Page 4- THE BATTALION Official Notices Dwdlinc for Official Notice* U S :S0 p.m. on day* before publication, that U, Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. Notices should be concise, typewritten, double- ■paced, and signed. SCHEDULE OF EVENTS Friday, March 14, 8 p. m.—"The Artifi cial Creation of Speech" by Dr. J. O. Perrine demonstrating “Pedro the Voder”. Mar. 14—"T" Club Dance—Sbisa Hall —9 p.m. to 12 midnight. Mar. 14—Rifle Team Benefit Show— Assembly Hall. Mar. 20—Faculty Dance—Sbisa Hall— 9 p.m. to 12 midnight. SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING For the information of any students contemplating Civil Service examinations, information has reached us from the Civil Service Commission that the State of Texas under the apportionment plan is entitled to 2,878 positions and that only 1,817 are occupied. This is simply a measure of the avail ability of Civil Service places for quali fied Texans. GIBB GILCHRIST, Dean of Engineering APPLICATION PHOTOGRAPHS Application size photographs which ac company personnel leaflets are ready for the following seniors. Please call for these at Room 133, Administration Build ing, at your earliest convenience. Alvin Cowling, Jr.; Arthur L. Harris; R. L. Harris; R. G. Hill; Thomas M. Horne; Roy G. Roberts; V. B. Stubbs; James P. Towns. Placement Bureau Association of Former Students MANtoMAN- they're MAN- FORMED! MANHATTAN SHIRTS 111 are designed on a man like yourself—to fit a man like yourself su perbly! They give you that comfortable, confi dent look because there’s no bunchiness . . . that comfortable, confident feeling because there’s no skimpy tightness! See our Man-Formed Man hattan Shirts now—in Spring’s smartest styles! $2.00 up. f llaldrop<8(o ‘Two Convenient Stores” College Station - Bryan PERSONNEL LEAFLETS Printed personnel leaflets are ready for the following seniors. Please call for these at Room 133, Administration Building, at your earliest convenience. A. Cowling, Jr.; W. F. Cummer; W. R. Ellis, Jr.; C. W. Geelan; J. H. Ham- brick, Jr.; R. L. Harris, Jr.; R. G. Hill; C. J. Hopper; T. M. Horne; L. H. John son; W. O. Keller; M. Mascorro, Jr.; C. C. Mathews; B. E. Netherland; J. F. Rogers; W. M. Roundtree; J. R. Scott ; V. B. Stubbs; R. J. Windrow. Placement Bureau Association of Former Students PHYSICS MEETING The physics colloquim will meet in room 39, physics building, March 11, 7:15 p.m. Mr. L. G. Lapham will talk on “The Development and Uses of the Ultracentri fuge". Physics Staff CZECH STUDENTS The picture for the Longhorn will be remade Tuesday at 12:46 on the old Y.M.C.A. steps. All be present because this picture is to be released to many Czech newspapers. A. & M. Czech Club PRESBYTERIAN STUDENTS The Presbyterian Students League is giving a party in the YMCA parlor this Thursday, March IS, at 7:80. All Presby terian students are invited. TRI-STATE A. & M. CLUB There will be a meeting of the Tri- State A. & M. Club tonight at 7:00 in the new “Y". Cigars will be served. Does "Professor John Smith” mean to you a name alphabetically listed in the directory? If so, then discover for your self that he is a regular guy this Thurs day at the Fellowship Luncheon. ROY L. DONAHUE, Chairman Legal Notice ORDINANCE NO. 56 AN ORDINANCE REPEALING ORDI NANCE NO. 3; SETTING THE DATES OF THE FISCAL YEAR; DESIGNATING WHO SHALL PAY TAXES; NOTICE OF TAX RENDITION; BOARD OF EQUALI ZATION; ASSESSMENT ROLLS; FIX ING THE TIME AND MANNER OF PAYING AD VALOREM TAXES LEV IED FOR THE USE AND BENEFIT OF THE GOVERNMENT OF THE CITY OF COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS. BE IT ORDAINED BY THE CITY COUN CIL OF THE CITY OF COLLEGE STA TION, TEXAS: SECTION. 1. That Ordinance No. 3, passed and approved by the City Coun cil of College Station, Texas, on March 16, 1939, be and hereby is repealed. SECTION II. The Fiscal Year of the City of College Station, Texas, shall run from January 1 to December 81, both days inclusive. SECTION III. Every person, partnership, or corporation owning property within the limits of the City shall, between Jan uary 1 and April 80, of each year, hand to the City Secretary, as ex-officio as sessor and collector, a full and complete sworn inventory of the property possessed or controlled by him, her, or them, with in said city limits on January 1, of the current year. PALACE Wed. - Thurs. - Fri. - Sat. DAVID O. SEL2N1CK*S pmAmSw 4 MARGARET MITCHELL'Ss*B T .rd*Old3aa* GONE WITH THE WIND IN TECHNICOLOR earring Clark Gable*i RuuBatur IXSUK OLIVIA Howard. DcHavilland ■ ad pr«*«»liag ^Vivien Leigh <» scarku ov«r« „ A Sakalcfc Iai«*MtlMuJ ProdaaUei* ^ Full Length — Nothing Cut But The Prices Mat. 40^, incl. tax. Nights 55^, incl. tax Prevue 11 P. M. Sat. Night "High Sierra" Shown Sun. - Mon. WAR RISK LIFE INSURANCE $5,000 You pay only one monthly premium . . . other premiums guaranteed if policy is issued 30 days be fore entry into military service. No additional cost to you during service or one year thereafter unless you still want your policy. No deduction from pay. For your rate and other information fill in below and mail. Name (Print) Address _ (Print) Date of Birth (Print) WALTER H. PECK 902 Dallas National Bank Bldg. Dallas, Texas SECTION IV. The City Secretary may send notices by mail to all known prop erty owners of the City, calling their at tention to their duty to make the rendi tions referred to in Section III thereof. SECTION V. The Board of Equalization, as prescribed by law, shall be composed of three commissioners to be appointed by the City Council. SECTION VI. After the assessment rolls have been examined and approved by the Board of Equalization, the City Secretary, as ex-officio assessor and collector, may give notice by mail to each property own er, if his address is known, as to the amount of his taxes due. SECTION VII. The advalorem taxes here after levied by the governing body of the City of College Station, Texas, each year shall become due on the first day of October of the year for which the levy is made and may be paid up to and includ ing the following January 81, without pen alty, after which date such taxes may be paid in the manner and subject to penalties and interest chargee as are pro vided in Section IX hereof. SECTION VIIL If any person shall pay, on or before November thirtieth of the year for which the levy is made, one half of the city ad valorem taxes levied on him or his property, then he shall have until and including the thirtieth day of the succeeding June, within which to pay the other one-half of his said taxes with out penalty or interest thereon, but if the last one-balf is not so paid, then such unpaid taxes shall become delinquent and a penalty of 8% shall accrue, together with interest at the rate of 6% per an num from July 1st of that year. SECTION IX. If any person fails or re fuses to pay one-half of the city taxes levied upon him or his property, on or before the thirtieth day of November of the year for which the levy or assessment is made, then unless be pays all of said taxes on or before the thirty-first day of the succeeding January, the following penalty shall be payable thereon, to-wit: During the month of February one per cent (1%) ; during the month of March, two per cent (2%) ; April, three per cent (3%) ; during the month of May, four per cent (4%) ; during the month of June, five per cent (6%) ; and on and after the first day of July, eight per cent (8%). All city ad valorem taxes, unless one-half (%) thereof have been paid on or before November 80th, as hereinabove provided, shall become delinquent if not paid prior to February 1st of the year next succeeding the year for which such taxes were levied or assessed and shall bear interest at the rate of six per cent (6%) per annum from February 1st, the day of their de linquency. SECTION X. Unpaid 1940 taxes shall be considered delinquent as of February 1, 1941, except where one-half was paid on or before November 30, 1940, and shall be paid and collected as is provided in the foregoing sections, is so far as ap plicable. To all delinquent taxes for the assessment year 1939 and prior years there shall be added, at the time of collection, a penalty of eight per cent (8%) and interest at the rate of six per cent (6%) per annum from July 1st of the year next succeeding the year of the assessment or levy, the date of delin quency. Passed and approved this the 6th day of March, 1941. ATTEST: SIDNEY L. LOVELESS City Secretary FRANK ANDERSON Mayor Classified MODERN ROOM for week-end guests. Double bed, adjacent bath. $1.00 per person per day. 334 Foster, College Hills. Office phone 4-6504. LOST—Will the Aggie who borrowed a bicycle without a brake Wednesday around Dorm 5 please notify E. Schrenzel, No. 20, Milner. FOR SALE—1932 Plymouth 4-door se dan. Looks rotten, runs good and priced right. 128 No. 11. FOR RENT-—Large room, two double beds—adjacent bath. Phone 4-7064. FOR SALE—1934 Ford Coupe, good con dition. $86.00. Box 2041, College Station, Texas. LOST—Campaign Hat with red cord in YMCA lobby Saturday night. Usual reward. W. W. Thomas, P.H. No. 1. FOR SALE—Four-room house. Midway addition. Call E. K. Spahr, 2-i459. LOST—A brown overcoat at Hrdlicka’s Saturday night after the corps dance, to Hill in room 82 Return for reward. 822, dormitory 4 Pedro— (Continued from Page 1) say “extemporaneous,” for ex ample. No telling what Pedro might say if an inexperienced per son sat down at the controls and pressed the wrong keys—it might sound something like the tonal equivalent of the typographical etaoin shrdlu, or maybe worse. While Pedro looks complicated, his component parts are relatively simple. He is made up, with the exception of the keys used to make him talk, of parts used in furnish ing telephone service. The way the Voder talks sounds pretty simple, too, to hear Dr. Perrine explain it. According to Dr. Perrine, Pedro’s voice is made up of two kinds of sound, just as is human speech. Pedro simply produces these two sounds electrically, and they are shaped by operating the proper keys and controls. The trick is in knowing which controls to operate when. During the lecture, Dr. Perrine will touch on the significance of the Voder as a step in serious tel ephone research, for Pedro is not just a toy for whiling away dull hours in the laboratory. With the means of artificially creating speech at hand, according to Dr. Perrine, there is speculation on the possibility of doing so at a distant point. It is possible that some day the words spoken into a telephone may be converted into narrow bands of frequency simulating tel egraph signals which, in turn, at the distant end of the line, will control electrical currents to re create the words of the speaker. Since telegraphic signals may be transmitted over a much narrowed band of frequencies than is re quired for direct voice transmis sion, sending of telephone messag es by telegraphic means would in crease the number of speech chan nels over telephone lines by meth ods different from the present car- Left Overs From Field Ball Track Team— (Continued from Page 3) style to take down third place honors in the shot-put in the San Antonio meet which Texas Uni versity also annexed. Thomason was beaten by Isham of South west Texas Teachers College, and Stokes of Howard Payne. The tables were turned on Roy Bucek, ace Aggie hurdler, when Owens, who was second to the cadet star in the Border Olympics in the 120 yard hurdles, won by five yards with a fast time of 14.4 seconds. The San Antonio meet showed that A. & M. had a vastly impro ved team than the one than ran in the Border Olympics. Although, not taking any first places, the Aggies came through with enough second and third places to assure them a fairly high place in the standings. Among the cadet cin der stars that showed to a great advantage included “Bama” Smith, Felix Bucek, Jimmie Knight, Ralph Henderson, Pete Watkins, and Howard Ricks. Baylor Mascot— (Continued from Page 1) leader: when Little Joe stopped, they stopped. They steered him into an open shed and hurriedly slammed the door. But with a ferocious growl and a mighty wallop of his right paw, Mr. College knocked the door down. His captors hastily scattered in the proverbial four directions. Around and around they went. Finally Little Joe tired of his rambling and walked back to his cage. Watchman Loren Grantham slammed the lock in place and clicked it shut. “Oh boy,” they all rejoiced, “we caught the bear.” Youth Rally— (Continued from Page 1) dale Methodist church. Address, Dr. W. Angie Smith, pastor, First Methodist Church of Dallas. Benediction. rier systems. The questions raised by this theorizing cannot be answered now, Dr. Perrine says. Pedro, who creates speech sounds very well, is the first machine of its kind in the world, and much experi menting remains to be done. How ever, Pedro does have a long and varied ancestry, since a number of attempts to produce speech by me chanical means have been made, dating back to l n 80. Civil Service Exams Announced The United States Civil Service Commission has announced exami nations for the positions described below. Applications will be accept ed at the Commission’s Washington office not later than the closing dates specified. The salaries are subject to a 3% percent retire ment deduction. Junior engineer, all branches of engineering, $2,000 a year. This ex amination has been announced be cause of the increasing need for junior engineers in national de fense work. Qualified persons who do not have eligible ratings under previous junior engineer examina tions held by the Commission within the past year are urged to file application at once. Applications will be rated as received until December 31, 1941. Except for the admittance of a senior student un der certain conditions, completion of a college engineering course is required. Inspector, engineering mater ials (aeronautical), with salaries ranging from $1,620 to $2,600 a year, Navy Department. Because of the urgent need for qualified persons, this examination is an nounced with modified require ments. Applicants may qualify in the following options: Aircraft, engines, mechanical parts, aircraft propellers, instruments, tools and gages, materials, and parachutes. Applications will be rated as re ceived until further notice. Supervisor and assistant super visor of Indian education in mural painting and fine arts, $3,800 and $2,300 a year, respectively, Indian Field Service, Department of the Interior. Specialized study in fine arts or as an assistant or student in a painter’s workshop including practice in mural techniques is re quired, as well as certain exper ience in the field of fine arts. Ap plications must be on file not later than March 31, 1941. Instructor, mobile laundry, va rious grades, with salaries ranging from $2,000 to $2,900 a year, Quartermaster Corps, War Depart ment. Applicants must have had experience in actual laundry op erations including the use of mod ern washing and drying machinery and the preparation of laundry so lutions. Applications will be rated as received until further notice. Full information as to the re quirements for these examinations, and application forms may be ob tained from College Station, Texas and Bryan, Texas. Secretary of the Board of U. S. Civil Service Examiners, at the post office or customhouse in this city, or from From out of the files come these shots taken at the Field Artillery Ball, February 28. Russ Morgan and his nation ally famed dance orchestra played for the ball, which was the opening of Aggieland’s 1941 social season. Miss Natalie Scott of Cor sicana, above, receives a trom bone lesson from Russ Mor gan while her date, Jerry Sparkman, Houston, holds the music. Hendrix Merrill and Mor ris Anderson were snapped with their dates while dancing to “music in the Morgan Man ner.” Morgan also played for a corps dance the night follow ing the Ball. \ the Secretary of the Board of U. S. Civil Service Examiners at any first or second class post office. -TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 1941 T.C.U. Pins SWC Baseball Hopes On Unseasoned Pitchers If an inexperienced pitching staff should come through, T. C. U. will have one of the best baseball teams in several seasons, Coach Walter Roach reports. The Frog varsity starts diamond workouts March 1. Preston Thompson, Fort Worth junior, is the only letter pitcher on the squad. Others who will take a fling at the mound duties are A. J. Brumbaugh, Fort Worth, squad- man from last year; Ross Vader- kolk, Milwaukee, Wis., who lettered at third base last season; Jack Billingsley, Fort Worth, senior basketballer who will be out for baseball for the first time; and sophomores Trotter Adams, Pan handle, and Paul Landers, Garland. Other positions will be filled with inexperienced men. Ralph Tankersley, Terrell, will be behind home plate. Richard Allen, Fort McKinney, both lettermen, will cover first. Dennis Tankersley, Terrell, Connie Sparks, Panhandle, and Bill Crawford, Fort Worth, are letterman outfielders. Paul Sorrels, veteran Fort Worth sandlot star, will be on third. Glenn Cowart, Dallas, is a two-letter se nior at short. Second base, for the present, is wide open. The National Research Council’s committee on food and nutrition says it will cost less than two- thirds of one cent more to pro duce “enriched bread” than ordi nary white bread. Self-supporting fraternity men at the University of California at Los Angeles are about as num erous as self-supporting non-fra ternity men. Typewriter Service Sales and Supplies All Work Guaranteed Call 4-4114 Student Co-Op Store SORRY, BOYS! ... I can’t wait! For the gang is meeting at . . . HRDLICKA’S On Old College Road To Make Rooms Look Larger, Smarter Bigelow For extra character and charm in your rooms—we suggest Bigelow Broad- loom. And now is the time to buy it, while our special low price is in effect. Bigelow Broadloom will make your rooms seem warmer and ever so much more spacious, whether used wall-to- wall or in “Tailor-Made” sizes, which leave a floor margin showing. This carpet is closely and carefully woven for long service. A wide choice of col ors—16 of the season’s newest and smartest shades. Come in today. Priced as low as $3.25 sq. yd. OTHER BROADLOOMS Duron $6.95 sq. yd. Beauvais $5.95 sq. yd. Fervak $4.50 sq .yd. Winchester $3.95 sq. yd. M G Gullo ch'D apsbu Corrt^JLcto ~yY1 J