Page 4 They Traveled the Gay White Way Above are shown George Raft and Pat O’Brien in a scene from “Broadway” which plays Friday and Saturday at the Campus. OFFICIAL NOTICES Classified FOR RENT—One three-room furnished apartment. S. V. Perritte. 4-8794. FOR RENT—Furnished apartment, util ities paid; % block up from Highway No. 6 on Sulphur Springs Road; also room for 2 gentlemen. Phone 4-8634. WILL THE AGGIE who borrowed the bicycle in front of the Assembly Hall Tuesday, July 7, please return it to the Aeronautical building. No questions will be asked. It is red, white with front car rier basket, new saddle, and new black handle grips. FOR RENT—Three bedrooms, newly finished, three blocks from College "Station P. O. Will rent regularly or by the night. Ideally located for week-end guests since it is in walking distance to all Campus activities. Phone 4-6764. FOR RENT—Three apartments. Two furnished three-room apartments, electric refrigeration, private baths. One unfur nished apartment, three airy bedrooms, new and modern throughout; garage. Phone 4-6764. I, L. M. GALEWSKY, have officially changed my surname to GALE, and will henceforth be known as L. M. Gale. LOST—An Elgin wrist watch, last Fri day night, July 10th. Left on wash basin in lavatory of basement of Y.M.C.A. Please return for reward. Charles Graham, H-2, Walton. FOR RENT—Cool, southeast bedroom. Private entrance. Located about blocks from post office, south side of cut-off road to Bryan. Phone 4-6474 before 6. Mrs. James. Call at home after 5. Meetings < HORTICULTURE SOCIETY—There will be an important meeting of the Horticul tural society next Thursday night, July 16, 1942. Everyone majoring in horticulture is urged to be present. This includes fresh men and sophomores who plan to major in horticulture. Plans for the summer horticulture show which is to be held Wednesday, July 22, 1942, are to be fin ished. A. S. A. E. MEETING—There will be a meeting of the A. S. A. E. tonight at 7:00 in the Ag. Eng. lecture room. All agricultural engineering majors are urged to be present. A student program will be presented. A. S. C. E.—The A. S. C. E. will meet tonight at 7 :00 in the C. E. lecture room. Mr. George M. Garrett of Bryan will speak on a topic which should be of in terest to all Civil Engineering students. The University of Kentucky is one of only , eight schools in the Southwest offering the. Ph. D, de- -uiun aansuio ^ Suppo^s gree. Fort Hill, former home of Thom as Green Clemson, founder of Clemson college, is located in the center of the Clemson campus. • Ideal for active summer sports. Sleek, brief, streamlined. Provides masculine support. Cool because knit fabric absorbs and evaporates perspiration and lets your skin breathe. Originated and manu factured by COOPERS. f iTaldropflfo ‘Two Convenient Stores” College and Bryan Canners Should Prepare Before Applying for Sugar Homemakers canning fruit this year will save themselves time and trouble if they do some ad vance preparation before applying to their local rationing board for certificates. “Be prepared to answer these three questions when you go,” ad vised Winifred Jones, specialist in food preservation for the A. & M. Extension Service: How many quarts of fruit did you can last year? How many quarts of fruit do you plan to can this year? How many quarts of last year’s fruit do you still have on hand ? An other word of advice is: “Keep a record of the fruit you can with your rationed sugar because your rationing board will ask for it when you apply for more sugar.” Answering these questions will be relatively simple for the thous ands of rural homemakers who have kept records and filled food preservation budgets as recom mended by county home demon stration agents of the Extension Service. Rural homemakers may stretch their sugar allowances by using thinner syrups for canning fruits and fruit juices and by using corn syrup or honey as substitutes in canning recipes, Miss Jones says. Information on these methods can be obtained from county home demonstration agents. She warns that saccharine, a coal tar product with an extremely sweet taste, cannot be used in canning because it becomes bitter when heated. Here is the specialist’s summary of the rationing regulations as they apply to sugar for canning: “You will get one pound of sugar for every four quarts of finished fruit you are putting up, and you may can as much fruit as? your family needs. You may have an additional pound of sugar for each person in your family to make a small supply of jams, jellies and fruit butters.” Food for Victory Outlook Is Bright Texas’ outlook for reaching its Food for Freedom goals is bright despite the labor shortage, the battle against insects and dis ease, and the scarcity of equip ment, specialists of the Extension Service reported last week. The summary was given at a confer ence for Director M. L. Wilson of the USDA’s Federal Extension Service, Washington, D. C., who visited the state headquarters here. Milk production will exceed the 10 per cent increase asked, the Director was told. Demand for fluid milk from Army camps has decreased the volume of cheese plants, and plants making conden sed and powdered milk. The state is also meeting the required 12 per cent increase in egg produc tion. Texas has 16 per cent of the nation’s egg drying capacity and can dry 50 percent of the eggs produced in the state, poultry husbandmen said. Recently vegetable growers have moved 70,000 carloads to eastern markets. The horticulturist indi cated that the current problem is Cotton Yields Up, Losses Low Should Be Farmers Motto It’s horse-sense to build up cot ton yields this year and hold down losses. Low losses mean low premiums but high losses mean high prem ium rates under the Federal Crop Insurance program. “Higher the premiums soar, less effective will become the program which helps stabilize farm income,” Donald L. Cothran, state crop in surance supervisor, said in ex plaining that loss experience each year is used to determine prem ium rates in future years. He pointed out that cotton crop insurance won’t make a farmer profit on labor and investment but that it served as an income safeguard when conditions beyond control of the grower deprived him of a normal crop. Labor costs and prices of fer tilizer and insecticides are likely to be higher this year, but lint is bringing around $100 a bale, and cottonseed, none too plentiful, is selling at higher prices than in past years. To capitalize on these more profitable returns, Cothran urges farmers to produce as near ly a full crop as conditions per mit. While crop insurance contracts protect growers against losses due to unavoidable crop hazards, in sured-farmers must follow good farming practices and exercise reasonable precautions to avoid losses before indemnity payments will be paid by FCIC. “We buy Federal Crop Insurance for protection, not for dividends, and like fire insurance, it certainly comes in handy when calamity knocks on the door,” he explain ed. Farmers Urged To nserve Cotton Dusting Chemicals In order to conserve the supply of calcium arsenate for cotton dusting, Cameron Siddall, entomol ogist of the Extension Service, suggests that farmers dust their cotton only when infestation justi fies and that they use no greater poundage of poison dust than is recommended. As a further help, the nozzles of dusting machines should be correctly adjusted and not allowed to clog. Reviewing the poison dust situa tion, Siddall says that during the 1942 season a total of approxi mately 50,000,000 pounds orf cal cium arsenate will be available for the cotton belt, or about 20,- 000,000 pounds less than is used ordinarily for the control of cot ton insects. The War Produ’ctiorn Board ordered that amount manu factured and delivered through the customary channels (state dis tributors and local dealers) on the basis of percentages ranging from 30 per cent on May 1 to 100 per cent on September 1. Accordingly, he says, established distributors and dealers in each cotton-growing county should be able to obtain their proportionate share of the available supply. getting enough canned tomatoes needed for distribution under lend- lease commitments. A 52 per cent increase in this year’s pig crop was forecast by the Extension swine husbandman, who said the number of pigs raised r per litter has reached an all-time high. The Texas pig population is 18 per cent greater than ever before. This year’s calf crop is far in excess of the average, and cattle sold for slaughter are consider ably heavier than last season. Juke Box Prom Saturday...35 cents WHY NOT COME BY AND SEE US ON YOUR OFF PERIOD FOR THAT NEEDED HAIR CUT YMCA and Varsity Barber Shop Located On the Campus THE BATTALION THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 16, 1942 Possession - Nine Points of the Law “You Belong to Me” is the title of the prevue show at the Campus Saturday night. Co-starring Henry Fonda and Barbara Stanwyck, shown above, the picture will continue through Sunday and Monday. Ten Tons of Sunken Gold Constitute Loot in Wartime Treasure Hunt Student Activities Releases More Campus Officials The following is an extension of the list of club officers that ap peared in last Saturday’s Battal ion. All such officers will be pub lished as soon as the space is available and the names are turned in to the Student Activities office. A. & M. Horticulture Society President: Leo Bailey Vice-Pres: Ben L. Ivey Treasurer: T. J. McLeaish Intramural Managers Club President: John Mouser Vice-Pres: Dave Meyer Treasurer: Mathew C. Wilson Kream and Kow Klub President: John Roming Vice-Pres: George Roberts Treasurer: Joe F. Kelsey Longview A. & M. Club President: Fred Ashford Jr. Vice-Pres: F. M. Bradshaw Treasurer: H. B. Skidmore Lutheran Students Association President: Rex Colwick Vice-Pres: Raymond Velinder Treasurer: Raymond Eisenhauer Pistol Team Capt.: Russell Cook Treasurer: Tobert G. Cox Pre-Med Society President: Fred Kolle Vice-Pres: George Willeford Treasurer: John E. Green Puerto Rico A. & M. Club President: Russell T. Cook Vice-Pres: Henry Lassalle Treasurer: Ruban R. Costas Singing Cadets of Aggieland President: T. H. Collins Vice-Pres: M. D. Lyle Bus. Mgr.: M. Bernay Martin Publicity: Ed Kingery Librarian: J. J. Hill Junior A. V. M. A. President: W. D. Dumert Vice-Pres: Gerald Parker Treasurer: C. B. Chastain A. S. A. E. President: W. T. Hall Vice-Pres.: Y. E. McAdams, Jr. Treasurer: L. H. Hodges Agronomy Society President: D. W. James Vice-Pres.: D. D. Morrison Treasurer: Jack H. Barton American Institute of Chemical Engineers President: Jasper H. Barrett Vice-Pres.: George M. Wunder- lick Treasurer: Paul W. Brandon Institute of Aeronautical Sciences President: Steve Kaffer Vice-Pres.: Gene Lark Treasurer: Gene Kipp Secretary: Clifton Adcock American Institute of Mechanical Engineers President: W. H. Doran Treasurer: W. W. Walton American Society of Civil Engineers President: J. C. Denny Vice-Pres.: Joe Bauml Treasurer: C. A. Riggs, Jr. Secretary: Robert Haltham American Society of Mechanical Engineers President: T. J. Bolling Vice-Pres.: Martin Lantau Treasurer: V. P. Kelly Secretary: Robert Haltham Biology Club President: Harold Holdeman Vice-Pres.: Harry Trodlier Treasurer: Ed Maddox Secretary: Jack Barnes Entomology Club President: S. K. Kirk Vice-Pres.: W. B. Morehouse Treasurer and Secre tary: W. B. Morehouse Fencing Team President: R. Shaw Treasurer: J. H. Blakelock Secretary: D. Stillinger Grayson County A. & M. Club A vivid account of a wartime treasure hunt in which ten tons of gold bars valued at $10,000,000 was retrieved from the wreck of the transpacific liner Niagara has been received by the International General Electric Company from Nelson Jones, a representative in Wellington, New Zealand. Jones assembled underwater lighting equipment which permit ted the salvors to blast their way accurately into the liner’s strong box 428 feet below the surface. He also took part in the operation which set a new world record for deep-sea salvage. “The whole affair was very def initely of the hush, hush variety,” reported Jones, “but the job has been successfully concluded and I understand the gold is safely in America.” Plans for the undertaking were made soon after the Niagara, en- route from Auckland, N. Z., to Vancouver, Canada, struck a Ger man mine and sank near the Hens and Chickens Islands off Wan- garei Harbor on June 19, 1940. The Commonwealth Bank signed a sal vage contract with United Salv age Properties, Ltd., of Melbourne. An old light draft ship, the Clay more, was reconditioned and an observation bell, a steel sylinder weighing 5,500 pounds and equip ped with plate glass windows, were obtained.. A long tedious search with the latest echo sound ing devices was required to find the ship. In the course of this, Diver John Johnson of Melbourne descended 528 feet in the bell, a record exceeded only by Dr. Wil liam Beebe’s bathasphere. The wreck was finally located in heavily mined waters on Febru ary 2, 1941, when Diver Johnson, peering through the glass windows of the bell late in the afternoon, noticed first an oil drum, then a boat davit and finally the liner lying on her side. x Salvage work began next day, with Jones, general manager of the National Electrical & Engi neering Co., Ltd., of Wellington, assisting the salvors in electrical ly lighting the wreck area in front of the diver’s bell. With the diver inside directing the lowering of explosives from the surface, the salvors began to blast their way into the ship. Men of the Royal Australian Navy sometimes assist ed. More than 40 mines in all were encountered and destroyed. One blast sent a wounded shark to the surface. A hole 40 feet long and 20 feet wide, large enough to admit the bell and a grab, was made in the ship and, step by step, the salvors worked toward the bullion room. A delicately placed explosive blew away the hinges of the door with out disturbing the contents. There were cheers from the crew of the Claymore as a grab lower ed into the room was brough to the surface on October 13, clutch ing two boxes of gold worth $35,- 000. The work continued with mo tion picture cameras recording some of the operations. The greatest single day for the treasure hunters was last Armis tice Day. The sea was calm. A div er was over the side at 8 a. m. and worekd accprding to his tele phoned directionl", a grab brought up boxes of gold singly, in twos and in threes, every quarter of an hour all day long. Five times the jaws of the grab brough up four boxes at one lift. In all, 46 boxes of gold worth more than $1,500,000 were brought to the surface that day. Prior to the removal of the Ni agara’s gold, the deep sea salv age record was held by the Ital ians who in four years recovered some $3,000,000 in gold from the P. & O. liner Egypt which sank off Brest in 396 feet of water after a collision in 1922. Only the White Star liner Laur- entic, torpedoed off Ireland in 120 feet of water during the first World War ,is believed to have yielded greater treasure than_ the Niagara to salvors. British Navy divers retrieved $19,000,000 in gold and silver from the Laurentic over a seven-year period. Juke Box Prom Saturday...35 cents LISTEN TO WTAW Z 1150 KC ======== Thursday, July 16 11:25 a.m.—Music 11:30 a.m.—Treasury Star Parade 11:45 a.m.—Brazos Valley Farm and Home Program—Is the Lady of the House In ? Mary Hester Harrison 11:55 a.m.—The Town Crier 12:00 noon—Sign-Off 7 p.m.-7:30 p.m.—THE AGG'IE SHOW. Via Texas State v Network (not carried on WTAW) Friday, July 17 11:25 a.m.—Music 11:30 a.m.—You Can’t Do Busi ness with Hitler (Office for Emergency Management) 11:45 a.m.—Brazos Valley Farm and Home Program 11:55 a.m.—The Town Crier 12:00 noon—Sign-Off 4:30 p.m.-5:30 p.m.—THE AG GIE CLAMBAKE featuring “The Cask of Amontillado” a drama by Edgar Allen Poe (adapted for radio by Ellis Newman, Radio Speech Class). Good Care of Teeth Prevents Fear Of Dentist by Child A child by the time he is two and a half or three years of age should become acquainted with the atmosphere of a dental office and the ministrations of a dentist is the advice given by Doctor Geo. W. Cox, State Health Officer. It is of prime importance, according to Doctor Cox, that children look upon the family dentist as a friendly guardian of their health. In stressing the importance of early dental care, Doctor Cox quoted the following from a bul letin of the American Dental As sociation: “Parents should teach the child that the dentist is his friend. They should not allow him to receive the impression that a visit to the dent ist means unpleasantness and pain. Such impressions are usually cre ated in a child’s mind before he ever sees the dentist. “Parents can prevent fear in the child by taking him to the dentist before the teeth are decayed. Thus, the first visit will consist of an examination only. Subsequent vis its will consist of a simple clean ing or, at the most, the painless filling of small cavities. It is a grave mistake to so neglect a child’s teeth that his first visit to the dentist must be associated with pain.” Doctor Cox said that the im portance of good dental health had been called to national atten tion by recent selective service examinations and added that a great percentage of physical re jections for military service could have been avoided by dental care in the first few years of life. {Secretary: Ferry iML. UarKer Vice-Pres.: Billy G. Earnheari 'Treasurer: Billy R. Brogdon President: John T. Lynch Juke Box Prom Saturday...35 cents Floating mines as well as bad weather interrupted the work. One mine became entangled in the wires to the bell and was pulled to the surface. Another bumped against the Claymore without exploding. While You Are At the North Gate COME IN AND LET US SERVE YOU WITH AN Also See Us For Drugs Magazines Smokes Toilet Articles ‘A GOOD PLACE TO MEET YOUR FRIENDS” Aggieland Pharmacg “Keep to your right at the North Gate and you can’t go wrong” Patronize Our Agent In Your Outfit. DYEFfcS'PURSTORAGE HATTERS rrvoir’xCjarL CASH & CARRY NORTH GATE D. M. DANSBY, ’37 Beat this HOT WEATHER Keep Cool R. V. UNIFORMS COOL, WHITE NO. 4 DANCE UNIFORMS COOL KHAKI UNIFORMS Come in and see these. You will surely get one. — ALSO — Order Your Wool Uniform Require ments Now for Winter REMEMBER—We are the leading uniform mahsers at College Station. ZUBIK & SONS UNIFORM SPECIALISTS 1896 — 46 Years of Tailoring — 1942 4 4 4 ¥ * f 1 . r 4