"Pa#e 4 THE BATTALION -SATURDAY MORNING, MARCH 14, 1942 Official Notices Announcements RED CROSS SCHEDULE, MAR. 16-20— Monday a.m., Volunteers; p.m., Christian Ladies; Faith Snuggs Circle. Tuesd; ■s; An sday Chnrch of Christ. a.m., Army; p.m. Wedn p.m., Methodist bnuggs (Jircle. Tuesday, , Army, Episcopal Ladies. Extension Service Ladies; Mothers, , Volunteers, all day. Ladies: p.m., Lutheran Ladie Thursday Project . Friday a.m.. a.m., House HOME NURSING—New Red Cross classes in home nursing will be organized next week. Those interested in taking the course should get in touch with Mrs. T. R. Spence, Phone 4-6064, at once. 9 a.m. The Student Coffee Hour. 10 a.m. The Church School, Mr. J. G. Gay, Supt. 11 a.m. Morning Service of Worship. 7:30 p.m. Wesley Fellowship. 8:16 p.m. Evening Preaching Service. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, COLLEGE Rev. R. L. Brown, Pastor; Harvey Hatch er, Education and Music Director; Frank Camp, B.S.U. President Sunday school ng worship i B.S.U. Council, 2:30 p.m. Training Union, 7:30 p.m. Evening worship service, 8:30 p.m. Mrs. Brown will speak about her recent trip to Cuba. Two student prayer meetings each eve ning at 8 :00—one in the Church building and the other in the new Y. 10 :15 a.m. Meeting’s NEWCOMERS’ CLUB—The Newcomers’ club will meet with Mrs. J. C. Miller, 101 Hereford, College Park, on Wednesday, March 18, at 3 p. m. CAMPUS STUDY CLUB LUNCHEON —The Campus Study club will entertain with a luncheon honorii Mrs. Judd Col- : Ai ids of may make reservations with Mrs. R. O. club president, telephone 4-8984, by March 14. loring Her at 1:45 Tuesday at the Aggieland Inn. Club members and friends of the honoree Berry, t Saturda; CAMPUS STUDY CLUB MEETING— Mrs. Judd Collier, State Federation Chair man of Defense, will be guest speaker at the meeting of the Campus Study Club, Tuesday at 3:30 in the Y. M. C. A. The Girls’ Chorus of Stephen F. Austin High School, Bryan, will sing. Visitors are come. igh vel- Church Notices CHURCH OF CHRIST R. B. Sweet, Minister Please notice the time change for Sun day morning services: Bible classes at 9:45; worship service at 10:45 a.m. Sun- ATTENTION, JUNIORS—Those mechan ical, aeronautical, and industrial engineer ing juniors who find it necessary to stay out of school for one semester and are in terested in making application for sum mer employment with Pratt & Whitney Aircraft Corporation, should contact the Placement Bureau, Room 133, Administra tion building, as soon as possible.—Place ment Bureau, Association of Former Stu dents. Classified FOR RENT—An unfurnished four-room apartment. Hardwood floors. Practically new. Price right. Call S. V. Perritte, 4-8794. LOST—Campaign hat in Room 310, Aca demic building, last Tuesday. Notify H. W. Gill, 428 No. 1. WILL the person who borrowed bike back pie ing where to find it person who borro' please return or leave note tell- I need it to hold job enabling me to stay in school. No mg me to st: questions asked. Reynolds, 66 Milner. day evening worship at 8 o’clock and pr. day, 8 p.m. vited to attend all these servt er meeting Wednesi All are ices. ay- in- A. & M. METHODIST CHURCH Sunday, March 15, 1942. Important notice: It will be observed that the hours of meeting have been re stored to the customary hours at the re quest of a large group. Now That you Must Walk More . . . Take our advice and wear only the finest shoes money can buy! Many of our customers are thanking us for acquainting them with the superior comfort and longer lasting smartness of / i/A Nunn-Bush shoes, j i Mte tasfuaneeL Oxjjoul^ \[j// Tbs BREWSTER Most Regular Styles $8.95 to $10 Edgerton Shoes Edgertons are made by Nunn- Bush . . . every pair is smartly styled . . . only first quality leath ers are used in Edgertons, insur ing extra wear for every pair. $5.50 to $7.50 flTaldropfl(8 “Two Convenient Stores” College Station Bryan PIANO BARGAINS—One Mason & Ham lin Grand, one Steinway Grand, both look and play like new, real bargains; one Kimball spinet for balance due. Terms if desired. Write W. P. West, adjuster, Thos. Goggan & Bro., 1201 Main St., Houston, Texas. —LIBRARY— (Continued from Page 1) ing an off period. There are 850 current magazines in this room. Of course the Life and the Es quire (minus a few pictures) be come well worn a few days after a new issue comes out but there are several hundred other maga zines which are equally attract ive if one will but look for them. The organization journals are at tracting a lot of attention lately, especially among seniors. Now we come to the newspaper room. Here we find 26 national and state papers and a large number of college and county pub lications. Almost any student can find a paper that interests him in this room. In fact some like it so well that they find it easy to con vert the chairs into comfortable beds. —KYLE FIELD— (Continued from Page 3) gie pitchers, left off ... If base ball ever gets short of fast and tricky base-runners, they can al ways get ahold of Ira (Slugger) Glass, who has made it a habit of stealing home . . . Sheppard Field and the Oklahoma Sooners found it out only too clearly . . . Next Friday and Saturday, March 20- 21 will be another big week-end for Aggie sports . . . The track and golf team go to the Fort Worth Fat Stock Exposition, Coach Lil Dimmit’s nine opens its conference season against Baylor at Waco, and the swimmers will be engaged in the annual South west Conference meet held here. . . . Bill Conaster, one of the best punters in the conference in ’39-40 will leave for Fort Benning, Geor gia as a second lieutenant next Tuesday. Tropical Paradise Unexcelled Masters of Firearms Demonstrate Here This Evening Exotically Beautiful Gene Tierney offers Tyrone Power a tropical paradise in the romantic adventure film “Son of Fury,” which opens at the Campus tonight at the midnight preview after the corps dance. The story is based on Edison Marshall’s best-seller, “Benjamin Blake.” Brazos County Home Economics Group Organizes to Aid National Defense Brazos County home economists have organized to aid more effec tively in the nation’s war efforts. Thirty-five trained women, many of them homemakers and others employed in public service, form ed a local units of the Texas Home Economics at a meeting Thursday night at the City Hall. A committee headed by Mrs. Roy Snyder will study the needs of Brazos County residents which home economists can help to meet. Another committee will dis tribute 150 posters in public places over the county. The posters urge civilians to eat the right food in order to stay fit. The essenials of a good daily diet are also listed. Cooperation in a nutrition prog ram being sponsored for all home makers in the county by Bryan Pa rent-Teacher units was pledged by the home economics unit. A com mittee from the organization will help the P. T. A. sponsors plan a nutrition course and instructors will also be selected from the pro fessional group. Other suggested projects includ ed helping public assistance famil ies in the county make better use of surplus commodities; giving assis —OKLAHOMA U— (Continued from Page 3) count for three more runs. The Aggies, however, were not beaten yet. They threatened seri ously to tie the score in their half FOR THE BEST of the inning. Rogers led off with a walk and scored when Peden smashed a homer over the left field wall. Porter walked and took third on Black’s bingle. However, Shuford, Newberry, and Ballow all grounded out to end the inning without another tally. Stephenson’s single, a pitcher’s balk, a stolen base, and Scoggin’s overthrow accounted another run for the Sooners in the eighth can to. Oklahoma added a final run in the ninth on Layton’s double and an error by Scoggin. BOX SCORE Oklahoma U. (9) AB R H E Stephenson, cf 5 13 0 Smith, 2b 2 '10 0 Collins, sb 5 110 Mitchell, rf i 5 1 1 0 Layton, If 4 2 2 0 Chyz, c 3 2 3 0 Jacobs, 3b 5 110 Mauk, lb 5 0 0 0 Cumberland, p 1 0 10 •Parker 1 0 0 0 Burrell, p 2 0 10 TOTALS 38 9 13 0 •Parker batted for Cumberland in fifth. AB R H E A. & M. (4) Newberry, rf Ballow, ss 3 0 0 0 Glass, 2b 4 1 2 0 Scoggin, c 3 0 13 Rogers, If 3 10 0 Peden, 3b 4 110 Porter, lb 3 110 Black, cf 4 0 2 0 Stevenson, p 2 0 0 0 Acrey, p 0 0 0 0 Shuford, p 1 0 0 0 •Seay 1 0 0 0 TOTALS 33 4 8 3 •Seay batted for Shuford in 9th. Score by innings: R H E Oklahoma U 000' 106 012—9 13 0 A, & M 000 110 200—4 8 3 EATS DRINKS SMOKES George’s Confectionery In New Y — ADAMSON — (Continued from Page 3) 400 yard free style — Taylor, Kiel, Winters. 100 yard back stroke — Conway, Looney, Stein. 150 yard medley relay — Con way, Cowling, McKee. 220 yard free style relay — Tay lor, McKee, Cowling, Looney. 150 yard medley relay (fresh man) — Geren, Stein, Griffin. 150 yard breast stroke — Cow ling, Griffin. tance to cafes, restaurants, hotels, and other places where large groups are fed; and promoting knowledge of nutrition among lunch projects in the county, asked young groups, members of civic clubs, and the public at large. Mrs. Downard, supervisor of the assistance of the group in ob taining 10 additional acres, for a schol garden to benefit the com munity school lunch projects. Al ready use of 10 acres has been pledged. Miss Velma Erisman, county distributing agent, report ed that 4-H Club girls in the coun ty are contributing 16,500 healthy tomato plants for the school gar den. The famous Topperweins, world’s greatest shooting team, will be in Aggieland this week end for an exhibition. The show starts at 2:30 this afternoon south of the Cavalry stables. Seeing the Topperweins is like going to a circus—a rapid suc cession of thtfills and e^ci((ing feats, each more unbelievable than the one before. These gun wizards have a bag of shooting stunts and records that are unrivaled. Both are remarkable with rifle, pistol, and shotgun, but each has a few tricks that the other hesitates to try. With 14 world records to his credit, Mr. Topperwein performed a feat which was published in Ripley’s Believe It Or Not. Shoot ing at 72,000 wood blocks (214 inch) with three .22 rifles, he missed but nine. Out of the first 50,000 he missed only four. This record included several long runs, the longest being 14,560. He shot for ten days, eight hours a day. Mrs. Topperwein began her shooting career shortly after her marriage, and today is recognized as the greatest all-around woman shot in the world. She handles all types of firearms equally well. One record she holds is breaking 1952 trap targets out of 2000 in 5 hours and 20 minutes—a record in endurance and ability unex celled by neither man nor woman. The Topperweins have shot in every state in the ilnion during their careers, shooting side by side with the best marksmen, and they remain the undisputed best A survey reveals there are now 23 professional sororities. team in the world. The public is invited to see the exhibition this Topperwein Team I afternoon and go away with some thing to talk about a long time afterward. ALWAYS LOOK YOUR BEST TRY US AND BE CONVINCED We are well qualified to give complete service and satisfaction Y. M. C. A. BARBER SHOP “In Old Y” LISTEN TO WTAW :1150 KC: 11:40 11:50 8:45 9:30 11:25 Saturday’s Programs 11:25 a. m.—You Can’t Do Busi ness With Hitler (Office of Emergency Management) a. m.—Interlude a. m.—A Movement For Reflection (Bryan and Col lege Station Pastors) a. m.—The Town Crier and Battalion Newscast noon—Sign-Off Sunday’s Programs a. m.—Roans Chapel Sing ers a. m.—Classical Music a. m.—Sign-Off a.m.—Marvel of Vision (Better Vision Institute) a.m.—Marine Program (TL S. Marine Corps) a.m.—The Town Crier and Battalion Newscast I'M FIXED FOR DURATIOW More Than Ever! YOUR BICYCLE DESERVES THE BEST OF CARE Now that you’re using your bike for all errands, be sure it is in excellent condition. We’ll check, test, repair .. for safety- first ! STUDENT CO-OP One Block East, N. Gate Phone 4-4114 msure/or \ou There’s satisfaction in knowing that the G’/atf revenue tax you pay on every pack of twenty cigarettes is doing its bit for Uncle Sam Every time you buy Chesterfields y 0 u get the satisfaction of a smoke that’s definitely MILDER, far COOLER and better-tasting. Chesterfield’s superior blend of the world’s best cigarette tobaccos will give you more smoking pleasure than you ever had before. Try a pack of Chesterfields today. 1,300 TV,* " Bo m *° T °*eo 1,485 AlEO/U/u Hc ta n 7 s h bav y i 0» TH ^ A rioNS Front WILLIAM TRACY and ELYSE KNOX (a Chesterfield girl), star ring in Hal Roach's comedy hit HAY FOOT. Our movie stars are doing a grand job selling defense bonds and entertaining our soldiers. > Many of them choose Chester field to send to men in uniform. O': Col. VIVIAN J. OLSEN, Cadet MARIE HOFFMAN of the Wo men’s Defense Cadets of America. This and simi lar organizations send millions of Milder, Better- Tasting Chesterfields to the men in uniform. i ^4# Ills Chesterfield Copynjh* 1942, liccmr * Myths Tofaccd Co. ^ <0M \ * / r • A .7 '4 t' v x W