The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 20, 1931, Image 3

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    THE BATTALION
3
Pres. East Texas
C. Of C. Addresses
Engrs. & Sciences
Dr. N. G. Word, president of the
East Texas Chamber of Commerce,
spoke on Public Health at a joint
banquet of the junior members of the
school or arts and sciences and the
school of engineering Tuesday night.
His talk stressed the importance of
caring for your own personal health
as a means of controling the spread
of contageous diseases, and with the
use of slides which illustrated very
graphically his points, he showed the
Last Of Longhorns
Distributed Friday
Distribution of the new Longhorn
has been discontinued until Friday
when 300 more copies of the book are
expected to arrive from the Rein
Printing Company in Houston. Copies
of the de luxe edition also will be
given out at this time, Ed Moore, edi-
results of some cases of recent years.
The spread of infectious disease was
explained through the use of toxins
and toxin-anti-toxins which are com
monly referred to as serums and vac
cinations.
tor-in-chief of the yearbook stated
Monday.
The annual first was released to
the cadet corps Sunday morning and
by Monday night over 2,000 copies
had been distributed. The aBttalion
offices were used to facilitate the
distribution, but after Monday all re
maining copies were removed to the
regular Longhorn office in the new
Library buldinig. The first shipment
of the annual reached the campus
Friday by truck, but the new allot
ment will be shipped by freight.
There is no refuge from confession
but suicide; and suicide confession.—
Daniel Webster.
The student must, while in school,
come in contact with the opposite sex.
This daily meeting tends to abolish
his fear.—Prof Vivien Fisher.
What we suffer from today is the
subtle undermining of the ethical
sense as such.—Rabbi Samuel Schul-
man.
“Boys, we have appreciated your business
and enjoyed your friendship.”
CAMPUS BARBER SHOP
in the
«Y”
Bert Smith, Prop.
Paid to Winners of
CAMEl CONTEST!
R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company takes pleasure in announcing
that the decisions of Judges CHARLES DANA GIBSON, Roy W. HOWARD
and RAY Long in the $50,000 Camel Prize Contest have been
reached and that prizes accordingly have been awarded as follows:
First Frize,
JAMES THOMAS SHARKEY, 101 Train Street, Dorchester, Mass.
Second Prize* &MOmOOO
Third Prize* $*Z 9 000
MRS. WALTER SWEET, Navy Yard, Brooklyn, N. Y.
JULIUS M. NOLTE, Glen Avon, Duluth, Minn.
5 JPWr*?# ©if &1~0OO f>€Mt*h
A. B. FRANKLIN, III, 52 Kirkland St., Cambridge, Mass.
JOHN R. McCarthy, 721 Main St., Willimantic, Conn.
FREDERICK E. ROBINSON, Coronado Beach, Calif.
WM. A. SCHRADER, Brent Apts., New Albany, Ind.
DR. D. H. SOPER, 523 E. Brown, Iowa City, Iowa.
5 Frizes of $500 each
F. CARTWRIGHT, Transp’t’n Bldg., Washington, D. C.
EDITH COCHRANE, Glenvale Ave., Darien, Conn.
BARBARA LAWLESS, Ardmore, Pa.
JANE PARSONS, 325 E. 79th St., New York, N. Y.
RICHARD W. VOGT, Green Bay Road, Waukegan, I1L
25 Frizes of $SOO each
MARIE ALBERTS, 6252 So. Spaulding Ave., Chicago
W. R. BARKER, JR., 420 N. Spruce, Winston-Salem, N.C.
EUGENE BARTON, 3625 La Luz St., El Paso, Texas
MRS. EDW. F. DALY, 1133 Louisville St., St. Louis, Mo.
WM. G. ERBACHER, 308 N. Front St., Conway, Ark.
LEROY FAIRMAN, 69 Dartmouth St., Forest Hills, N. Y.
KATHRYN R. FRANCIS, 448 E. 22d St., Baltimore, Md.
MRS. ALEXIS GODILLOT, 191 Waverly PI., New York
C. W. GRANGE, 2316 Central St., Evanston, III.
C. S. GRAYBILL, Paxtonville, Pa.
JOHN I. GRIFFIN, 1208 Jackson, Pueblo, Colorado
DAVID C. HILL, Peyton and Arlington Rds., York, Pa.
ELIZABETH JARRARD, Porter Apts., Lansing, Mich.
J. W. KEATING, 523 Prospect Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
J. H. KENNEDY, 2627 W. State St., Milwaukee, Wise.
JOHN KILPELAINEN, West Paris, Maine
DR. CLIFTON B. LEECH, 211 Angell St., Providence, R.I.
EDWARD MARTIN, 121 Liddell St., Buffalo, N. Y.
MRS. L. C. MILLARD, 609 Stockley Gardens, Norfolk, Va.
EUGENE SARTINI, 745 Chapel St., Ottawa, 111.
GREGORY LUCE STONE, 755 Texas St., Mobile, Ala.
DR. C. L. THOMAS, Mount Airy, N. C.
LEE R. WOMACK, 448 Tenney Ave., Amherst, Ohio
J. ARTHUR WOOD, 21 Burke St., Mechanicville, N. Y.
EMERY HERBERT YOUNG, Painted Post, N. Y.
TN congratulating the winners in the
3- great Camel contest we want at the same
time to thank most cordially the approxi
mately million men and women who dis
played their friendly interest by sending
in an entry.
We wish also to thank the millions of smokers
throughout the country for the appreciation
they are showing for our new Humidor Pack
as is evidenced by the notable increase in the
sale of Camel cigarettes.
By means of this dust-proof, germ-proof.
moisture-proof Cellophane wrapping the
rich aroma and full flavor of choice Turkish
and mellow Domestic tobaccos have been
air-sealed in Camels for your enjoyment.
If you have not tried Camels in the Humidor
Pack all we ask is that you switch over to this
brand for one day.
After you have learned how much milder,
how much cooler, how much more enjoy
able it is to smoke a perfectly conditioned
fresh cigarette, go back to the harsh hotness
of stale cigarettes if you can.
Camels
©1931, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, M.C.