The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 09, 1932, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    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<wu«i e««<Ha*aMm *aW Dravrr
Is* rrsr mm! Dm*! mm -
JOAN BLONDELL
WARREN WILLIAM
ANN DVORAK
BETTE DAVIS
grsja-'-tfjtsr
la
THE BATTALION
IS
Seminar
ddressed By
Mark Francis
Fraacis, Dean of the
Veterinary Medicine at A
was the speaker at
serai-waekly meeting
Seminar held in the
room Monday night.
’ subject was “The Ori-
Domeetic Animals.”
was illustrated by tea-
and covered the erigi-
our domestic cattle, sheep,
hogs, and poultry.
According to Dr Francis the ma
jority of our domestic animals were
originally native to* this country,
especially in the western part of
the United .States, as shown by
fossil Remains which have been
uneartlied in various parts of the
country. Fossil skeletons of horses,
deer, ahd dogs have been found In
the vicinity of College Station. Na-
vanota. and Brenham. Some of the
animal* migrated or were taken to
Europe and Asia before the Ice
Age and those that remained in
this country were exterminated by
the glaciers which, covered North
Ameri^i in Pleistocene time. Dr.
Francii stated. Utter the European
and A*ian animals were brought
back U North America by travel
ers and settlers and our present
strains originated with them.
The meeting was attended by an
exceptionally large group of Bryan
and College residents and many of
the late arrivers were forced to
stand throughout the talk.
theme eoag, and favorable publicity
predicts this will be an excellent
picture
Six hours in which to accomplish
his purpose and fulfill his duty
proves almost too short a time for
Warner Baxter in the picture, “Six
Hours • to Live”. This talkie has
one of, the best plots shown in re-
cynt films. John Boles and Miriam
Jordan support Warner Baxter in
this slmr.
Starting November 31, the Queen
announces a reduction in admission
prices. The new price schedule
from that date is fifteen cents
from |-2 p. m. and twenty-five
cents after two p.m
James Cagney, as a small town
boy who has become a famous auto
racer, returns home to his father
and younger brother. His younger
brothofr, following in James' faot-
steps » already the looal champion
racer. Cagney helps him along and
he gets to be one of the country's
most famous drivera. They then
break up over some giris and Cag
ney fellows the downward path.
Ann Dvorak and Joan Blondell are
Coolidge Tired of
Denying Rumors
Job With Col
Boston. Maas.—(IP)—For iff or
President Calvin Cooling* >> 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