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C ainsnwm R THE AUBURN SPIRIT
VOL. XXXIX
AUBURN, ALABAMA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1925 NUMBER 12
SEASON TO END WITH 25TH AUBURN-TECH GAME THANKSGIVING
AUBURN REPRESENTED AT
WORLD COURT CONFERENCE
Four Students Attend Intercollegiate
Meet in Atlanta;|
Plans Discussed
RAT BIBLE
SENATOR J. THOMAS
HEFLIN DELIVERS A
STIRRING ADDRESS
Upperciassmen who have not gotten
a Rat Bible from the "Y" office
I
are requested to do so. There are a
number of the books left for those
"Students are not,expressing them- d e j ; r i n g t h e m a n d t h e y a r e t o b e h a d
selves on our National and Interna- ^ ^ a s k i n g Q0 b y t h e Y office
tional policies as they should," was under L a n g d o n Hall and sign on the
the opinion of 225 delegates attend- d o t t e d H n e T h e R a t B i b l e , t h u y e ap
ing the Southern Student Conference a r e f u „ of ; n t e r e i t ; n g m a t t e r a nd
on the World Court, held in Atlanta i c o n t a i n „ r e c o r d o f a l , e v e n t , o n t ne
on November 6th-8th. Forty-five , ^ ^ c a l e n d e p.
schools and colleges of Alabama,
One of Auburn's Noblest Sons
Returns to Talk On
"New South"
REV. McLEOD MAKES GEN. SIBERT GIVES
FAREWELL ADDRESS PORT AMENDMENT
TO STUDENTS THURS. TALK AT CONVO.
Methodist Pastor Leaves
Take Troy Pastorate
To
P r e d i c t s Mobile As South's
G r e a t e s t F u t u r e Port
MOREY MEN MAKING FINAL
PLANS FOR TECH TORNADO
THANKSGIVING
Georgia, Florida, and South Carolina ;
' r i Z r n r ^ r r MISS DOBDS SPEAKS
gates present.
The two fundamental DUrposes of
the conference were: ( l r T o create
an incentive for thought and study
among the students on the subject ^ ^ DM^ socia, d i r e c t o r>
of the entrance of the United States A , a b a m a P o l y t e c h n i c institute, today
AT CONVOCATION
TUESDAY MORNING
iiito the World Court, which question
is to come up before the United
States Senate on December 17th,
1925 for open debate. (2) To concentrate
thought and study of Southern
Students on National and International
affairs.
Thirty-five such student
decried the tendency of many persons
to make a mere show of power
and authority. Miss Dobbs was the
speaker at freshmen convocation.
President Spright Dowell presided
and read to the freshmen the Presi-
! dent's proclamation on the proper oh
confer- s e r v e n c e 0f educational week.
"There must be something deeper
and finer in our characters than a
mere show of power and authority,"
person must be fired first with a
spirit of moral earnestness, second
with a high regard for intellectual
beauty, and third with a quiet but
determined energy of will."
ences are being held oyer the country
this fall, led by the Student Movement
of America.
A regional committee to continue j M i s s Dob j jS declared. "It is what we
the work of the Atlanta Conference < r e a n y a r e—w n a t we stand for—and
was created with headquarters in j n o t w h a t w e say> t h a t c o u n t s.
Atlanta. Four members were elec- ,<In o r d e r t o a c q u i r e a real per-ted
from Georgia and. each tff the s o n a i ; t y an<i strength of character a
other three states selected one representative
to serve on the committee.
At the closing session of this conference
the' following resolution was
passed by a unanimous vote: "Resolved,
that we foster an impartial
educational campaign on our campuses
regarding the World Court."
It is the plan of the Student Movement
of America to take a straw
vote on the attitude of the students
toward the World Court. This vote
is being conducted by The NEW
STUDENT and will be published by
the Associated Press, ,if in by December
10th, 1925. The vote in Auburn
will be taken the first week in
December. ' ~
Visit the World Court literature
table in the library and don't fail to
read the editorial of this paper on
"WHAT IT IS."
COOLIDGE IS RIGHT
C. H. Turk, a member of the class
of '25 was a visitor to the Village
during the week. Turk was accompanied
by Mr. Weissinger, of the
Southern Bell, who delivered an address
before the senior elecs.
President Coolidge expressed himself
in no certain terms when he declared,
"What the youth of this
country needs is not more public
control through governmental action
but more home training through
parental action." This statement was
made before the International convention
of the Y. M. C. A. in Washington:
The solution of the great problem
of crime lies, as the President stated
in the proper training of our young.
It was appropriated that the President
of the United States should
commend the Y. for its efforts in this
field. It is hoped that the Y. will
be able to render even greater service
in this field in the future.
CO-EDS STAGE TENNIS TOURNEY
STARTING WITH GAMES THURS.
Starting Thursday afternoon at
four o'clock and playing through
Friday, Saturday and Sunday afternoon
the'first matches of the Co-ed
Tennis Tournament was held. The
second matches were played yesterday
and the finals will be played off
after the Thanksgiving holidays.
The results of the first matches
are:
1. Sudie Dowdwell 6-3; 6-1.
Allye Hughes 0-0; 0-0.
2. Clara Ellen Yarbrough 5-0; 7-5.
Catherine Hare 0-0; 0-0.
3. Elizabeth Mardre 6-0; 6-0.
Lillian Dunn 0-0; 0-0.'
4. Phonsie Thompson 6-4; 6-4.
Lucille Totty 5-7.
5. Rubye Powell 6-0; 6-1.
Anne Catherine Nunn 0-0; 0-0.
6. Maryline Cauthen 0-0; 0-0.
Grace Gardner 6-0; 6-0.
7. Rubye Russell 6-3; 6-2. •
Mattie Mae Allen 0-0; 0-0.
8. Emma Gerhardt 6-4; 6-1.
Eloise Floyd 6-4.
The pairings for the second matches
are: Rubye Russell vs Emma Gerhardt;
Rubye Powell vs Grace Gardner;
Elizabeth Mardre vs Phonsie
Thompson. The referees for these
matches will be George Cunningham
Dudley Trawick, Porter LeMay and
Foster Thomas. The prizes to be given
to the winner and runnerup of the
Tournament will be I'One hundred
and one famous Poems" offered by
Burtons and a choice of college souvenirs
given by W. D. Gibson.
The matches afe being played on
the Alpha Tau Omega; Lambda Chi;
Sigma Kappa Nu, and Kappa Sigma
Courts.
"The attention of the entire
world is focused on the* south today,
as it is producing every thing in the
agricultural kingdom, and will probably
rank as the most progressive
section of our country in the near
future." The Honorable Thomas Hef-lin,
United States Senator, declared
to an over taxed audience at Langdon
Hall tonight.
President Spright Dowell presented
the speaker as a statesman rather
than a politician, and one who has
always promoted the best interests
of his country at all times. Major E.
P. Smith, army chaplain lead the de
votion.
.Senator Heflin continued, "The
south has answered the supreme call
of sacrifice on all occasions and the
ideals of the south will always main
tain the liberty of the world when all
the rest fails. The story of the
south can't be told in one evening
not even one major part of it, as
starting first with this great wilderness
and tracing its history to this
present day would require the work
of many men enumerated in numerous
volumes.
"On a recent trip to the New Eng-lang
states I was surprised at some
of their notable achievements, but
they can easily claim many deeds
as they have been the center of many
early events. It is very hard to tell
the souths contribution to civilization,
as it has given so many great
and famous men toward the furtherance
of this great country. When
ever the occasion presents itself a
southern man is always ready to
grasp it.
The speaker traced the development
of the south starting at first
as a wilderness with a vast expanse
of forests, with the dominence of
the Indian, then the first white settlers
came, and by their perseverance
and bravery they started the first
steps toward a great modern civilization.
He told of the many natural
resources that were yet unharnessed
waiting for the coming" of men. With
out such names as Patrick Henry,
Randolph, Lee, Thomas Jefferson,
Washington, Jackson, Polk, and Wilson,
the world would have been handicapped
in its further progress, and
all these were southern men.
"We are blest with . the snowy
fields of cotton but the futher production
of cotton is being hampered
by the abuse cotton is now receiving.
The evil that has cut the price of the
cotton market must be checked, as
I want those who'produce cotton to
get more than a few benefits from its
sale but to realize a good profit.
When the senate convenes I will do
my best to help clean it up and to
see that the south gets all that is
coming to it, also that no one is
burdened by unjust taxation.
"Those who are envious of the
south might ite well get over this
jealousy immediately. God only
knows what the future of the south
will be in the next few years. It will
probably be the richest and most progressive
section in this country in
the next twenty five years. When
people knock the south they are
knocking the supremacy of the Anglo
Saxon blood."
In conclusion Senator Heflin related
the happy days he spent here
as a student, praising the wonderful
faculty and the wonderful work they
stood for. He praised the wonderful
progress the institution has made
under the present administration,
hoping for its continued success to
The young people of this generation
and the hext are going to dig
through the debris of religious traditions
to find the realities of life,
and in this is the hope of Christianity
and of the world, the Rev. Norman
McLeod, pastor of the Auburn
As Thanksgiving draws near our
Prophesying Mobile as the souths 'thought, naturally turn Ho the greaf-greatest
future port, handling her j e , t of games, the Auburn-Tech class-full
quota of commerce', and con- j ; c ; n Atlanta. But do not forget to
necting all railroads at a nominal
cost, General William L. Sibert, native
son of Alabama and a distingui-
Methodist church, declared in
farewell address here in Langdon
hall. The Rev. Mr. McLeod has been
transferred from Auburn to the pastorate
of the First Methodist church,
Troy.
In introducing Mr. McLeod, Dr.
Spright Dowell, president of Alabama
Polytechnic institute,' paid high tribute
to his services at Auburn during
the last six years. Mr. McLeod
n i s | shed army officer in charge of the
Mobile Port Development declared,
"that this port is an aid to cheaper
pause and give a serious thought to
the real significance of the day, of
the many things we are to be thankful
for, and the blessings that are
ours.
Let us be thankful flor those brave
commodities, but for its continued j a n d fearless men whose struggle
success depends the aid of the people ! m a d e it possible for us to have the
of Alabama." ^ [greatest nation in the world, for
General Sibert was the principal those great leaders who have builded
speaker at the convocation exercises! for us a fine institution, an Alma
for upperciassmen in the college ! Mater for which each and everyone
chapel, Langdon Hall. f of us are thankful for and proud of.
"The port is a facility that will
came to the Auburn pastorate in 1919! Play a great part in thfe future of
and has therefore served two years ' Alabama as it has so splendidly done
longer than the period allotted to ! to the past. This great development
Methodist ministers. He has been j is needed in Alabama and will be
closely identified with the college j completed with the help of every in-work
at Auburn. i dividual in the state. Alabama is
"The younger generation will build destined to become a great export
the finest civilization the world has j country of manufactured goods,
ever enjoyed," Mr. McLeod said.! "The success of this state depends
"They are trying to find reality and upon the educated youth of today,
certainty. The younger people are and I appeal to you, as engineers to
One More Day Remains Before
Game; Many Stars to
Make Last Stand
Surely, if that band of people who
first set aside Thanksgiving day
could stop and offer their Thanks
even when their safety was jeopardized
we, who have the comforts and
luxuries of life can do the same as
graciously flor the things that are
religious and they will dig through
the debris of religious traditions to
find the realities of life. It will cost
the blood of coming generations to
make the world come to Jesus Christ
and salvation. We must have ideals
and have faith in ourselves to believe
our ideals can be put across. For one
is best suited to make sacrifices
when he has faith in God and himself.
" *
"It has been the pleasure of my
life to be associated with young Auburn
men for the past six years. I
have complete faith in the younger
generation as a result of this association.
Many of our speakers say the
world is in a bad way, that the war
has left the world with a terrible reaction.
This is, for the most part, true
and it is going to be up to the younger
generation to save the world from
demoralization and chaos. The young
people are religious in spite of all
the assertions which are made to
the contrary."
PAVING ON MILLER
AVENUE UNDER WAY
The latest forward step made in
Auburn was the beginning of the
pavement of Miller Avenue. Within
a short time Auburn will be an erstwhile
'Village of the Plains,' the village
being supplemented by a rapidly
growing metropolis with the appearances
of a regular city.
The portion of Miller Avenue being
paved extends from College
Street to South Gay. The work will
be completed within the next month.
go out in the world and find a place
for the unlimited capital in this state.
"I have been requested to give you
my philosophy of life and I would
say that the important thing in life
is to work, rear a family and teach
your children to work. Every man
has a divine urge to do something
great, and his has caused scientists
and inventors to give their whole
life toward their work.
"We have done considerable dredging
work in Mobile so as to make it
always safe should a serious gulf
storm ever arise. Many acres of land
has been bought following the plan
of ushering in a greater port development
for Mobile.
MISS RUBYE POWELL
HEAD WOMEN'S A. A.
STEERS CAPTURE
PRIZES AT FAIR
AT MONTGOMERY
At a meeting of the Womans' Ath-lletic
Association last Monday night
Rubye Powell was elected captain
of the girls' basketball team. Celeste
Nesbit was appointed to act in the
capacity of manager.
The Co-eds have a number of promising
candidates out and from the
material on hand they should turn
out a winning combination. Practice
started Monday night with Bill Mc-
Kinn'ey coaching the Tigrettes. Pra-tice
is held each night from six
thirty to eight o'clock.
DAUGHTER IS BORN TO
LIEUT. AND MRS. C. E. PEASE
Lt. Crowell E. Pease, F. A., D.
O. L., U. S. A., and Mrs. Pease are
receiving congratulations on the
birth of a daughter, Joyce Marilyn,
on September 17, 1925, at Walter
Reed Hospital, Washington, D. C.
—Army and Navy Journal.
Lt. Pease is on duty at Auburn
with the R. O. T. C. Department
here when
EXPLOSIVE BEING GlVEN
OUT TO ALABAMA FARMERS
Ag Engineering distributes 165,000
pounds explosive to farmers of state
past two months.
Through the department of Agricultural
Engineering the farmers of
the state in the last two months have
bought 165,000 pounds of pyrotol,,
war salvage explosive. This pyrotol
is used for blasting purposes, in
clearing - land, blasting ditches and
etumps, and a number of other farm
needs. L. C. LeBron on the Agricultural
Engineering has charge of this
work.
take care of the needs of education
that are presented in the south today.
Among the many prizes won at
the recent State Fair which was held
in Montgomery, was a reserve championship
on a Hereford steer shown
at this fair. Nine other steers which having been assigned
represented the three major breeds
of beef cattle, Hereford, Shorthorn,
and Angus were shown.
These steers after being shown j
at the State Fair were sold at public
auction to Swift and Company of
Moultrie, Georgia at an average
price of twelve and one half cents a
pound. These steers were shipped
immediately to Moultrie, Georgia,
where they were put on exhibition at
a County fair at this place for a
week. Swift and Company are shipping
these steers to various points
throughout' the South to be put on
exhibition to demonstrate to the
Southern farmer that prim^beef cat-
With the last game of the season
previous to the annual Tech classic,
relegated to' the rim, distant, but
somewhat pleasant past, the Tigers
are beginning to turn the wheels in
preparation for their time honored
enemy, Georgia Tech, whom they
are to face for the 25th time when
the whistle blows at Grant Field Turkey
Day.
A glance* at the record discloses
that since these two first met in
' 1892 the Plainsmen have 15 contests
' chalked in the win column, while the
Tornado has administered the bitter
:dose 8 times with one game, that of
1923, resulting in a deadlock.
From the year that these two
started operations through 1914 the
Tigers have almost a clean slate with.
but one defeat, and 11 to 0 victory
for Tech in 1906, to mar an otherwise
perfect record. During this
period, covering 15 engagements the
Techsters were able to tally but S5
points, while the Plainsmen rolled
up* over 400. Howwrer, stuo ttttt
date the Tiger ledger hat be*
lean on points, and has but owe -victory
recorded, that of 1919, when
Donohue's men surprised the skeptics
by accumulating 14 points to 7 for
Tech. Meanwhile the Atlantans have
been having things their way since
the '14 season which may be termed
the turning point, and have rolled up
some healthy scores on their Bengi
adversaries.
The worst drubbing handed the
Jackets was administered in 1892,
when they were smothered to the
tune of 96 to 0. The largest score
to be run up by Tech was in 1917
when the powerful Jacket machine
ran rough shod over the Tigers 68
to T.
For the past three years the games
have been closely contested. In 1921
the Tigers, after winning all of their
previous games were forced out of
the championship by the Alexander-men.
The following year, under the
tutorship of "Boozer" Pitts, the Bengal
squad took the field intent on
holding the enemy. Though the Tischool
opened in September. He re gers were able to gather but a lone
turned recently from Washington ac- I first down, the succeeded in keep-companied
by Mrs. Pease and Joyce : ing the -scenery under their own tim-
Marilyn. They will make their home Ibers frem the aspiring eyes of the
in Auburn. (Continued on Page 3.)
GUIDE TO FRESHMEN MAKING
TRIPS TO FOOTBALL GAMES
NO. -ATLANTA, GA.
Georgians. Looking at it from this
tie can be produced in the South and angle it is hard to tell just what it
in Alabama. is the gate to, although, of course,
Part of these steers were donated j to a visitor, Atlanta is an enchant-to
the college by breeders of the state ;ing city, as it is the gateway to the
and part were bred on the college l fair and prosperous and fertile and
Atlanta has often been fondly . ing good football game, a lot of pret-called
the Gate City by enthusiastic ty girls and other scenery.
Atlanta is quite an industrial town,
farm. They have been used for class
work here at the college in Judging
and Beef Cattle Management..
A reserve championship was won
on the Hereford steer while first
prize was captured by the senior
yearling. First, second, third, fourth,
and fifth prizes were won by the
junior yearlings. Senior calves won
first, second, and third prizes. Quite
a number of the prizes offered for
beef cattle were won.
honest and industrious and beautiful
and what not state of Alabama,
(adv.)
However we will pass over- the
question of whether or not Atlanta
is the gate city, although the question
admits of some argument as
Washington, Cincinnatti, St.Louis and
other hamlets all claim a similar title.
Be that as it may Atlanta is a very
nice city and should be visited by
everybody that wants to see a cork-manufacturing
stone mountains, golf
champions, all-Southern fullbacks
and other by-products. It is also
quite a railroad center, and posses-es
two passenger terminals that resemble
nothing so much in beauty,
size, and purity of architecture as
the magnificent W. of A. Terminal_
at Shorters, Ala. The city also boasts
of quite an extensive street car system
on which an occasional car op-.,
erates, and has a police force that,
according to some Auburn students,
(we know not where they obtained
their information) is unduly active
and efficient. They probably have
(Continued on Page 3)
V
L
Pag • 2 THE PLAINSMAN
Sty? fHgittfflttsut
r
7
i
Published weekly by the students of the
Alabama Polytechnic Institute, Auburn,
Alabama.
Subscription rate $2.00 per year (33issues)
Entered as second class matter at the Post
Office, Auburn.
STAFF FOR 1925-26*
E. D. Ball Editor-in-Chief
J. F. Thompson Business Manager
H. G. Grant Faculty Adviser
EDITORIAL STAFF
W. D. Horton Associate Editor
W. D-. Baughman Managing Editor
S. H. Lynne _'_ Assistant Managing Editor
J. F. Hixon Assistant Managing Editor
J. P. McArdle Sports Editor
G. D. Salter News Editor
Rowe Johnson Assistant News Editor^
W. R. Hardin Asst. News Editor
Grace Gardner Co-ed Editor
J. M. Jenkins Alumni Editor
Red Russell Humor Editor
W. C. Wall Current Event Editor
C. D. Greentree Exchange Editor
George Cunningham Feature Writer
REPORTERS
H. Fulwiler, Jr. C. C. Phillips
Katherine Hare . R. G. Lurie
W. R. Hardin W. C. Hurt
J. M. Wills R. C. Cargile
L. O. Braceen
BUSINESS STAFF
Alvin Smith __ Assistant Business Manager
C. B. Burgoyne Advertising Manager
W. G. Sellers Circulation Manager
William Frank.-Asst. Circulation Manager
All articles for THE PLAINSMAN to
be published the current week must be
handed to the Plainsman'office not later
than Wednesday night. Articles must be
double spaced typewritten. The office is
room 4 under Langdon Hall.
TELEPHONE NUMBER 238—W
AUBURN IN THE PRESS
Recognizing the great forward step
made at Auburn and in the Engineering
world by the completion of Erskine Ram-
^"•say Engineering Building much space in
the leading industrial journals of the
country has been devoted to favorable
comment on the Building.
The Industrial Index, a manufacturing
journal dealing with manufacturing in the
South carries a half page cut of Ramsay
Building accompanied by a three page
article.- The, Illinois Central Magazine has
a half page cut of the building and also
a group picture of Dr. Dowell, Erskine
Ramsay, Victor Hanson,, Dr. Elliott, Dr.
Burrus, and president Markham, President
of the Illinois Central. In the Magazine
is a description of Ramsay Building and
the account of the dedication exercises.
n the October number of the Manufacturers
Record an article regarding the new
addition was published. We are justly
proud of the most modern engineering
building and of the nationwide recognition
that has been given us by the leading
journals of the country.
GLORIOUS
All things come to those who wait. And
to those who have stood by and manned
—A the_cheering guns, whether the Tigers were
winning or losing received a reward Saturday
that they will never forget. A reward
in the form of the South's greatest
football game would be putting it only
too-mildly. Those fighting felines with
all kinds of dope doping them to fall before
the Commodores, braced themselves,
forgot the Georgia game and meandered
Ki onto Rickwood and proved themselves to
be the stuff that Tigers are made of.
We can all say that the Orange and Blue
gridders, with the exception of the quarterback,
will be long remembered for what
thtey did and not what they said. Needless
toTSay the signal caller will be remembered
for both.
While we are on the subject Dr. Ross
enlightened us at the mass meeting as to
jr the source of the yell. "Here we come
in a big caboose." Heres the way we were
'reminded' of it. It was back in 18 some-j
. thing or other and Auburn was scheduled
.-= to play Vandy in Montgomery. The only
passenger train was late and a special train
consisting of an engine and caboose was
chartered to carry the team and students
to Montgomery. When the special pulled
out from the station at Auburn there were
some one hundred and fifteen souls hanging
on various parts of the caboose and
, engine. When the special reached Mont-
_ gomery the rooters paraded the streets
singing the well known yell.
Dr. Ross was a member of the team
making this trip. Incidentally Auburn won
the game.
delay, appointed December 17, 1925, as
the date for1 beginning what is expected to
be the final consideration of the long-delayed
Harding-Hughes-Coolidge World
Court proposal.
Text of Senate Resolution 5
Whereas the President, under date of
February 24, 1923, transmitted a message
to the Senate accompanied by a letter
from the Secretary of State, dated
February 17, 1923, asking the favorable
advice and consent of the Senate to the
adhesion on the part of the United States
to the protocol of December 16, 1920, of
signature of the statute for the Permanent
Court of International Justice, set out in
the said message of the President (without
accepting or agreeing to the optional clause •
for compulsory jurisdiction contained
therein), upon the conditions and understandings
hereafter stated, to be made a
part of the instrument of adhesion: Therefore
be it
Resolved (two-thirds of the Senators present
concurring,) That the Senate advise
and consent to the adhesion on the part
of the United States to the said protocol
of December 16, 1920, and the adjoined
statute for the Permanent Court of International
Justice (without accepting or
agreeing to the optional clause for compulsory
jurisdiction contained in said
statute,) and that the signature of the
United States be affixed to the said protocol
subject to the following reservations
and understandings, which are hereby
made a part and condition of this resolut
i o n , namely:
1. That such adhesion shall not be taken
pto involve any legal relation on the part
of the United States to the League of Nations
or the assumption of any obligations
by the United States under the covenant
of the League of Nations constituting part
1 of the treaty of Versailles.
2. That the United States shall be permitted
to participate through representatives
designated for the purpose and upon
an equality with the other States, members,
respectively, of the council and assembly
of the League of Nations, in any and all
proceedings of either the council or the
assembly for the election of judges or deputy
judges of the Permanent Court of
International Justice or for the filling of
vacancies.
3. That the United States will pay a fair
share of the expenses of the court as determined
and appropriated fr<5m time to
-time by the Congress of the United States.
4. That the United States shall be in no
manner bound by an advisory opinion of
the Permanent Court of International Justice
not rendered pursuant to a" request
in which it, the United States, shall expressly
join in accordance with the statute
for the said court adjoined to the protocol
of signature of the same to which the
United States shall become signatory.
The signature of the United States to
the said protocol shall not be affixed until
the powers signatory to such protocol shall
have indicated, through an exchange of
notes, their acceptance of the foregoing
reservations and understandings as a part
and a condition of adhesion by the United
States to the said protocol.
In the opinion of the local World Court
committee the above Senate Resolution
5 known as the Harding-Hughes-Coolidge
plan is the most simple and conservative
suggestion as' to what" the United States
should do about the World Court. The
first four reservations were drawn by
Secretary Hughes. They protect us from
inadvertently joining the League and give
us our full rights with other nations in
the election and payment of judges. The
fourth reservation prevents the courrt
from being altered without our consent.
The fifth reservation embodies a further
safeguard recommended by President Cool-idge
in his Message to Congress, December
3rd 1924, providing that the United
States be not bound by an advisory opinion
unless the United States has joined in
the request for it.
In other words the above plan does not
take us into the League. It does not give
the court universal jurisdiction over us.
It does not commit us to pacifism or to
any attempt to "Outlaw War." It does give
what encouragement we can to the World
Court and leaves our future course to take
care of its self.
not be watched, that he should be put on
his honor and that the Honor System be
jjiven a fair chance.
Now there are some professors that do
not watch their class while calling the roll
and in a known case the class suffers a
decrease of about ten per cent, sometimes
more or less, of the total marked present.
Here is the condition of the professor giving
the Honor System a square chance to
work. How is he rewarded for the confidence
he puts in his class?. He is double-crossed.
The Honor System does not work
here for the same reason that it fails in
other classes. Some professors put a quiz
up and leave the room. Then there is in
many cases the passing of a few words,
advice and help between students. Even
when he is in the room there is a twisting
of the paper so one's friend may see it.
Those professors who watch their class
have become acquainted with the existing
conditions. They realize that there are
students in every section who cannot be
wholly put on their honor. On a foreign
language quiz a student copied the whole
thing Out of his book while the professor
was in the rooim This happens also in
history only too often. This same fellow
has been known to cheat on four quizzes
this semester. The Honor System calls
for "evidence" before conviction. The
evidence in. this case absolutely refused
to make a statement before the Honor Committee
stating that he did not want to
cause any hard feeling with his friend*
Yet he says that he is a supporter of
the Honor System. Right there is the
hitch. It is supported by a mob of insurgents
who are causing discontent and
unrest to spread thruout the campus, students
who are here with no definite goal
in view, haying the minds of mere babes,
and who are never able to marshall enough
nerve to stand up for something they know
is right. Truly and well these should be
pitied because they have not yet reached
that shallow depth of thought that makes
them realize they are cheating themselves
most of all. This is a most deplorable condition
and one that requires some deep
« BULLETIN BOARD «
Tuesday, November 24.
7:00 P. M. The Wilsonian, Wirt and
Websterian Literary Societies will meet
in their regular rooms in the Main Building.
Wednesday, November 25.
7:00 P. M. The A. I. E. E. will meet
in the Engineering Building.
7:00 P. M. The Pharmaceutical Society
meets in the Pharmacy Building.
7:00. P. M. The Student Agricultural
Society meets in the Ag. Building.
' Thursday, Turkey Day.
8.30 A. M. The Football Special will
leave the Grand Central Depot for Atlanta.
12:30 P. M. A general feasting thruout
the Nation the noble gobbler being the victim.
2:00 P. M. Football Matinee in Langdon
Hall.
2:00 P. M. The Auburn Tigers will
clash with the Golden Tornado on Grant
Field.
Friday, Saturday and Sunday.
Most Auburnites will be having a big
time at their homes.
Monday, November 30
8:00 A. M. Regular classes begin after
much feasting and enjoyment.
6:30 P. M. Normal Class of the Student
Friendship Council meets in the Y. M. C. A.
7:00 P. M. The Evans Literary Society
meets in the Main Building.
thought and attention somewhere.
"Give a student a chance to be on his
honor and he wont think he has the right
to crib, that he'would if he was^Watched."
Any student who thinks,jh#-1ias the right
to cheat under any circumstances or on
account of some action on the part of
anyone, may be called a gentlemen where
he hails from but in Auburn he cannot
be classed as such.
J would rather have five friends in college
whose daily code of ethics is an Honor
Code of the highest type, friends who do
not have to read the .principles of the
Auburn Honor System to know if they
are violating them, than to have five
hundred friends of the other type.
Everything possible has been done in
the way of writing articles and making
speeches and talks to put the Honor System
across to the student body so they
will support it. It is obvious that nothing
more can be accomplished by just talk.
The Honor System needs a powerful driving
force behind it and this can be obtained
only thru the cooperation of the
student body. If we are going to have
the Honor System let us not disgrace ourselves
and our pride Alma Mater by staining
it with the vileness of dishonor, but let
us cherish and hold it as something sacred.
Do You Know
Tuesday, December 1.
7:00 P. M. The Wilsonian, Wirt and
Websterian Literary meet in their respective
rooms in the Main building.
Wednesday, December 2
7:00 P. M. The A. S. M. E. and the A.
I. E. E. will have a joint meeting in the
Engineering Building.
7:00 P. M. The Pharmaceutical Society
will meet in the Pharmacy Building.
7:00 P. M. The Student Ag Club meets
in the Ag Building.
Thursday, December 3.
7:00 P. M. Dean Petrie's class in Current
Events in the auditorium of the Engineering
Building.
t WITH OTHER COLLEGES *
There will be no student strike over the
right to operate automobiles at Wabash
College (New Student, October 3.) After
taking an uncompromising stand against
the anti-auto ruling, the student body has
agreed to a compromise. "The Bachelor,"
student publication, after a vigorous fight
against the original ruling stands behind
the student majority in its acceptance of
the compromise, the terms of which follow:
--.
§
1. No student will park his car on the
campus at any time.
"2. In order to drive to school from rural
districts, men must secure a special dispensation
from the Dean.
3. Men having cars in the city for business
purposes must secure a special dispensation
from the Dean.
4. Faculty cars must be parked on the
west side of the campus.
- 5. All other automobiles owned by students
must not be driven from 8 o'clock
Monday morning until six o'clock Friday
evening.
This compromise will continue until the
annual meeting of the Board of Trustees
on December 16.
"If," pronounced The Bachelor, "the
majority of the student body wishes the
case reopened on December 16 for any desire
change in the present ruling, The
Bachelor will again become the champion
of student rights and leave no stone unturned
in merciless publicity of those responsible
for the autocratic puerility."—
The New Student.
can university into an institution of learning
in place of a good tight paddock where
impetuous young men may be kept for
four years to run about as much as they
please without serious danger of getting
lost or darning themselves beyond repair.
There is no doubt about i t : the acquirement
of learning is entirely alien to the
popular conception of a college education.
Tenors who do not chew may go elsewhere
and do as they please so "long as they refrain
from undermining the he-man's college.
Let the academic shades be .sacred
to the "bull bass" and the quiet enjoyment
of Climax plug.:—The Harvard Crimson.
In the Crimson and White for Oct. 29th
there is a spirited article in reference to
recommencing the custom of wearing rat
caps. Alabama is about the only Southern
College that does not follow this tradition
and from the sentiment as expressed in the
Crimson White they will not be backward.
The custom was abolished there several
years ago.
Letters to the Editor I
WHAT IT IS
Last March, just before adjournment,
fey a non-partisan vote of 77 to 2, the
United States Senate, after over two years'
In reply to the editorial in last week's
Plainsman on "Our New Honor System."
I wish to congratulate the writer on the
true expression of his ideas on this subject
and am sure that we all agree with
the first part of the article. But I think
there is room for difference of opinion
on the topic discussed in the last part.
He states that a factor acting against
the Honor System is the fact that there
are some members of the Faculty who do
not believe in it, that some professors
watch a class while calling the roll or
during quizzes, and that some scatter the
students all over the room and then watch
them.
He advocates that the student should
THE DECLINE OF THE HE-MAN
Disgusted with the lack of the "old-fashioned
bull bass" in the Cornell Glee
Club, an undergraduate in that university
has offered the first heartfelt diagnosis
of what is wrong with American education.
"What this university needs," he says,
"what all American universities need just
now, is less intellect and more boys who
-shave blue and chew tobacco, and who,
when they sing in the back room, can produce
those rumbling profoundo notes from
the waist line."
It sounds as if this particular Cornell
man had been sitting at the feet of* that
noted pessimist, Mr. Gil Dobie; and, if Mr.
Dobie has indire.ctly something to do with
his disciple's disgust, the suggestion is all
the more worthy of attention from the
wise heads who are sitting up nights with
American education and feeling its feeble
pulse. Cornell's well-wishers are not the
only amateur college presidents who
mourn the decline of the tough specimen
at college. Sports writers and alumni
everywhere are likewise saddened to witness
insidious attempts to make the Ameri-
On entering the Athletic field we are
made to stoop down in going into the gate.
One wonders why they do not make the
gate higher. On closer examination we
observe a plank nailed just over the low
entrance, and on this plank is written
"King 27 N. C. 6." Each time a player
enters that gate, he has to bow to that
score. Likewise each time he enters that
gate he has a firmer determination to put
his best in the King game on Turkey Day
at Bristol.
Students! Are we going to let our athletes
beat us in enthusiasm over the game?
Let's start talking this game up. Let's begin
saving up money to go to Bristol and
witness this game. Don't go home then.
You can go home Christmas, but you can't
see the Parsons beat King Christmas or
Thanksgiving either if wejdon't back them
up and follow them up. there to see the
game. Come on students, let's talk this
game up and then when the time comes,
GO! — King College News.
All that we have heard since we arrived
here from Birmingham has been to the
tune of "Oh that game." Now we ask you
is that nice to make us discuss the thing
over and over again when we almost died
-when we saw it. However you know how
it goes, and that is not the point of this
argument. The point is that what are we
going to do on Thanksgiving. We hate to
admit it but there were quite a few fellows
that did not have faith enough in their
team to go to Birmingham and see them
play. This lack of faith was undoubtably
prompted by the disasterous defeat of the
week before, but is that any excuse why
they should fail to support their team when
it was in adversity and go and see some
other team play in another town. If they
were financially unable to go to Birmingham
and see their team go down in the
annals of fame, all well and good. But if
they had the money to go and see their
own team and did not do so because they
felt that they would be badly licked, then
we have nothing to say for we are beyond
speech. It does not savor of the old Auburn
spirit. The Auburn team is your
team in Victory and in Defeat, and it is
when it is being defeated that you should
show that you belong to that team.
We hate to say so but if we can whisper
it quite softly we would like to say "we
told you so." All ye who went to Montgomery
to see B'ama beat Florida—Ha,
Ha. A great game to be sure but did
it compare to the game that we played.
Does it compare to seeing your own school
team pulling up out of defeat in one of
the most spectacular games that they have
ever played. We think not and so we say
again—Ha, Ha.
But to come down to things that are
still to be decided. Who is going to win
the game with Tech. No one knows and
as far as your spirit is concerned it does
not make a particle of difference. Win or
lose it is up to you to be there and back
up that team. You say that you fear
that the comeback that they did last week
was merely an accident and that it will
not last for the next game. But did you
see last weeks game and are you sure that
you caught the real spirit of the thing in'
that our team did not win by a flike but
that they won by football. Last weeks
game was no accident. Whether you realize
it or not we have a team now that
has tasted of real hard won victory and
they are not going to forget it for some
time. But win or lose, if you are in a
position to go to the game it is your duty
to be by that team when they go to Atlanta.
An outsiders viewpoint of the college
boy, namely Auburn.
You rejoice to see him coming as night
watchers rejoice to see the coming day.
You are happy when he is gone as thunder-shocked
people are glad in the silence that
follows the passing of a cyclone.
He has his likes and dislikes, accumulating
both the one and the other by instinct
rather than reason. He can not
be made to assume responsibility, and it
is as easy to keep him down as it is to
keep a cork under water.
He often has what men call brains, and
uses them when he can find time, which
is rarely ever, for he is a mighty busy man.
He loves to sing and usually sings bass,
which is perhaps as well as not, for he is
is bass singer even when he is a warbling
tenor.
He-loves his music as a dog loves fleas,
and loves his girl with an undying devotion
that has been known to last two weeks
"hand running."
His most prized possessions are a college-colored
sweater, his frat pin, a set of golf
clubs and the pictures ,of seven girls. His
choice hymn is her, and his favorite book
in the Bible is Hezekiah.
His clothes may represent his own taste,
or may be a part of the hazing program of
the college, but in either case they are
loud enough to sound like a clap of thunder
when he passes you.
He is at heart the best sort of a fellow,
but he yearns for the reputation of a regular
devil among the ladies. He is vastly
humilated because Mother still wants to
rub him with Vicks Salve when he has a
cold.
He will risk his life to put out the flames
on ybur roof, and risk it again to put your
front gate up there on Halloween.
His stomach is a vast void and all the
earth is under tribute to fill it—if it can.
My idea of a wasted college career. Cio
to college the years of 1923, 1!)24, and
1925, see all the football games up until
this last week but decide then that it
seems like it is an impossible thing for
Auburn to win one of the big four games.
Therefore you do not go to Birmingham
and as a consequence miss one of the
best victories that Auburn has had in four
years. Can you imagine what could be
worse? I can't.
The time- is fast approaching for the
turkey'season of the year and we are all
looking forward toward the twenty-sixth.
Beside the Auburn-Tech game there will
be several turkey chewing and egg-nogg
gargling contests prevalent around this
section of the state.
What is the school coming to when this
occurs? One of the smartest students in
the Chemical course finds that he tires of
listening to the prof and consequently drops
off to sleep. When asked the reason of
doing this he remarks that he does this so
as to attract the attention of the other
students and keeps them from going to
sleep.
There is a movement on foot to see if
we can't elect Mr. "Swede"/Mathison as an
all-round ladies man. Even, if you hate to
say so you will have to admit that he is
all there when it comes to qualifying for
the position and with a little outside help
we should get him elected without much
difficult.
A Little Sarcastic
'Twas Harry who the silence broke,
"Oh, 'Lil,' why are you like a tree?"
"Because, because—I'm board," she spoke.
"Oh no, because you're woo'd," said he.
"Why are you like a tree" she said.
"I have a—heart?" he asked so low.
Her answer made the young man red,
"Because you're sappy, don't you know."
Once more she asked, "Why are you now
A tree? He couldn't quite perceive.
"Trees leave sometimes and make a bow,
And you may also bow, and leave."
—California Pelican.
With only one more week before the
end of the football season we are reminded
of the fact that at this time last year
we were wondering what was going to
happen after all this excitement was over.
It did not seem to us that there ever could
be anything that would take the place of
football. Since that time we have learned
that there is not anything that will take
the place of football but that there are
things that require just as much attention.
Studies are of course the most important
of these, but as every man is dependent
solely upon himself for the
amount that he studies, we will leave that
subject alone. What we are referring to
is that the Basketball season is nearly here.
The basketball team strange to say requires
some boosting too. Last year it seemed
that there was a great part of the student
body that would go most anywhere
to see a football game but that there was
a very much smaller group who would follow
the basketball team. Let us see if
we cannot remedy this this year, and everybody
back that team.
Red Edwards has banded against the
picture show find is working out a way
whereby he can defraud them. What? Oh,
he simply reads the advertisements that
are posted and in this way beats them out
of the two bits that they would have gotten.
As we all know helium is the lightest
known of the gases. It is rumored that
McGi'aw has acquired the name of "Helium"
McGraw but I don't see why because
he looks like he is plenty heavy to me.
They may had reference to. some part of
his body however. Ask him and see if he
can straighten this out for you because I
do not wish to be misunderstood.
On the trip last Saturday someone was
called down by one of the Captains here
for wearing a "Sam Brown," when he was
only a junior. I get them mixed and do
not recall whether it was Billy Wyatt or
J. A. McDaniel.
Ben Frank Riley says that out-of-town
football dates and late checks do' not mix
very well, nor give a fellow any too secure
feeling.
The worlds idea of a good joke: A platoon
of seniors ranking from 'Captain to
Second Looey with Sam Brownes, officers
insignias on their shoulders, and rifles on
their shoulders covering them up. I mean
to all the world except the Infantry Seniors
who are the goats of this joke.)
X 1
THE PLAINSMAN Page 3.
Going
W. Ovim
EVERY time
you go up in
a modern building
having highspeed
elevators
( t h e Chicago
Athletic Club,
for instance) you
are Jifted by the ingenuity of at
least one Westinghouse engineer
who is barely ten years off the
campus.
Until three years ago, highspeed
elevators invariably required
direct electric current.
There was no practical method
of using alternating current, and
since many districts are supplied
only with alternating current, a
serious handicap existed.
It was possible to employ a
motor generator to convert alternating
current into direct current,
but when that was done no practical
system of control was available
if the elevators were to be
operated at high speed. The suggestion
was made that the control
be accomplished by varying the
Up
ufTThe question is sometimes asked:
?"\ Where do young men get when they
enter a large industrial organization?
Have they opportunity to exercise creative
talents? Or are they forced into narrow
grooves?
This series of advertisements throws light
on these questions. Each advertisement
takes up the record of a college man who
came with the Westinghouse Company
within the last ten years, immediately after
graduation from his university.
voltage of the generator, and
(among others) to a young man
of thirty-three—R. W. Owens,
Illinois '14, now head of the
direct-current section of the
motor engineering department
—came the special problem of
designing an electric generator
that would perform as one had
never performed before.
Many were associated in the
undertaking, for it involved pioneering
in control apparatus as
well as in generator design, but
eventually all difficulties were
overcome, and there emerged the
"Variable Voltage Control System
for Electric Elevators", now
standard throughout the building
industry.
Here you have the type of
problem that confronts the design
engineer in- an organization
like Westinghouse. Not all are
as large as this; or lead to such
sweeping results. The design
engineer works for the customer.
He starts with an analysis of the
customer's needs and develops
apparatusjto meet those needs.
His responsibilities are varied
and heavy. The jobs of the direct-
current section of the motor
engineering department range
from motors for driving ventilating
fans to those for dumping
whole cars of ore at the docks.
A force of 1,000 men is constantly
occupied building the
motors designed by this section."
Westinghouse
the fold, these being "Buck" Spinks,
Batch Ollinger, "Clabber" Williams,
"Feny" Crane, "Bozo" Self, "Pea"
Greene, and "Bull" McFadden, all
of these lads having functioned for
three or more years as a part of
the Tiger machine.
The duo of additions to the Tiger
coaching staff Dave Morey and
"Mike" Papke will get their first impressions
of Grant Field which lays
claim to being the most famous grid
rectangle in the Southland. The Tiger
clan serving its first year under
the new Tiger mentor has had a season
replete with ups and downs.
Starting operations with an easy
triumph over Birmingham-Southern,
the Tigers were held to a close score
by the comparatively week Clemson
crew the following week. Then followed
homecoming day and a glorious
19 to 0 victory over V. P. I. The
next Saturday found the Moreymen
in the Lone Star State and on the
short end of an overwhelminging defeat
at the hand of the Texas Long-horn.
Later Howard College invaded
the Plains and nearly walked off with
a victory after almost outplaying
the Bengals. The Tulane game
found the Tigers at their best, though
the game was dropped to the Greenies
on a muddy field.
The last two contests showed a
complete reversal of forjn. After being
swamped by the Bulldogs 34 to
0 the Moreymen came back with a
hair raising victory over the Vander-bilt
Commodores, and there is no
doubt that this last game will serve
as a strong stimulant to spur them
on against Tech.
The center problem has been a constant
thorn in the side of Coach
Morey, the Tiger mentor having been
forced to develop a trio of pivot men
during the present campaign. Robinson,
who was slated to fill the shoes
of the departed "Fatty" Lawrence
at the opening of the season, was
forced to the shelf with a fractured
elbow early in the season. "Pop"
Patterson, who relieved him at the
post was beginning to show the ear
marks of a comer when he was laid
up in the Georgia game with a fractured
wrist bone. The latest addition
is "Fats" McNeill, who will get his
second/opportunity when he displays
his wares at Grant Field.
r Order Your Cakes, Pies and Candies
From
AUBURN INN
HOLIDAY SPECIALTIES
Fruit Cake, Baked Turkeys
Tim Bales
Phone 50J
We Wish To Announce That We Will Not
Have Turkeys for Sale This Year as in Previous
Years. We Hope This Will Not In-convience
Our Customers. We Thank You
For Past Favors.
MOORE'S MARKET
1 , ^ • ^ ^ • ^ ^
The Big Store With The Little Prices
HAGEDORN'S
Dry Goods—Ladies' Ready-to-Wear—Shoes
HAGEDORN'S-Opelika's Best Store
The
FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF AUBURN
ADVICE AMD ACCOMMODATION
FOR EVERY COLLEGE MAN
Any Financial or Business Transaction
Albert Thomas, '04, Pres. G. Herbert Wright, '17, Cashier
C. Felton Little, '06, Vice-Pres. W. D. Steele, Ass't Cashier
TOOMER HARDWARE CO.
A Complete Line of Hardware
GUIDE TO FRESHMEN MAKING
TRIPS TO FOOTBALL GAMES
Continued from page one)
a mayor also, but we don't know who
he is. We have reason to believe
that his name is either Wycoff or
Jones, as these are the only two
names that every Atlantan seems to
know.
According to some of the more
unregenerate students on the Auburn
campus, all claim that Atlanta may
make to being a city of true Southern
Hospitality can be accepted as
pure bunk, hokum, and nonesense.
One student went so far as to say
that he was ejected from no less that
six hotels in whose lobbies he had
attempted to pass the night. To
iquote this student again, the only
place of true hospitality in the so-called
Gate City, party of the first
ipart, is the city jail, .and that in said
jail, they are a bit too pressing in
; their desire to have the visitor re-imain
for an extended stay.
Besides Georgia Tech and Ogle-
| thorpe, the city of Atlanta boasts of
isome fine educational institutes. The
! handsome Federal College ^of Ap-i
plied Ethics is located in Atlanta, and
'students have come from all parts
of the United States to matriculate.
This school specializes in post-graduate
work as can be seen by the fact
that some students remain as long
as twenty years or more. The main
B0ST0NIAN SHOES
ARE GOING STRONG
ASK THE WEARERS,
AS TO THEIR COMFORT
AND WEARING QUALITIES
GIBSON'
MEN'S WEAR S
plan of the College is to impress upon
the undergraduates the fact that
it is unethical to counterfit money,
blow safes, swing the festive blackjack,
and other things generally
frowned on by the more exclusive.
Tuition and railroad fare to the College
is free, as is board and lodging.
The school has a fine dormitory system,
each resident having the greatest
privacy, and protection to burglars.
Auburn students desiring to
take courses in ethics and rock-crushing
should write for a catalogue
at once.
There will not be much time to
see much of Atlanta on Thanksgiving
after the student has finally arrived
and marched in the parade, he will
spend the rest of. the forenoon find-ling
Grant Field. After having seen
the Tigers trim the Yellow Jackets
.the student will spend the rest of
i his-time finding' his way back to the
station. Atlanta has such a complicated
system of„_streets that strangers
have been known to leave the
I hotel, go around the corner for a
I newspaper, and spend the remainder
jof the night finding his way. If the
J visiting Freshman is not good at
; cross-word puzzles, he will do well
to carry a homing pigeon with him,
jand thus be able to get back to the
station before train time.
plunging over the final Tiger stripe.
The outstanding performers of the
game were Wycoff of Tech and "Fatty"
Lawrence of Auburn. Lawrence
will not return having ended his
career with that game.
The Thanksgiving classic is doubly
famous in that it has rung down the
curtain on the pigskin activities of
many Auburn and Tech luminaries.
The coming contest mack the passing
of the rival leaders, Doug Wycoff
and "Red" Harkins. Aside from the
tall Auburn thatched Tiger battle
chief, seven Bengals will pass from
Through an error in lasts weeks
issue of the Plainsman, the article
about the history of "Auburn the
loveliest village of the plains" was
not credited to the author. The article
was written by E. R. Moulton
of the Senior class, and was part of
the work required in the course in
Agricultural Education taught by
Professor S. L. Chestnutt.
WK MAKI<:
CUTS > n NEWSPAPER
X MAGAZINE
^CATALOG
Kngraving Co
i i e r y , Alnb.tma
AN ERROR
F. E. HUDSON UNDERGOES
OPERATION FOR APPENDICITIS
F. Edward Hudson, a sophomore
in the school of Architecture, has
been out of school for the past three
weeks. The cause of his absence
was an operation for appendicitis.
He has been in the Opelika Infirmary
but he is again able to be out. He
came back to Auburn Tuesday afternoon.
The students all join in
extending to him a hearty welcome
back to Auburn. However, it is with
regret that we learn that he is not
to be in school any more during this
term. We hope to have him with us
again next semester.
BAPTIST CHURCH
Special Thanksgiving service by
Dr. Holmes 7:00
Everyone Invited
The Methodist Church
Prayer Service Wednesday Night 7:30
Two Services Sunday
Preaching by Dr. Davidson
Sunday School 9:30 A. M.
Thanksgiving Turkey Dinner
AUBURN INN _
Sunday November 22
Also Thursday November 26
75 Cents
MOREY MEN MAKING FINAL
PLANS FOR TECH TORNADO
Continued from page one)
Techsters and the score resulted in
a zero deadlock.
Last year in the third canto the
Techmen started an irresistable offensive,
led by the mighty Wycoff,
and carried the oval almost the
length of the field to lodge it past
the last Tiger stronghold, with Doug
/ •
Let Us Sell You a New Ford
A. MEADOWS GARAGE
Auto Repairs Tires Tubes
Cars for Hire—U Drive 'em
Gas Oil
Phones 29-27
MEETING OF PHARMACEUTICAL
SOCIETY
MAY & GREEN
Men's Clothing
Sporting Goods
Montgomery, Alabama
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . — 4
The meeting of the pharmaceutical
society was held Wednesday night.
President Cartlidge called the meeting
to order. The program consisted
of very interesting talks by Stewart
and Ashurst. Then Allison told some
good jokes after which the meeting
adjourned.
A. I. E. E. HAS PICTURE
The A. I. E. E. held its regular
meeting on Wednesday night. The
program consisted of a picture from
the Westinghouse which dealt with
the development of water power. It
began with the first use of water to
turn water wheels and then led up
to its present use in the development
of hydro-electric power.
There was a large crowd attending
and every one enjoyed the picture.
I
It gives
a better shave
Thousands of men know this reason for
the ever-growing popularity of Williams
Shaving Cream. Williams gives shaving
lather—lather that stays wet and full.
It is the result of three generations of specializing
in shaving soaps. The big tube with
the unlosable hinge-cap is 35c; double-size
tube containing twice as much, 50c.
L W A Y S I N S I S T O N W I L L I A MS
LATEST STLYES
1 OPELIKA
C. S. WHITTELSEY, >
SHOES, CLOTHES, HABERDASHERY
BEST VALUES 1
ALABAMA\
m&a
r
Page 4. THE PLAINSMAN
THANKSGIVING CALLS FOR AUBURN
TO WRECK TECH,
TURKEY AND CRANBERRIES,
AND SNAPPY NEW SUIT
AND TOPCOAT-Its
up to the best football team
in the world to Get Tech and any
restaurant can serve Turkey and
Cranberries
But it takes a Blach's Deluxe
suit and topcoat to give that well
dressed appearance that the season
demands.
The latest styles and fabrics
and they are priced right—all
suits with an extra pair of trousers.
-BRANCH
Auburn Girls are Attractive by J. C.
Elder. He declined because of bash-fulness
about the subject.
Second was a debate; Resolved
that a Sophomore is a Rat with his
brains beaten out. M. S. Poster affirmative,
J. C. Elder negative, L. J.
Maxwell,,E. Cason, and F. L. Brown
judges. The decision was given Elder
after Foster admitted that a Sophomore
could not have his brains beaten
out, as a Rat because he did not
have any to begin with.
John Thomas took up the first
subject, Why Auburn Girls are Attractive.
He made the statement
that he had had one date during his
three years in Auburn and had sworn
off. Nuff sed.
R. H. Elder told why he was so
popular with the girls. His charming
personality and natural good looks.
W. G. O'Brian gave the secret of
his success in selecting base-ball
sponsors. "That little Girl I left behind."
At 'the unanimous request of the
society President Nunn told, of her
several Love affairs. Birmingham figured
pretty strongly in this choice
bit of the programme.
Some one asked F. W. Sparks if
anyone loves a fat man. Needless to
say ,she does.
Everyone is welcome at Wirt Hall,
second floor, Main Building every
Tuesday night at 7 P. M. This means
you especially.
WIRT LITERARY
SOCIETY MEETS
i tes of the previous meeting having
been read and adopted, the pro
gramme committee had decamped in
force to Tuscaloosa the preeeeding
£iFt_Literary—Society met in j'weeker.d.-
Wirt Hall, Tuesday night Novr" ti,
1925, at the regular hour 7 P. M.
Having no business, and the minu-
President Nunn announced that an
impromptu programme would be in
order, the first number to be; Why
LESSONS
IN
SHORTHAND AND TYPEWRITING
OR
TYPEWRITING
Phone 157 P. O. Box 93
VET. ASSOCIATION
MEETS IN ATLANTA
The tenth annual Southeastern
Veterinary Association meeting was
held in Atlanta on the ninth and
tenth of this month. This association
includes all the states this side
of the Ohio river. The meeting was
held in Henery Grady hotel and many
men of note were there. Dr. Adams,
the well known surgeon and instructor
of the Veterinary school of Pennsylvania
delivered a very interesting
address. Several of the state
Veterinarians were there, including
our own Dr. Carey.
Our correspondent R. G. IsbellrrtP
ports ;
Dr. F. D. Patterson, Jr., accompanied
by four other faculty members
and two seniors of the Auburn
Veterinary College, made a very interesting
talk on poultry diseases and
parasites. Dr. Patterson gave a general
outline of poultry feeding, giving
special attention to baby chicks,
external and internal parasites,
treatment and prevention of them,
size and location of poultry houses.
* The eleventh annual meeting of
this association is to be held in Auburn
next year on the second Monday
and Tuesday in November. The purpose
of these meetings is to promote
the welfare and interest of Veterinarians
through the South. There were
from seventy five to a hundred present
at this last meeting and since
the next one is to be in Auburn we
hope that we will be able to swell
that total and at the same time be
J. X. GREENE
TAILORING
Men's Furnishings
OPELIKA
1 while after the program the whole
was turned into a jolly gathering
when simple refreshments appeared
on the scene. Misses Nonie Wood,
Annie Laura Crawley, Annie Merle
Arant and Lottie Gibbs were the actresses
in the final event of the program.
i Opelika Pharmacy
Inc.
Phone 72
DRUGS—SODAS
CIGARS—TOBACCOS
r-T. C. Saxon A. P. Collier
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT
ROBERTSON'S QUICK LUNCH
The Best That Can Be Bought
Served As Well As Can Be
Served
15 Commerce St..
Montgomery, Ala.
DR. THOS. B.. MCDONALD
Dentist and Oral Surgeon
Office over Toomer Drag Store
Phone 49
Auburn, Alabama
as ably represented as we. were at
the last meeting.
ORDER OF LAMPS
HOLD OPEN MEET
On last Tuesday the Lamps held
the first open meeting for the year
1925-26. Its purpose was the bringing
before the women students some
phases, new and old, of the Honor
System. -
Mrs. Margaret Blair, president of
the organization presided over_tltfe
meeting and introduced each member
..of--the 'Tramps, as they talked on
honor, honor in' examinations, and
quizzes, and honor in everyday things
or our code of ethics. These thoughts
were given in turn by Dorothy Dug-gar;
Grace Gardner; and Alma Bent-ley.
Elizabeth Floyd announced a new
annual feature of the Lamps. A
loving cup is to be awarded each
year to the best all-round senior woman.
The winner of the trophy is
to be selected after the first semester
by popular vote of the women
students, the recommendation of a
committee from the faculty and the
decision of the active members of
the Lamps. A scholastic average of
85" is necessary for eligilility. Such
recognition from those involved in
the awarding makes it a prize worth
striving for through the four years
of college.
Two vocal solos by Mrs. Mayo added
a touch of beauty to the solemnity
to the solemnity of the occasion
OH YOU "PEA"
1
A soft hush had fallen on the whole
field,
And the game was almost over;
The score had gone against us, so it
seemed,
And gloominess over all did hover.
2
The score was seven to nine,
And fifty seconds to play;
No chance to come from behind,
We'd lost the game that day.
3
Ho, what does that mean?
Tuxworth goes in for Bogue!
What could the coach's idea be?
Game's almost over, we'll soon be
on the road.
4
Look! Tux. is calling signals.
The line and backs fall in position.
A few more signals, the ball is snapped.
The team charges, no gain to mention
5
Again they line up, signals ring;
Tux takes the ball and races backwards.
He throws it down the field with a
mighty swing,
To the speeding backs and ends.
6
The fans go wild at the show.
Pea green has caught the ball;
And races madly toward the enemy's
goal.
He almost reaches it-before he falls.
7
The ball has sped true to its mark,
And the grand old "Pea" .with a
mighty leap,
Has caught the ball from the falling
darkness»*-
Ani-swept seventy-five yards down
the groggy field.
is.
S e e k t he
" S u r e - F i t"
label—refuse
imitations
JOLLY'S, INC.
'Sure-Fit" Caps are made bv Fine St Levy, Inc., 702
8
Forty seconds more to play;
The enemy's goal line almost in reach,
Could we reach the line on three
more plays?
Hush! the signals are called with a
shriek.
9
The ball is passed, as the mighty
"Clabber" falls back.
Tux takes the ball, and drops to his
knees;
"Clabber" foot hits the ball with a
.mighty whack!
The ball sails out with a lonesome
wheeze.
• 10
A dead silence falls as the ball sails
on.
The referee's hands are raised high!
The kick has gome true, and time is
gone.
The wounded, worn, sore, and bleeding,
but fighting Tiger has won
his fight.
. A SPECTATOR.
I When it's Thanhgiving—and the teams
are drawn up for battle on the gridiron—when the first
touchdown goes over and the grandstands rock with frenzy
—have a Camel!
WHEN the rival bands ate playing to make
your blood tingle. And the cheers and answering
songs sweep back and forth between the
opposing thousands of rooters. When, following
that tense hush, a swift player darts out
from the flashing formations on the .gridiron
and races across the goal for the first touchdown
—oh, man, or superman, when the taste of joy
is too keen to endure—have a Camel! ,
For Camel is the boon companion of your
joys. Roam as far as you will from the prosaic
things of every day, Camel will be the truest
smoke friend you ever had. Not a tired taste,
not a cigaretty after-taste, not a regret in a
million Camels! Just full and fragrant smoke
contentment, just added zest in living.
So when your own college's team tears
through for its first smashing goal this Thanksgiving
Day—when life seems fullest of the
frenzy of happiness—joyfully apply the fire
and taste the smoke that's loved by millions,
Hare a Camel!
Into the making of this one cigarette goes all of the ability of the world's largest
organization of expert tobacco men. Nothing is too good for Camels. The choicest
Turkish and domestic tobaccos. The most skilful blenders. The most scientific
package. No other cigarette made is like Camels. No finer cigarette can be made.
Camels are the overwhelming choice of experienced smokers.
Our highest wish, if you Jo not yet
know Camel quality, is that you try
them. We invite you to compare Camels
with any cigarette made at any price,
B. J. Reynold. Tob«co Co.
Evans Literary Society
Holds Regular Meeting
The Evans Literary Society held
it's regular meeting Monday night,
Nov. 16, having a very good attendance
present. The program consisted
of a talk, "What can aircraft
do in the next war," by Mr. Roberts,
and another one, "Blundering Parents-
Wayward Children," by Mr.
Baker Jones. Both talks showed a
marked degree of preparation and
they covered the subject very successfully.
After these two talks,
the society was carried into another
room where they had the pleasure of
seeing a play which was presented by
members of the Evans Society. The
society is planning to present the
play before the Dramatic club.
1925 GLOMERATAS!
Send Someone a Glomerata
A few for $3.00-
And some for $2.00
She wants one, Now's your chance
STUDENT SUPPLY SHOP
ucShe^ 'Distinctive^ Shop"
B. Y. P. U. NEWS
An event happened on Sunday
night, November 15, that has not
happened previously this college year.
The Holmes Union of the Auburn B.
Y. P. U. won the Efficiency Banner
for the second consecutive Sunday.
This Banner has travelled around between
the different Unions on different
Sundays, and stands for the
best Union in general work for the
week. The contest is keen at the
present time, and there is sure to
be more rivalery between the Unions,
in a friendly way, in the future.
In going to press the Plainsman
last week inserted some jokes under,
B. Y. P. U. News. The blame is laid
to the reporter who turned in this
news. The thought of the staff was
this was intended for B. Y. P. U.
News, while the reporter intended it
for the joke section. The reporter
being the Baptist News gatherer this
mistake is to blame.
This mistake is hoped to be cleared
between the different parties included
in the write-up. An apology
is due the B. Y. P. U., and the reporter
with the Plainsman staff,
take this opportunity to extend regret
such happened with the assurance
that such mistakes will not happen
again.
" S a y It W i t h F l o w e r s"
F o r A l l S o c i a l O c c a s i o ns
Rosemont Gardens, Florists
Montgomery, Alabama
Homer Wright, Local Agent for Auburn
REGULAR BOARD
Auburn Inn
Three Meals $24.00
Two Meals $18.00
Breakfast $7.15 to $8.30
S. A. M. E.
The Weekly meeting of the Society
of American Military Engineers was
featured by a discussion of "shrapnel"
by Capt. Anderson, F .A., and
an explanation of different phases
of-the work of "the Military Intelligence
Division" of the general staff,
by J. M. Earnest. Capt. Anderson's
discussion Was most interesting, as
it took the form, of an explanatory
talk on the use and effect of Shrapnel.
Mr. Earnest's talk showed unusually
thorough preparation, and a
good understanding of the subject.
In making our program's more interesting,
we, from time to time,
bring in musical and dramatic talent.
You sophomores, juniors, and
seniors come out at 7 p. m. Monday
night and see for yourself what goes
on in the Engineer room.
For Auburn Citizens _
And Student Body
Courteous and Friendly Service
Five Chairs
. B. REED BARBER SHOP
Successor to C. H. Watts
J. W. WRIGHT, Jr.
Complete Line of Furnishings
FOR AUBURN STUDENTS
NEXT TO POST OFFICE
BANK OF AUBURN
We Highly Appreciate Your Banking Business
GREENE &. W A T T S °™J£CA
m MEN'S OUTFITTERS AND SHOES
The Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes
AMERICAN DRY CLEANING CO.
OPELIKA, ALA.
FOX CARDWELL
Student Representative in Auburn
Call 9109
Collections Daily
"One Day Service"
l! N a** i
,
THE PLAINSMAN
(
n •
•41 m r^
z_L
n D
I TDI IBM TIP PI? Q nf) WN Standing of Southern Conference Teams, 'Big 22'
UOUiXll J I U J C A J J U \ J VIIf Te a m Won Lost Tied Total Oppo. Pet.
rANDY IN THRILLER Points Points
Williams Toe Is Deciding Factor After Long
Pass, Tuxworth <To Green,
Nets 73 Yards
-In one of the thrilling windups
' e r seen on the grid rectangle at
FRickwood Field, Birmingham's pigskin
emporium, the Auburn Tigers,
with, all of the cards stacked against
them, and with not even the most
favorable critic willing to conceed
them an outside chance, came into
their own and downed the Vander-bilt
Commodores in a spectacular
split-second triumph. The battle
which sesawed for 60 minutes, finally
ended with Auburn 10, Vandy 9.
With the ball nestling on their own
15 yard line in the possession of the
enemy with first down and less than
a minute to play, the Morey charges
appeared to have less chance to cop
the contest than a one armed paper
hanger. There is an old adage about
truth being stranger than fiction.
However the Commodores would have
another touchdown or nought, and
Mr. Gill Reese, who calls 'em for the
Nashvillians, elected to essay the dirigible
route. Therefore Bill Spears,
according to instructions stepped
back to chunk a long one over the
goal line to Nig Waller, but the oval
never found its mark, and it was
Auburn's ball on the 20 yard line.
At this stage Morey trotted out
Tuxworth, pulling in Bpgue. Tux-tion
looming as the Rock Mountains,
the McGugins tried a couple of long
passes, Williams finally intercepting
one, being brought to the turf as the
whistle sounded.
In previous Auburn-Vandy games
it was always the Tiger who was
the aggressor^ and the Commodores
who seized, and made the most of
every opportunity to score. Hew-ever,
in this instance the old order
of things was subjected to a complete
reversal.
Vandy started off at a whirlwind
clip and after a couple of minutes
had the ball knocking at the Tiger
door. However the first Vandy assault
was turned back at the 12 yard
line when Waller lacked a yard of
completing first down, and Greene
lifted out of danger. Reese, Waller,
and Hendrix, then started an as-sault
from the Tiger 45 yard line.
Each of this trio- ripped off gobs
of yardage until the oval landed on
the 3 yard stripe from which point
Hendrix plunged over for a touchdown,
giving the McGugin clan a 6
point margin over the Tigers.
Bryan's effort at kicking over the
extra point resulted in failure when
the two Tiger flankmen, Ollinger and
Spinks, broke through the interven-
Alabama 6........0 .0 147 0 1.000
Tulane 4 0 0 78 10 1.000
Washington & Lee 4 0 0 64 3 1.000
North Carolfna 4 0 0 :.66 14 1.000
Georgia Tech \ 4 1 0 66 14 800
Virginia 4 1 0 41 28 800
Tennessee 2 1,. 1 33 50.. 667
Auburn 2. -. 3 2 0 42 62 600
Kentucky 3 2 0 40 62 600
South Carolina 2 2 0 40 19 500
Georgia 2 3 0 73 29 400
Vanderbilt 2 3 0 50 50 .400
.3.
.2.
.3.
.3.
.4.
.1.
.0.
.0.
.0.
.0.
V. P. 1 2.
Florida '. 1-
Miss. A. and M 1-
Sewanee 1-
V. M. 1 1
Louisiana State 0 1........1.
N. Carolina State 0........3.. 1.
Maryland -- 0 4 0.
"OleJMiss" 0 4........0.
Clemson . 0 4 0.
. 9..
.49..
.18..
.10.
.48..
. 0.
.12.
. 3.
.16.
.12..
...49..
...57.
...45.
...64.
...87.
...42.
...51.
...32.
...48.
.107.
.400
.333
.250
.250
.200
.000
.000
.000
.000
.000
TIGER SUBLETS
SPANK SOUTHERN
FROSH SATURDAY
CASUAL COMMENT
worth running towards his own goal;ing Vandy forward wall and smeared
line, suddenly paused and espying
"Pea" Greene, who was passing over
the 35 yard stripe enroute to the
Vandy goal line, shot the pigskin
across the intervening space. Greene
outreaching Reese who was poised
nearby grabbed the ball, and deftly
sidestepping the Vandy star, was off
in a clear field.
The sight of the tall Tiger continuing
in operation toward the timbers
in front of the opposing goal,
passing line after line of the precious
yardage with nought but Magic City
ozone separating him from the coveted
point, brought down the house,
if such expression may be used, in • kicked goal from placement, and the
the play all over the lot. The failure
of the Vandy boot was responsible
for the loss of the game, later on.
The'Bengals could do nothing during
the initial canto except boot the
oval out of immediate danger, and
stop the Vandy offensive. However,
at about the middle of the second
quarter a poor .punt gave the ball
to the Moreymen on Vanderbilt's 36
yard line. .It was the first scoring
chance for the Tigers and they made
the most of it. Turner flipped a 15
yard toss to Greene, who sidestepped
Reese and ran the intervening dis-tance
for a touchdown. Williams
every attempt.
The Gold and Black successes in
this line were few and far between
in the passing game, one of the long
flips being good for 25 yards while
another went for eleven stripes. As
the Bengals were accused of being
especially weak against a passing attack,
the sight of them slapping away
essayed a pass over the goal line
and the ball went over to Auburn on
her own 20 yard line after which
Greene got away with his long run
when he caught Tuxworth's pass,
turning the tide of battle.
Vanderbilt attempted 16 forward
passes, 6 of these meeting with success
and netting 88 yards. The Tithe
Vandy flips was a revelation, 'gers were more successful in this
Being unable to gain in territory past department, essaying 10 and com-the
Tiger 30 yard stripe, it was de
cided to try a field, which Bill Spears
did to perfection, giving the Nashville
crowd a two-point advantage
and changing the complexion of the
contest from aT,iger standpoint, from
pleting exactly half of this number
for a total net gain of 155 yards.
The Gold and Black had it on the
Orange and Blue when it came to
compiling yardage, however, getting
a total of 326 yards in 97 plays while
victory to the possibility of gloomy!the Tigers were helping themselves
paroxysms of wild enthusiasm. With
game after game going by the boards
Moreymen were out in front for the
first time of the season in a major
previously, the Tiger supporters were squabble.
tasting their first sweet draught of I The sight of themselves in the
triumph over a major adversary. jiead proved to be a great encourage-
However, Greene failed to reckon jment for the Moreys as they stiff en-with
Nig Waller, who sped across the ed whenever the occasion demanded
chalk lines in hot pursuit. Waller and another drive at the Tiger goal
approached "closer and closer, and'line was frustrated at the 15 yard
when the two reached the 10 yard!line as the first half became history,
line the pursuer gave a mighty lunge, | The third quarter found honors
defeat.
Especially did the Tiger hopes look
anything but bright when several
minutes later the Commodores with
flags flying high seemed about to
help themselves to another 6 to 7
points when Hendrix and Spears toted
the pigskin from the 12 yard line
clear across the field to a point within
the Tiger 3 yard line. At this
point when a touchdown seemed imminent
the Tiger line put up a stubborn,
dogged resistance, and the ball
went over. "Pea" Greene, being
rushed by opposing linesmen, got off
a poor punt of only 12 yards, giving
Vandy the ball once more on the
Tiger 15 yard line to try it all over
again. At this stage, however they
and catching Greene around the
waste, pulled him to earth and the
two rolled over to the 7 yard stripe.
Within less than a minute the scene
had shifted from the Tiger goal line
with the Commodores the aggressors,
to the Vandy line with the ball in
possession of a blood thirsty Tiger
who would not be denied.
At this instance, "Red" Harkins
called for time out in order that he
and his mates might be the recipients
of a 5 yard penalty. While this
was going on Morey ushered "Clabber"
Williams into the fray. The
Penalty placed the ball on the 12
yard marker, and Tuxworth prepared
the ground.for Williams to try a
placement. While the crowd was
stilled in excitement, the Tiger toe
artist added another placement Jto
his laurels by lifting the oval squarely
over and through the timbers,
giving the Tigers a margin of victory
of a lone point.
With time for the whistle almost
at hand, and a single point of separa-about
even with the ball zigzagging
near the middle of the field while
Vandy was striving desperately to regain
her lost advantage. The Commodores
had title to the ball the
greater part of the stanza but the
Tigers made the most of their opportunities
and the yardage total for
each side stood about even.
In the forth and final chaper the
score of the game began to soak
more firmly into the craniums of
McGugin's men" as the minutes flitted
away while they were seemingly
unable to work the oval up to a
point within striking distance of the
Tiger goal line. As a last opportunity
to they began to hurl passes with
the frequency of a granade tosser,
with Mr. Spears of the projecting
end while Waller and Hendrix acted
as the reception committee. However,
these two worthies did little
receiving, thanks to the alacrity of
the Tiger backfield crew which was
here, there, and everywhere knocking
down the oval after practically
Previous Auburn- Tech
Football Games
1898 29.
1899 63-
1902 --- 18-
1903 10.
1904 12.
1906 0.
Year , Auburn Tech
1892 26 0
1894 96 0
1896 40 0
,. 0
._ 0
.- 6
._ 5
.. 0
..11
1907 12 6
1908. 44 0
1910 16 0
1912 ——. 27 7
1913 --- 20 0
1914 14 0
1915 0 17
1916 7 33
1917 7 —68
1919 14 7
1920
1921
1922
1923
1924
0 -34
0 14
6 14
0 — — 0
0 7
Totals ~_ 461 229
to 188 in 28 plays.
First Quarter
Vandy won**the toss and elected
to defend the south goal. Harkins
kicked off 35 yards to Rives on his
20 yard line, who ran it back 20
yards. Hendricks went over left guard
for two yards. Hendricks went over
center for three yards. A pass, Waller
to Cargile, made 22 yards and
first down. Reese went over left tackle
for two yards. Reese went over
left tackle for one yard. Reese lost
two yards around left end. Fourth
down, 9 to go. G. Waller circled right
end for 8 yards and the ball went
over. Auburn's ball on her own 7
yard line. Green punted 35 yards
to Reese. Reese went around left
tackle for 8 yards. Hendricks went
over left guard for three yards and
first down. Reese took one yard.
Reese failed to gain. A pass, G.
Waller to Cargile, made 11 yards and
first down. Ball on Auburn's 20 yard
line. Hendricks went out bounds
for nine yards.
Hendricks went over left guard for
one yard and first down. Time out
Auburn. Reese went over right guard
for 7 yards. Hendricks hit center for
one yard and a, touchdown. Score:
Vandy 6, Auburn 0. G. Waller failed
to kick goal. Blocked by H. Harkins
and Spinks. Harkins kicked off to
Reese on his 10 yard line, who ran it
back 19 yards. Hendricks got three
yards. Reese broke through right
guard for 11 yards and first down.
Hendricks went over right guard for
two yards. G. Waller went over left
tackle for two yards; Reese went over
center for one yard. Bryan punted
40 yards to Reese, who fumbled but
recovered for a 22 yard loss. Reese
circled left end for 5 yards. Hendricks
rammed center for two yards.
Reese went over right guard for two
yards. Hendricks hit left guard for
two yards and first down. Reese went
around right end for^ five yards.
Continued on page 6)
Meeting the Birming"ham-Southern
frosh Saturday, in a- morning encounter
previous to the bigger engagement
between the big Tiger and
the Vandy Commodores at Rickwood,
the Tiger Kittens administered a 12
to 7 defeat .to the yearlings of the
Methodist school, at Munger Bowl.
The feature of the game" was the
great forward passing attack of the
Southerners and the spectacular demonstration
of holding the opposition
from their own goal line given
by the Brownies. . Late in the final
canto, Mr. Ogle, elevated Panther
flankmen who didn't require a mit
or a couple of gloves on each hand
to spear tosses from out the ozone
and from all directions, grabbed the
oncoming oval after its flight of 30
yards, and was laid horizontal after
he had reached the Tiger two yard
stretch.
Here was indeed a ticklish situa-tiontion
for the men of Brown. The
game nearly over, the ball resting on
the 2 yard stripe, and in the hands
of the enemy, with a touchdown
seeming imminent. Sullivan rammed
right guard for one yard. Hewlett
gathered a foot after a charge
through center. With two feet separating
them from the coveted line,
Hewlett attempted to bore through
right guard, but his plunging form
was intercepted by "Dummy" Howard
and Captain Logan, who broke
through and tossed him for a four
yard loss. It was decided, however,
that Howard was offside, the. play
being recalled and the Tigers penalized
half the distance to the goal
line. This put the oval inside one-foot
line and gave the Panthers an
additional try for touchdown.
Displaying the old spirit of fight
'em known to every Tiger squad,
rodent or otherwise the Baby Tigers
hardly left their knees in frustrating
every Panther sledgehammer attack.
Mitchell smashed into the wall making
a six-inch dent. With only two
inches of Munger Bowl real-estate
in the way Sullivan made a last stab
at a touchdown and victory, but
three or four Tigers were at him
and the Panther charger was chunked
for a foot minus.
Ingram then stepped rearwards
and booted a beautiful spiral that
landed in the vicinity of the 35 yard
marker and all danger of the Tigers
losing the battle that they deserved
to win by a trio of touchdowns, was
past.
The Tiger touchdowns were shoved
over in the second and third quarters
while the Panthers annexed their
seven in the final round. Soon after
the second stanza got well underway
the Tigers began an approach that
started at their own 32 yard line.
McClain skirted the flank for a
dozen yards. The Hilltoppers were
penalized 15 yards when a player just
substituted, became talkative before
a play was run. With the ball on
the 33 yard line ''Mike" Fisher, dashed
around end for half dozen yards,
and on the next play, speared a 12
yard toss from Hartselle. Mosely
made first down and Fisher loped
nine additional yards around the
left terminal., Mosely then toted it
for first down on the three yard
line. Fisher and Mosely were stopped,
but Hartselle slipped over center
on the next play for the remaining
distance. Ingram's boot for-goal
hit the cross bar.
The Tigers scored again in the
next period when James started operations
against the goal line by
spearing an enemy pass while in mid-field.
Porter tossed to Wattwood for
Well, we licked Vanderbilt. Contrary
to what Tiger teams of the past
have done against the Commodores,
the present machine let the Nashville
bunch do all of the work and when
the opportunity to score presented itself
the Bengals went in and helped
themselves to 10 points.
~ WRECK TECH
It pays to never give up. This
point was demonstrated by Spinks
and- Ollinger, when these two worthies
slipped through and blocked Bryan's
effort at dropkicking the extra point
after the Vandyites had made it appear
that they were going to have
things quite their own way, when
they trouped down the field for their
first and only touchdown. Had it
not been for the alterness of this
pair the game would have ended a
tie.
WRECK TECH
The excitement reigned supreme.
First Vandy looked as though they
were going to pile up a large score
when the McGuginites seemed to be
penetrating the Tiger defense works
almost at will. But they failed to
reckon with the fighting spirit of the
Harkinsmen.
-WRECK TECH-We
have heard it said that the
present squad of Tigers was incapable
of coming back. But if they did
not return with a bang after everything
was against them, then there
isn't a dog in Georgia, or a cow in
Alabama or a weiner wurst in Germany.
WRECK TECH
Last but not least on the Tiger
menu is Georgia Tech. The Alexan-dermen
have turned in a good season
thus far. Numbered among their,
victims are Oglethorpe, Florida, Vanderbilt,
Penn State, Georgia, and V.
M. I. Quite an imposing array, n'est
pas? The Jackets have bowed to
Alabama's Crimson Tide and Notre
Dame. Year in and year out dating
from back as far as 1916, the Yellow
Jackets have been in the foremost
ranks in Southern football and lately
the Atlantans have become the most
well known OH Southern teams who
invade the North.
WRECK TECH
Time1 was when the Auburn Tigers
were the most feared outfit in the
South. Opponents used to tremble
when the Plainsmen trotted on the
field. However, within the last few
years we must admit, big victories
have been somewhat lean. The Tigers
have stood at the very pinnacle far
too long to be forced down for any
length of time. And it wont be very
long unless we miss our guess, before
they are right in the thick of it once
more.
WRECK TECH
It is safe to say that no two teams
in the Southland have divided so
many championships between them as
have Auburn and Vanderbilt. Back
in the old days it became a regular
thing to see these two mixing it on
the last day to determine who would
fly the colors.
WRECK TECH
Tech scored very few points
against the Tigers before the 1915
season, the Plainsmen outpointing
since that time things have changed
them about ten to one. However,
and the Techmen have almost reversed
the order. The last time that we
grabbed the decision from Tech, people
were spotting 21 points on the
Atlantans to cop the verdict. We
managed to put over two touchdowns
that time and we can do it again.
Further we will venture to say that
there are very few Who will make
bold enough to spot a similar number
of points this time.
WRECK TECH
Somebody said that it couldn't be
done, but they did it last Saturday
against Vanderbilt. Who says that
they can's do it again?
WRECK TECH
How much do comparative scores
count in football? For instance Vandy
defeated Texas by two touchdowns
to one. Texas smothered Auburn '33
to 0. Then the. Tigers waded in and
beat Vanderbilt 10 to 9. How's that!
WRECK TECH
This being our last chance to make
predictions regarding the scores we
shall drink our fill of the sport. How
do these probabilities agree with your
constitution?
Alabama 27, Georgia 7.
Vanderbilt 16, Sewanee 7.
Tulane 14, L. S. U. 6.
Furman 25, Clemson 0.
Virginia 19, North Carolina 7.
Washington and Lee 25, Florida 0,
Columbia 10, Syracuse 0.
Pittsburgh 15, Penn State 3.
Marquette 20, Mercer 0.
Nebraska 18, Dame 7.
Washington and Jefferson 10,
West Virginia 0.
WRECK TECH
TIGER RECORD
Sore Oppo. Place Date
25-6 B'ham-Sou Munger B. Sept. 26
13-6 Clemson
19-0 V. P. I.
0-33 Texas
7-6 Howard
0-13 Tulane
0-34 Georgia
10-9 Vandy
??-?? Ga. Tech
Clemson Oct. 3
Campus Oct. 10
Dallas Oct. 17
Campus1 Oct. 24
Montgomery Oct. 31
Columbus Nov. 7
B'ham Nov. 14
Atlanta Nov. 26
12 yards and James reeled off the
yardage necessary to place the ball
on the Panther 20 yard line. Suann
and Porter made another first down
but the Tigers were deprived of five
yards by means of a penalty on the
next play. Fobb James banged the
line for four and Spann lunged
through for the second touchdown.
Porter failed to kick goal.
The lone Panther touchdown came
after a series of long passes with
Ogle being on the reception end of
practically each and every one of
them. The ball was carried by this
means to within close range of the
Tiger goal line and Sullivan bucked
it over. O'Brien dropkicked the extra
pointer.
"Shorty" Ogle, who stretches some
6 and one half feet into the atmosphere,
was a reception committee of
one when it came, to receiving Panther
passes. The tall Hilltopper, was
here, there, and all over the lot grabbing
»'em, and was instrumental in
chalking up practically every first
down that his mates got. They registered
12 of them and practically
all came by the chunking route.
All in all, the Panthers essayed 33
passes, 15 of which were completed
for practically all of the yardage
gathered by the Southerners, amounting
to 154 stripes. Ogle snagged 11
of these efforts and was responsible
for 114 yards of the total. Three attempts
failed to find their mark
while five went into the outstretch"-"
ed hands of Tigers. The Tigers made
13 first downs.
To pick the outstanding performers
on the Tiger squad would prove
a difficult task for the entire bunch
did noble work. However, it might
be safe to say that Fisher and McClain
were the stellar players in the
backfield, while Logan and Watt--
wood did the most consistent work
in the line.
Continued on page 6)
Golf Equipment
Fountain Pens
Stationery TIGER DRUG STORE
Send ^er a ^Whitmans Sampler
_; -. . Drugs
Prescriptions _ - .
i
I
I
(
r
THE PLAINSMAN
Make Our Store
Your Store
Drinks - Cigars
Cigarettes and
Drug Sundries
Orange & Blue Confectionery
Sam Sowell 75 -Chester Sowell
Christmas is just around the corner from
Thanksgiving. Don't turn that corner 'till
we show you what your girl will like. She'll
talk right if you give her a box of our beautiful
stationery or an Auburn pillow cover or
table runner or a pen and pencil set or a
book.
Buy Your Auburn Seal Christmas Cards
Now
BURTON'S BOOKSTORE
AUBURN TIGERS DOWN . Spinks was incomplete but Vandy
VANDY IN THRILLER
(Continued from Page 5)
was off side and penalized for 5
yards. Newsome lost 1 yard at right
'tackle. Green made 2 yards at left
Hendricks went over center for three L j j ^ F o m . t o g0 G r e e n k i c k e d QUt
yards. Bryan punted 37 yards to Bo-! o f b o u n d s Qn V a n d y . s 3 2 y a r d l i ne
gue, who signaled for a fair catch. G W a U e r w e n t o v e r r i g h t g u a r d f or
It was Auburn's ball on her own 15
yard line. Greene punted 35 yards
and the ball hit a Vandy man and
8 yards. Hendricks hit center for 2
yards and first down .Vandy's ball
on her own 48 yard line. Reese hit
was downed by Ollinger and it was r i g h t g u a r ( J f o r 5 y a r d g T w o t o g0
Auburn's ^ball on Vandy's 48 yard H e a d r i c k s f a i i e d t o g a i n a t l e f t tack-line,
as the quarter ended. Score
Vandy 6, Auburn 0.
am
i • •
fifes
"} Second Quarter
Turner went over lefttackle -for 5
yards. Green went over right guard
for 27 A pass- from Newsome to
le. Subs for Auburn, McFadden for
Hoffman, Self for Andress. Auburn
was penalized 6 yards for excessive
time out and first'down for Vandy.
Reese went over right guard for 2
yards. A pass was incomplete. A pass
/
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AUBURN FURNITURE CO.
Students Cooperative Dining
Club
serves only the best foods. Superintended
by a lady who is an expert dietician, managed
by coach "Red" Brown.
3 Meals $20.00 per month
2 Meals $16.00 per month
Meals will be served at 7:15 a. m. 12:15 p. rn.
and 6:00 p. m. j
G. Waller to Reese, made 3 yards.
Bryan punted to Bogue for 25 yards.
It was Auburn's ball on her own 18
yard line. Green made 1 yard around
left end. Green punted to Reese for
38 yards. Hendricks rammed center
for 2 yards, but Vandy was off side
and penalized 5 yards. Green broke
through and threw Reese for , 10
yard loss. Bryan punted out of
bounds on his own 36 yard line.
Green hit left guard for 1 yard. A
pass, Newsome to Green, made 35
yards and a touchdown.
Score: Vandy 6; Auburn 6.
Williams replaced Newsome. Williams
kicked goal. Score: Vandy 6;
Auburn 7. McKibbon kicked off to
Bogue on goal line, who ran it back
21 yards. Green punted 36 yards .to
Reese who ran it back 11 yards. N.
Waller went over left tackle for 5
yards. Hendricks hit left guard for 5
yards and first down. N. Waller went
over left tackle for 3 yards. Subs
Vandy, N. Waller replaced G. Waller.
N. Waller hit left guard for 2 yards.
Reese hit left guard for 3 yards.
Hendricks hit left guard for 2 yards
and first down. Subs^ Vandy, Creson
for Booth. Reese hit center for 2
yards. N. Waller made 3 yards over
left tackle. Third down, 5 to go.
Hendricks hit left guard for 1 yard.
Reese went over guard for 4 yards
and first down. Ball on Auburn's
11 yard line. Subs, Auburn, Long replaced
Market. Auburn was penalized
5 yards for excessive time out. Ball
on Auburn's 6 yard line. A pass,
from N. Waller over the goal was
incomplete. It was Auburn's ball
on own 20 yard line. Green went over
left tackle for no gain. Score: Auburn
7; Vandy 6, as the half ended.
Third Quarter
._ Subs, Vandy, Spears replaced
Reese. Subs, Auburn, Market i-eplac-ed
Long. Harkins kicked off to
Rives who was downed on his 29
yard line. Hendricks failed to gain.
N. Waller went over right guard for
6. Hendricks hit right tackle for 2.
Creson punted 38 yards to Bogue.
Williams went over right tackle for
2 yards. A -pass, Williams to Bogue,
made 30 yards and first down.
Williams went over center fdr 1
yard. Auburn was penalized 5 yards
off side. A pass, Williams to Bogue,
made 9 yards. Turner failed to gain
at left end. A pass from Williams
was intercepted by Hendricks. Vandy's
ball on her own_36 yard line.
N. Waller went around left end for
1 yard. Creson punted to Bogue for
40 yards, who ran it back 5 yards.
Williams went over left guard for
5 yards. Play was called back and
Vandy penalized 5 yards off side.
Williams went over center for 1 yard.
Turner rammed center for 3 yards.
A trick play, took Williams over left
guard for 4 yards and first down.
Turner went through center for 4
yards. Williams rammed center for
1 yard. A pass, Williams to Crane,
made J.1 yards and first down. Bogue
was thrown for a 3 yard loss.
Subs, Auburn, Crane replaced Green.
A pass from Williams was incomplete.
A pass from Crane was intercepted
by Spears. It was Vandy's
ball on her 25 yards. Hendricks rammed
center for 5 yards. N. Waller
went over left tackle for 6 yards
and first down. Hendricks rammed
center for 5 yards. N. Waller went
over left tackle for 6 yards and first
down. Hendricks rammed center for
2 yards.
Spears went over right tackle for
1 yard. A pass, Spears to Cargile,
made 22 yards and first down. Ball
on Auburn's 41 yard line. Hendricks
went over left guard for 3 yards.
N. Waller went off left tackle for
2 yards. Five to go. A pass from
Spears was incomplete. Spears went
out of bounds for 2 yards and the
ball went over. Auburn's ball on her
own 22 yard line. Subs, Vandy,
Reese replaced Coles. Crane went
over center for 2 yards. Subs, Auburn,
Crane replaced by Green. Turner
hit center for no gain and Auburn
was off side and penalized 5
yards. Green punted out of bounds
for 33 yards. It was Vandy's ball
on her own 40 yard line, and the
quarter ended here. Auburn 7; Vandy
6.
Fourth Quarter
Reese was thrown for a 5 yard
loss. Spears punted 37 yards and a
Vandy man grounded the ball on Auburn's
30 'yard. Williams rammed
center for 4 yards. Bogue lost 8
yards. Green punted 21 yards out of
bounds. A pass Spears to Hendricks,
made 15 yards and first down. A
pass' from Spears was incomplete. A
long pass from Spears was knocked
down by Williams on the goal line.
A pass, Spears to Hendricks'made 2
yards but Auburn was penalized 5
yards off side. Spears drop kicked
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goal from the 28 yard line. Score:
Auburn 7, Vandy 9. Williams kicked
off to Reese on his goal line who
ran it back 49 yards. It was Vandy's
ball on Auburn's 41 yard line. Hendricks
went over left guard for 2
yards. Reese went over center for 3
yards. Reese went over center for 4
yards. Spears punted 4 yards out of
bounds on 34 yard line. On a fake
pass Williams went around left end
for 8 yards. Williams was thrown for
a 3 yard loss. Green punted 45 yards
to Reese who ran it back 5 yards.
Hendricks rammed center for 1
yard. Spears went around right end
for 16 yards and first down. Hendricks
rammed center for 3 yards.
Spears went around left end for 2
yards. Hendricks went through left
guard for 7 yards and first down.
Ball in mid-field. Hendricks rammed
center for 6 yards. Sub, Auburn,
Pruitt for McNeil. Long for Market.
A pass, Spears to Reese, made 7
yards and first down. Subs, Auburn,
Salter for Turner. Hendricks rammed
center for 1 yard. Spears went
around right end for 9 yards and
first down. Hendricks rammed center
for 1 yard. Hendricks went through
left tackle for 13 yards and first
down. Hendricks went over left guard
for 1 yard. Reese went right guard
for 3 yards. Auburn's ball on her
own 3 ^rd -line. Green punted out
bounds for 13 yards. Spears went
around right end for 1 yard. A pass
from Spears to N. Waller was incomplete.
It was over goal line and the
ball is Auburn's on her own 20 yard
line. A pass from Williams was incomplete.
Sub: Auburn, Tuxworth
for Bogue. A pass Tuxworth to Green
made 73 yards. Tackled from behind
by N. Waller. It was-Auburn's ball
on Vandy's 7 yard line. Time out.
Sub, Vandy, Booth for Hendricks.
Auburn was penalized 5 yards for
excessive time out Williams kicked
goal from placement on 22 yard line.
Score: Auburn 10; Vandy 9. Subs,
Sentimental Journeys
Then and Now**
WHEN the campus sheiks of the Class of .1896,
Anyold College, donned their most heart-breaking
raiment and sallied forth to play sentimental havoc
with the inula tes of Miss Van Teetum's Select Finishing
School for girls, no gas-fed conveyance carried
them on theii way. Instead, they went in debt to the
corner livery stable.
However, there's one thing to remember which
links their day to yours. Many of the very same
pavements— those of vitrified brick—over which they
drove are trie same pavements you are using today.
Keep that little fact in mind whenever you hear
the praises sung of so-called "modern" pavements.
Ask their backers to show you examples which have
rendered even as much as fifteen years of service.
(And then we will give you a long list of vitrified
brick pavements which have resisted from twenty-five
to forty-odd years of traffic.)
A Book for
Roads Scholars
If "The Construction
of Vitrified Brick
Pavements" is not
already a text-book in
your courses, let us
send you a personal
copy. It is an accurate
and authoritative
handbook of 92 pages
which you will want
to preserve for reference
after graduation.
VITRIFIED
P A V E M E
O U T L A S T T H E O N D S
AlTONAL PAVINi; BRICK *S AS-SOCfAT,ION, E.^GIVET.RS--- BLDG
THE TIGER INN
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Sandwiches and Cold Drinks
Special Breakfast
The
Luncheonette
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MONTGOMERY., ALA.
Carte
du Jour
Yes, it's true that
she'll know you
paid just five call"
ing cards for her
Parker Lady Duo-f
old, but do you
really think she
thinks the nonen-tity
costs more?
Then you'd'better
look farther.
Auburn, Hodges for Tuxwortjj, Wil-: right half; Spann, fullback. Hartselle, Sullivan. Points after
Hams kicked off to Spears for 50 Birmingham-Southern (7)—Ogle, ^touchdown, O'Brien (dropkick).
yards. Spears ran it back 22 yards. ieft end; Harmon, left tackle; Doty, i Substitutes: Auburn — Hartselle,
But- play was called back. Auburn off left guard; Stephens, center; Fulton, j McLane, Fisher, Mosely, Wattwood,
side. Williams kicked off 45 yards rjght guard; Barnes, right tackle; Howard, Elliott, O'Brien, McTrottis,
to N. Waller Vandy's ball on her sternchuss, right end; Lott, quarter; ' Dowdy, Strickland, J. Finney, Raglan
own 41 yard line. A pass from Mc- Hewlett, left half; 'Capt. Murray, j Sullivan, Brown.
Ribbon was knocked down by Spinks. rjght half; Mitchell, fullback. Officials: King (Center,) referee;
A pass from Spears was intercepted j Score by quarters: -j L e w i s (Birmingham-Southern,) um-by
Williams who ran it back 25 yards
to the 45 yard line. The game ended
here. Score:-Vandy 9, Auburn 10.
Auburn Position Vanderbilt
Ollinger Coles
Left End
Andress Rives
Left Tackle
Hoffman Keene
Left Guard
McNeil Sharp
Center v
Market — - B r v an
Right Guard
Harkins, Capt. McKibbon
Right Tackle
Spinks Booth
Right End
Bogue — — — G. Waller
Left Half
Newsome —- Cargile
Right Half
Turner Hendrix
Fullback
Substitutions: Auburn—Self for
Andress; McFadden for Hoffman;
Williams for Newsome; Long for
Market; Market for Long; Crane for
Green; Green for Crane; Pruitt for
McNeil; Long for Market; Salter for
Turner; Tuxworth for Bogue.
Substitutions: Vandy—N. Waller
for G. Waller; Creson for Booth;
Spears for Reesef Reese for Coles;
Booth for Hendricks.
Score by periods:
Auburn 0 7 0 3—10
Vandy f<> ° 3— 9
Scoring: Touchdowns, Hendrix,
Green, Point after touchdown, Williams
(placekick.) Field goal, Williams
(placekick.)
Referee, Strupper (Ga. Tech), umpire,
Finley (Virginia); head linesman,
Williams (Sewanee); field judge,
Emerson (Montgomery Bell.)
Auburn Cubs 0
Panthers __ 0 0 0 7—7
Scoring: Touchdowns, Spann,
g g o 12 Pire; Bagley (Birmingham-Southern)
head linesman.
Time of quarters: Fifteen minutes.
m
TIGER CUBLETS SPANK
SOUTHERN FROSH SATURDAY
(Continued from page 5)
Line-up:
Auburn (12)—Ingram, left end;
Carter, left tackle; Dinsmore, left
guard; Capt. Logan, center; Cunningham,
right guard; Turner, right
tackle; McGee, right end; Porter,
quarter; E. James, left half; F. James
HOMER WRIGHT
FRESHMEN, SOPHOMORES, JUNIORS, SENIORS. ATHLETES
Do You Know?
HOW TO STUDY"
The Student*' Hand-Biook of Practical Hint* on the Technique
.of Effective Study
by
WILLIAM ALLEN BROOKS
A GUIDE containing hundreds of practical hints and short
cuts in the economy of learning, to assist students, in securing
MAXIMUM SCHOLASTIC RESULTS at a minimum cost of time
energy, and fatigue. -
ESPECIALLY RECOMMENDED for overworked students
and athletes engaged in extra curriculum activities and for average
and honor students who are working for high scholastic
achievement. *
Some of the Topics covered
;
Scientific Shortcuts in Effective
Study
Preparing for Examination*.
Writing Good Examinations.
Brain and Digestion in Rela -
tion to Study.
How to take Lecture and
Reading Notes.
Advantages and Disadvantages
of Cramming.
The Athlete and His Studies.
Diet During Athletic Training.
How to Study Modern Languages
How to Study Science, Literature,
etc
Why go to College? m
After College, What? w
Developing Concentration and
Effeciency.
Why You Need This Guide
"It is safe to say that failure to guide and direct study is
the weak point in the whole educational machine. Prof. G. M.
Whipple, U. of Michigan. N •
'"She successful men in college do not seem to be very«happy.
Most of them, especially the athletes are overworked." Prof.
H. S. Canby, Yale. , .
"Misdirected labor, though honest and well intentioned may
lead to naught. Among the most important things for the
student to learn is how to study. Without knowledge of this his
labor may be largely in vain." Prof.<x. F. Swain, M. I. T.
"To students who have never learnt "How to Study," w6rk
is very often a chastisement, a flagellation, and an insuperable
obstacle to contentment" Prof A. Inglis, Harvard:
"HOW TO STUDY" will show you how to avoid all misdirected
effort.
Get a good start and make this year a highly successful one
by sending for this Hand-book and guide NOW.
You Need This Intelligent Assistance
CLIP
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TODAY.
American Student Publishers,
22 West 43rd St., New York.
Gentlemen: .
Please send me a copy of How to
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