PAGE 4 THE BATTALION THURSDAY, DEC. 14, 1939 LEGAL NOTICES ORDINANCE GOVERNING PUBLIC EAT ING ESTABLISHMENTS AN ORDINANCE DEFINING RES TAURANTS, EMPLOYEE, EATING AND COOKING UTENSILS, HEALTH OFFI CER, ETC., REQUIRING PERMITS FOR THE OPERATION OF SUCH ESTAB LISHMENTS, PROHIBITING THE SALE OF ADULTERATED, UNWHOLESOME, OR MISBRANDED FOOD OR DRINK, REGULATING THE INSPECTION, GRADING, REGRADING, AND PLACARDING OF SUCH ESTABLISH MENTS, THE ENFORCEMENT OF THIS ORDINANCE, AND THE FIXING OF PENALTIES. Be it ordained by the City Council of City of College Station, as follows: SECTION 1. Definitions. A. Restaurant.—The term “restaurant” shall mean restaurant, coffee shop, cafe teria, short order cafe, luncheonette, hotel dining room, tavern, sandwich stand, soda fountain, and all other eating and drinking establishments. B. Employee.—The term “employee” shall mean any person who handles food or drink during preparaion or serving, or who comes in contact with any eating or cooking utensils, or who is employed at any time in a room in which food or drink is prepared or served. C. Eating and cooking utensils.—“Eat ing and cooking utensils” shall include any kitchenware, tableware, cutlery, uten sils, containers, or other equipment with which food or drink comes in contact dur ing storage, preparation, or serving. D. Health officer.—The term "health officer” shall mean the health authority of the city of College Station or his au thorized representative. E. Person.—The word “person” shall mean person, firm, corporation, or asso ciation. SECTION 2. Permits.—It shall be un lawful for any person to operate a restau rant in the city of College Station who does not possess an unrevoked permit from the health officer and in whose place of business such permit is not post ed in a conspicuous place. This section shall apply to temporary or itinerant as well as to permanently established places of business. Only persons who comply with the requirements of this ordinance shall be entitled to receive and retain such a permit. Such a permit may be revoked by the health officer upon the violation by the holder of any of the terms of this ordi nance, or at any time when in the judg ment of the health officer the restaurant has become a public-health menace. SECTION 3. Placarding or public dis play of grade notice.— Every restaurant shall display at all times, upon a placard, or upon any other place approved by the health officer, a conspicuous notice approved by the health officer stating the grade of the restaurant. SECTION 4. Examination and condem nation of unwholesome, adulterated, or misbranded food or drink.—Samples of food and drink may be taken and ex amined by the health officer as often as he deems necessary for the detection of unwholesomeness, adulteration, or mis branding. The health officer may con demn, remove, and destroy any food or drink which he deems unwholesome, adul terated. or misbranded. SECTION 5. Inspection of restaurants for purposes of grading and regrading.— At least once each 6 months the health officer shall inspect every restaurant lo cated within the city of College Station. In case the health officer discovers the violation of any item of sanitation re quired for the grade then held, he shall make a second inspection after the lapse of such time as he deems necessary for the defect to be remedied. If upon the second inspection the same item of sani tation is found to be violated the restau rant shall be required to display immedi ately a grade notice based upon the sec ond inspection. One copy of the inspection report shall be posted by the health officer upon an inside wall of the restaurant, and said inspection report shall not be defaced or removed by any person except the health officer. Another copy of the inspection report shall be filed with the records of the health department. Give Aggie Jewelry For Christmas See KRERGER 57-Law 6th Ramp SECTION 6. The grading of restaurants. —The grading of all restaurants shall be based upon the following standards: GRADE A RESTAURANTS.—Grade A restaurants are those which comply with all of the following items of sanitation: ITEM 1. Floors.—The floors of all rooms in which food or drink is stored, prepared, or served, or in which utensils are washed, shall be of such construc tion as to be easily cleaned, shall be smooth, and shall be kept clean and in good repair. Kitchen floors shall be im pervious to water. ITEM 2. Walls and ceilings.—Walls and ceilings of all rooms in which food or drink is stored, prepared, or served shall be kept clean and in good repair. All walls and ceilings of rooms in which food or drink is stored or prepared shall be finished in light color. The walls of all rooms in which food or drink is prepared or utensils are washed shall have a smooth, washable surface up to the level reached by splash or spray. ITEM 3. Lighting.-—All rooms in which food or drink is stored or prepared or in which utensils are washed shall be well lighted. ITEM 4. Ventilation.—All rooms in which food or drink is stored, prepared, or served, or in which utensils are wash ed, shall be well ventilated. ITEM 5. Toilet facilities.—Every restau rant shall be provided with adequate toilet facilities conveniently located and con forming with the ordinances of the city of College Station. Toilet rooms shall not open directly into any room in which food, drink, or utensils are handled or stored. The doors of all toilet rooms shall be self-closing. Toilet rooms shall be kept in a clean condition, in good repair, and well lighted and ventilated. Hand washing signs shall be posted in each toilet room used by employees. In case privies or earth closets are permitted and used, they shall be separate from the build ing, and shall be of a sanitary type con structed and operated in conformity with the requirements of item XOr of the U. S. Public Health Service Milk Ordinance and Code, a certified copy of which shall be on file in the office of the city clerk. ITEM 6. Water Supply.—The water supply shall be easily accessible to all. rooms in which food is prepared or uten sils are washed, and shall be adequate, and of a safe sanitary quality. ITEM 7. Lavatory facilities.—-Adequate and convenient hand-washing facilities shall be provided, including warm run ning water, soap, and approved sanitary towels. The use of a common towel is prohibited. No employee shall return from a toilet room without washing his hands. ITEM 8. Door and windows.—When flies are prevalent, all openings into the outer air shall be effectively screened and doors shall be self-closing, unless other effective means are provided to prevent the entrance of flies. ITEM 9. Construction of utensils and equipment. —All eating and cooking uten sils and all show and display cases or windows, counters, shelves, tables, refrig erating equipment, sinks, and other equip ment or utensils used in connection with the operation of a restaurant shall be so constructed as to be easily cleaned and shall be kept in good repair. ITEM 10... Cleaning and bactericidal treatment of equipment and utensils.— All equipment, including display cases or windows, counters, shelves, tables, refrig erators, stoves, hoods, and sinks, shall be kept clean and free from dust, dirt, insects, and other contaminating materials. All cloths used by waiters, chefs, and oth er employees shall be clean. Single-service containers shall be used only once. All except single-service eating and drinking utensils shall be thoroughly clean ed and subjected to an approved bacteri cidal process after each usage. All multi use utensils used in the preparation, cook ing, or serving of food and drink shall be thoroughly cleaned and subjected to an approved bactericidal process immediately following the day’s operation. Drying cloths, if used, shall be clean and shall be used for no other purpose. ITEM 11. Storage and handling of utensils and equipment.—After bactericidal treatment no utensil shall be stored ex cept in a clean dry place protected from flies, dust, or other contamination, and no utensil shall be handled except in such a manner as to prevent contamination as far as practicable. Single-service utensils shall be purchased only in sanitary con-J tainers and shall be stored therein in a clean dry place until used. ITEM 12. Disposal of wastes.—All wastes shall be properly disposed of, and all garbage and trash shall be kept in suitable receptacles, in such manner as not to become a nuisance. ITEM 13. Refrigeration.—All perish able food or drink shall be kept at or below 50° F. except when being prepared or served. Waste water from refrigeration equip ment shall discharge into an open sink or drain, properly trapped and sewer con nected, provided that where sewer con nections are not available clean adequate water-tight drip pans may be used. ITEM 14. Wholesomeness of food and drink.—All food and drink shall be whole some and free from spoilage. All milk, milk products, ice cream, and other froz en desserts served shall be served in the original containers in which they were received from the distributor or from a bulk container equipped with an approv ed dispensing device; provided that this requirement shall not apply to cream, which may be served from the original bottle or from a dispenser approved for such service. All oysters, clams, and mussels shall be from approved sources. ITEM 15. Storage and display of food and drink.—All food and drink shall be so stored and displayed as to be protected from dust, flies, vermin, handling, droplet infection, overhead leakage, and other contamination. No animals or fowls shall be kept or allowed in any room in which food or drink is prepared or stored. All means necessary for the elimination of flies shall be used. ITEM 16. Cleanliness of employees.— All employees shall wear clean outer gar ments and shall keep their hands clean at all times while engaged in handling food, drink, utensils, or equipment. ITEM 17.—Miscellaneous.—The sur roundings of all restaurants shall be kept clean and free of litter or rubbish- None of the operations connected with a restaurant shall be condvicted in any room used for domestic purposes. Adequate lockers or dressing rooms shall be pro vided for employees’ clothing. Soiled linens, coats, and aprons shall be kept in containers provided for this purpose. No article, polish, or other substance containing any cyanide preparation or other poisonous material shall be used for the cleansing or polishing of eating or cook ing utensils. GRADE B RESTAURANTS.—Grade B restaurants are those which have been found on two successive inspections to have violated the same one of any of the following items of sanitation required for grade A restaurants: 1, 2, 3, 4, 8, 12, SEE NEW MERCURY 8 BRYAN MOTOR CO. Phone B-lll Bryan, Texas RESIGN FROM THE “HUNT ,, CLUB . . . here’s what you’re looking for! You’ll satisfy her longing for an exquisite gift, with an al luring robe! All she could ask for in loveliness ... all you could ask for in value! They come in soft shades of tearose, ice blue, flower- sprigged pastels, rich deep shades of wine, royal. Tailored satins, priced from $5.95 to $7.95 Quilted robes, at $6.95 Lace-trimmed satins, at $7.95 to $9.90 Eugene Edge and Son ‘ON THE CORNER” or 17. GRADE C RESTAURANTS.—Grade C restaurants are those which have been found on two successive inspections to have* violated the same one of any of the following items of sanitation required for grade A restaurants: 5, 6, 7, 9,. 10, 11, 13. 14. 15, and 16. FROM AND AFTER 2 MONTHS FROM THE DATE ON WHICH THIS ORDI NANCE TAKES EFFECT NO RESTAU RANTS EXCEPT GRADE A AND GRADE B RESTAURANTS SHALL BE OPERAT ED. SECTION 7. Notification of disease.— Notice shall be sent to the health officer immediately by the restaurant manager or by the employee concerned if he or any employee contracts any infectious, contagious, or communicable disease, or has a fever, a skin eruption, a cough lasting more than 3 weeks, or any other suspicious symptoms. It shall be the duty of any such employee to notify the restau rant manager immediately when any of said conditions obtain, and if neither the manager nor the employee concerned noti fies the health officer immediately when any of said conditions obtain they shall be held jointly and severally to have vio lated this section. A placard containing this section shall be posted in all toilet rooms and privies serving restaurants. SECTION 8. Procedure when infection suspected.—When suspicion arises as to the possibility of transmission of infection from any restaurant employee the health officer is authorized to require any or all of the following measures: (1) the immediate exclusion of the employee from all restaurants ; (2) the immediate clos ing of the restaurant concerned until no further danger of disease outbreak ex ists, in the opinion of the health officer; (3) adequate medical examinations of the employee and of his associates, with such laboratory examinations as may be indicated. SECTION 9. Enforcement interpreta tion.—This ordinance shall be enforced by the health officer in accordance with the interpretations thereof contained in the 1933 edition of the U. S. Public Health Service Code Regulating Eating and Drink ing Establishments. SECTION 10.—Penalties.—Any person who violates any provision of this ordi nance shall be fined not more than one hundred dollars ($100.00) at the discre tion of the court having jurisdiction. Each and every violation of the provisions of this ordinance shall constitute a separate offense. SECTION 11. Repeal and date of effect. -—All ordinances and parts of ordinances in conflict with this ordinance are here by repealed, and this ordinance shall be in full force and effect immediately upon its adoption and its publication as provided by law. SECTION 12. Unconstitutionality clause. —Should any section, paragraph, sentence, clause, or phrase of this ordinance be de clared unconstitutional or invalid for any reason the remainder of said ordinance shall not be affected thereby. Passed and approved this 7th day of December, 1939. J. H. BINNEY, Mayor. Attest: SIDNEY L. LOVELESS, City Secretary. MILK ORDINANCE ORDINANCE NO. 32 AN ORDINANCE MAKING MANDA TORY THE GRADING AND LABELING OF MILK AND CERTAIN MILK PRO DUCTS SOLD OR OFFERED FOR SALE WITHIN THE CORPORATE LIMITS OF THE CITY OF COLLEGE STATION. TEXAS: PROHIBITING THE SALE OF ADULTERATED, MISBRANDED, OR UN GRADED MILK, AND MILK PRODUCTS ; REQUIRING AND PROVIDING FOR THE ISSUING AND REVOKING OF PERMITS FOR THE SALE OF MILK AND MILK PRODUCTS ; AUTHORIZING AND DIRECTING THE CITY HEALTH OFFICER TO RECEIVE APPLICATIONS FOR, INSPECT DAIRIES AND MILK PLANTS AND GRANT OR REVOKE PERMITS TO PERSONS, FIRMS, AND CORPORATIONS TO SELL OR OFFER FOR SALE GRADED MILK AND MILK PRODUCTS WITHIN THE CITY ; PRO VIDING FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF FUTURE DAIRIES AND MILK PLANTS; ADOPTING THE PROVISIONS OF SEN ATE BILL 83 PASSED BY THE REGU LAR SESSION OF THE 45TH LEGISLA TURE, REVISED CIVIL STATUTES 1937 SUPPLEMENT ; PROVIDING FOR THE ENFORCEMENT OF THIS ORDI NANCE, AND THE FIXING OF PENAL TIES. WHEREAS, the Regular Session of the 45th Legislature, 1937, passed an Act known as Senate Bill 83, relative to the grading and labeling of milk and milk products and authorizing the governing bodies of cities to make mandatory the grading and grade labeling of milk and milk products sold and offered for sale within the corporate limits of such cities, and WHEREAS, it is necessary to regulate the sale of milk and milk products within the City of College Station, for the pro motion of health, the governing body of said City desires to require permits for the sale of milk and milk products and to make mandatory the grading and label ing of milk and milk products sold and offered for sale within the city limits of the City of College Station, Texas, now therefore, BE IT ORDAINED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS: Sec. 1. That hereafter it shall be un lawful for any person, firm or corporation to sell or offer for sale any milk or milk products within the corporate limits of the City of College Station, without such person, firm or corporation first makes application to and receives a permit from the City Health Officer to sell such milk or milk products. The City Health Offi cer shall issue or revoke such permits in accordance with the requirements and con ditions herein after set forth ; provided he may revoke or refuse to issue a permit, if in his judgment any milk is unfit for human consumption. Sec. 2. The City Health Officer of the City of College Station, is hereby authorized and directed to receive appli cations for, and grant permits to persons, firms and corporations desiring to sell or offer for sale milk and milk products within the City; provided said Health Of ficer shall inspect the equipment and sanitation of the dairies and milk plants and grade the milk according to the pro visions of the Senate Bill 83, passed by the 45th Legislature Regular Session, Revised Civil Statutes 1937 Supplement, and in Ohio stath u. CELEBRATES AN ANNUAL MISTLETOE DAY BY HANGING MISTLETOE-ON ALL OF THE CAMPUS BUILDINGS / PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT WAS FLUNKED IN ONE OF HIS LAW COURSES AT COLUMBIA BY HARLAN F. STONE v NOW A SUPREME COURT UUSTICE / XI N THE I840‘S OBERUN COLLEGE GO-EDS SCRUBBED FLOORS. CLEANED ROOMS, WASHED AND MENDED THE- YOUNG MEN’S CLOTHES. IN PAYMENT THEY RECEIVED 2.^4 £ AN HOUR./ FRANKLIN- I’M AFRAID YOU'LL NEVER AMOUNT TO MUCH/ 7^ Movie Reviewer Nisbet, ‘Grade-Point Man’, Originally from ‘God’s Country’ Robert Eudaly “Bob” Nisbet, junior editor and “Movie Review” columnist on The Battalion staff, claims despite all his journalistic activities that he’s “a chemist, first, last, and always.” A “local product,” Bob has lived in Bryan for the past four years. He grad uated from Stephen F. Austin high school in 1937. Before living in Bryan, Bob was a West Texan, living in both Men ard and Sonora. Like all the other boys from that part of the state, he claims it to be the original “God’s country.” Bob is classified as a junior, and is studying hard to he a chemical engineer. One of his nicknames is “grade-point man,” but he laugh ingly declares that it comes not from his scholastic achievements, but from the new idea he has adopt ed for his movie column, that of rating shows not by the usual “stars,” but by “grade-points.” Music, one of Bob’s special hob bies, has played an important role in his life. He’s been concerned with music and musical organiza tions since his grade-school days. Here at A. & M. he sings in the Glee Club, as well as being a member of the Aggie Band—the Field Artillery Band being his divi sion of that organization. accordance with the rules and regula tions promulgated by the State Health Officer pursuant thereto. The grading and labeling of milk and milk products sold and offered for sale within the cor porate limits according to definition (F), Section 1 of the said Senate Bill 83, for grades “A”, “B”, "C”, and “D” raw milk and milk products, and definition (Q) for grades “A”, “B”, and “C” pasteurized milk and milk products, is hereby made mandatory. These specifications are on file with the City Clerk for public exam ination. Sec. 3. Adulterated, Misbranded, or Un graded Milk or Milk Products Prohibited. No person shall within the City of Col lege Station or its police jurisdiction, pro duce, sell, offer or expose for sale, or have in possession with intent to sell, any milk or milk product which is adulterated, misbranded, or ungraded within the mean ing of any under the penalty of the afore said Senate Bill 83. Violation of this Section shall be sufficient cause for revo cation of permits for the sale of milk or milk products. Section 4. All pasteurized milk and milk products shall be placed in their final delivery containers in the plant in which they are pasteurized, and all raw milk and milk products sold for consumption in the raw state shall be placed in their final delivery containers at the farm at which they are produced. Sec. 5. All future dairies and milk plants from which milk or milk products are supplied to the City of College Sta tion, Texas, which are hereafter construct ed, reconstructed, or extensively altered shall conform in their construction to the grade A requirements of this ordinance. Sec. 6. Enforcement interpretation. This ordinance shall be enforced by the City Health Officer in accordance with the interpretations thereof contained in the 1939 edition of the U. S. Public Health Service Milk Code and aforesaid Senate Bill 83. Sec. 7. Six months from the effective date this ordinance, no milk or milk pro ducts shall be sold except grades A pas teurized, certified, and grade A raw; provided lower grades may be sold during degrading periods as determined by the City Health Officer. Sec. 8. Repeal and Date of Effect. All ordinances and parts of ordinances in con flict with this ordinance are hereby re pealed ; and this ordinance shall be in full force and effect immediately upon its adoption and its publication, as pro vided by law. Sec. 9. Unconstitutionality clause. Should any section, paragraph, sentence, clause or phrase of this ordinance be de clared unconstitutional or invalid for any reason, the remainder of said ordinance shall not be affected thereby. Sec. 10. Any person, firm, corporation or association of persons who shall sell, offer for sale, or possess for the purpose of sale any milk or milk product with the City of College Station, Texas, without having a permit authorizing the sale of same, issued by the City Health Officer of the City of College Station, Texas, or who shall sell or possess for the purpose of sale any milk or milk product after a permit has been revoked or suspended shall be fined in a sum not exceeding One Hundred Dollars, and each separate sale, or possession for sale, shall constitute a separate offense. Sec. 11. Where violations of this ordi nance and the provisions of said Senate Bill 83 are found, the City Health Offi cer, his agents, or any other city offi cer having jurisdiction, shall file com plaint or complaints in some court of com petent jurisdiction. Passed and approved this the 7th day of December, 1939. J. H. BINNEY, Mayor. Attest: SIDNEY L. LOVELESS, City Secretary. 1399 School Boys Injured in Texas 1939 Football AUSTIN. Dec. 14.—Surveying the thumps and bumps in Texas schoolboy football, the interscho lastic league has reported that 79 injuries were sustained by each 1,000 of 19,375 players during the past 12 weeks. In all, two deaths and 1,399 in juries were recorded. The rate compared with 40 per 1,000 in Wisconsin where a football safety program recently was be gun. The figures were obtained by C. H. Kenley, San Angelo high school principal, head of a committee which will report on the feasibility of athletic insurance at the league’s May meeting in Austin. Kenley made a six-months study of grid iron mishaps. He found that 43 per cent of injuries were sprains, and frac tures were next in line at 20 per cent. The leg was the most vulnerable part of the athlete’s anatomy, lead ing the list with 311 casualties. Foot injuries totalled 260 and shoulder 204. Night> games were charged with 48 per cent of injuries, day games with 16 per cent, practice scrim mage with 17 per cent and prac tice without scrimmage 14 per cent. The type of play involved when injuries occurred was known in only 60 per cent of the list and reads like this: Line plays 28 per cent, end runs 18 per cent, and passes, punts and kickoffs, com bined, 4 per cent. Ample Helium Reserves Possessed by the U. S. Reserves of helium more than ample for any emergency require ments now foreseen are possess ed by the United States alone a- mong the world’s nations, Secre tary of the Interior Harold L. Ickes announced recently. Conservatively estimated, the secretary^ reported, the natural gas reserves which supply the gov ernment’s Amarillo, Texas, helium plant contain at least 100,000,- 000,000 cubic feet, equivalent, with a 1.8 per cent helium con tent, to a reserve of 1,800,000,000 cubic feet of helium, or about 200 times the average annual produc tion during the last 10 years. There is a glacier in Greenland named after Cornell University Expert Radio Repair STUDENT CO-OP Phone No. 139 North Gate Library Announces New Books Bought On Student Reading Fund Following is a list of books of which one or more copies have been bought and received by the College Library this fall with funds from the Student General Read ing Fund, according to Dr. T. F. Mayo, librarian. Other books are on order, and at this time the third order is being sent. Dr. Mayo repeats for the bene fit of all those requesting books from this fund, that by the ruling of the Student Library Commit tee, no textbooks will be bought with it. The list is as follows: Barrington—Glorious Apollo (a novelized life of Byron); Belbenoit —Dry Guilloting (life of the es caped inmate of Devil’s Island who The Rain Came. Carr—South American Primer; reached the U. S. last year and took out naturalization papers); Bertram—Unconquered (written about the peasant Chinese fighters by an American newspaper man who lived with them); Bromfield— Cloete—The Turning Wheels; Cool- idge—Old California Cowboys; Cooper—Designs in Scarlet. Di Donato—Christ in Concrete (novel by a young Italian laborer in New York); Diffie—Puerto Rico; Broken Pledge, Dos Passos—Ad ventures of a Young Man. Fadiman—I Believe; Fisher— Children of God; Forester—Captain Horatio Hornblower; Guttmacher — Life in the Making. Halsey—With Malice Toward Some; Hertzler—Horse and Buggy Doctor; Jordanoff—Through the Overcoat; Jordanoff—Your Wings. London—The Sea Wolf; McWil liams—Factories in the Field; Milley—Huntsman, What Quarry ? ; Moley—After Seven Years; Nord- hoff—The Hurricane. Partridge — Country Lawyer; Saint-Exupery—Wind, Sand, and Stars; Scacheri—Fun of Photo graphy; Sheean—Not Peace But a Sword; Steinbeck—Grapes of Wrath; Steinbeck—Long Valley. Taylor — Address Unknown; Thompson—Let the Record Speak; Vance—Escape; Woodbury—Glass Giant of Palomar; Zola—Short Stories. Another baby giant panda has been received at Chicago’s Brook field Zoo. This is the fourth of these rare animals to be brought to America, and may be the last, as their exportation from their native habitat in China has been forbidden by the Chinese govern ment. Waco Mothers Add To Library Fund A. & M.’s college Library Gener al Reading Fund was boosted an other $5 over the holidays when the Waco A. & M. Mothers Club sent that amount to the college library to be added to the fund already set up. This amount makes a total of $565.40 raised since February 1, 1939, when the project was begun. Students donated $50.40 last year, Dean R. P. Marsteller contributed $5, and the remaining $510.00 has been contributed by the various Mothers’ Clubs throughout the state of Texas. The donation sent in by the Waco club was handled through Mrs. F. M. Pool, treasurer, who stated “The McClennan County A. & M. Mothers’ Club (Waco) is happy to help this much.” lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIM THE GIFT OF GIFTS — A DIAMOND To My Girl Gentlemen! Give her some thing personal this Christ mas—sojnfcthing exciting to wear! A beautiful housecoat, that’s exactly what she’s hop ing for! We invite you to make your selection now while our stock is complete. Come in, merely mention her size and preference, and we’ll do the rest! All gifts will be wrap ped ready to give, “without extra charge”. Prices on house coats range from $3.95 to $22.75 “A gift from the Smart Shop means more” Thursday Night Is MEN'S NIGHT At Lester’s Smart Shop LADIES WILL NOT BE ADMITTED Men . . . you’ll have the store to your selves . . . and our entire sales force will be here to help you! It’s the ideal time for a man to do his Christmas Shopping. Bring your gift list . . . we’ll help you with your problems. We believe you will enjoy it! The store will be open for men only. 7:30 to 9:00 O’clock JP/fTlflRT/tWP