THE BATTALION The Aggieland Tailor Shop AGGIE TAILOR SHOP Make Your Uniform, Breeches and Shirts All Kinds of Alterations FRANK ZUBIK, PROP. North Gate of Campus, Next to Luke and Charlie THE EXCHANGE STORE THE COLLEGE STORE For the Students’ Needs A Complete Line of UNIFORMS BOOKS STATIONERY DRAWING MATERIAL TOILET ARTICLES The Official Store of the College The Greater Palace THURSDAY — FRIDAY — SATURDAY What a Cast Robert T. Montgomery and Benny Rubin Hear Them Sing This One “Go Tell Your Mother” All Talking Comedy News Football News Preview 11 p. m. Saturday “THOSE 3 FRENCH GIRLS” with Fifi Dorsey CLIFF “UKELELE IKE” EDWARDS Ooh-la-la What a Show Buss leaves for College After Midnight Show Special Notice—There will be no Matinee on Thursday. Open 6 p. m.—Holiday T. C. U. Students— (Continued from page 1) Club announced that October 18, the day of the game, had been declared an official holiday at T. C. U. and the Horned Frog-Texas Aggie game des ignated as the game for the official student body trip this year. The trip is being sponsored by the Fort Worth Kiwanis Club. Two and possibly thre special trains wil handle the T. C. U. student body and the Fort Worth delegation, Mr. Carlton said. Two of the three specials will return to Fort Worth immediately after the game and one will remain until late that night, ac cording to present plans. Indica tions are that 1000 to 1200 T. C. U. students and between 800 and 900 Fort Worth citizens will make the trip. President Walton announced that T. C. U. students would be guests of the college at luncheon at the mess hall. Faculty members of T. C. U. wil Ibe guests of members of the A & M faculty. The game will start at 2:30 o’clock and a dance will be giv en by the cadet corps in evening in the mess hall honoring T. C. U. sup porters. “The decision to visit A & M for the Horned Frog-Aggie game was unanimous on the part of T. C. U. students,” Mr. Barrett said. “In fact, there is never any hesitation in de ciding what the official student body trip will be on those years when the Frogs play the Aggies at College Sta tion. There is no forgetting the hos pitality of A & M in the past and we are looking forward with great inter est to visiting Aggieland again this year.” Campus Barber Shop In the “Y” On Account of the Nation Wide Depression We are Reducing- Our Prices All 500 Charges Now 350 Price Schedule in Our Shop BERT SMITH, Prop. UNIFORM TAILOR SHOP Shirts and Breeches Blouses and Slacks MENDL & HORNAK, Props. Tailor Made Jewelry Gifts Watches JOE KAPLAN & CO, INC. Victor, Columbia, Brunswick and Okeh Records Kodaks and Art Supplies Portables Radios those Sunday shows aren’t any nearer than they were before we started. We still believe we’ve started some one to thinking and unless we can per suade them to think our way we might as well give up this idea of Sunday en tertainment and continue with the same old routine. If we act as one, we are sure to get what we want. Again we repeat let’s let ’em have it. Robert Montgomery and Bennie Ru bin carry romance and comedy to the greens in “Love in the Rough” coming to the Palace for the remainder of the week. “Hell Harbor,” featuring Lupe Ve lez and Jean Hersholt, comes to the Assembly Hall Saturday. A tropical moon, a semi-barbaric retreat overrun with desperados and adventurers . . . perfect setting for the dynamic ro mance of a two-fisted beachcomber and a flaming maid of the coral is lands. Cliff Edwards with his ever present ukelele and Fifi Dorsey with her bag of wiggles are doing “Those Three French Girls” at the Palace Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. “Shadow of the Law” with William Powell is coming to the Assembly Hall Saturday night. This time Powell leaves the courtroom to be hunted for a crime he did not commit. The following countries have a lower per cent of illiteracy than the United States—Japan, New Zealand, Germany, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Scotland, Netherlands, Ireland, Switz erland, England, Canada and Wales. Unseen Things ^-1-^HERE’S an unseen something in the sky. A something which visits everywhere, uses the whole of the heavens for a playground. This un seen something is the wind. Unseen it is, how surely there Sure by the bending c trees... wind-whipped. Sure by the rushi yet the ng < the heavens for a playgn ind. Un: Sure 1 iipp* the clouds... wind-driven. Sure by the £1 of the leaves... wind-chased. Unseen to every one. . .yet known by all.. .known by what it does. Like the wind, unseen are other things. Con sider a bag of feed. As it stands there, one secs feed in the ...nothing more. But he who t not to get fc Cggs and mill hings in a b; how many of these unseen things 3ag. . s feed, buys it not to get feed, but to get eggs ilk or pork. Eggs and milk and pork. . .these are the unseen things in a bagful thing stowed feed’s true worth. That such a friend in every neighborhood. For that’s Purina’s job ... putting things .. .eggs or milk many board bagful. Feeders in your neighborhood say that Purina is doing this job. They have judged Purina Chows not on its looks. . .but on what it does. Like the away in each bagful. . .that’s the test of ; at’s what makes Purina Chows or pork, or any one of other unseen things...in every Checker- The oldest practicing attorney in the city of Cleveland, is John P. Green, who 86 years old, and has been a lawyer for 60 years. He is a negro. wind. .. what’s in Purina Chows is not easy to see. . . but w hat it does is easy to see everywhere. The good news has spread to every neighborhood I MAKERS OF 63 CHOWS /'°'- L | VESTOC |