PAGE 4 THE BATTALION Official Notices ▲11 notices should bo sent to The Bsttslion Office. 122 Administration Bnild- ln«. Ther ohonld be typed and doable- opscod. The deadline for them ia 4 :0» p. at. the day prior to the date of Issue. SCHEDULE OF EVENTS January 20—Basketball game. S.M.U. and Texas A. & M., Gymnasium, 7 :30 p. m. Jan. 25 and 26—Pre Medical Society benefit show. Assembly Hall, 7:80 p. m. January 81—Faculty dance, Banquet room, Sbisa Hall, 9 p. m. to 12 midnight. LONGHORN CLUB PICTURES Space reservations for club pictures in the 1940 Longhorn must be in by February 1. See Watson in room 208, hall 12. VANITY FAIR PICTURES Pictures for the “Vanity Fair” section of the Longhorn must be in by February 1, 1940. All pictures must be turned in to Mick Williams, 98 Law. PERSONNEL LEAFLETS All seniors and graduate students who desire the individual personnel leaflets who have not paid for same, are requested to come by room 138, Administration Building, not later than January 20. This is necessary so that the order for cuts on the pictures may be made in due time. LUCIEN M. MORGAN, DIRECTOR Placement Personnel Division Association of Former Students NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS Consolidated school taxes can be paid without penalty up to and including Jan. 81, 1940. Penalty schedule for payment of taxes after January 31 is as follows: February 1% March 2% April 3% May i°/o June 5% July 8% Taxes are delinquent on July 1 at which time 6% interest begins. J. C. CARLL Tax Collector A. & M. Consolidated School District THE BATTALION STAFF The entire editorial staff of The Batta lion will meet in The Battalion office, 122 Administration Building, Tuesday night at 7:15. All the editors and junior editors are especially asked to be present. Anyone wishing to join the staff is invited to do so at this meeting. ENGINEERING SENIORS The Civil Service Commission has an nounced a junior engineer examination. Applications must be on file with the U. S. Civil Service Commission not later than February 6, 1940. A notice of the examination giving full details may be seen on the School of Engineering bulle tin board in the Academic Building or in the office of the Dean of Engineering. If, after reading the notice, you wish to apply for the examination please leave kJMV ASSKAU&LY HALL ... Because he sets in tfeete aasi jiitehes far'his .the Aasmcaa DOLLElIl BOBlfURNSm Susan HAYWARD ^Joseph ALL®, k Elizabeth Patterson • Gene Locuart Charles Bickford Pitimrr' Saturday, Jan. 20 12:30 SGHTY EMPIRE ...Fusing the cracks of empire with their broken hearts! starring Douglas FAIRBANKS, Jr. and Basil RATHBONE Virginia FIELD Lionel ATWILL Universal Pictur# ^ Saturday, Jan. 20 6:30 & 8:30 your name in my office and you will be advised of a meeting prior to February 1 for all engineering seniors who are interested at which time application blanks will be furnished and explained. It is hoped that you will make your plaas to apply for this examination. GIBB GILCHRIST Dean of Engineering CIVIL SERVICE All seniors are urged to read Civil Service Announcement No. 10 for Junior Professional Assistant. There are twenty- eight different options offered from Jun ior Agronomist to Junior Range Examiner, Junior Biologist (Wild Life), and Junior Engineer. The closing date for applications to ave here should he February Instructions on filling out the form 8 may be obtained from your department leave here should be February 1st. ie lep head. Further instructions will be given by O. E. Teague, Civil Service Department, on Wednesday evening at 7:30 in the Animal Industry Auditorium. STUDENT LIBRARY COMMITTEE The regular monthly meeting of the Student Library Committee will be held Sunday afternoon beginning at 2 o’clock in the office of the librarian. Dr. T. F. Mayo. Members are urged to attend this ■rs ar< important meeting. Organizations HILLEL CLUB Prof. V. K. Sugareff will address an open meeting of the A. & M. Hillel Club on Sunday evening January 21, at 7 p. m. in the lounge room of the old Mess Hall. His subject will be “War in Southeastern Europe”. BIOLOGY CLUB There will be an important meeting po: of the Biology Club next Monday even ing, January 22, at 6:45. Two reels of excellent sound pictures on biological to- sou pics will be shown and officers will be elected to serve during the next two semesters. All students interested in be coming members for the second semester are cordially invited to attend. The meet ing will be held in the Biology lecture room in the Science Hall. GLEE CLUB The regular meeting schedule of the A. & M. Glee Club is from 6:30 to 7:30 p. m. every Monday, Tuesday and Thursday night—all in the basement of the old dining hall. Special rehearsal of the tenor sections will be held every Monday; of the base- baritone sections, every Tuesday. These begin at 6 p. m. in the above meeting place. Lost and Found LOST: Trench coat in Library cloak room. Name in collar, brown gloves in pocket; Return to Newman, room 326, dorm 8 for reward. LOST: A wide brown all-wool muffler with red and yellow stripes, made in Eng land, lost night after Christmas holidays. Of high sentimental value to owner. Triple usual reward for reward to room 113, dorm 11. Max A. Melcher CHURCHES EPISCOPAL CHURCH St. Thomas Chapel, College Rev. Roscoe Hauser Jr., Chaplain 8:30 a. m. Holy Communion 9:30 a. m. Coffee Club and Bible Class 10:45 a. m. Morning Prayer and sermon. (1st Sundays - Holy Communion) FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF COLLEGE STATION R. L. Brown, Pastor 9:45 a. m. Sunday School 10:50 a. m. Morning worship 6:45 p. m. Baptist Training Union 7:30 p. m. Evening worship Wednesday—B. S. U. Council 6:45 p. m.; prayer meeting 7:30 p. m.; choir rehearsal 8:16 p. m. Student prayer meeting every evening at 6 :45. A. & M. CHURCH OF CHRIST R. B. Sweet, Minister 9:45 a. m. Bible classes 10:45 a. m. Worship service 6:45 p. m. Young People’s meeting 7 :S0 p. m. Evening worship Wednesday—Prayer meeting, 7:30 p. m. A. & M. METHODIST CHURCH James Carlin, Pastor 10:00 a. m. Church School 11:00 a. m. Morning warship 7:00 p. m. Epworth League meeting 7:45 p. m. Evening service PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Y. M. C. A. Chapel Rev. Norman Anderson, Pastor 9:30 a. m. Sunday School 11:00 a. m. Morning worship 6:45 p. m. Young People’s League 7:45 p. m. Evening devotional and fel lowship. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SERVICE Y. M. C. A. Parlor 11:00 a. m. Morning worship LUTHERAN SERVICES Y. M. C. A. Parlor Rev. Kurt Hartman, Pastor 7:00 p. m. Evening worship FOR RENT: Furnished southeast new, 3 room & bath apartment. Garage. Close in. Phone Miss Lil ian Beaumont, Bryan 244, Street address: 609 East 26th Street. Barber Shop La Salle Hotel O’Conner - Jones Bryan, Texas Dr. A. Benbow DENTIST Phone 375 Austin Building — Bryan Dead Letter Office— (Continued from page 1) and inspected by the postal author ities in an effort to determine the address of either the addressee or the addresser. On occasions one of these addresses are determined and the letter is forwarded immed iately. But in the majority of cases the reading of these letters is futile, and they are thereupon de stroyed by fire. All money and other valuables found in this mail is held in Fort Worth for one year awaiting claim. At the end of that time all unclaimed matter is auc tioned off or disposed of in a way most profitable to the postal serv ice. The local postal employees esti mate that an average of 50 such letters are received in a month. According to these men, not one letter in 10,000 is actually “lost through the mails,” and if a letter fails to reach its destination one may well suppose that it is lying dormant in some dead letter of fice. The local office goes out of its way in trying to discover the destinaiton of these letters and when all attempts fail there is nothing left for the letters but de struction by fire. And so these messages, lie inert in College Station—freaks of the mails, deformed and definitely “non-reg.” Their missions are un performed and their destiny is ex tremely questionable. The employees ox the local of fice were quick to point out a shortcoming which is far more common in the general addressing of a letter. Almost everyone is guilty of omitting the apparently unimportant return address. Some few may go so far as to place the box number in the upper left hand corner of the envelope. The postal employees to the man will declare grimly and adamantly that this is bad practice. They insist that every letter should bear a return address which is correct on ly when the sender’s name, box number, and post office are legibly placed in the aforementioned cor ner. They explain that in as much as some boxes, such as the organ ization boxes, contain upwards to 70 names it is next to impossible to return a letter to its rightful owner without this complete re turn address. Therefore the local post office requests that everyone kindly include his name in the re turn address, and further, they iq- vite everyone to better acquaint himself with the more fundamental rules of the postal service in order that delay and confusion may be reduced to a minimum. Engineers’ Day— (Continued from page 1) dent flying instruction, and simi lar activities. It was decided at the meeting to devote some two weeks to the pro motion of engineering, so planned that the Engineer’s Day Show would fall in the middle of the period. Dean Gilchrist announced to the Council that he had contacted some of the outstanding engineers is the United States, trying to get them to come here to make talks during that two week period. Some of them have already given favor able answers. The main purpose of the Engi neering Council is to represent the students. This may be accomplish ed enly if any student who has a suggestion will take the time to get in touch with some member of the council. The members of the Council, in the various branches of engineering, are: Architectural So ciety, Gordon Siebeck, Marshall Be thel, D. P. Simpson; Chemical En gineering, A. T. Hingle, A. K. Hamilton, C. A. Droll ; Civil En gineering, B. B. Cloud, C. DeVil- biss, J. West; Electrical Engineer ing, W. P. Smith, F. K. Nichols, FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF BRYAN W. H. Andrew, Pastor 9:45 a. m. Sunday School 10:50 a. m. Morning worship 6:30 p. m. Baptist Training Union 7:30 p. m. Evening worship Free busses for students leave both “Y’s” at 9:20 every Sunday morning. COLLEGE AVE. BAPTIST CHURCH OF BRYAN R. C. White, Pastor. 9 :45 a. m. Sunday School. 11:00 a. m. Morning Worship. 6:20 p. m. Baptist Training Union. 7:30 p. m. Evening Worship. Free bus for students leaves old “Y”, Project House area, and street intersection near new dormitories at 9:10, 9:16, and 9 :20 respectively each Sunday morning, and 6:10, 6:15, and 6:20 respectively Sunday evening. RIDE THE BUSSES SAFE, DEPENDABLE & COURTEOUS Serving Aggieland for Over a Quarter Of a Century Bryan-College Traction Co., Inc. Cadet Pistol Team Defeats Group Of State Troopers With local attraction focused on the A. & M.-Rice basketball game Thursday night, the Aggie pistol team at the same time encountered and retired winners over the State Department of Public Safety team with a margin of 32 points. Bill Lewis, firing for the Aggies, claimed high score for the evening and also set a college record in slow firing that should stand for a good number of years. Lewis’ score for the evening was 284 out of a possible 300. Dan Lawrence, ex-Aggie, led the troopers and claimed the second spot of the match with a score of 277. He also set the lead in rapid firing, with 92. Third place was taken by C. A. “Ears” Lewis with 273 points. The department’s team arrived here late Thursday evening and ate with the Aggies in the mess hall and also attended the basketball game. This match has become an annual affair with the troopers showing a good bit of interest in the Aggies’ team. AGGIES Slow Timed Rapid Total Shields, Bob 86 99 81 266 Lewis, C. A. 86 96 91 273 Kennemer, Clint Lewis, Bill 86 93 93 272 97 96 91 284 STATE TROOPERS 1,097 Lawrence, Dan 89 96 92 277 Cearley, J. L. 84 96 91 271 Chance, C. L. 76 92 93 266 Callamore, Tom 82 86 88 251 1,065 Future Farmers To Hold Area Meet Saturday, Jan. 20 Early Saturday morning about 200 Future Farmers of America will arrive at A. & M. for their annual area convention. These boys are representatives of area three which takes in a large part of Tex as, including College Station and surrounding territory. Area three has in it forty seven chapters of Future Farmers and all will prob ably represented at the meeting. The main purpose of the conven tion is to hear reports on the or ganization’s past year’s work and elect new officers for the coming "year. Upon arriving at College Station the boys will be privileged to in spect the college campus and facili ties. At 10:00 o’clock they will gather in the Assembly Hall where they will receive a welcome from Roy Martin, a member of the Sen ior Collegiate F. F. A. organiza tion at A. & M. The first feature on the day’s program will be a report on the experiences in a Leadership Train ing School held at Miniwauca, Mich igan. The report will be given by Leland Main, an active member of the Slocum Chapter, who is also treasurer of the state F. F. A. organization. Following this there will be given a report on the Nat ional Convention at Chicago last year and also plans will be made for the Texas State Convention of 1940. The state convention will be held in Houston, Texas, sometime in July with the members of area three acting as host to the rest of the state which is divided into ten separate areas. Among the last things on the program will be a report of the nominating committee and the elec tion of new officers for the com ing year. Those chosen will take office as they are elected. Next will be heard the report of the Pro gram of Work Committee at which time the goals for 1940 will be set up and plans will be made as to how these goals can be reached. G. P. Rhoten; Mechanical Engi neering, B. Burns; T. M. Hagood, A. Reagor; Petroleum Engineering, L. J. Lefkofsky, B. H. Elliot, E. H. Peters. Who’s Who— (Continued from page 1) George W. Smith, editor of the Longhorn; Joe M. Boyd, All-Amer ican football player; James M. Sharp, captain of the Ross Volun teers; William H. Oswalt, lieuten ant colonel of the composite regi ment; Frank H. Corder, president of the Saddle and Sirloin Club; Thomas A. Balmer, Band comman der; William T. Guy, president of the Scholarship Honor Society; Howell D. Miller, lieutenant col onel of the Infantry; Robert T. Shields, lieutenant colonel of the Field Artillery; Bruce B. Cloud, president of the Student Engineer ing Council; John A. Kimbrough, All-American football player; Ele B. Baggett, president of the junior class. LONGHORN AND FROG CAGERS IN GAME TONIGHT FORT WORTH, Jan. 20.—Appar ently again destined for cellar greatness, T. C. U.’s basketball team goes to slaughter Saturday night against the University of Texas in Austin. Coach Mike Brumbelow predict ed he would have a slightly bet ter bunch of cagers than last year, when the Frogs dropped 12 straight games, their complete conference schedule. He still holds to that prediction. But the Frogs, still weak even though stronger, had the bad luck to draw the conference’s leading title contenders for three of their first four games—Rice twice and Texas once. “We knew from the start we had almost no chance to beat those teams,” Coach Brumbelow says. “But the Aggies showed unex pected strength too and took us m College Station. Now we don’t trust any of ’em! We ought to win a game or two, but I’d hate to try to figure out from which team!” Floppy Blackmon, rangy fresh man who becomes eligible for varsity Feb. 1, will be held out this year, Brumbelow has decided. He figures Blackmon will do him more good with a full year in ’43 than with part of a season in ’40. ROSE TO FAME FROM SINGING IN BATH1UB WACO.—Most coeds, it seems, like to sing in the bath tub, and Elizabeth Ray, Baylor University student from China several years ago, was no exception. But as she carolled away one day at the top of her voice, she had little idea that she was being auditioned and that her melodies that morning would send her to her present position as contralto solo ist with the world famous West minster choir. So it worked out however. Miss Roxy Grove, head of the Baylor school of music, overheard the singing, was impressed, and intro duced herself when the bath was over. Their conversation resulted in Miss Ray’s entering the music school for study under Prof. Robert Hopkins, director of the Baylor a cappella choir . . . and in suc ceeding years in tours of this con tinent and Europe. Two coeds are members of the livestock judging team of Massa chusetts State College. The ten “depression classes” of 1930-1939 at Stevens Institute of Technology are 96 per cent em ployed. For the first time in 25 years, Union College this fall had an un defeated football team. -SATURDAY, JAN. 20, 1940 COSMOPOLITAN CLUB The Cosmopolitan Club will have its regular meeting in the Y. M. C. A. parlor Sunday afternoon at 3:00 o'clock. The boys from Mexico are presenting a special program about their country in which they will feaure a trip to Mexico City, starting at Laredo by way of the International Highway. The typical music of the different regions will be heard throughout the supposed trip. Also an explanation of a typical Bull Fight will be given. Everybody is invited, specially American boys interested in Cen tral and South America, for a lot of valuable information will be given. Refreshments will be serv ed as a compliment of the Y. M. C. A. W. J. Douglas, Jr. INSURANCE AGENCY General Insurance Commerce Bldg. Phone B-160 — CHICKEN GRILL FRIED CHICKEN STEAKS OYSTERS AND FISH 24th and College Ave. For more pleasure at the movies see Paramount’s Feature Attraction THE GREAT VICTOR HERBERT starring ALLAN JONES and MARY MARTIN For more smoking pleasure enjoy CHESTERFIELD’S Feature Attractions ...REAL MILDNESS and BETTER TASTE. ALLAN JONES Mildness and Better Taste are Chesterfield’s Feature Attractions The Right Combination of the world’s best cigarette tobaccos in Chesterfield gives you two features you can get in no other cigarette... Real Mildness and Better Taste. On top of that. Chesterfield gives you a far cooler smoke. You can’t buy a better cigarette. MARY MARTIN Copyright 1940, Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. • . ..