THE BATTALION -THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1941 Lees-McRae college students, Banner Elk, N. C., have organized the country’s farthest-south ski ing club. Members make their own skis in the college wood-shop. Mm When you have your date down for the Spring Dances call us for Cor sages and Boutonnieres. J. COULTER SMITH Bryan - Ph. 2-6725 Be Foxy.. Go To Used Car Headquarters BRYAN MOTOR CO. Dress For The Occasion Every man will appre ciate the style, quality and smart appearance of this double-breasted drape model Tuxedo . . . available in regular, long or short models. Very reasonably priced at . . . $25 Select the proper “dress” accessories from our complete stock of Man hattan Shirts . . . Swank and Hickok Tuxedo Sets . . . Sherman Bows . . . Edgerton Tuxedo ox fords. I iTaldrop & (8 “Two Convenient Stores” College Station - Bryan Official Notices Deadline for Official Notices is 3:80 p.m. on days before publication, that is, Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. Notices ihoald be concise, typewritten, doable spaced, and signed. SCHEDULE OF EVENTS Feb. 28—Field Artillery Ball—Sbisa Hall—10 p. m. to I a. m. Feb. 28—A.I.E.E. Benefit Show—Assem bly Halt honor at a banquet to be held at Aggie- iday evening at 6:30 p.m., March 3rd. Mr. Howard W. Barlow of the land Inn Moni Aeronautical Engineering Department re ceived word last week that Professor liockema is visiting tne campus on a grant from the Carnegie Foundation. While here, he will confer with President Walton and Dean Gilchrist relative to administration and selection of students for the college quet. H. W. BARLOW INDUSTRIAL FILMS Two outsanding industrial films have been secured by the Industrial Engineer ing Department: THE MOULDER: This is a 16mm. silent film of the General Electric Co. Approxi mate running time 16 minutes. FROM IRON ORE TO STOVES: This is a I6mm. silent film of the making of stoves and shows scenes of foundry practice. Approximate running time 25 minutes. Those interested may see the films as 15c to 5 p.m. — 20c after LAST DAY Margaret Lockwood Rex Harrison -in— Tomorrow and Saturday Geraldine Fitzgerald Jeffrey Lynn Gladys George —in— “A Child Is Born ,, Also Late News - Cartoon “The Puritan” —with— AN ALL STAR CAST them to needy students. IND. ENGINEERING DEPT. Judson Neff, Head, Room 810, Pet. Eng. Bldg. ACADEMIC COUNCIL MEETING A meeting of the Academic Council will bo held at 2:80 p.m. today. F. C. BOLTON, DEAN SENIORS AND GRADUATE STUDENTS According to College Regulations, Sat urday, March 1, is the last date on which applications for degrees and certificates to be awarded on May 80, may be made. H. L. HEATON, Ass’t. Registrar SPEED LIMIT ON CAMPUS 1. Due to the increasing number of cars being driven on the A. & M. College campus, it has been deemed necessary to establish and enforce a speed limit for driving on the campus. The limit will be 20 miles an hour. 2. An officer is being placed on the campus to see that the speed limit of 20 miles an hour is enforced, and all persons who drive on the campus are warned not to exceed this limit. By order of the Commandant: JOE E. DAVIS, 1st. Lt.. Inf., Assistant Commandant AGRONOMY SOCIETY PICTURE A group picture of the Agronomy So ciety will be taken Friday, February 28 at 6 p.m. on the Ag. Bldg, steps. Num ber 2 uniforms and khaki shirts will be worn. Seniors please wear boots. AH students who plan to Join the form, and also bring your club dues, gold frame. Finder return to 117 No. which amounts to 60 cents. 11 for reward. YOUNG PEOPLE'S GROUPS Now’s your chance to meet a leading Rabbi, Priest, and Minister at the same time. An informal coffee hour will be held for the students and members of all young people's groups in the Y Par lor this afternoon at 6 p.m. Local girls will serve. PRE-MED CLUB There will be a meeting of the Pre- Med Club Thursday night at 7 o’clock in the Biology Lecture Room. A moving picture of special interest to Pre-Med students will be presented. Classified FOR RENT— Large room, two double beds—adjacent bath. Meals if desired. Phone 4-7064. Agronomy Society this semester are urg ed to be in the picture. AGRONOMY SOCIETY The Agronomy Society will meet Thurs- »y night at 7:30 in the Ag. Engineering Lecture Room. King Cotton will be elect- da; - ~ing ed. Also a junior business manager and a junior social secretary for the Cotton Ball. The Cotton Ball committees will be an nounced. HOCKEMA TO MEET PURDUE ALUMNI Professor Frank Hockema, Assistant to the President of Purdue University, will meet with the alumni of Purdue Univer sity who are now at A. & M. at the time of his visit to College Station next week. Arrangements are being made to have Professor Hockema as a guest of FACULTY LUNCHEON Religion is a necessity, denomination- alism sometimes a hindrance, and tolera tion a virtue. Come to the Fellowship Luncheon Thursday noon, to abide by a necessity and to ameliorate a hinderance by eating at a table with a clergy NOT of your own denomination. ROY L. DONAHUE, Chairman WOMEN’S SOCIAL CLUB The College Women’s Social Club will have its regular monthly meeting Fri day at 3:00 p.m. in Sbisa Hall with the Music Group as hostesses and the Cir culating Library Group as assistant host esses. M. E. STUDENTS There will be a very important meeting of engineering. It is believed that all of the Purdue ery impor of the A.S.M.E. tonight in the physics Alumni in College Station have been reached, but any who may not have re ceived notice of this banquet are request ed to notify Mr. H. W. Barlow at once of their intentions to attend this ban- lecture room at 7 o’clock. Harry W. McQuaid, metallurgist of the Republic Steel Corporation, will talk on new heat treating developments. MARKETING AND FINANCE SENIORS Marketing and Finance Seniors will have a group picture made Thursday at 12:45 p.m. on the Ag Building steps. Please wear boots and khaki shirts. INVENTORS COUNCIL The National Inventors Council has been created by the Secretary of Commerce to function in close collaboration with the military and naval branches of the Gov ernment in bringing to their attention all such discoveries and mechanisms made by civilian inventors as appear to have de fensive value. Full in formation with reference to the work of this Council and regulations as to how inventions may be submitted to the Council will be found on the School of Engineering bulletin board in the Ac ademic Building. GIBB GILCHRIST, Dean of Engineering COTTON SOCIETY There will be a very important business meeting of the Cotton Society at 7:15 p.m. in the Textile Building. Pictures of Southern and Middle West Agriculture will be shown. SADDLE & SIRLOIN CLUB The Saddle & Sirloin Club will have its picture taken for the Longhorn Feb. 27th at 6 p. m. in front of the Ad ministration Building. EX-4H CLUB The Ex-4H Club will have its picture taken immediately after the Saddle & Sirloin Club, for the Longhorn. RURAL SOCIOLOGY CLUB There will be a meeting of, the Rural Sociology Club at 7:30 p.m. tonight in room 203 Ag. Bnilding. Important that all members be present. There will be a speaker. CAMPUS FILM CLUB The Campus Film Club will show its imp' fourth foreign feature of the year at the Campus Theater at 8:30 Thursday. It will “TU be “THE PURITAN,” a French produc tion with English titles. Arrangements have been made which will allow rapid seating of members and non-members who wish to see the show. SAM B. ZISMAN A. S. C. E. The A.S.C.E. Barbecue will be held Thursday afternoon in Hensel Park. Col. O. A. Seward will be present and will give an informal talk. Trucks will leave the C. E. Building at 4:30 and 6:10. part of the regular classroom instruc tion in the basement projection room prc of the M.E. Shops Friday and Satur day, February 28th and March 1, at 10:00 Student Technical Societies, or other departments are invited to arrange with the Industrial Engineering Department for the use of these films if they are in terested. The films are booked for the entire week and are ordinarily available on Monday through the following Satur day. INDUSTRIAL ENG. DEPT. Judson Neff, Head BIG SPRING CLUB The Big Spring A. & M. Club picture for the Longhorn will be taken at 6:16 Friday, Feb. 28, on the steps of the old “Y”. Cotton shirts will be worn. FISH AND GAME CLUB A picture of the club will be taken for the Longhorn on the “Y” steps at 6 p.m., Thursday, February 27. All club members are urged to be present in number 2 uni- FOUND BICYCLE—Owner may secure bicycle by proper identification and by cycle by pro] lying for this ad. W. L. Adcock, Phone paying 4-8524 from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. LOST—One pair of glasses with light LOST—Class Ring. Temple High, 1938. Initials R.H.H. engraved on inside. Re turn to 207 No. 4. Liberal Reward. LOST—Elgin pocket watch. If found please return to Z. Hemphill, room 104, dorm 5. itate an expenditure of approxi mately $1000. It Is expected that this amount will be saved on fire insurance rates when the fire plug is placed within 500 feet of the dif ferent units of school property. There are 928 semi-circular arch es in the main barracks of The Citadel. RIDE—Round Trip to Denton. Leaving Saturday noon. Returning Sunday night. 1940 Oldsmobile, radio equipped. See Tex Flynn, 47 Milner. WANTED—Garage near Campus, pref erably at North Gate. Contact Edgar O. ns, ner Hall, room 61. Anderson Says— (Continued from Page 1) collection dates and a state tax de linquent plan. The council voted to install a fire hydrant on the consolidated school campus which will necess- i' : - - A */ m v ■ 1: ill m Ell” I - It s part of the game ...to pause and & *1 Am —MB \ ‘ V " ■ A., v J _ mi :: it “Q4ccnm£ conscious tribute to Here's a drink that is unique. It never loses the freshness of appeal that first charmed you. You drink it and enjoy an after sense of complete refreshment. So when you pause throughout the day, make it the pause that refreshes with ice-cold Coca-Cola. YOU TASTE ITS QUALITY pays an un conscious tribute to ^ estern FAectric, matter ot Bell Telephones. It means tbat all the equipment nseA in the connection, is made so skillfully that it transmits the familiar tones and inflections. A.& manufacturer for the Bell System, "Western Ylectric makes some 43,000 differ ent items oi telephone apparatus. As pur chaser for the System, it buys raw materials and supplies from all over the globe. As drar tributor ,it sees that aU these things are av^ able -where and Vfhen needed.This helps give you the "W orld’s finest telephone servic - iill Bottled under authority of The Coca-Cola Company by Bryan Coca-Cola Bottling Co., Inc. nitric ^ ^ npl1 service GEORGE STEPHAN, President LOST AND FOUNP The Industrial Engineering Department has on hand the following articles: 1 pair men’s gloves (found in room 108 M.E. Shops last semester). 1 blue knit sweater, button type. 1 fountain pen (lost in Francis Hall Lecture room during the final exam in I. Eng. 401 last semester) If these articles are not claimed and proof presented of ownership by Mar. 10, 1941, the department will dispose of THE SMOKE OF SLOWER-BURNING CAMELSGIVES^ou &XmA MILDNESS, EXTRA COOLNESS, EXTRA FLAVOR AMERICA’S No. 1 SKIER DICK DURRANCE VS. THE STOP WATCH AT SUN VALLEY AND He’s a little man to look at—but on a pair of “hickories” he’s a mighty giant. He’s held virtually every major down-hill and slalom title in North America. He smokes ... as much as he likes . . . but note: He smokes the slower-burn ing cigarette that gives extra mild ness and less nicotine in the smoke ... Camel. “Night Train” Also Selected Short Subjects IT'S SWELL TO GET THAT EXTRA MILDNESS IN A SMOKE AS TASTY AS A CAMEL. THERE'S NOTHING LIKE A CAMEL FOR FLAVOR mm •'•SwxSK&ki LESS NICOTINE ■I than the average of the 4 other largest-selling cigarettes tested—less than any of them—according to independent scientific tests of the smoke itself V,.; ^11 T"MVE of the largest-selling cigarettes ... the brands that most JT of you probably smoke right now...were analyzed and com pared by tests of the smoke itself. For, after all, it’s what you get in the smoke that interests you ... the smoke’s the thing. Over and again the smoke of the slower-burning brand— Camel—was found to contain less nicotine. Dealers everywhere feature Camels by the carton. For con venience—for economy—get your Camels by the carton. . R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company. Winston-Salem, North Carolina The Campus Film Club will sponsor at 9:00 and 10:30 tonight one of a series of foreign made films . . . AT THE ROUNDHOUSE high up on Sun Valley’s famous Baldy Mountain, Dick Dur- rance (above) takes time out for another Camel. “That Camel flavor is something special,” he says. “Never wears out its welcome.” And the answer is Camel’s costlier tobaccos in a matchless blend—they’re slower-burning! Try the slower-burning cigarette yourself. Know the supreme pleasure of a smoke free from the excess heat and irritating qualities of too-fast burning . . . extra cool, extra mild. Enjoy every flavorful puff with the comfort ing assurance of science that in Camels you’re getting less nicotine in the smoke (above, right). BY BURNING 25% SLOWER than the average of the 4 other largest- selling brands tested—slower than any of them—Camels also give you a smokingp/uy equal, on the average, to 5 EXTRA SMOKES PER PACK! CAMEL THE SLOWER-BURNING CIGARETTE f r. * M * # r c* * l A VOL