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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (March 8, 1933)
- K THB BATTALIOW I ’ ! if ' 1 H •1 • POR- tOME COOKED MEALS MRS. PARKHIlJl S CAPE ^ J W' ^HEN IN DOTBr Htmt Erm «r T Mr GU im J. W PAYNE JUNIOR JUDGING : 1 TB1I INSPECTING FAT STOCK SHOWS Departaient's Animab Win First Places In AH dannea Entered With One Exccfv Barber Shop (la Um T) SaUUi Prop — —L ODAV j A new shipmen Mantbcr* of th« A and M Junior Livestock Judtrinf Team arc now »n an inspection tour of fat stock show* throughout the state pre paratory to competing in the Southwestern Exposition and Pat Stock Shbw to be held in Fort Worth from March 10 to 18. ac cording tt> D. W. Williams, head of tha Animal Husbandry department of A and M College. Inspection and practice judging of livestock was made at Mason. San Angelo, and Coleman during the past peek and on Friday March 10. the team will go to Fort Worth where they will compete against teams from Louisiana State Uni versity. Oklahoma A and M, and Texas Tech os Saturday, March 1L Men making the trip were: E. H Bobbitt, Hillsboro; S. T. Logan. Sonora; A- B. Kyle, Whitney; E. J. Hughes, Dubiit; F. Gremmel, Pettus; R T. Alexander, Cana dian; and R. M. Milhollin, coach of the team. Maj. Delametcr Wins Military; Department Golf Contest Major B. F. Delameter. Jr„ In fantry, was the victor in the Mili tary Golf Tournament Friday. March 3rd, at the Bryan Country Club, when he defeated Major W. C. Washington in the final round and Lieut. Cal. A. R. Emery, In fantry, ia the second round, while Major Washington was victorious over Lieutenaat J. J. Binns. Field Artillery, and Lieutenant Seybold of the Engineers. Gray High Scorer of Southwest; Joe Moody Wins Third University Forward Field With 157; Garners 112 Points. Student Gives Talk ■ At Meeting of Civil Engineering Society R. C Crook^ Gfinfcwy, captain on the Composite Regimental Staff, spoke on “The Details of Manu facture and Up of j Piling” at a meeting of the Student Chapter of the American Society of Civil En- gincera in the Civil Engineering building Friday night. Crook has had experieace ia the use of piles on highway work while working with the State Highway Department and is reputed to have dona sxtensive! studying in that field. His talk included the detoils in manufacture and several illus trations in tha use of piles on large jobs. Moody +«- TALIO* rwSiicsTtoa . *fe cockt** etfsias . All Sixes ,11 - Idrop6(8 TWO | onv enient Stores Bryan and Collage COLLltGB STATION. TEXAS VOLVMS IS Nl'MBn tl Kntorad as WmsI ilm mUm si U» Tmt cing OfOss af Csm* BSsUiS. Tssaa. ssSpr tiro Act W Cieswss, Hank S. ISTt. I BlU ' OmeHshl IMS ky Iks BaltsHas terroxiAL ST aw Jack Gray, sensational sopho more forward of the Texas Uni versity 1/onghorna has taken first in scoring honors in the Southwest. He relinquished his lead only once early in the season when Captain Joe Moody of the Aggies, forged ahead for a brief period Gray connected with 62 field goals, 33 free throws for a total of 167 points. He failed to approach the season record for one year though, which was made by Adolph Dieted of T.C.Uro last year, but he brokf the tall Frog's individual scoring record for one game Saturday sight in Austin when he scored 32 points. Gray was instrumental in giving the Aggies a 61-20 troun- championship 1/onghorn team, was runner up to Gmy with 127 points garnered from a total of 64 field goals and 19 gratis shots. Captain Joe Moody of the Aggies and Doc Sumner of the Homed Frogs tied for third piece honors with 112 markers each. A free throw margin enabled the flashy Frog forward to tie tha Aggie Cap tain who had a lead of aeven field goals for the season. The leading scorers are as fol- Kubricht, center of the G FG FT PT8 ceptjo Gray, Texas _ 4.1S 62 33 167 durini Kubricht, Texae .12 64 19 167 have Moody, ASM —11 46 20 112 Stunner, T.C.U. -11 89 34 112 theta Kinsey, T.C.U. ....11 87 23 97 coaehi Moody, Ark. .4-12 84 10 78 ee for Merka, ASM. Xu 28 22 78 will h Prangs, Texas „ -it >2 11 76 bera c J oh neon. Rice .... J. 12 25 21 71 Partm Dixon, Rice ... .i..lt 29 13 71 Offij Reynolds, Baylor 12 » 10 68 ^loh 1 Kendall, Ark. rol2 25 17 67 Antoni Parks, Baylor ~ X.1I 27 12 66 Graad Murphy, Ark. il2 24 17 66 L. Ha| Snider, Rice .122 20 26 asarg*, Krtam And Kow Preparing For Dairy Show To Bo For iU In Doiry Hi ; Doiry Department To Offer Priseo. J « 11 ' the sponsorship of the members of the Kream and a dairy show which is me an annual event will be Saturday, April 16. This the date of .the annual For- to’ reunion. is a two-fold purpose for Professor C. N. Shep- head of the Dairy Hus- department stated. The will stimulate interest in work among students and experience in fitting and dairy cattle, and will also an occasion for exhibiting ege’s dairy herd to visitors, ipment of the Dairy Bus- department and the dairy on display. test in fitting and showing animals, open to all Dairy students, with the ax- of seniors, will be held the show. Twenty students ready entered the contest, animals, and are training r the contest under the the j j , ' ’ 1 I !| Itnv ' /v and time to get a Stetson I IS 4 \ THERE’S no excuse for looking winter-worn. Not when you cgn get genuine Stetsons for as little as $lt (That’s “Overhead Economy**!) ... Spring styles —young men’s styles. Spring colors. They’re in the stores now as low ss C ‘ John B. Stetson Company PkiUMpJUs New York Leedse Peris of senior students. Pris- winners of the contests contributed by the mem- the Dairy Husbandry de- st of the Kream and Kow E. O. Wurxbach, San president; E. W. Dobbs, w, vice president; and F. Temple, secretery-tre- “SAVE WITH SAFETY” $.100Value for 49c ; Tooth Brush and Two Tubes Colgrate’s Tooth Paste 70c Value for 39c (j j , . .i. Shaving KiU—Shaving Cream, Styptic Pencil and Talcum I’o* d* r AGGIEUND PHARMAC “Your Drug Store I ry* vw nuMovoia S N. BeM J a .1 Art WMsr KOITOBIAL BOARD W. M. Wstme D. L. TMacw 3. T. StaM Us L A. B«U atWINBU ST AW Adrertiaias Mssso»r J 'r.l' 4 Amt AdvwtlsAsg Mssagar Brtsdte Am* AdwitUns Manasrr W. M Wataos ClreslaUoa Mssaesr W. A. Cosssllr AaaL CtreulsOoa Mss—'M C. B. Hnisy A—t. Cirruls(M>n Man—rr \ \ •E* Greater Palace Y — FRIDAY — SATURDAY iERSl LERS besstifal „ the world ia Bros.' gllttsrlal xtrsvsgsass ! b i. ih a , 1 1 1:2 P. M. 25t - SUNDAY AND MONDAY! ancy Carroll — Gary Grant in “Woman Act tan in Liberty Magazine — 10 Authors Wrote Story Ruth Etting Singing M< ! * News PREVIEW 11 P. M. SATURDAY j Spencer Tracy Face in the Sky Comedy 7 — News Tuesday and f S ! t — ' f M AYBE * t 8 to ^ ature * J-»-l it 8 something else. I don't know just what it is, but somehow or other Fve jurt got to slip out in the woods and sit down on a log. I always take the old pipe along. Thinking somehow seems easier when you are smoking a pipe. I can fill up my pipe with Granger, hod somehow just seem to see things clegrer than at any other time. " Don't know what it is about < but it must be made fo|pipeo—leal ] tobacco. ^mu-how, there's a flavor and aroma about Grander I never found in any other tobacco. U In n I pack my old pipe tight and good with these big Granger flakes, it’s about the coolu-t smoke I ever I enjoyed. It makes me downright pipe hungry every time I look at the pa< kan*." Some years ago we made a painstaking. <1 * 1 a / N to find out, if we could, best suited for pipes. Blue Grass regions of found a tobacco < all«<l There is a grade of this used for chew- le for cigarettes This ' J is prepared by a method years ago by Mr. J* N. The Granger pouch keeps the tobacco fresh • M . Wellman. It gives Granger a fragrance and mellowness that pipe smokers like, and makes it bum to a clean, dry ash. Granger never gums a pipe. Granger has not l>een on sale very long, but it has come to b<‘ popular, and there is this much atxmt it: We have yet to know of a man who started smoking it, ’ who didn't keep on. Folks seem to like it. e# .1. i