ident mission-
AIRES MEET AT
HOWARD
FOUNDER’S DAY
OBSERVED HERE
DR iPo. DAWSON, OF
TUSCALOOSA, MAKES
PRINCIPAL ADDRESS
_ On Wednesday, January 28, 1920,
fT MEETING OF BAPTIST
flTUDENT MISSIONARY CON-
VKNTION MEETS AT HOW¬
ARD-MANY PROMINENT
SPEAKERS PRESENT.
At a meeting
оПЬе
base ball let¬
ter-men last Thursday, Lovick P. Me
Lane was elected captain of the 1920
team to succeed Lewis Walker who
will not be in school this term. Mc-
Lane is a classy little ball-player,
and is popular with his teammates.
His past record at Howard, together
with his years of experience both in
amateur and semi-pro ball make bim
the logical man for the place. He
ALABAMA TRIMS BULL- DOGS
IN THRILLING GAME
AT TUSCALOOSA
Founder’s Day was observed here,
with Dr. L. 0. Dawson, pastor of the
■First Baptist Church, of Tuscaloosa
as orator of the occasion.
A short musical program was giv¬
en in the beginning of the exercises I
and Pres. Williams made a few re- i
marks about the college’s bright fu¬
ture, he told of the success he was
making in- his effort to raise $200,-
000 for college.
Ot January 23, 24 and 26th the
до
meeting of the Alabama Bap-
tot Students’ Missionary Convention,
№
in session at H&vard. Almost a
hmc red delegates were present rep¬
uting several of the colleges and
imti'atiohs of the State.
Ti e Convention was opened Fri¬
day night with song service, led by
Mr. Gladstone Jackson, of Howard.
Ubi Dr. A. L. Aulick, pt Ft Worth,
He also stated that
we were almost sure of being out of !
debt and having an endowment of j
$400,000 in a very short while.
Dr. Dawson spoke on “The Found
er and His Ideals.” In a most elo-
forti in a brief way, the possibili- 'qoent way he told his hearers of the
tfes of the Convention. Dr, ■
С. В
great ideals the founder of the col- !
Williams, Pres, of Howard, was un lege had and the importance of stay- j
awldsbly absent and the
dm3 was deferred until next day.
Tvo returned missionaries wer<
the outstanding speakers of the con
L NEWBORNE PATTERSON
Recently elected president of the
State Baptist Missionary Convention.
ENTRE-NOUS SUBSCRIP¬
TION CAMPAIGN STARTS
MONDAY THE 8TH
ad tag close to those ideals. He spoke
of the wonderful work the college
was doing and had done in the past.
Howard was opened at Marion,
January, 1842, with Dr.
dxt3en years in Northern China, and ling Shqrman,
ion, these
president The in-
Dr. W. B. Bagly, thirty-nine years
л
stitution was given its name in hon-
miirionary in Brasil, and other parts or ot John Howard, an English
ot South America. philanthropist First enrollment was
Гг.
Glass told ot the many experi- nine small boys in a small friroie
ос я
on the missoin field and th
э
building. 1846 college erected new
growing of the great work there an lj building at cost of $11,500. Fire de¬
hor the Chinaman is developing stroyed building in 1864. Three brick
nmitaUy, morally and religiously. He buildings were erected, these were lea8t ono
at»' put before the convention the 'used for hospital purposes during the „zJul
present condition and possibilities in Confederate w.
that great mission ■ field. moved to Birml
It. Bagby, who was the first Baj
ь
— —
tie Missionary in Brazil, gave his _
5 ftaa
4&ЮК
MR PA£$
of the work in South Amtorica. fie!
tol l of the wonderful growth of this j HOWARD MA
country materially and spiritual! y. j DENT g
The convention was startled when it , MISSION A
kerned that Alabama had never !
aeut a missionary to South America.
«
j^ewben
Dr. J. R. Hobbs, pastor of the Fir it J CoUtC* w«
Bf.ptist Church, of Birmingham,.^ gtate Bapt
ipske Saturday morning on “Why tkm at their fi
Hive Baptist Student Organization here
in Baptist Schools?” His rneesa ?e !|ganday> Mr. :
ww helpful and this reasons wvre Qf high aUn(j
elar and to the point. possesses a k«
Dr. Chas. T. Ball, former profeu- ^ — u.. which
*r in Seminar;; at Ft. Worth, now ■ iftt_
Smthem Secretary of Students’ Mis- \
zonary Movement, was present and
five several addresses dnring the BE PATR
time, which were both inspirational YOUR SCHOC
isd intellectual. TO THE ANN
Dr. J. E. Dillard, pastor of Sou ;h-
lide Baptist Church, spoke on “T he '
Superlative Granduer of the Mission- THANK YO
fry Enterprise.” In a beautiful v-ay
1* showed the magnitude and power
'< the Missionary war. Upon takin
Dr. L. L. Gwaltney, editor of Ala- Business Mans
«та
Baptist, spoke Sunday after- find that some
won, on “Larger and Better Men.” i porters and a
SUB-
OUR GOAL— A 100 %
SCRIPTION FROM THE STUDENT
BODY. CAN WE DEPEND ON
YOU?
COUNT TOLSTOI
SPEAKS UNDER AUS¬
PICES OF HOWARD
Count Hya Tolstoi, son of the on the local court. However, the
great Tolstoi, spoke to a represents- Moore-Stephenson combination proved
tive audience at the First. Baptist ^ m4,ch and the final count stood:
Church, Tuesday evening, January Alabama 29, Howard 17. The fea-
27, under the auspices of Howard ^ 0f the game was the remark-
College. His subject was: “Russia’s j
аЫе
goai shooting of Moore for Als-
he spoke in detail about bolshevism
and the things which produced it;
second, he spoke intimately about his
father and his father’s teachings.
DO YOUR DUTY. BUY AN EN
TRE-NOUS.
YOUR SUPPORT
be sent to the engraver unless the
price of the cut has been paid. The
| management has secured very rea-
' sonable terme- for this work and a
cheerful observance of the schedule
> will result! in lessening the burdens
il- ! of the Staff and make for a better an-
gy nual. Prices are as follows:
ib- Seniors - $2.00
Juniors — . — . —
1-Д0
Sophomores - -60
Freshmen - - - -60
gjg All organizations . ,10.00
per page.
,tv Smaller cuts in proportion.
Faculty - 8-00
)n_ Students, we appeal to you to at-
,by [tend to this matter at once. This
the! work must be completed now in or-
je- der to make way for other cam¬
paigns. Some one will be in the En-
tbe tre-Nous office to take the money and
give you a receipt. Thank you for
(TolWIey. J. F. your co-operatiom _ .
Upper. The try- -T* Entre-Noua Management
DR. C. W. SHROPSHIRE
SPEAKS TO BIOLOGY
Secretary, W. B. Dowell, Uni/sr-
Bity of Alabama.
Treasurer, Miss Ella Hamilton,
Florence State Normal.
Corresponding Secretary, Miss
ГА-
"** Schofield, Troy State NornuJ.
Assistant Corresponding Secretary,
With Lathem,' Eldridge Aead-
DEATH OF MR.
STOP! LOOK1 LISTEN! THEN
j “SHELL OUT” FOR AN ANNUAL.
I YOU’LL NEVER REGRET IT.
THE HOWARD CRIMSON
PUBLISHED EVERY Tt^O WERE; DURING THE SCHOLA8TIG YEAR
BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA; FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1920
3ER 9
BASE BALL
CAPTAIN ELECTED
BULL-DOGS HAVE A
WORTHY LITTLE
PILOT FOR THIS SEASON
HOWARD HAS
DISASTROUS TRIP
LOSES FOUR STRAIGHTS ,
BY CLOSE MARGIN-
That Howard has a well-trained,
fighting basketball team, no one will
deny. But the team just seems to
lack the necessary punch to win
games. This was shown on the dis¬
astrous road-trip of last week, when
the team dropped four straights,
has played baseball for six years on-phe first game was with the Talla-
| Various semj-pro organizations and j <jega Athletic Club and was a rough
made quite an enviabee record in the j
ад<|
tumble affair resulting in a 34
Walker County League last summer. jto 17 score in favor of Talladega.
On Howard’s 1919 team he held down j The same night, the second squad
second base like a veteran, fielding played Good water on its own grouds,
.970 and hitting well over .300. Un¬
der his leadership, and with a vast
amount of good material, Howard’s
1920 aggregation. should rank high in
S. I. A. A. circles.
“Mac” is very popular in the stu¬
dent-body, is a member of the Soph¬
omore class, and is a Pi
К
A. We
wish for him and the team every suc¬
cess this season.
losing by the small margin of 32 to
16. The third game was with Merc¬
er University, at Macon, Ga. The
game was fast and well-played.
Ricks, of Mercer, was the star of the
game and proud to be the undoing of
the Howard quintet.
О.
.B* Newman
played a bang-up game for Howard.
The final score was: Mercer 33, .How¬
ard 21.
The fourth game was with Geor¬
gia Military Academy and' was lost
by a closer score than the Mercer
game, 28-20.
The Bull Dogs then returned home,
and, after a few days rest, journeyed
to Tuscaloosa where they took on the
fast Alabama five. Advices from
Tuscaloosa say that the game was
the hardest-fought contest ever seen
on the local court. However, the
Moore-Stephenson combination proved
too mtuch and the final count stood:
Alabama 29, Howard 17. The fea¬
ture of the game was the remark-
will bo depicted; Jhe^ glee dub, divlded into two distinct parts. First, ] tionai sh0ts from the center of the
floor. For the locals, Walker and
О.
B. Newman featured.*
THE BEST GIFT YOU COULD
SEND HER— THE ENTRE-NOUf
KUGELMASS HAS
GREAT TRIP
Sarbford University Library
Profeasor L Newton Kugelmass
NOUS CUTS represented the State of Alabama at
Washington where a convention waA
held in the interest of Congress legis¬
lation on the Jones-Reavis Bifl.
It is a bill introduced by the engi¬
neers of the country to reorganize
the government so that all engineer¬
ing works are under one department
at the head of which is to be an engi¬
neer. It is a bolsheviki movement
for efficiency, economy and expert-
ship of service.
Every state in the union had a
representative engineer. Each one of
them presented reports, addressee,
plans of state organization, etc. Of
all the organization schemes pro¬
posed the one framed by Professor
Kugelmass for Alabama was adopt¬
ed for the entire country.
Special sessions were held with the
Congressmen and Senators at which
Prof. Kugelmass played quite a po¬
litical role. He was also appointed
Secretary of the Convention.
At Baltimore, Prof. Kugelmass
was the guest of one of the members
of the Faculty of the Chemistry of
Johns Hopkins.
In New York the professor was at
home also attending to some Collo¬
idal chemistry matters for the Na¬
tional Research Council.
LET’S SUBSCRIBE 100%, AND
THUS MAKE POSSIBLE THE
BEST .ENTRE-NOUS EVER 8BBN
AT HOWARD,