, and a num- , bar of other ingredients. By Lewi* Grass At the Palace Thursday, Friday, and Saturday —Cabin in the Cotton Saturday night. Sunday, and Monday-Three on a Match. Tuesday and Wednesday—Six Hours tp Live. At the Queen Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday— Chandt the Magician. HAVE you n i s the many new and beau tiful giftn we now have for Christman? ! V• A Small Deposit will reserve any J- article you might wish -AT - CALDWELL’S JEWELRY STORE IHamends Watches Silverware Bryaa, Texas Wednesday Breach of Pror Thursday — At the Assembly Hall Saturday night. <:S0 A 8:30— The Crowd Roars. Wednesday night—Unashamed. , T 1 In “Cabin in the Cottoa", Rkh- srd Barthelmess is credited with his best performance sines “Tol- able David”, the picture that made him famous. Barthelmess as the son of a poor tenant farmer rises from his surrounding)* but goes back in the end to take the side of his people. Bette Davis is the dau ghter of the rich plantation owner who befriends 1 Barthelmess and Dorothy Jordan is the poor girl whom he loves. This picture follows the trdhd ef the latest pictures in decrying unsatisfactory conditions. Warren William, Ann Dvorak. Joan Blondell, and Bette Davis are featured in Warner Brothers' “Three on a Match”. Ann. Joan, and Bette, classmates in public i school, part on graduation and meet ten years later. At this time Ann Dvorak, married to Warren Wil liams. runs off with a gangster and from this develops the plot of the story. Excellent acting, a beautiful Ec Luxe Cxef 4 * * and CcNrecTiCNccy C ATERER TO THE AGGIES APET1TE Bryan, Texan — v. WC fhe Greater Palace THURSDAY — FRIDAY — SATURDAY RlcflUfd BAfflHELMESS .ill CABIKiniWCdTroH ^ BETTE DAVIS • DOROTHY JORDAN A r.t.l Naion«| Hi) BARGAIN MATINEE 1 . 2 P. M. — 25c *te» test ^T 1 ML** as advMMa hi pnre* . .. tW r> fel ting sick and tired of being “ap pointed” president of various col leges and universities about the country. So'the following letter from him was published last week In the !B - ton American. ”1 never heard of any pro|>«Hsl that I should be president of New York University until I received your wire. “If you newspaper men would state each time that my namo is proposed for some position that there is no foundation for the re port you would always be and k would save me no trouble and correspondence “With kindest personal regards. I »»». , I : . “Calvin Coolidge” - Along lb ( Sidelines lb WILLIAMS Pitt Students Riot After Defeat Given Fighting Irish Team • j i with buckets ef water beside them. There was no deliberate attempt to dampen Pitt’S enthusiasm, but the water was kept at hand just ia Guesses o week within ing to be ■ ■4.,., / Englishmen have established a record for sobriety in the last year. With the exception of 1918, when millions of men were at war, there are fewer cases of drunkenness than at any other time in the aa- ormances are pit- Panthers a few days ago, you t^,,., m od*r* hiatory. They num- ******** ** e don’t know that good old Pitt apir* bered only 42..'UX> as compared with PITTSBURGH, Pa. (IP)—If you C. think anyone on the campus of the 4the games for this L conference are go- ! University of Pittsburgh took as than Mst week matter of course the 12 to 0 white- winners of the washing given Notre Dame by the past week’s tii« their J other and on*; they are: Texas A ay4 M 7, Rice 6. Texas Univwoty 7, T. C. U. 3. Arkansas S. M U. 6. to fall, but here it. 188,900 in 1918. end SOUTHWEST CONFERENCE GRID CHART (Week E mi ing Nov. 6, 193$) Season Standing Team W L T Pet. Pt* Op battle, will have Kyle Field ! When an I into contact ject somethi and we say especially si re th^Cor p- ield u$*fer tl so because they with them and their feet. (stable force comes an unmovable ob is going to happen, t Texas will score T. C. U 7 0 1 .938 245 Texas 1 0 .858 Iftft Rice « 1 0 858 118 A. A M. 3 3 3 .600 8> Baylor .2 3 1 .417 5^ 8. M. U. 1 4 2 .286 29 Arkansas .14 1 250 58 Conference Standing T. C. U.._ 3 0 0 1.000 78 Texas 3 0 0 1.000 7d Rice 2 1 0 .667 Si Arkansas .1 2 0 .333 39 A. A M. . 0 1 2 333 0 S. M. U. 0 2 1 .167 9 •fflffir „ 0 3 1 .126 4 Last Week’s Results Texas 19, Baylor 0. A. A M . 0. S M <1. 0 Rice 12. Arkansas 7. T. C. U. 27. Simmons 0 This Week’s Games (With Last Year’s Scored) 17 True, after the first celebrations of the event, the students bowed to the quiet Pennsylvania Sabbath Texas Teel 21, Baylor IS. • n < 1 pretty sober (mentally ' Louisiana diate 7. Centenary 3. and otherwise) over the week-end. Because oC (he improved show- But when Monday mornmg rolled int of the IbW Mrtut th. * roo “* ^ “*■ MunUn,, ..SlU. I... U«, I*™'!' U> . *£ ''‘T’°Z2 «. pick-t tew,, th. owi.. clow ' ,ad ^ ' simply had adjourned to the down town street corners, and all the college authorities could do was to say it was all right and declare the day a holiday Pittsburgh police then began to find themselves busy, for the stu dents, not s tew of whom were co eds. began storming the city's the- ale.*. In one small riot four under graduates were arrested and .targed with destroying property >r creating a disturbance Other students were invading the campus of Carnegie Tech, near by, but students of that institution, mindful of the routing of their own team by Notre Dame the week before, found it just a bit difficult to get hilarious about the affair. The Tech students looked oh with slightly pained and somewhat en vious expressions, giving their call ers what might be termed a cool reception. The Pitt revelers found doors locked and Tech stalwarts looking silently down from upper windows, Yew Ryea or Yew Glaaese, Sat PAYNE, Optemetriat k Bldg. Bryaa. Tea. one tourhdov^f against the Frogs, who in turn 'Will get cloqe enough to send in th^fr sure kicker. Tiner. for their onlj9 score. Rice barelj> did defeat the Rasor- 35 ; backs and dc$iFively beat‘the Mus- 47 tangs, so chai*#* are that the Ark- 50 ansa* boys pill win their second 60 conference gl^fie of the season a- 67 gainst the Indies in Dallas* 86 Texas Tecw] will probably take Baylor’s nuipjer while the unde- 12 feated Centeo*i\ 'ientUmen will 12 meet a *troi% forward wall in the 26 | Tigers of Bi£f Jones from Louis- Duke university SCHOOL OF MEDICINE DURHAM N C Fmmr larma W atrSM wsoka ars stop «Mk rsar. TSmh smo te tofc— ••••••' iM.D. la t**M rsors) M Uww MnM war b* la*mi cadi y«ar (M-D. la bar rsan.) TW Mdrsar* rsa«ir»»—u ara bbfflsiwi. rkararWr aaO at baW Wo yaw ml Mltao* wot*. lartaWao tW ■stOM SM7 W aWalaaS (raaa tW DOM. s. Tigers of B iana State. Lloyd G norarrt of makes an well as"does the Dallas have determi pup. Th* in the write- game: “The Friday at Fort Worths T. C> U■ i ^pyia Bu (0) v*. Texas (10). ti fui w |,ite Friday at College Station: Rice (0) vis. A. A M. (7b Friday at Lubbock: Baylor (32) vs. Tech (0). Saturday at Dallffa: (42) vs. Arkansas (II) seems to he ig- Sex of Rei'eille and of comipission aa sport writer* of r who 'seems to the specie of our B* are as follows of the I’ony-Aggie sicced their vl- scot on the beau- W. U. LAWRENCE D. C. YORK Denttsu G reeaweed Ceart New Urslbo »ot«olb Court 8 U. SEASON’S RE( ORDS ridden by the fair Mustang coe#, " 1 m * I Reveille dfi have fun on the gridiron better halves, and prob ably received^,more attention over the radio .tl an'any dog .that ever T. C. U. 14 Texas Teachara...^.. .4.— s .& s. u^ iU. 55 Daniel Baker 1 ..L ... 34 Arkansas 17 .A. A 68 Austin College 27 Baylor — 27 Simmons Texas attended a f< was a proud and it took - 2 ' about thirty 3; classmen to t the girls and Eric Linden younger brother. the “Unpahamed” is a new court room drama by Bayard Veiller. au thor of the “Trial of Mary Dugan”. Helen Twelvetree*. as Joan Ok-I. ■, daughter of a millionaire, sscrifu- w her reputation to save her broth er, plffyed by Robert Young, after he had Killed her lovet. Monroe Owalef, John Miljan, Jean Hersholt and Lewis Stone are other mem bers of the cast of the presentation. Students Earn Part of School Expenses Through Dairy Work Each year a number of students specialising in Dairy Husbandry are given an opportunity to con tribute toward the defrayment of their college expenses. This year eleven students are employed in the college creamery to take care of the handling and processing of milk and the manufacture of the ice cream, butter, and Cheese, used by the college. Six mdi' are work ing regularly as milkers and about aa many more are doing various jobs in the dairy and on the (ana Of the students having jobs srHh the Dairy Husbandry Department, eighteen occupy quarters provided by the department and six others live it the dormitories. During the past summer housing facilities were greatly improved and the old loo house was added to the email colony of “shacks" located west of the Southern Pacific railroad track*, according te A. L. Darnell. Professor of Dairy Husbandry The departanent requires that all students in its employ be property rlasstfird scholastically ami thd authorities have placed al 26 Daniel Baker 4.... Oj 6. Centenary ...13; 65 Missouri 0 1?.., Oklahoma r'-- -H - J 4... 101 18 Rice ^.^..„..y. / ....i 4—' « U S. M. U..../. I ...... 8 19 Baylor i .... Baylor 1""*l 32 St. Edwards ..i. 0 18. . Loyola - 1— \i 0 6 Arkansas ... .1.. 20 |0 - A. A M. L. 0 0 TCU. n 9. Texas J. —J— 8. M. U. 0 N. Texas Teachers . 0 0 Texas Tech - ... 8 0 Rice 4....I8 16 Syracuse i—4 L. 6 7.. On tens r>' —i—.—► 18 6. Texas ...— 14 0 A. A M Rice —*—•«-** 0 20 Texas A. A L 10 L. 8. U ) i IS.. S. M. U— i....-., 14. Loyola —i~~u. 8. Texas ...4.—.. ■ 41. Creighton 12.„.ArkaMffi . A A M ', 7. ..Texas Tech. . 8. .Jfeuthff|UffftWff — 14. Tulane V-f- 26 Sam Houston 1 ... 14. Texas A. A I {— • T. C U. — 0 Baylor — 0 Centenary 8 .8. M. U II game. She also of the parade, persuasiveness of men and upper- the little quad ruped on theftrain when a deputy sheriff insisted upon removing “her”, during (the return trip to \, Aggieland, JC * j One of the ^dtural sights at Ati- f > F'RIENDLY SERVICE f ■ CAMPUS UAPUEP SliCP Y Bid*. HAIKi I TS 36c gie football been a vipW Bill Sterli in the past has rnted by Captain Itfressed in his big [ 0 Hendricks 19. Missouri Mi—. 1 11 T. C. U. 20 Baylor A L, S. U j. 7. Rice L Lesdin Player Oliver, hb, TCU 9 Koy. fb, Texaa 8 HHIiard, hb. Texas 8 Brannon, qb, TCU 8 Spearman, hb, TCU 6 Stafford, hb, Texas 6 Dominguc, AAM 6 Wallace, bb. Rice 5 Dennis, qb. TCU t Thrasher, hb. Rice 4 LaForge, hb. Ark. 3 Biddle, hk, Ark 3 18 Adjutant GrtWMl of th* state, he has appeared^ the games in reg ulation army Uniform. At Dallas Saturday, howler, he was Captain Bill again and.tjtore the clothes that distinguished this tall ex-Aggie from aH‘the (htps"idcr of the fans. Wilson Planned To Resign If Defeated Secretary Reveals New YorkIP) President Wil son, during his hte* campaign, plan ned. if defeated* I® resign and put his Republtc^gP opponent into of fice immediattejy after election te facilitate thp Ration’s efforts in the World Wpr crisis, according to a revelation made here last week by Joeeph wwv. secretary to the war-time^JNrMid* n t- Hie plan, Jhltnulty revealed te the United was to prevent the customsi^ delay between the date of electiNl and the date of inauguration of the President on March 4 which* In tim* of crisis, might delay Handicap the gov- erpffMfft. H* . Tumulty said Mr. Wilson planned to appoint HM'opponent, Charles Evans Hughe*, now chief justice of the Unikfd State^ Supreme Court, to the past of secretary of state in the C9fnt the Repablicaas won. Then tb4'president and vice president woid^ have i«iigned. au tomatically placing the secretary of state in ti*;White House I like theTyftem of government in the United States, rhisfly be cause H is ffffff-dsmocratk. I like the way a stay*, no HEAR the Ml • :ii ’ as well game as see i it Foster Jobs it of Strict enfosi requiring thtf sfce of aaprsd art in Catholic Churls has been ordered w Pope Pis*-, Who h^s asserted the* he will Ha* tolse^j «H»a- Biodaro srchljdrtare and painting |b churches f I •rched on the top row can knowj ju*t what Football fans pei happens on every I i The Western Electric Public Address System makes it possible. An announcer give* a running descrip tion which carries to every seat in the stadium. Picking up, amplifying and distributing sound. Public Address equipment also serves the college lecture auditorium, the gymnasium, the larger . halls. A product of telephone research, its perform* ance is still another example of Western Eleo j \ 41 f f i ; . ^[b. jl trie’s leadership in sound transmission apparatus. I I • » H ' r 1 i t * I i Western Electric Parckoj { I Manu/actmrers Purchasers , , , Distributors SINGS ISS1 POB THS BBLL BTBTBM f