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About The Texas Aggie. (College Station, Tex.) 1921-current | View Entire Issue (April 2, 1942)
THE TEXAS AGGIE Page 4 SPORTS PARADE Once Over Lightly . . . R. C. (Beau) Bell, ’31, who has been in the Major League for several sea- sons at St. Louis, Detroit, and Cleveland, is this year with Tole- do of the Class AA American As- sociation. The team trained in San Antonio and old “Beau” look- ed as fit as a fiddle. Younger brother Woody Bell, ’38, is in the Army. Both captained and were star outfielders and hitters on championship Aggie Baseball teams their last years at A. & M. . . .. Jake Mooty, ‘35, is still in the majors with the Chicago Cubs and the sporting news recently had this to say about him, “Jake Mooty, scheduled to be the Cub’s night game expert, is being brought along slowly but is feeling fine and has had no recurrence of the sore arm trouble that has pes- tered him in the past.” Jake was a star pitcher A. & M. He makes his winter home in Fort Worth and has been in professional base- ball since graduation . . . Jess Landrum, ’38, is with the Dallas team in the Texas League. He is listed as an outfielder but is ex- pected to be used all around the diamond. He has also played with Toledo and Shreveport since his baseball days at A. & M.. ... Johnnie Morrow, 38, former fiery Aggie football, basketball, and baseball star is back in the pro game with the New Orleans team of the Southern Association. He left A. & M. to pro ball for sever- al years and later returned to Texas to go into business and play semi-pro ball. He went back with New Orleans last year. . . . The Aggie swimmers can’t overcome the superior quantity of their Longhorn rivals and Texas won its 11th swimming title in a row at the conference meet recently. It is the third straight year that the Aggies won the most first places and still lost the title . . . If the war doesn’t intervene, Dough Rollins will have a championship track team at A. & M. within the next two years. This year’s fresh- man team is a strong aggregation of both individuals and relay teams who can outstep the varsity... .. That boy Collins pitching for Texas, this year is a son of former Aggie Star Warren “Rip” Col- lins, ’17, still rated the greatest punter in Southwest football his- tory. “Rip” is sheriff of Travis County and lives at Austin. . ... Back to swimming, Bobby Tay- lor, Aggie swim star, is the out- standing tank performer in the Southwest. In the recent confer- ence meet he set a new conference record in the 220-yard free-style and also won the 100-yard free- style and the 440-yard free-style. . . . And a bouquet to a long list of A. & M. men who pioneered the swimming sport for inter-col- legiate competition at A. & M. For years they struggled along without coaches, organization, or other support. Now swimming is creating lots of interest and excite- ment and it is a grand inter-col- legiate event. . Baseball Coach Lil Dimmitt’s mouth waters every time he takes a look a Fresh- man baseball pitching star big Lee Forrest. If the varsity had Forrest to team with Charlie Stephenson this year they might be hard to head for conference honors. Forrest is from Dallas’ Sunset High School. Annual Meeting Visitors Break In New Dorm Stag visitors returning for the annual ‘meeting next week-end, April 11-12, will be quartered in one of the four recently completed new dormitories and will thus have the opportunity of initiating the new halls. Two of the four dormitories nave been named in honor of Generals Andrew Moses and George F. Moore, ’08, both former commandants. These dorm- itories have not previously been used. Upon arrival visitors should re- port to the Ex-Students’ Head- quarters at the Y. M. C. A. for assignment to rooms in the new dormitory. Reunion classes will be quartered in adjacent rooms. The new dormitories will be found both comfortable and convenient- ly located. San Antonio Plans Spring Party May 23 The annual spring chicken bar- becue of the San Antonio A. & M. Club will be held on the evening of May 23 at Henry Weir's, "21, ranch near San Antonio. Louis A. Hartung, ’29, has been named gen- eral chairman of the party; Julius A. Stein, 26, will handle the pro- gram of games and entertainment for the evening; and Leon Bras- kamp, 29, is in charge of pub- licity and attendance. Chickens for the party have al- ready been purchased and are fat- tening. Major Hugh E. Wharton, 28, the club’s traditional expert, is on active duty at San Antonio, and will either find time to handle the barbecuing job or be available as a consultant. Additional news of this annual big affair, which has become famous in Southwest Texas, will be carried in subse- quent issues of the AGGIE. The Brundrett Boys On Many Fronts The four sons of Mr. and Mrs. George T. Brundrett, ’08, 311 North Windomere, Dallas, will shortly be in uniform. The oldest son, Capt. George C. Brundrett, ’33, is in the Philippines. Dr. Frank W. Brundrett, ’37, who has been operating a veterinary hos- pital in Dallas, holds a reserve commission. He has taken his first physical examination and will be in the service shortly. Lt. Warner M. Brundrett, ’41, has completed the primary Air Corps training at Corsicana, and is now at Randolph Field. The remaining son, Jack Milner, will graduate from high school this spring and will don a 1934 (Continued from Page 3) LT. E. H. McCANN, JR., one of Humble Company’s civil engi- neers ,is stationed at Needles, Cal- ifornia. JAMES E. POOLE is in New York City working on a project for the Mathieson Alkali Corpora- tion. He gets his mail at Hotel Lex- ington, New York, N. Y. LIEUTENANT WILLIAM O. TAYLOR is on active duty and at the present time attending the Balloon Barrage School at Camp Tyson, Tennessee. ; LIEUTENANT E. PACE WEA- THERBY, JR., has arrived in Mon- mouth Beach, N. J., where he is on military duty with the Army En- gineer Corps. 1935 LIEUTENANTS LEA ROY ALDWELL, WALTER M. YOUNG, and JIMMIE JOHNSON are on active military assignments at the Balloon Barrage School at Camp Tyson, Tennessee. VERNE C. ANDREWS coached the dairy cattle judging team of J Alla Hubbard in northeast Collin County, which won top honors in the annual dairy judging day ac- tivities for 4-H Club boys of Texas at the Southwestern Exposition and Fat Stock Show in Fort Worth recently. Andrews is assistant county agent of Collin County with headquarters at McKinney. LT. WILLIAM P. ALEXAN- DER, JR., is on duty with the 4th Interceptor Command, Signal Corps, San Francisco, Calif. He and Mrs. Alexander live at 790 California Street, San Francisco. FIRST LIEUTENANT GEO- RGE W. COX is on active duty with the U. S. Engineer Corps and has been assigned on various posi- tions in Southwest Texas. He also received his master’s degree in 1936 and was captain of the Aggie swimming team in 1935. Before going on active duty he was with the State Highway Department. 0 1936 CHARLIE V. ARISCO has been ordered to active duty and report- ed to Fort Benning, Georgia. Aris- co lived at 225 16th Street, Port Arthur, Texas, and was president of the Port Arthur A. & M. Club. LIEUTENANT GEORGE BARGMANN has been ordered to attend the Officers’ Training School at Fort Francis E. War- ren, Wyoming. He was formerly of Gonzales, Texas. LT. ROBERT S. CONLY has been called on active duty and is with the 1st F.A. Bn., 6th Divi- sion, at Fort Leonard Wood, Mis- souri. Before going into the serv- ice, Bob was with the Humble Oil & Refining Company at their Bay- town Refinery. He is a chemical engineer and as a student at A. & M. was a Ross Volunteer. The Humble Company lost an- other employee when LT. JOHN M. cadet uniform at A. & M. in June. CRADDOCK was ordered on ac- tive duty. He is with the Signal Corps at Duncan Field, San An- tonio. John was a member of the Scholarship Honor Society while at A. & M. and took his degree in electrical engineering. LT. ROY T. DURST is in the Office of the Chief Signal Offi- cer, Room 1348, Temporary Build- ing “M,” Washington, D.C. Before going on active duty, Roy was in the Production Department of the Humble Company. When at A. & M., he was on the Battalion Staff, ’35, and Longhorn Staff, ’36, as well as being a member of the Press Club, Waco Club and various other organizations. LARKIN C. EAKIN has been transferred as assistant county agricultural agent from Wharton County to Burleson County as act- ing county agricultural agent by the Extension Service. He will be located at Caldwell, Texas. 1937 LT. JOSEPH B. COLLERAIN is at the F. A. Replacement Training Center, Fort Sill, Oklahoma. As a student at A. & M., Joe was on the Longhorn staff, Captain of the Pistol Team, and took part in many student activities. He was with the Humble Company before going on active duty. LIEUTENANT RICHARD N. “DICK” CONOLLY is one of the four A. & M. men who have just completed the Adjutant General's School at Washington. There were 175 men enrolled. The other A. & M. men were CAPTAIN HARRY K. WESTERMANN, ’34; LIEU- TENANTS ROBERT S. JONES, ’30; and JASON T. CAMPBELL, ’39. Conolly is returning to Elling- ton Field, Texas. ; J. WALTER DAVIS has been given a leave of absence for the duration of war for military serv- ice by the Texas A. & M. Exten- sion Service. Davis has been serv- ing as assistant county agricul- tural agent for Henderson County. Davis is a brother of ROY B. DA- VIS, ’27, of Houston. 1938 FIRST LIEUTENANT GEO- RGE BARTON ADAMS, son of Mr. and Mrs. George E. Adams of the Texas A. & M. Extension Serv- ice, has gone to Washington, D.C., under orders for service in the U. S. Army. LIEUTENANT R. B. BOETT- CHER, JR., was on the campus re- cently from his post at Ellington Field to interview A. & M. seniors who are interested in air corps service. Over 100 seniors who will receive reserve commissions upon graduation were transferred to the Air Service. Lieutenant Boettcher is the son of R. B. BOETTCHER, ’00, East Bernard, and has been on active duty at Ellington Field for some time. WILSON B. BUCKLEY'S new mailing address is Box 416, Rus- sellville, Arkansas, LT. JOHN M. DIEB is on active duty and stationed in San Diego, California. John was with the Humble Company before receiv- ing his orders. He was a distin- guished student, a member of the Scholarship Honor Society, and a reporter for the Battalion while at A. & M. 1939 JOHN BAILEY, assistant mech- anical engineer at Frankford Ar- senal, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, recently visited his parents in Bryan. He attended the meeting of American Society of Mechani- cal Engineers in Houston from March 23-25. Bailey is being sent, along with Brig. Gen. Earl Mec- Farland and Lt. Col. D. J. Martin, from the Frankfort Arsenal by the War Department, ordnance de- partment, to the meeting. Bailey lives at 3208 Wellington, Philadel- phia, Pa. JOHN C. BECKA is stationed at Camp Wallace, Texas, Battery B. John was with the Humble Company at their Baytown Re- finery before going in the Army. | $ C. H. BERGMANN, ’39, Goliad, has gone on active duty with the U. S. Air Corps and is located at Kelly Field. ERNEST J. BOTARD has been granted a leave of absence by the Texas A. & M. Extension Service for the duration of war for mili- tary service. He was county agent for McMullen County with head- quarters at Tilden, Texas. 1940 LT. H. J. BLACK has been transferred from Fort Riley, Kan- sas, to Troop F, 104th Cavalry, Military Reservation, Indiantown Gap, Pennsylvania. JAMES D. EILAND has chang- ed jobs—from Secretary of the Deaf Smith County A. C. A. at Hereford to Assistant County Cadets Beat Texas Split With Bears In Diamond Race As the AGGIE goes to press the Cadets split a baseball series with S.M.U. at Dallas, thereby dimming sharply early season title hopes. Another game with T.C.U. at Ft. Worth this week will further tell the story of where the Aggies will land in the conference race. Lil Dimmitt’s Aggie Baseballers got away to a good start in the conference winning two and drop- ping one in their first three games. The cadets split a pair against Bay- lor at Waco but trounced the fav- ored Longhorns 4-1 at College last Friday. With every team in the league rated below par, the current race promises to be a wild scramble. Texas, as usual, is favored for the title. For the Aggies Captain Scoggin, catcher, and Charlie Stephenson, pitcher, are outstand- ing. Aggies (4) Ballow, ss Rogers, If Black, cf Smith, rf | coormonore, as} ol corvneonom Jom = 0 000 100—1 100 010 B © =] Texas (1) Grell, cf Hestor, Sb, TL) .c.ceeerersese- 4 Hatton, ss Houpt, 1b Harkins, » 8, If eenesises 4 Reeves, O’Reagan, c¢ Randerson, ¢, 3b ........... Collins, “ip sone. AL *Pierce Dumke, p Tankersley, p TOTALS .....58... 3 1 *Pjerce batted for Collins in 4th = Sea i de = wl cocccococomoconoEnwt ol cocoro~ool al cocororrmrrromn They Keep ’Em Flying Eight airplane mechanics, radio specialist, and so forth, on the ground are required to keep one pilot flying. Many are experts in particular lines. The following Ag- gies are members of the ground force at Randolph Field, Hester C. Kirchner, ’89; Charles Y. Gibson, '38; Albert J. Seargeant, ’39; Drayton H. Lester, 41; James F. Gholson, ’34; William A. Given, 40; Louis W. DeWeese, ’32; Wil- liam D. Frierson, ’40; Brister M. Guess, '41; Wesley I. Lane, Jr. '36; and G. R. LeBlanc, 41. Agent at Wheeler, Texas. Lieutenants Sherman Given, C. Dow Mims, Roland Hass, JRoy Packer and Al O. Schnabel are on active duty attending the aBlloon Barrage School at Camp Tyson, Tennessee, LT. FRANK W. HARTMANN, JR., received his temporary pro- motion from 2nd Lt. to 1st Lt. on March 4th. His address has also been changed from Company A, 4th Bn., Fort Monmouth, N. J., to Company B, 31st Bn.,, Camp Crow- der, Missouri. LT. CHARLES HENKE, Camp Wolters, Texas, was married in December. LT. AND MRS. DONALD H. HOLICK were recent campus vis- itors from Fort Sill, Okla., where Lt. Holick is Personnel Officer in the Replacement Center. He is the son of Edward W. Holick, ’15, College Station. 1941 Lt. T. C. Day C. Day, Blum, is in the U. S. Army Air Corps and among his exploits is the recent sighting and helping to sink a German submarine in the Lieutenant Thomas Atlantic. He studied mechanical engineering at A, & M. and grad- uated from Kelly Field. He is now stationed at Hampton, Virginia. WILLIAM R. ELLIS, JR, is employed by the Lone Star Gas Company, and lives at 109 East South Street, Longview. JAMES B. HARBIN has ac- cepted a position with the Farm Security Administration at Cen- ter, Texas. LIEUTENANT LYNN H. GRASSHOFF has been on the move lately but has now lighted at Geiger Field, Spokane, Wash- ington. As a student at A. & M,, Grasshoff was a major in the Sig- nal Corps, a distinguished student, a member of the Ross Volunteers, and a member of the Scholarship Honor Society. LT. KEITH HUBBARD has re- ported for active duty with the U. S. Army Air Corps, Wright Field, Dayton, Ohio. Keith was on the Battalion Staff while a stu- dent at A. & M. and is from Deni- son, Texas. LT. MARLAND JEFFREY is athletic officer at Sheppard Field, Wichita Falls, and recently brought his baseball team to the campus for a pair of battles with the Aggies. Although the soldiers lost both games, playing manager Lt. Jeffrey did his best. He was at bat eight times and clouted out seven hits. He lettered in both baseball and football at A. & M. His assistant baseball manager is Bob Hall who entered A. & with Jeffrey and played one year of football before leaving school. JOE P. JONES, El Paso, Texas, is in training at the Pilot Replace- ment Center, Kelly Field, San An- tonio. LIEUTENANT AND MRS. LESLIE KELLEY, of Galveston, were recent campus visitors. Mrs. Kelley is the former Miss Mary Virginia Dimmitt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lil Dimmitt of the A, & M. Athletic Department. LIEUTENANT JOHN KIM- BROUGH, former All-American fullback, has been called to active duty and sent to an assignment on the West Coast. During the past year he starred in one mov- ing picture production and also played professional football. His brother, Jack, is already on active duty. VANN A. “STACK” KLINE, of Mineola, is living at 3904 Day Street, Houston, Texas. LIEUTENANT MORRIS LICH- ENSTEIN has been transferred from Fort Leonard Wood, Mis- souri, to the 823rd Engineer Bat- talion, MacDill Field, Florida. LT. CULLEN I. LOVEN has been transferred to Fort Knox, Kentucky, Company “K,” 22nd QM Regiment. Cullen requests that THE TEXAS AGGIE be sent to his home address, 92 South 25th, Paris, Texas. LIEUTENANT ROBERT A. LYNCH is in the army now as- signed to the San Antonio Air Depot, Duncan Field, San Antonio, Texas. WAYNE MADDOX is assistant county agent, Pampa, Texas. LIEUTENANT J. ED MARTIN has been transferred to Camp Barkeley, Texas, and reports that he is glad to get back to Texas after living in the Heart of the Ozarks in Missouri for the past six months. His address is 1408 Grape Street, Abilene, Texas. As a student at A. & M., “Ed” was a mechanical engineer, captain of B. Engineers, and voted the best drilled man in 1939. TILFORD H. MORGAN, Dallas, has received his commission in the engineering division of the Army Air Corps Reserve and will report this week for duty at De- troit, Michigan. WILLIAM R. NELSON, of Mec- Kinney, has received his commis- sion as a First Lieutenant in the Army Chemical Warfare Service and is stationed at Edgewood Ar- senal, Maryland. WALTER C. NESTER lives on a ranch at Hondo, Texas, and re- ceives his mail in Box 402. Walter is an animal husbandry graduate. LIEUTENANT JAMES W. PINSON, JR., on active duty at Fort Riley, Kansas, has been transferred to Fort Sheridan, Illi- nois. As a cadet at A, & M., Pin- son was known to his intimates as “Jim Dick,” was from Forney, Texas, was major C Cavalry, and a member of the Student Welfare Committee. A recent campus visitor was LEON RAHN. Leon is in Houston, 6602 Annapolis Street, right at this time and is waiting for def- inite orders. LEHMAN H. RAHN, twin brother of Leon, is located at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri. Both Leon and Lehman played varsity football, while students at A. & M. LIEUTENANT L. ERNEST SAMPLE is serving a tour of mili- tary duty with the 28th Anti-Air- craft Training Battalion at Camp Wallace, Texas. VOLNEY B. STUBBS has en- listed in the army and is assigned to the Field Artillery at Fort Sill, Oklahoma. Since his graduation last June, Stubbs has been work- ‘ing for Hormel’s, Austin, Minn. MARION D. WILKINSON re- ports that he is enjoying his work with the SCS very much. He will have his permanent appointment under the Civil Service Commis- sion in about two months if he isn’t called to the Army before that time, DAN C. WILSON is working for the Douglas Plant at Santa Monica, California, and is living at 1542 Yale Street. He reports he 1s enjoying his work very much. AVIATION CADET WILLIAM i| D. WILSON has entered primary flying school at the Spartan Air College, Tulsa, Oklahoma. He first took a four weeks’ training period at the Replacement Center at Kel- ly Field, Texas. 1942 LIEUTENANT DON GABRIEL is attending the Coast Artillery School at Fort Monroe, Virginia. DON was editor of the Student Bufislion while a student at A. JOHN P. HORAN received his degree at midterm and prior to that time had earned a reserve commission through the CMTC. He has been ordered to the Infan- try School at Fort Benning, Ga. DAVID JAMES of San Antonio has been transferred from Cimar- ron Field, Oklahoma, where he was taking flight training, to Lowry Field, Colorado, where he will be enrolled in an armament training school. Many Aggies Study Balloon Barrage At Camp Tyson, Tenn. The following A. & M. men are in the Balloon Barrage School at Camp Tyson, Tennessee, and send regards to their friends and class- mates: Lieutenants Sherman Giv- en, ’40; C. Dow Mims, ’40; Roland Hass, ’40; Jerry R. Vaughan, 38; Roy Packer, ’40; Al O. Schnabel, ’40; Hal M. Moseley, ’38; G. R. Addicks, ’33; Wm. O. Taylor, 34; Lea Roy Aldwell, ’35; Walter M. Young, ’35; Jimmie Johnson, ’35; W. A. “Bill” Orth, Jr., 89; Jim G. Clary, 38. Mm. |St. Louis Aggies Meet Each Month A trip through the plant of the National Bearing Metals Corpora- tion as guests of Eugene Ballard, '12, chief engineer, featured the last meeting of the St. Louis A. & M. Club. The meeting was held at the club’s headquarters at the Mark Twain Hotel and the trip followed the dinner meeting. The St. Louis Club continues to meet every third Friday of the month at 6 o’clock at the Mark Twain Hotel. Visitors are cordial- ly invited and can get in touch with the club by calling T. Lewis Jones at Ch. 9800, or John F. Grace at Grand 2894. Club Presi- dent Clyde T. Norman, ’37, has re- cently been transferred to Mem- phis, Tennessee. Other officers of the club include W. J. Ray, ’18, vice president; Chas. A. Tosch, '34, secretary-treasurer; and John F. Grace, ’25, program chairman. Dallas Club Stag The Dallas A. & M. Club will hold its annual stag party on the evening of April 17, according fo present plans, and all A. & M. men are invited. The committee in charge is composed of Dr. M. B. Starnes, 27; J. A. “Hop” Rey- nolds, ’80; and J. W. “Skinny” Williams, ’18. Dallas Club— (Continued From Page 1) are at war and to advise them that we are being licked every time we get close enough for the near- sighted little so-and-sos of the Rising Sun to spot us. “If Congress can hear the voice of Dallas amid the groans of busi- ness and trade associations, over the noise of labor hoodlums calling for stoppage of work, over the snoring of complacent sleepers—if Congress hears the voice of Texas and acts, America will not pass out in her sleep.” Pacific Failures Blamed on Strikes Church listed the strikes in de- fense industries and the resulting loss of man-days. He said that “had not these unpatriotic and treasonable stoppages occured, the Mikado and his armies would now be back in Tokyo.” The strikes denied MacArthur the fighter and bombing planes he needed, Church said, and brought on other failures in the Pacific. “I know that the laboring man is all right,” Church said. “He is willing to work and he loves his country. I also realize that some of his unwise and greedy leaders are binding him to a collective record which some day may at the hands of public opinion deny him the advantages in peace time that AUSTIN BRIDGE COMPANY MANUFACTURERS CONTRACTORS - BUILDERS DALLAS, TEXAS Roads - Bridges - Road Machinery THURSDAY, APRIL 2, 1942 ‘he has gained under the present administration. “It amazes me to hear our com- mander-in-chief say that you can’t make men work when he has the power to prevent men who won't work from keeping men by force from working who are willing to do their full part to serve their country by sweat and toil.” People Want Radical Changes Church said that Roosevelt and Churchill seemed unwilling to make as radical changes as the people of their countries demand- ed. “In England the masses demand more aggressive war,” Church said. “In the United States the citizenship is outpouring their pent-up convictions and petition- ing that the closed shop govern- ment within the national govern- ment of democracy be removed to the end that all may become free workers and willing fighters in the common enterprise of destroy- ing tyranny. “Mass meetings and speeches won’t win this war now. We want action. We want airplanes, tanks, guns and ships to take all these war supplies to Bataan now, not in 1943. Congress is not listening to MacArthur's call for planes, tanks, ships. They are otherwise engaged, trying to appease labor and other pressure groups. This is election year and General Mac- Arthur and his men may not be able to cast a vote this year. “In the face of the situation and congressional inaction, we are asked to exercise patience and calmness. Are we going to keep silent while Congress cringes and cowers at every sound of John L. Lewis’ growl and while members who are paid to stay on the job hang around cloakrooms listening to the honeyed words of Green? Dallas says no by this gathering tonight. Work or Fight Is Motto “Work or fight must be your motto and ours. Management and labor, professional men and preachers, women and girls want to help now to win this war. Tell us definitely what to do. Get out in front to lead us. Get competent assistants to speed production. Quit trying to find jobs for defeat- ed politicians as executives. Don’t spend so much effort trying to bolster our morale back home. Try harder to shatter the morale of the Germans and Japs. “We want action now. We will cheerfully pay the bills if our tax money goes into planes, tanks, guns and ships to take them to our fighting forces everywhere. But we, warn you that we won’t put up with huge war production profits nor with our tax money being ex- tracted to fatten the income of some of the labor organizers who use Storm Trooper methods.” LOUPOT’S TRADING POST i y Now offers a new service } to ex-students. Begin- ning Jan. 1, they began | to buy Regulation Uni- { forms and Books that are } being used. If any Ex ¢ has any articles that | might be of value to the { student, describe it in de- ¢ tail as to what it is. If clothing, size, condition, § tailor if possible, and } year purchased, if bought ¢ new or used. Drop this § information in the mail } and convert the uniform, | book, or drawing instru- ment into cash. y y Address your mail to LOUPOT’S TRADING POST College Station, Texas Wn. CAMERON & Co. ! (INCORPORATED) LET US REMODEL YOUR HOME Payments Monthly Under F. H. A. No Red Tape—Deal Direct With Us We have built homes in the Southwest for over half a century with Cameron’s Quality Building Material. Ninety Lumber Stores to Serve You «oe