The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 08, 1944, Image 4

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    PAGE 4
THE BATTALION
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 8, 1944
Christmas Gifts
Fine Belted Military
TRENCH COATS
At prices from
$12.50 to $40.00
Serviceable
House Slippers
$3.00 to $4.50
College Jewelry
at a range of prices from
$2.00 to $25.00
We have many beautiful
items on display
Fitted Men’s Cases
$12.50
Billfold and Billfold Sets
Cigarette Cases
The Exchange
Store
“An Aggie Institution”
HELP BRING VICTORY
BUY MORE WAR BONDS
W T A W
Batt Chat
John W. Davis, former ambas
sador and former presidential can
didate, will be the speaker, on
Saturday, December 9, at the
“Opera Victory Rally,” over
WTAW in connection with the
Metropolitan Opera broadcast of
Mozart’s “Don Giovanni”. The pro
gram will start at 1:00 p. m., CWT.
Mr. Davis will speak on “The
Stumbling Block to Peace,” in the
series which has its general sub
ject “The Fight for the Peace.”
Archibald MacLeisch, Librarian of
Congress, inaugurated the series
on the first broadcast of the sea
son last Saturday, (Dec. 2). This
program feature will continue for
the eighteen opera broadcasts
planned this year.
In the Mozart opera, Ezio Pinza
will sing the title role and Florence
Kirk, a newcomer this season, will
be heard as Donna Anna. Others
in the cast, under the baton of
George Szell, include Eleanor Ste-
ber, Bidu Sayao, Charles Kullman,
Salvatore Baccaloni, Nicola Mas-
cona and Mack Harrell. Herbert
Graf will be stage manager. Mil-
ton J. Cross again is announcer-
commentator.
* * *
Bob Burns, his bazooka and his
jokes, and George Murphy with his
songs and engaging manner, will
be on hand with Paul Whiteman,
who has travelled West, to open
the Hollywood doors of the Radio
Hall of Fame for the first West
Coast broadcasts over WTAW,
Sunday, December 10, at 5:00 p.
m., CWT.
Jimmie Wallington will be m. c.
of the opening program from the
movie capital and will remain as
announcer for the following seven
weeks. Gloria De Haven, new movie
starlet, will be present for next
Sunday’s show as will Carlos Ra
mirez, Mexican singing sensation.
Paul Whiteman and his Radio
Hall of Fame Orchestra will, as
usual, provide music for the full-
hour broadcast, which, during its
Hollywood visit, will originate in
Earl Carroll’s huge Theater Res
taurant, half of the seats being
reserved for sarvicemen.
* * *
Ethel Barrymore will return to
her WTAW show, Miss Hattie,
Sunday, December 10, after an ill
ness that forced her to miss her
first performance on a New York
stage in her fifty years in the
theatre.
Miss Barrymore will resume her
role as the sympathetic and under
standing Miss Hattie, whose kind
ly wisdom and humor dominate
'
"It's a boy. MacTavish is passing
out matches so we can light our Sir Walter Raleigh.
Smokes as sweet
as it smells
... the qualify pipe
* tobacco of America 1
FREE! 24-page illustrated booklet tells how to select and break in a new pipe; rules for pipe
cleaning, etc. Write today. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corporation, Louisyille 1, Kentucky.
YOU FISH!
If you haven’t had your picture made, come in today
and be photographed—there is still time to get it for
Christmas.
If you have had your picture made come in now and
re-order—we have your proofs on file.
GIVE HER THAT INDIVIDUAL GIFT
Amateur Supplies Commercial Groups
See Our Complete Frame Selection
qA. & M. PHOTO SHOP
“The House of Satisfaction”
Waldrop Bldg. North Gate Dial 4-8844
Pecans Sould Be Well
Ventilated In Storage
Pecans in storage should be well
ventilated, otherwise heating and
molding may result. This reminder
comes from J. F. Rosborough, hor
ticulturist for the Texas A. and
M. College Extension Service. He
warns against storing the nuts in
bins before the meats are thorough
ly dry. It is better to keep the
pecans in sacks for a couple of
weeks, storing them where the
air can circulate freely over and
around them.
Where freezer lockers are avail
able, pecans will keep satisfactorily
for three years. The shelled meats
should be stored in tin cans or other
tight containers. They should be
stored early, usually in December,
before any deterioration in the
meat begins.
Crop estimate for Texas is 43
million pounds of pecans, good in
some sections and spotty in others.
Llano County, for example, re
ports the biggest crop in a number
of years, and County Agricultural
Agent C. V. Robinson says the
nuts there are of fine quality. In
Galveston County, where the nuts
are not so plentiful, home demon
stration club women are pooling
their orders for a large shipment
of paper shell pecans. Orders were
taken at 32 cents per pound with
minimum lots of 10 pounds.
Harvest is nearing completion in
some sections but where all nuts
have not been gathered Rosborough
emphasizes that care should be
taken to prevent damaging twigs
and branches when the nuts are
threshed with cane poles. Beating
the trees unmercifully might des
troy many buds and reduce future
yields. A canvas cover or wagon
sheet spread over the ground be
fore threshing is begun aids in
quicker harvest.
In DeWitt County, J. W. Jackson,
county agricultural agent says
some growers have been docked
about 20 percent for green nuts.
Proper drying will bring better
prices, he is advising farmers.
OFFICIAL NOTICES
Classified
Drawing Book, Problem Book, and Draw
ing Material were left in the Exchange
Store shortly before the holidays. Owner
may have same by claiming and paying
for this ad. Exchange Store.
Announcements
Students whose absence from class is
classed as authorized are reminded that
authorized absence cards for each subject
missed must be submitted in duplicate
within 48 hours after the return from the
absence and that arrangements for making
up the work missed must be made with
the instructor Within live days.
Alter this week these limitations will
be strictly enforced.
F. C. Bolton
Dean of the College
CANDIDATES FOR DEGREES: Dece:
ber 15, is the deadline for filing applk
tions for degrees to be conferred
j A.. i "" •
pplica-
at the
udents. 1 hose students who have not
ready done so should make formal ap-
ication in the Registrar’s Office immed-
alr
Pi
lately.
H. L. Heaton
Registrar
The new bulletin that gives the chan:
in the College Calendar and changi
expenses for the Spring Semester is
avail:
Spring Semester
able at the Registrar’s Office.
H. L. Heaton
ges
in
Registrar
CAMPUS STUDY CLUB: Members of
the Entertainment Committee and the Fine
Arts Committee will serve as hostesses for
the annual Christmas Tea to be given
day afternoon, December 12th in the
Chapel, at 3 o’clock. The Jun
ior Choir of the College Station Presbyter
ian Church will present a Chrii
ly atternoon,
Y. M. C. A. Chapel, at 3
,— ‘"'hoir of
hurch
tata under the direction of M
Mitchell. Mrs. R. R. La:
istmas Ca
iss Carolii
rs. K. K. Lancaster will
as accompanist and assistant director.
Members are urged to bring guests to this
meeting.
.roline
serve
irecto:
Church Notices
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
R. L. Brown, Pastor
9:45 a.m. Sunday School
10:60 a.m. Morning Worship
5:00 p.m. Fellowship Hour.
6:00 p.m. Training Union
7:00 p.m. Evening Worship
A cordial invitation is extended to all
who desire to worship with us.
COLLEGE AVE. BAPTIST CHURCH
203 N. College Ave.
J. H. Landes, Pastor
9 :45 Sunday School
11:00 Morning Worship Service
6 :15 Training Union
7:30 Evening Worship Service
THE FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Corner Twenty-seventh and S. College
F.t J. Smythe. Pastor
10:00—Sunday School
11:00—Communion and Worship
6 :00—Recreation Hour
7 :00—Christian Youth Fellowship
8 :00—Communion and Sermon
A cordial welcome awaits all who at
tend this church.
the lives of a typical American
famiy. It is a role which she creat
ed last September 17, when she
embarked on her first regular ra
dio series.
Stricken with a severe cold and
high fever, Miss Barrymore missed
her first broadcast in her starring
series on November 12, and was
taken to a hospital the following
day. She is now in Hot Springs,
Va., and will return to New York
late in the week.
The Miss Hattie Show, a series
of dramatic episodes, is heard Sun
days at 2:30 to 3:00 p. m., CWT.
During Miss Barrymore’s adsence,
the title role has been taken by
Betty Garde, star of the musical
“Oklahoma.”
* * *
A premature salute to St. Pa
trick’s Day will be included on the
Jack Berch Show when Jack sings
“Too Ra Loora, Loora, That’s An
Irish Lullaby” on his WTAW
broadcast, Monday, December 11,
at 10:45 a. m., CWT.
Going classical for the morning
the Three Suns, instrumentalists,
will play Paderewski’s “Minuet in
G.” Tipping the scales in favor of
popular music, Jack’s songs will
be “It’s So Peaceful in the Coun
try,” “Casey Jones,” and “The
Best Things in Life Are Free.”
* * *
In cooperation with the Treasury
Department, WTAW will present
Sons of Heaven, a dramatic series
dealing with Jap atrocities to
American prisoners. The scripts,
by Ira Marion, will be based on
various sources of information on
Nipponese treatment of war cap
tives.
Sons of Heaven will be offered
in a series of four broadcasts, Dec,
12, 13, 14 and 15, at 3:30-3:45 p.
m., CWT.
—BOOKS—
(Continued From Page 2)
Engineering And Its Sciences:
Essentials of Drafting, by Carl
L. Svenson.
American Paddle Steamboats, by
Carl D. Lane.
The Telephone in a Changing
World, by M. M. Dilts.
Submarines, by Herbert S. Zim.
Atoms, Stars and Nebulae, by
yiCTORY
BUY
UNITED
STATES
WAR
BONDS
AND
STAMPS
CHURCH OF CHRIST
R. B. Sweet, Pastor
Sunday. 9:45 Bible classes; 10:45 the
morning worship; 7 p.m. the evening wor
ship.
Wednesday 7:15 p.m. the Prayer Meet
ing.
All are invited to attend all these serv
ices. You will be most welcome.
CATHOLIC STUDENTS
Sunday Masses 9:15 and 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Mass 7:00 p.m.
Confession Saturday 6:30 to 7 :30 p.m.:
Sunday, before Mass.
Friday 8, Holy Day of Obligation, Mass
7:00 p.m., St. Mary’s.
Newman Club meeting, December 10,
1944, 10:15 a.m., Sunday, St. Mary’s.
ST. THOMAS’ EPISCOPAL CHAPEL
The Rev. J. Hugh R. Farrell, Chaplain
Jersey at Pershing Streets
Second Sunday in Advent.
There will be no 9:00 a.m. Holy Com
munion as the Chaplain will be absent un
til the Coffee Club at 9 :45 a.m.
Church School at 9:45 a.m.
Holy Communion at 11:00 a.m.
The Holy Eucharist will be offered for
all of the members who were confirmed
on Wednesday and all are urged to receive
Holy Communion. The U. M. C. Y. will
meet on Wednesday at 7 :00 p.m.
AMERICAN LUTHERAN
CONGREGATION
Y. M. C. A. Chapel, Campus
Kurt Hartman, Pastor
Sunday School at 9:45 a.m.
Student Bible Class and Discussion
iod at 9:45 a..m
Divine Services 11:00 a. m.
A. & M. METHODIST CHURCH
AND WESLEY FOUNDATION
Rev. R. C. Terry
Sunday:
Church
Morning
Wesley Fou
Wednesda:
a.m.
p.m.
ednesday:
Choir Practice—6 :45 p.m.
Wesley Fellowship and Mil
Vesley fellowship and Midweek Devo
tional—7 p.m.
The A. and M. Methodist Church is one
block east of the Post Office at the North
Gate.
A. & M. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Norman Andersen, Pastor
Sunday School 9:45 in the Campus
Theatre. “By courtesy of the Management.’
Morning Worship 11:00 in the Campus
Theatre. “By courtesy of the Management.”
Student League 6:30 in the Y. M. C. A.
Chapel.
Student Forum. 7:30 in the Y. M. C. A.
Chapel.
Leo Goldberg and Lawrence H.
Aller.
Stratigraphy of the Eastern and
Central United States, by Charles
Schuchert.
Power from Start to Finish, by
Franklin M. and Claire Reck.
Automobiles from Start to
Finish, by Franklin M. Reck.
From Man to Machine; a pic
torial history of invention, by
Agnes Rogers.
Geodetic Control Surveys, by H.
O. Sharp.
Agriculture And Its Sciences:
Magic Gardens; a modern chron-
cle of herbs and savory seeds, by
Rosetta E. Clarkson.
Trees of Northeastern United
States; native and naturalized, by
H. P. Brown.
The Physiology of Plants, by
William Seifriz.
Edible Wild Plants of Eastern
North America, by Merritt Lyndon
Femald and Alfred Charles Kin
sey.
Forest Mensuration, by Donald
Bruce and Francis X. Schumacher.
Theoretical Soil Mechanics, by
Karl Terzaghi.
Farm Soils; their management
and fertilization, by Edmund L.
Worthen.
Illustrated Flora of the Pacific
States, by Leroy Abrams.
Plant an ash tray in your car
and save a tree in the forest.
—DEAN—
Continued from Page 1
animal husbandryman for the Uni
versity of Wyoming.
Ice Cream Twice Yearly
The number of cows in the dairy
herd at A. & M. has not been in
creased since Shepardson became
head, but the quality of the herd
has decidedly improved until it
ranks near the top of college dairy
herds. When he first came to A. &
M., raw milk was delivered to the
mess hall in cans and placed in
pitchers for the students. Shepard
son said that the students swore
that the milk in the pitchers was
skimmed milk. The per-student
consumption of milk at that time
was one-half pint per day but it
was raised to one quart, the high
est college consumption of pasteur
ized milk in the United States. Ice
cream, before Shepardson’s arrival,
was served only on the first and
last Sundays of the school year,
but now it is served in the mess
halls twice weekly.
Since the establishment of Bry
an Air Field, the A. & M. College
Dairy is supplying the army per
sonnel stationed there as well as
WTAW
1150 kc.—(Blue Network)
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1944
A. M.
6:00 Sign On
6:02 Texas Farm & Home Prog. WTAW
6 :16 Sunup Club WTAW
7 :00 News Summary BN
7:15 Arlo at the Organ..... BN
7 :30 United Nations News BN
7:45 Off the Record WTAW
8:00 The Breakfast Club BN
9:00 Fannie Hurst Presents BN
9 :30 What’ Cooking—Boyardee.. BN
9:45 Songs by Jean Tighe BN
10:00 Music By Marais BN
10:15 Trans-Atlantic Quiz BN
10:30 Land of the Lost BN
11:00 Swingshift Frolics BN
11:05 WTAW NEWS WTAW
11:30 NatT Farm & Home Hour BN
P. M.
12 :00 Serenade to an—
Autumn Afternoon BN
12:15 Trans-Atlantic Quiz BN
12 :S0 Farm FainrPEM
12 :30 Farm Fair WTAW
12 :40 Bunkhouse Roundup WTAW
12:45 Tips, Topics, and Tunes....WTAW
1:00 Metropolitan Opera BN
5 :00 Hello, Sweetheart BN
5 :15 Harry Wismer—Sports BN
5:30 Soldiers With Wings BN
5.45 Andrini Continentales BN
6 :00 Sustaining Music BN
6:15 Children’s Vesper Hour WTAW
6:30 Sign Off
7:15 Sign On
7:15 Football Game
10:30 Sign Off
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1944
A. M.
8 :00 Blue Correspondents BN
8 :15 Coast to Coast on a Bus BN
9:00 The Lutheran Hour WTAW
9 :30 The Southernaires : BN
10:00 Music by Master Composers WTAW
11:00 Weekly War Journal - BN
11:30 College Ave. Bapt. Church....WTAW
P. M.
12:00 John B. Kenedy BN
12:16 George Hicks BN
12:30 Sammy Kaye’s Tangee
Serenade BN
12:65 Your Sunday News Extra.... BN
1:00 Old Fash. Revival Hour....WTAW
2:00 Listen, the Women BN
2:30 Miss Hattie BN
3:00 Darts for Dough BN
3:30 Set To Music BN
4 :00 Mary Small Revue i BN
4:30 Met. Opera Presents- BN
5:00 Radio Hall of Fame BN
6:00 Drew Pearson BN
6:15 Week of Review WTAW
6:30 Sign Off
MONDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1944
A. M.
6:00 Sign On
6 :02 Texas Farm & Home Prog. WTAW
6 :15 Sunup Club WTAW
7:00 Martin Agronsky—
Daily War Journal BN
7:15 Let’s Learn Spanish WTAW
7:30 Blue Correspondents BN
7:45 Morning Melodies WTAW
7:65 Hollywood Headliners WTAW
8:00 The Breakfast Club BN
9:00 My True Story BN
9:25 Aunt Jemima..-...., BN
9 :30 Between The Lines WTAW
9:45 One Woman’s Opinion BN
10:00 Breakfast at Sardi’s BN
10:30 Gyl Martin BN
10:45 Songs by Cliff Edwards BN
11:00 Glamour Manor BN
11:15 Meet Your Neighbor BN
11:30 Farm and Home Makers BN
P. M.
12 :00 Baukhage Talking BN
12:15 WTAW Noonday News WTAW
12 :30 Farm Fair WTAW
12:45 Andrew Continentales BN
1:00 Kiernan’s Corner BN
1:15 Mystery Chef BN
1:30 Ladies, Be Seated BN
2:00 Songs by Morton Downey.... BN
2:15 Appointment With Life BN
2:45 Sincerely Yours BN
3:00 Time Views The News BN
3 :15 Music for Moderns WTAW
3:30 To Be Announced
3:45 Church of Christ WTAW
4:00 Brazos Valley Farm& Home WTAW
4:15 Dick Tracy BN
4:30 To Be Announced
4:45 Hop Harrigan BN
5:00 Terry and the Pirates BN
5 :15 Treasury Salute WTAW
6 :30 Jack Armstrong BN
5 :45 Capt. Midnight. BN
6 :00 Horace Heidt. BN
6:30 Sign Off
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1944
A. M.
6:00 Sign On
6:02 Texas Farm & Home Prog. WTAW
6 :15 Sunup Club WTAW
7:00 Martin Agronsky—
Daily War Journal BN
7:15 Your Life Today BN
7:30 Blue Correspondents BN
7:45 Rosa Rio at the Organ BN
8:00 The Breakfast Club BN
9:00 My True Story BN
9 :25 Aunt Jemima BN
9:30 Between the Lines WTAW
9:45 The Listening Post BN
10:00 Breakfast at Sardi’t BN
10:30 Gil Martyn BN
10:45 Jack Berch And His Boys.... BN
11:00 Glamour Manor BN
11:15 Mid-Morning Melodies WTAW
11:30 Farm and Home Makers.... BN
P. M.
12:00 Baukhage Talking BN
12:15 WTAW Noonday News WTAW
12 :30 Farm Fair .WTAW
12:40 Texo Roundup WTAW
12 :45 Luncheon Tunes WTAW
1:00 Kiernan’s Corner. BN
1:15 Mystery Chef . BN
1:30 Ladies Be Seated BN
2:00 Songs by Morton Downey BN
2:15 Appointment With Life. BN
2 :45 Sincerely Yours BN
3:00 Time Views The News BN
3:15 Music for Moderns WTAW
3:30 To Be Announced
3 :45 Keys of Faith WTAW
4:00 Brazos Valley F. S. A. WTAW
4:15 Dick Tracy BN
4:30 To Be Announced
4:45 Hop Harrigan BN
6:00 Terry and the Pirates BN
5.T5 Something for the Girls WTAW
5:30 Jack Armstrong ' "BN
5 :45 Captain Midnight BN
6 :00 Bryan Field _WTAW
6 -.30 Sign Off
the needs of the A. & M. dining
halls.
Under Shepardson’s supervision
the dairy farm has cleared post
oak and needle grass from 450
acres of land and transformed
these same acres into productive
fields.
Before the war drained the A.
& M. student body, the Dairy Hus
bandry Department graduated 20
to 25 seniors each year and had
about six graduate students. Many
of these students came from neigh-,
boring states to study at Texas A.
& M. Shepardson stated that with
in the last 20 years Texas has
grown from an insignificant posi
tion in the dairy field to a rank
of sixth place in the United States.
The value of Texas dairy products
is equal to two-thirds of that of
cotton and is equal to the value
of beef cattle production.
Shepardson’s Improvements
Even though most of the ex
perimental work is delegated to
the Texas Agricultural Experi
ment Station, the Dairy Husbandry
Department under the general sup
ervision of Shepardson has eradi
cated disease among jpllege dairy
animals, developed a satisfactory
milk substitute for calf feeding,
improved and developed a method
of using surplus skim milk in mak
ing concentrated milk solids in
the manufacture of ice cream,
which has greatly aided small
plants, begun pastuerization of
milk for college consumption, and
developed methods of artificial in
semination especially adapted to
dairy cattle-.
During the years that Shepard
son has been associated with the
dairy industry he has served as
a Director of the American Dairy
Science Association, Director of
the American Jersey Cattle Club,
chairman of the research commit
tee of the American Jersey Cat
tle Club, president of the Texas
Dairy Products Association, and
Director of Texas Jersey Cattle
Club.
In 1937 he attended the World
Dairy Congress in Berlin, Ger
many as a repesentative of the
United States government. There
were 12 delegates sent from the
U. S. to the meeting, which had
representatives from more than 60
nations.
At the present time Shepardson
is a member of the A. & M. Ath
letic Council and is on the board
of the Bryan-Brazos County Cham
ber of Commerce.
Dean Shepardson is a member of
all of the masonic lodges and also
a member of many national honor
ary fraternities among which are:
Phi Kappa Phi, Alpha Zeta, Gam
ma Sigma Delta, Lambda Gamma
Delta, Sigma Phi Epsilon, and
Scabbard and Blade. He is also a
Rotarian.
Played Football
Shepardson played football in
high school and college and cap
tained Colorado State’s first champ
ionship team. He was freshman
football coach at his alma mater
for seven years.
He has no hobbies, but is a
man of unsurpassed energy. Rather
than spend his time on non-produc
tive pursuits he has concentrated
on working at and bettering A. &
M. Much of his time has been taken
up with work helping A. & M.
students, a large number of whom
have been able to work their way
through ^chool as a result of em
ployment that Shepardson made
available on the college dairy farm.
HELP BRING VICTORY
BUY MORE WAR BONDS
—AGGIE—
Continued from Page 1
Austin; McCloskey Hospital in
Temple, and Blackland Air Field
in Waco.
The conference schedule for the
Aggies runs as follows: Jan. 6,
Rice here; Jan. 12, T. C. U. here;
Jan. 13, S. M. U. here; Jan. 16,
Baylor there; Jan. 20, Rice there;
Feb. 6, Texas here; Feb. 9, S. M. U.
there; Feb. 10, T. C. U. there;
Feb. 14, Baylor here; Feb. 17,
Texas there; Feb. 23, Arkansas
there; and Feb. 24, Arkansas there.
DO YOUR PART—BUY BONDS
NOTICE !
We have connections with
the following book dealers
and are buying wholesale
for them.
Wilcox & Folette, Chicago
University Book Store, Alabama
College Book Co., Columbus, 0.
Burns and Noble, New York
We will quote you the best pos
sible price on all titles whether
they are used here or not.
LOUPOT’S
TRADING POST
CONDUCTS REVIVAL
Dr. Lemuel Hall, Army Chaplain,
is conducting Revival Services each
evening beginning at 7:00 p. m., at
the First Baptist Church, College
Station.
Army Chaplain to
Speak At Revival
Dr. Lemuel Hall, Army chaplain,
will talk at the revival of the First
Baptist Church, which started De
cember 3. The revival will continue-
through Sunday, Dec. 10.
Dr. Hall will use the following
subjects on Saturday evening and
Sunday:
7:30 Saturday evening: “Paid in
Full”; 10:50 Sunday morning: “The
Great Refusal,”, and 7:00 Sunday
evening: “Real Reality.”
A cordial invitation is extended
to all by the church. Pictures of
work in Army camps will be shown.
Students may be excused from call
to quarters to attend.
—SCHOOL^-
(Continued From Page 1)
age Controlmen, Radio Operators^
Ship’s Cooks and Bakers, Pharma
cist’s Mates and Sonar Operators,
In addition to these schools,
there are several restricted schools
on which the Coast Guard is un
able to release information.
The interesting and specialized
training program is one of the
several attractive points to enlist
ment at this time. Additional infor
mation can be secured by applying
at the Coast Guard Recruiting of
fice, 1110-12 Irwin-Keasler build
ing, Dallas, Texas.
DR. N. B. McNUTT
DENTIST
Office in Parker Building
Over Canady’s Pharmacy
Phone 2-1457 Bryan, Texas
Do Your
Christmas
Shopping Now
We suggest that you do
your Christmas shopping
early—here you’ll find a
pleasing stock of Christ
mas gifts that will be ap
propriate for Mother . . .
Sister ... Dad or Brother.
We’ll gladly assist you in
selecting gifts that will
be certain to please.
No Extra Charge for
Gift Wrapping
[jjaldropeg
“Two Convenient Stores”
College Station—Bryan