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About The Daily Bulletin/Reveille. (College Station, Tex.) 1916-1938 | View Entire Issue (March 4, 1926)
A J - THURSDAY SPECIALS ONLY $4.95 for your pick from a group of 90 pairs of Packard's $8.50 shoes and oxfords. Broken sizes. The earlier you come the better value you will get. With each sale goes a chance for a Wilson Bros. $2.50 shirt free. W. EF. GIBBS & SON SHOE REPAIRING done by NEW COLLEGE SHOE SHOP Shoes will be collected and delivered by F. K. Mixon, 24 Foster FRANK KOHOUT Proprietor If in Bryan, go to the BRYAN SHOE HOSPITAL THE COLLEGE STATION COMMUNITY STORE (Cooperative) Dealers in Staple and Fancy Groceries Trade at your own Store Leave your order for engraved personal or business cards at the Pub- licity office. They will be filled by one of the largest and best-equipped houses in the South. FEED MANUFACTURER TO INTERVIEW SENIORS L. M. Kishler and C. R. Fry, rep- resentatives of the Purina Feed Mills of St. Louis and Fort Worth are now on the Campus for the purpose of interviewing seniors relative to employment after graduation. C. R. Fry, a graduate of the College with the class of ’25, entered the services of this Company last August and is now associate employment manager with Mr. Kishlar. For the past few years more Texas A. and M. men have been in the em- ploy of this Company than from any other college or university in the United States. A Purina Texas Ag- gie Club has been formed with 28 members, all of whom are actively working for the Purina organization. Appointments for an interview with Mr. Kishlar and Mr. Fry can be made by calling at the Y. M. C. A. desk through Friday. —_—r—— DISTINGUISHED STUDENTS (Official) At the end of each session, students who have failed in no subject and who have accumulated a total of sixty grade points during the session shall be announced as “Distinguished.” On Bulletin Board No. 13 in the Main building, is posted a list of the students who are eligible for this dis- tinction by virtue of having accumu- lated twenty grade ponts or more dur- ing the first term. CHARLES E. FRILEY, Registrar. a rr. — A. LOST.—Overland crank, on Campus. Finder please return to E. L. Wil- liams, Department of Education.—124 Industrial YOU LADIES Of the Campus— Next time you're in Bryan, stop in and ask to see these wenderful, all-silk CHIFFON HOSE $1.95 I. K. LAWRENCE CHAS. NITCH CAMPUS TAILOR We Keep the Aggie looking snappy. The conservation department of Louisiana says that the annual yield of Louisiana’s muskrats is about $6,000,000, and puts that State at the head of all in the Union in fur pro- duction. But the trade hardly hears of Louisiana muskrats. Instead, the furs are marked as Southern musk- rats. A gas mask has been developed that produces its own oxygen. ~ WEATHER REPORT FOR WEEK ENDING FEBRUARY 28 The temperature and precipitation records for the week ending Sunday, February 28, are as follows: Temperature Inches Date Maximum Minimum Rainfall February 22, Monday 75 50 0.00 February 23, Tuesday 75 51 0.00 February 24, Wednesday 77 41 0.00 February 25, Thursday 79 48 0.00 February 26, Friday 62 38 0.00 February 27, Saturday 73 43 0.00 February 28, Sunday 71 51 0.00 During the month of February, 79 degrees, the minimum 36 degrees, inches. 1926, the maximum temperature was and the amount of precipitation 0.13