I * "T THE BATTALION ■ ACCOUNTAKTSTO MAKE INSPECTION TRIP TO HOUSTON . - Arrangements Have Made For The Gi Visit and Inspect Different Basin cents. A and M Artillery Is Not To Be Motorized Sixteen senior and two graduate students specialising in account ing and statistics will visit a num ber of Houston business establish ments on their annual inspection trip which lasts from Monday. April 16, to Wednesday, the 18th; | placed, - the The recent plans for motorisa- tlon of the Field Artillery, which provides trucks and tractors for the moving of light artillery, will To not effect the Field Artillery of t A and M for some time to come. ('(HV However, the course in Military Science will have in its curriculum a few points of the motorised bat tery. » Pert Sam Houston is undergoing the change from horses to trucks, and a gradual replacement in the whole standing army will follow. After The regulars have been re- National Guard and T. W. Leland. head of the depart.- ment, has made reservations for the group at the Rice Hotel at a complimentary rate. The itinerary while in the city includes the following places: Hughes Tool Co.; Foley Bros., de partment store; National Bank of Commerce; Humble Oil and Refin ing Co.; Federal Land - Bank; County Auditor’s office; Anderson- Clayton; and Lykes Bros, and Rip ley, shippers. X - The group will be shown through the plants and offices of the var ious concerns and have been in vited to inspect the accounting systems and records' employed at each place. The Hughes Toqf Co., the largest manufacturing plant in Houston, manufactures valves, bits, drills, and other oil ^rell supplies and asachinery. The company employs more than two thousand men at this time and is operating on a twenty-four hour basis in order to fill orders. Howard Hughes, well known as the producer of several R O T. C will be motorised. The “horse countries”, such aa Texas and Oklahoma, will doubtlessly be the last to be motorised, so A and M jfaed not fear the loss of its horseflesh for some time to come. ROTC INSPECTION— (Continued from page 1) when the system of rating was change^ the school was rated ex cellent. ‘The corps is prepared for the inspection this year, for it is in I much better condition than it w^s this time last year, according toit olonel Emery. DODD SPEAKS ON STATISTICS AT 1 SEMINAR MEETING Averages or Means As Con* hI roc ted For Specific Pur poses Discussed by Univer sity of Texa Dr. E. L. Dodd, professor of mathematics at the University of Texas, was the guest speaker for a meeting of the Texas A and M Science Seminar last Monday night. His subject was; “Average* or Means a* Constructed for Specific Purposes.” Dr. Dodd discussed common use* for averages or means, such as their uar to engineers in solving problems and alas their uses as ap plied to financial problems and other matters of general use. This lecture was in the nature of an "exchange lecture,” as Dr. C, C* Doak of the A and M staff, talked before a meeting of the university seminar recently. AGG1 IE (Cdn — MARKSMEN—i tinued from page 1) Ott, and J- B. Heinen, also of Dal las. Ov^r 65 per cent of the intercol legiate matches were won by the Aggies, (his year, the matches be ing held: with about 66 teams in in the -United States# The av erage tot the year alho places Hildebrand, star Cleveland pit cher, was an All-American basket ball player at Butler University in Indianapolis during the session of 1929. t 1 • i i . ‘ I I ' I •; I ] V 1 a \ i H j I* : v Houston Boys of Houston Mo At Banquet Sund The annual Houston Club B quet, given bf the Houston M< er’s Club, took place Sunday noon in the banquet room of Mess Hall with Dr. T. O. W president of the college as speaker. Urging a continuance of the tom. Dr. WsltSn stressed the of parent-tedcher re la Understanding between these groups of people is a valuable As set to harmontr in student life, .lie said. Music for the occasion was fet- nished by the Serenaders. -1—•- Satisfy Those Desires For Good Food Parkhill’s Cafe An investigation at tb Univer sity of Iowa shows tha; one of eleven campus engagements result in murriAga, l< spectacular motion pictures, has them within the high rifle succeeded his father in the busi- teams m the country, wfiich com pletea an unusually successful erson-Clayton, the world’s year. Results of the Hearst laptch largsst cotton merchants, has will be Announced the latter -part modern warehouses in Houston of next Week, that extend ntare than a mile and a half in lengt i. They are floored with concrete and are so thorough ly fireproof that the company has received a double “A” rating on all; insurance covering the build- ings. It ia interesting to note that last year Anderson-Clayton bought a little more than one-third of the entire cotton crop produced in this country, this included the total production of Texas. Okla homa. and Louisiana. An inter esting problem that confronts the accounting offices of this firm is. that the company itself is divided lata- two distinct parts. One part of the company buys and holds the ootton while the other part sells the product to the world. Because of this arrangement it is necei to draw up separate profit and •tatoments for each division. 81 WEAR Michigan State College is con- . sidering s football course for men and women. 7]I—T-—-4 * An anCi-pun society has been organised by students at the Ste vens Institute of Technology to deal with advocates of “ths lowest ‘ o' form of h»Yi»or.” ft THE MESS $ JACKET Cool, comfortable, and 1 Reasonably Made of Genuine PALM BEACH You tan be assured of that well dreas- ed fueling if you buy one at L THE CAMPUS - — 1 •' ■ 1 There's Bounce in a PALM! RESILIENCY! j COME-BACK! RECOVE RYI SUIT \ Hang it up over-night, sad the wrin kles bounce out. The suit comes back to its normal beauty and shape, al most as well as if pressed with a iron. This is due not to any added finish which might vanish in the laundry... but to new developments in the actual conttruction of tbt fabric The wrinkle-hating, crease-holding 7 quality of the new 1934 Palm Beach and in smooth, unfurry yarns which repel dirt and dust, combine to keep down upkeep. Now you can stay cool and smart all summer at low cost. In white and many colors. StylisUy tai lored by GOODALL. Fully pre-uinmk. *18.50 At Your Clothier's MR—.7 1 ,j ,* Jl GOODALL COMPANY* CINCINNATI •! • Showing how Palm Beach Suits rotain thair smooth linos. Each of these summer suits, made of four totally different summer fabrics, was subjected to precisely the same mussing treatment, t Two sets of photographs were takm: (1) immediately after mussing; (2) after hanging the suits up over-night. The Palm Beach Suit not only wrinkled or mussed less than the others... but also showed truly amazing facility in the matter of “automatic ret overy.” (Sm actuallu tack can phot tu Uft ibou, mult, after boapug,) ^ K ? PALM BBACH SUMMBB SUIT NO. a SUMMIK SUIT NOi 9 SUMMIB SUIT NpL 4 RESULTS OF WRINKLING TESTS ON PALM BEACH AND OTHER SUMMER SUITS .M J # what it means »r i i • i 11 i' r , j Rewrite men on newspapers may lose their jobs when the teletype writer system is perfected, pre dicted W. C. Roberts, former tor 4|r thf Minneapolis Star. edi- 5PRING IS UERE...1 SAW THE. NEW Va rsitytowns to store Mr. Robin has long been a harbinger of. spring. What baa puzzled us tho' is - - - who tells the robin ? And now we know that he takes his cue from Varsity-tew a Clothes We’re saying “Spring is here” with a swell lot of Var- siyt-towns . . . and they’re “birds’’! $25.00 Taloa-Ta tra Trout $4.50 With Talon-Tailored Extra Trousers Bryan and Collage ’houses \ ( Everything that Science knows •bout is used in making Chesterfields. , One thing we do is to buy mild, ripe tobaccos and then lock up these to baccos in modern storage warehouses to age and mellow like rare wines. It takes about 3 years to age the tobaccos for your Chesterfield, for Time does something to tobacco that neither man nor machine can do. ware, It means something to keep 70 million dollars worth of tobacco in storage. It means just this: We do everything possible to make Chesterfield the cigarette that*s milder, the cigarette that tastes better. ; u S ^ m*m*m*m ,ankt ajZpb ■«* rtam-ouH am mm auMmOt: - i : 0^ smwh ! 4-: •Ski . VNJ t the cigarette that’s MILDER . \ •’J 4 the cigarette that h •! Ik. 1 ■ O l»M. Imwtt a Urns Toazcco < M i: " i I '• i \ 4