The Texas Aggie. (College Station, Tex.) 1921-current, November 01, 1939, Image 4

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    A. & M. Booth At
Brazoria Fair
The Brazoria County A. & M.
Club will have a booth at the
Brazoria County Fair and Fat
Stock Show to be held at Angle-
ton on November 9-12. In addition
to providing a comfortable place
for fair visitors to rest, or meet
friends, the club will have an ex-
hibit of information about the A.
& M. College and its activities. All
A. & M. visitors to this stock
show, and others interested, are
extended a cordial invitation to
the club’s booth.
Regular meeting dates of the
Brazoria County Club are on the
fourth Tuesday of each month.
Officers of the club include: War-
ren N. Moore, ’31, president; R. H.
Stansel, ’26, vice president; and
W. H. Meyers, 27, secretary-trea-
surer.
Dr. Dan J. Anderson, ’38, is a
veterinarian at Terrell, Texas,
where he is residing at 309 E.
Mboore Street of that city.
R. S. Elliott, ’38, writes to send
his TEXAS AGGIE to Box 861,
Big Lake, Texas, where he is with
the West Texas Range Improve-
ment Company. He reports his
company has been doing pasture
furrowing in Martin, Glasscock,
and Reagin Counties.
Paul T. Hanes, ’38, is adminis-
trative assistant for the AAA and
is located at New Boston, Texas,
where he gets his mail at Box 42.
Podge M. Reed, ’32, is now out
of the U. S. Air Corps and is liv-
ing at 1022 Erie Drive, Shreveport,
Louisiana.
A. C. Volz, ’33, is office engineer
with the Texas State Highway De-
partment at Corpus Christi, Texas.
J. H. Kitching, ’38, makes his
home at 2811 Oak Lawn Avenue,
Dallas. Kitching is with the Guard-
ian Funeral Home at Dallas.
Roy C. Morrison, ’38, is employed
by the Brown County Agricultural
Conservation Association and is
living at 1209 Fisk Avenue, Brown-
wood.
Davis B. Schultz, 28, is service
chief for the Burroughs Company
and his address is Lugano 1005,
Lomas de Chapultepec, Mexico
City, Mexico.
J. Walter Davis, 37, has return-
ed to A. & M. and will do graduate
work in the Dairy Husbandry De-
partment on his masters degree,
which he expects to receive at mid-
term.
Among Beaumont civic leaders
actively engaged in this year’s
Beaumont Community Chest Drive,
are Ed Stedman, Jr., ’21, and C. R.
“Chick” Dollinger, ’26. Stedman
is in the wholesale fruit and vege-
table business in Beaumont. Doll-
inger is with the Dollinger Steel
Company in that city. Both are
taking an active part in the solici-
tation of funds for this year’s com-
munity chest.
C. L. Babcock, ’18, immediate
past president of the Association
of Former Students, recently cele-
brated completion of the 10th
birthday of the C. L. Babacock |
Insurance Agency of Beaumont.
One of the civic leaders of Beau-
month, Babcock at the present time
is chairman of the school board
of that city.
Doss Buntin, ’39, is with the
Federal Crop Insurance Corp.,
Amarillo, and reports himself most
happy in his work.
Gabe Cazell, Jr., ’37, is pur-
suing graduate work at the Uni-
versity of Minnesota this winter,
working his doctorate. He re-
ceived his Master’s degree at A.
& M. last in the field of economics.
Arthur Morehead, ’32, is exec-
utive secretary of the Texas So-
cial Welfare Association, Box 1184
Austin. His headquarters were
recently moved to Austin from
Dallas.
A recent campus visitor was
Langston Goree, 20, who came
by while on a visit with his mother
at his old home in Navasota. He
lives at El Centro, California, in
the Imperial Valley where he is
ger of the Peoples Finance Co.,
and also engaged in the real estate
and loan business. He and Mrs.
Lloyd M. Walls, ’39, is with the
Petty Engineering Co., Box 809,
Alexandria, La. He travels over
much territory in Louisiana but
mail addressed as above will event-
ually reach him.
S. Lloyd Stoneham, ’38, is living
at Stoneham, Texas, where he gets
his mail at Box 26.
Horace H. Bennet, ’37, is with
the NYA Resident Center at Wood-
lake, Texas.
Fred D. Zalmanzig, ’37, has been
promoted to the position as tran-
mission engineer, South Texas De-
partment of the San Antonio Pub-
lic Service Company. He is an ac-
tive member of the Alamo A. & M.
Club in San Antonio.
The McMurrey Refining Com-
pany at Tyler has its full quota
of A. & M. men. Fred P. Sewell,
’32, is superintendent of the plant,
which also lists among its person-
nel, Doyle Williams, ’29; Frde Car-
penter, 28; and Forest Kendricks,
32.
Murell K. Taylor, ’36, recently
returned to Texas from Colombia,
South America, where he has been
for several years with a seismo-
graph Party, Texas Petroleum
Corp. He contracted a severe case
of malaria and will remain in
Texas until entirely recovered. He
is at home in Mt. Pleasant, Texas,
at the present time.
A. L. Betts, 38, is with the Gulf
States Utilities at Beaumont. He
was on the teaching staff of the
College last year as a graduate
assistant.
Ed D. Hopkins, ’19, Senior Sani-
tary Engineer, Pan American Sani-
tary Bureau, has been decorated
and honored by the Chilean Gov-
ernment with “El Merito” garde
“Oficial”, one of the highest de-
corations given by the Chilean
nation. He is the first engineer
to be so honored by Chile. A for-
mer Aggie basketball player and
known to his schoolmates as “Sis”
Hopkins, he has become one of
the best known sanitary engineers
in the western Hemisphere. Before
going to Chile he was with the
Texas State Health Dept. His pre-
sent address is Santa Maria 467,
Depto. 304, Santiago, Chile.
Col. Ralph H. Wooten, ’16, is
Military Attache to the United
States Embassy in Santiago, Chile.
Sam D. Camp, 27, recently mov-
ed from Houston to New Orleans,
where he is living at the Hotel
New Orleans. He is associated
with the Ford Motor Company in
the New Orleans District and is
in the Commercial Car Depart-
ment. For the past several years,
he has been treasurer of the Ace
Distributing Company of Houston,
specializing in trucks and buses.
Melvin M. Lawson, ’38, gets his
mail at Box Z, Hobbs, New Mexico,
where he is with the Humble Oil
& Refining Company.
Ray L. Tribble, ’28, is with the
city of Dallas and is residing at
5959 Ross Avenue, Dallas. Tribble
returns to work for the City of
Dallas after having worked for
the WPA in San Antonio.
H. C. “Tony” Heldenfels, ’35, is
with the Heldenfels Brothers, con-
tractors, and at the present time is
located at Rockport, Texas. He ex-
pects to be in Rockport until the
first of the year. “Tony” was edi-
tor of the 1935 Longhorn, and
participated in many campus acti-
vities.
W. W. Sadler, ’38, is with the
U. S. Bureau of Animal Industry
in St. Louis and is residing at 829
Clay, Collinsville, Ill.
James H. Caddess, ’32, is doing
in Bryan, where he gets his mail
at P. O. Box 612, Bryan. Cad-
dess also received his MS degree
from A. & M. in 1934.
Charles T. Smith, ’34, has been
ransferred from the Houston East-
man Oilwell Survey Campany to
S. L. I. Station, Box 100, Lafayette,
Louisiana.
N. A. Secardino, ’29, has recently
been transferred to Sunburst, Mon-
tana. Ned is still with the Texas
Company, and is keeping a check
on operations at Craig, Colorado,
Casper, Wyoming, and Sunburst,
Montana. Secardino reports that he
is enjoying the scenery very much,
although he is finding himself
quite a busy man. At the time he
was transferred, Ned was pres-
ident of the Port Arthur A. & M.
Club.
Dr. Burke Brewster, 26, is head
of the Health Department of the
city of Ft. Worth, and also Direc-
tor of the city’s Welfare Depart-
men.
R. P. Tull, ’28, veteran vocation-
al agriculture teacher, recently
resigned that capacity at Brady
to become essociated with the Con-
sumers Cotton Oil Mill at Houston.
Robert W. Yarbrough, ’01, is
resident engineer on the WPA pav-
ing project at Menard, Texas. He
is with the firm of J. W. Beretta,
Engineers of San Antonio, and that
city is headquarters and home. He
will be in Menard for several
months. Mr. Yarbrough was the
first student from Louisiana to be
graduated from A. & M.
H. M. Qualtrough, ’36, is with
the United Gas Pipe Company,
Box 780, Wichita Falls.
H. H. “Red” Weatherby, 29, has
been made assistant Extension
Poultry husbandman for the A.
& M. Extension Service with head-
quarters at College Station. He was
formerly assistant county agent at
Waco to County Agent J. C. Pat-
terson, ’12. Weatherby’s place at
Waco will be filled by George Lo-
gan, ’35, who moves to Waco from
Georgetown. Weatherby will work
under Geo P. McCarthy, ’28, poul-
try husbandman of the Extension
Service.
S. D. Reynolds, ’24, was a recent
campus visitor bringing news about
various A. & M. men in the West
Texas area. Sid is with the A. & M.
Experiment Station in the Feed
Control Service.
Charles B. Calvin, ’38, has re-
cently moved from San Antonio
to College Station, where he gets
his mail at Box 2324.
KEN W. HOOE (29) & CO.
Writing All Lines
GENERAL INSURANCE
BONDS
806 Medical Arts Bldg.
Waco, Texas
Telephone 7555
and ’30, writes from 121 Sycamore
Drive, Decatur, Georgia, where he
is with the A. Farnell Blair Con-
struction Company. He is mourn-
ing about not having an oppor-
tunity to see any Southwest Con-
ference Games this fall but ex-
ertheless. He occasionally gets to
Athens, Georgia and will be root-
ing for Georgia University and
Georgia End Coach “Siki” Sikes,
’28, several times this fall.
Kay Halsell, ’35, is still with the
Oil Well
has recently been transferred to
Salem, Illinois. Kay reports that
Valiil.. Forsyth," 37, fist also™ at
Salem, where he is connected with
the Lane Wells Company.
S. A. McMillan, Jr., ’37, is with
the Institutional Adjustment Divis-
ion of the Soil Conservation Ser-
vice, Neil P. Anderson Building,
Fort Worth. Sam reports that he
is getting along fine with his work
and is looking forward to the
A. & M.-T. C. U. Game on the 21st.
| Sam is the son of S. A. McMillan,
[709, regional farm manager for
the Farm Security Administration,
Dallas.
Tom B. Strother, ’38, has accept-
ed a position as industrial arts
teacher in the Luling High School.
P. L. “TWO-GUN” TRACY, ’25
CLAUDE EVERETT (17) INC.
522 Barziza St., Houston, Texas
GENERAL CONTRACTOR
SPECIALISTS IN STORM
SEWER CONSTRUCTION
pects to see some good ones nev- |’
AUSTIN
BRIDGE COMPANY
MANUFACTURERS
CONTRACTORS - BUILDERS
DALLAS, TEXAS
Roads - Bridges - Road Machinery
Supply Company but]
The Aggieland
Inn
ON THE CAMPUS
Ofyers You
Comfortable Rooms
Dining Room and
Lunch Room
®
Make It Your
Headquarters
Gain in net reserves
Gain in Total assets
Gain in Total surplus
PROGRESS PERCENTAGES
Compatative statements of the Company’s develop-
ment for nine months of 1938 and 1939 are convincing
evidences of successful operations.
Gain in 1st. year gross premiums
Gain in renewal gross premiums
“Texas’ Best for Best Texans”
SOUTHWEST RESERVE MUTUAL
LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
Legal Reserve Old Line
LONGVIEW, TEXAS
254 %
548 %
375%
204%
174%
T
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