The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 14, 1938, Image 8
•.+ * ' THE BATTALION TICES |BCHED)JLB o Oetobrr 1 I Benefit |®:45 p. k. October 16— ably October Hmll—9 A*»o<-i»tion Hall- ' 15-A. 4 M; t«. f»mefKyle PW Octokr 27-A-F Mom H iU-XO j October I k>»—2:1 0 p. T. C. U. Field—2:80 footbell p. m. October 16—torpe Dnnce—Meei Hall—» p. m. it itil 12 iraidnif ht. October 21—fHctuN 8how-A»- Hell—6|S0 p. in ft The Rio Grande Valley Chib will bold a meeting Monday aiffht after ydl practice in tne Y. M. C. A. ckpel. All Valley boyi are urged to be preeeaA' NOTICE A(i KONOMY SOCIETY p. m. A. H. Peril, [and 8 p.m. ' Corpe Dance—Mesa Trrr SATj OCT l&U There will be a Agronomy Society Oct 14 at 7:15 In Room. Dr Trotter tioa pictures of made this past invited of the night, A. I. Lecture present mo- Cotton Trip We here in the a package from rer Co. containing tag. Will the ordering this Mrs. Melle WiU Fuermann Pre-Law George erel arts took), waa of the A. 4 M. regular meeting of held Monday tires elected son. Fort Worth- president, James s Office Gsrdtoer-Dea- rod staff- it or person for it Wild Deer Loose on Studio Lot Breaks Routine for Cartoonists BY PAUL KETELSON nt sophomore lib- from Sen An- the presidency iw Chib at the organisation Other execo- Mayo Thomp- riee- Lybnmd, in- he next regular to be held Oct fsntry sophomoie, secretary-treas urer; and L H from Canadian Beginning with meeting, which ia 24, a senes of speeken will address the organisation a i alternate meet ing nights. Thee i speakers will include not only m sn from A. A M but also men fn m other Texas collegei. Membership ia tke Pre-Law Club is not restricted jo men who are taking e pre-law eg liberal arts course, but is opes to ell students at A. A M Engineering and agri culture students who are interested in the activities had purposes of i % \ bIeat the club may join. f 1 ship of V. K. Sui Mepcml To Be Pla r the si>onsor- der Sunday A musics 1 re! to attend vesper Hall will be playkd noon before five jnd from loud speake Building. The vesper be held at 5:30. , Sunday’s serviqt will be the ond in a regular aeries of programs. for students prices in Guion Sunday after will be heard an the Academic services will Slash! A wild deer has bees returned to Hollywood hQls today, and Wah Dianeys artiste settled dews aj after their excitement. Looking up from their work of drawing Mickey ‘Mouse, Doeald Duck and thefar p*1.v th«- artist* a deer beteg chased sround the bade yard of the Disney 8t diosj by a man swinging a lariat The deer bad strayed down from the hills, and the cowboy waa Larry Lens burgh, assistant director who used to be a Champion roper. He Wopod the noose around the deer > neck but it broke so he eaaght It Wtfb • flying tackle. The deer should sac, flying tackles ere 0- ' these dayp. Palace, Saturday Preview “I Am The Lew**. Edward G obinaon, the “Little Ceasar* of istoryear has become a gang uter. There has bm# little of the public enemy 1, due to pressure from the Will Hays office It Is with this in mind that the icers of the so-called gangs- ster do this film. It is perfectly all right to show the gangsters hut not in a light so as to give the public the idea that gangdom was the thing. Producers have broken sway for more than one reason and will, in the future stay away from idoliz ing the mob. “I Am The Law", le a picture worth seeing, first because H la following the footsteps of the fa mous New York District Attorney. Thomas Dewey. Edward G. Rebin- sen plays the pert of the herd boiled gang buster, and does the job very well. Many of us were in clined to the idee that Mr. Rebin- was a “type by this I mean that he was good only in one kind of picture, that being a grtfster picture. Before long Mr. Robinson will be chasing the artAs who have been sitting on the Motion Picture Awards every year, back to the dark. Hig acting ability cannot bo denied end will not be by the fans themselves,; Yen will be sunwise at the eiaae with which Edward G. Rgblnson carries the load of the lead ia the picture and will ne doubt be fully convinced od hie dramatic ability. ■semMy Hall Friday. Edward G. Robinson seems to be carrying off the honors of the week. The picture to be shown is A Slight Case of Murder”. «M| it beyond a doubt the funnist pic ture Mr. Robinson has ever been connected with. It is funny heemise he is trying to go straight and for the life of him things keep crop ping op to spoil his high aims. His daces km to go “straight was made at a moment’s ^notice and cause.I quite an uproar from his. hench men who had been his bodyguards end sack during the time of pro hibition. The picture itself le well done sad should be appreciated and •sen by all. (This ia s benefit show for the PoU> team). troops by forcing them (t) to render cerUin to occupy, |4) to and interfere with tion, and (6) to dee- end supplies by set- fireio them or by contamina- ■lif ’• I . ;' principal kinds of ch| wnvCA Vsuemb 1 > Hal '"aiurda* “Hold That Kins’, Mickey Rooney is back and with him a greet out. The picture on the whole k light, the plot being new but flimsy and does notiriag to hold the fen's at tention. The success lies wholly in the acting ability of the stare in the picture. Dennis O'Keefe does his bit ia.acting the pert *f the hero, holding up his assignment to the last scene Maureen O’Sullivan Second football dance of the school year it elated to be bald Saturday night from 9 until It in the mess hall, with music furnish ed by Tommy Littlejohn and hie Aggielaad Orchestra, Senior Social S.-cMthty Bill Livingston has an nounced. /| It infajh t|ho have decided on an unofficial homecoming for this weekend, T. C, U. students, Port Worth football fane. South Texas grid followers, and the regular run ef locale are expected to attend the function. Livingston has announced that aaescorted girls will be ia the par lor of the Y. M. C. A- after the game, where dates for the dance may be made by cadets. The first of the year’a four foot ball dances waa held after the Ag- gie Texas A. 4 L game. Others yet to com* include the Saturday hop, as well as dances after the ine'i pert end does very wtll. 1 ey Rooney while not having the leads now being given! to him, shows hia ability te the finish and makes his part stand out, which is more than can be said for some boy actors in the same position. Hs has no great part but does make- a games. CHKM WARFARB- (« ontmued from Page I), I has equipped as many of her cit izens hs possible with gas masks. ; 1AM ik'ftds field also, A. 4 M great part from what he has and, wfll ^ “ tion - A. 4 M should be complimented oh his K™duatea each year from 26 to 80 CW8 Reserve Officer* which about one fourth of the number produced each year in the entire nation. These people, whether in dTil or military life, will be le^d era around whom can be built ai talent PROP. C. Department B. WILCOX OF THE ef Education of A. 4 M. left Thursday afternoon for Austin, where he ia to attend meet ings of committees of the State Teachers’ Association. Thursday night be met with the sub-legislative committee ef the as sociation and Thursday night he will meet with the legislative com rmttev proper. Both meetings are in connection with the association's recommendations to the b ^islsture on State aid to public schools. Mr. Wilcox Is first vice president of the association. . < . agents are the long attack tbs respiratory sternutaters which irritate and throat awd cause testers which are tear ft .cants which blister the incendiaries which set fire to material. Tbs ary discharged from artflte shells, airplane bom from cylinders and c hand and rifle used varying with nation and conditions. tipaMtei wwniwti i mane of aU course, nothing that purpose the destruction of lift can hs called human. Tbs hu manity of warfare is measured by three things: the suffering at (ho time of injury; the percentage of deaths to'the total number of casualties; and the after offsets of the injuries Modern war J, strike without the warning effect of pain. Doctors high in the Medical Corps of the U. & Army sap that, gaa wo ends cause far less fuffer- ing that any other type of wound A person wounded by gas is out of danger and resting easy Within 24 to 4H hours, depending pn the \p.s of gas used. Thht Ik indeed a 1 ■'hort time when compared to the weeks a person suffers when a piece of shrapnel or high explosive changes s soldier into a bleeding mass of torn flesh and shattered bone, a pitiful wreck for (whom depth ia a merciful blessing. During the World War only t% oljiAll persons wounded by gat ditd, whereas 25.7m % of ajj non. teas wounded persons died. Over 1016 of the noa-gaa wend ed wars permanently disabled, only 13% of the gained were perm, neatly out of action. Prom theoe figure*, taken from the report ef the U. S. Surgeon General, R m evident that chemical warfare la the moot humane of all warfare. Only two colleges te the United States offer chemical Warfare training—Texas A. A M. and the Massachusetts Institute of Tech nology. Chemical warfare is, with the ^ United States alt least, prteurfly a defensive weapon, lbs United States leads the world te the pro- chetetepls. This tre- be thrown wki overnight t L duction of msadohs industry dep I into tW production of i almost overnight. With Amsrfran chemists chemical engineers, second to noirf |* ti* WpH, to direct the production of SSltlm*- ch. m kale, and o«r well developed sy» tom of tran* ports tion to get the chemicals to the plate they are! needed, the ehdmicsl industry Is a powerful defensive weapon And H is the only weapoa that serves the nations alike m p. ace ang te*g*( corkage® I For-The T. C. U. GAME If Our Agents— R, F. WINKLE \1v H.H.WEHNBt f i 8. J. MAREK . F. M. WEIR \ Do Not Contact Yon J ■ See Bergmann & Moseley 21 Milner 306 BUnO The College Florist J l, r !r efficient gaa It ia a serious msitake to think of the chemical warfare service as anything extetili a Nteppsctiag branch of the army—a highly effi cient branch, but still a supporting unit. Chemical agents are used te * number of ways and with a num ber of objects in view. The five main objects of the chemical at tack are: (1) the inflict casualties, (2) to harass and reduce the «f- ~T -In [• - -j FLYING INSTRUCTION 1 irensed Airplane and Instructor Reasonable Rates ROBERT PUTZ f BLACK’S AIRPORT I’hone 1314 or Zhk’s Garage h fall nm BY C HARLES pj STEWART Central Preoa WASHINGTO one ia glad, of world war was cent Chamberla Mussolini confi , Nevertheless, a of comment is a land domestical! Washington to ^he effect major conflict jwnr not (maybe only tegqmrarily) exactly as genuine pear.* lovers migk have wished. What tb^se folk had hoped was that Herr Ditier would have D. C.—Every- thst another off by the re- Deladier—Hitler- te Munich. undertone in diplomatic official Circles in that a I T>o K Itic want U to bh pro- for the fter the (mine, ill find Tuxedo* correct In every . drape models iskillfally derfgn- combining aoth- wenr and Single nod- in Mid- Black. Stytei ^wo Cfivtrifnt Store** ( ollege Station hia hand so © make H imposs self not tn or. Had this Is that he wou; dentiy deflated nate his fuehre Instead he baa If anything ins in po beliece that in' ity can last lei not the aligh Neutral see Mussolini e! nr, Benito M for boing ity is aerionaly Italy alone ia precipitate a Germany, plus IRISH SETTER-Native of IreUnd. Be- bcvedtokcacTaMofEagboh ettter, spaaici and pointer. Originally rrd and white in colonng. Today's standards call for solid mshogany red or nch golden chestnut. Ee- orntially a gun dog. Bold, hardy, yet ably gentle nature. ly called as to for Germany It- liae him as a bluff- tbo beat guess have been suffi- bome to ternd- lip te sort order, ■prengthenod, while Adolph ra- many ol itional t To his piomiaea yht ia given, would lika lo a tod, too. Hew- Iven credit at least Feuhrer’s son Besides, nough to formidable war k. if and when) WAR—IP AND War would (< be terrible. ! Still, it generally is agreed, out side Germany and Italy, that couldn’t end otherwise than in I (Beta to rial pal 'a defea. Hitler would be killed < r jump the Father land, like the e^-kalsar, or be te- terned on an ialknd, like Napoleon, or some such thing.;Ditto Muaaoii no, pmbably. Whkh would be tragic and dignified a id all that Bat would be k that H ’ | of lives and addition, proa ant day The drawback civilization M He’s giving his nerves a rest...and so is he T *HEDOG ST1 red a here has a nervous matter which of the common forma - system amasingiy neiiler to yours, with tenseness yoirteel, try this experiment: this sfi/rrrarr; It is the nature of the dog te Ease op sad en joy a Camel. Camels are not when he needs rest. It k the nature of made from cortber tobaccos. Smokers bid mankind te drive on...itetil nerves jerk that "Let up-light up a Camel” puts and twitch...until yon are croa and trri- more seat into life, and that CameTs table...tired ont without feiewiag u. No costlier Ttobaccoe soothe MILLIONS FIND ‘‘LET UP—LIGHT UP A CAMEL” N PUTS MORE JOY INTO LIVING X/i TEaat.i i lACoas, lion trsinef, md “Tony” Concetto, dscat setisiist (Uft), back trsdfy to the value of “Let up— hght up s Camel'* “Anneals can spring uho intrant aetton then fells,” says JstnSe. “We arc apt to get our nerves al wiaind up with our tmte way ofKriag- can’t let go. I had that Camels soothe my tKtvri." 'Tmtfl’s right," Miss Con cetto says “When ray rtcrers arc bred, 0 Camel helps them to rest" PUD L MaDANIBL, cwwhoy (n t ki), mys “When I feel nervous I let up, sad bght up s soothing CamaL Caqtets SIS maid— I Str oke Vra ssradily. They are so oomforttng. and nensr tire ray taste." LETUP. A, ] t u Smokers find Camel’s Costlier Tobadcos are SOOTHING TO THE NERVES