i Page 6 THE BATTALION THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 17, 1946 \ Kiwanis Club Counts Achievements for Past Year, Appoints New Committees Achievements for the year of 1945 were recapitulated by the College Station Kiwanis Club Tues day at its regular weekly lunch eon meeting. Committee reports from four outstanding committees were heard by the club under the guidance of Paul Ballance, program chairman for 1946. George Wilcox, new pres ident of the club, occupied the chair for the first time since his election. Reports were heard from the following committees: Boys and Girls Committee, Gene Brock chairman, presented by Gor don Gay. Work of the Committee in promoting and developing tho City Recreation Program was em phasized. Crippled Children Committee, Dan Russell chairman, presented by J. S. Mogford. A resume of the clinic conducted at the College Hospital for crippled children on May 23, 1945 was submitted, and plans were suggested for another clinic to be held during April or May of 1946. Public Affairs Committee, Er nest Langford chairman, presented by J. E. Breland. A five-point program adopted by the Committee last year including the develop ment of citizenship, civic develop ment, and improvement of inter city relations was outlined. Church Support Committee, D. T. Killough chairman. Work of the Committee in supporting the drive for clothing for the destitute in war-stricken countries was related. Committees and chairmen for the year of 1946 have been appoint ed as follows: Achievement and Attendance, Jack Ritter; Boys and Girls, Spike White; Bulletin, Jim Breland; Church Support, Bob Pinkerton; Civic Development, H. E. Burgess; Conservation—Re- soui’ces Use Education, Bill Mor gan; Crippled Children, Dan Rus sell; Education, W. D. Bunting; Entertainment, Frank Anderson; Finance, W. S. Manning; House and Reception, Sid Loveless; Inter- Club Relations, Carl Birdwell; In ter-Racial, M. L. Cashion; Kiwanis Education, John Sperry; Member ship and Classification, N. M. Mc Ginnis. Program, Paul Ballance; Public Relations, Lamar Fly; Recreation, Marty Karow; Transportation and Public Safety, Fred Hickman; Un derprivileged Children, H. E. Hampton; Veterans, R. L, Elkins; Vocational Guidance, E. L. Wil liams. New Kiwanis members introd- duced at Tuesday’s meeting were W. H. Badgett, L. J. Starr, and A. L. Schipper. Church Notices FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH R. L. Brown, Pastor 9:45 a. m. Sunday School 10:80 a. m. Morning Worship 6:15 p. m. Training Union. 7:15 p. m. Evening Worship. COLLEGE AVE. BAPTIST CHURCH 203 N. College Ave. Rev. W. J. McDaniel 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. 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 CHURCH OF CHRIST R. B. Sweet, Pastor Sunday, 9:45 Bible Classes; 10:45 the Morning Worship I 7 p. m. the Evening Worship. Wednesday 7:15 p. m. the Prayer Meet- Man, Your Manners By I. Sherwood Wrong Number Etiquette: No-' you may expect to hear such as body likes a wrong number, but it is important for the one receiving the wrong number to be polite, just as it is important for the one making the mistake to make an apology. When you are called by mistake the best way to correct it quickly is to identify yourself as soon as possible. A good way to do this is to use a reply such as the fol lowing: T’m son-y but this is Temple 4965, or “I beg your par don. but this is not 4001.” The best way to answer or call on the telephone any time to ident ify yourself by saying your name plus that of your office or office or home number plus your name. Examples: “Business Office, Chester Brown speaking”; “4965, Mi*. Hill speak ing.”; “4965, Ralph Hill* speak ing.” When calling a woman socially, a man would say, “Ralph Hill speaking”, but on business he would say, “Mr. Hill speaking.” If you fail to identify yourself when you answer a telephone call, this, “Who’s speaking?” Not wish ing to be rude too, you would say, “To whom did you wish to speak, please?” When calling your girl at her home and someone else answers, you should announce your name then ask pleasantly for her. Example: “Robert Brown, calling Eliza beth, please,” or if her father or mother answers you would say, “Mr. or Mrs. Bates, this is Robert Brown calling, may I speak to Elizabeth, please?” All students who wish part- time employment during the Spring term (February 4 to May 25) are urged to file an application renewal with the Placement Office immediately. Those students who have not filed applications but desire em ployment should file with us an application at this time. Re newals and applications will be accepted beginning Friday, Jah. 18, 1946. The Placement Office. OFFICIAL NOTICES Classified FOR RENT—Three corner rooms, servic ed with two baths. On Main street, three blocks from the P. O. Phone 4-4764. FOR SALE—One pair of white sa evening slippers, size 7-A. Call 4-9694. CATHOLIC STUDENTS Sunday Mass 10:00 a.m. Confessions, Sunday before Mass. ST. THOMAS EPISCOPAL CHAPEL Sunday Services Holy Communion 9:00 a.m. Coffee Club 9:30 a.m. Morning Prayer or Holy Communion :00 a.m. Air-Conditioned Opens 1:00 P.M. — Ph. 4-1181 FRIDAY and SATURDAY Big Double Feature 1st Attraction ITS A HOWLUVA LOT OF PUN... AMERICAN LUTHERAN CHURCH Rev. Fred Mgebroff, Pastor Services 2nd and 4th Sundays in Y. M. C. A. Assembly Room. 6:00 p.m.: Sunday School 6:15 p.m.: Students Bible Class 7 :00 p.m.: Divine Services Lutheran Students Associations 1st and 3rd Wednesdays at Y. M. C. A. Assembly Room. Lutheran Student Pastor’s Office in Y. M. C. A., open every Wednesday. Lutheran Radio Broadcast: Evi esday, 3:45 to 4:00 p.m., over nesday, < WTAW. ery Wed- Station Jewish Religious Services every Friday evening at 7:15 p.m. in the Y. M. C. A. Chapel. A. & M. METHODIST CHURCH AND WESLEY FOUNDATION Rev. R. C. Terry Sunday: FOR SALE—Pr. Senior boots—8, (Luc- ehese). Ice Cream and Khaki pants, Cam paign Hat—7, Green Blouse—37, Green trousers. Call 4-9809 or write E. V. Bond, P. O. Box 2164, College Station. We pay more. Get our price. Any make, any model. Bring your papers. Brazos Motor Co., Bryan, Texas, phone 2-7009. Will trade 5 room furnished Oakwood for smaller furn after 5:30, phone 4-9344. Apt. in Apt. Call Will card for children evenings, by hour. My home or your home. Call 2-6639 after Ex-servici Apt. by F< % Box 5476, iceman and wite desire fur eb. 1st. No children or pets. 176, College Station. ife desire furnished Write LOST pen an McKENZIE Jack McKen: 1046 for rewai Green and Black Sheaffer Life- tching pencil. Name JACK stamped on each. zie ard. on eae Walto: me Return to Hall, Box LOST—1 Schaeffer pen with gold band and name KEM MAYFIELD inscribed. Color brown, was lost just before Christmas holidays. If found please bring to Walton Hall, Ramp B-l & 3. Reward. Announcements flSffi BN® 2nd Attraction SUNDAY and MONDAY “AND THEN THERE WERE NONE” — starring — Barry Fitzgerald Walter Huston Also Cartoon and Flicker Flashbacks TUES. - WED. - THURS. A P4CT118E U REMEMBER COLUMBIA P!CIURt$ N tyw4f«r/irn Mom toXeineiw^A [/ ° IN TECHNICOLOR V storrring \\ — Plus!!— Fox and Crow Cartoon Flicker Flashbacks Short Church School—9:45 a. Morning Worship—10:5 Wesley Foundation—7 0 a. m. STUDENTS INTERESTED IN TUTORING There is a demand for private tutoring by individuals who are having difficulty Vth some of their class work. The Registrar’s Office has been directed 7 the Executive Committe to make avail- ley Wednesda: ( 1 tiona Th. nesday: Choir Practice—6:45 p. m. ley Fellowship and Midweek De —7 p. m. The A. and M. Methodist Church is one block east of the Post Office at the North ’es; al—7 p. m. d M. A. & M. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Norman Anderson, Pastor Sunday School 9:45 in the Y.M.C.A. chapel. Morning Worship 11:00 in the Y.M.C.A. on the lawn east jrm chapel. Student League 6:30 Guion Hall. of Tumme of Guion Summer Vespers 7:30 ftn the lawn east Hall. Continuous Show Starting at 1:00 p.m. SATURDAY and SUNDAY T&ffe przitv&s THAT &#EAT PLAY f To rue scfiEen WARNERS fa w JOHN DALL • JOAN LORRlNG NIGEL BRUCE • RHYS WILLIAMS Directed by IRVING RAPPER Screen Play by Casey Robinson and Frank Cavett From the Stage Plav by EMIVN WILLIAMS produced by Herman Shumlln • Music by Max Steiner TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY s ixec able to the Corps the nam who are qualified and eligib special tutoring. Those students w they are qualified for such work should call by the Registrar’s Office at once ai place their name on file for this purpose. make avs nes of students eligible to do ho feel ers using electricity in business establish ments : 1st 26 KWH 10* per KWH Next 400 KWH 5* per KWH Next 1000 KWH 4* per KWH All over 1426 KWH 2* per KWH minimum charge for Commercial light ing, $2.00. (B) Rates for water, domestic and ;rcial consumption: 1,000 mercial 1st Next Minimum wat (C) Rates for 1. For domestic consumers using sewe: age services for households or office onlj 1 Water Closet connectio 2 Water Closet conn ,000 gals ....75* 2,000 gals 40* per M. Next 3,000 gals 25* per M. All over 6,000 gals 20* per M. ter charge, $1.00. >r sewerage service ;tic consumers usin: ily: ion 50* nnections 75* 3 or more Water Closet con $1.00 2. For apartment and rooming houses using sewerage services: 1 Water Closet connection 50* Each additional Water Closet con. 25* 3. For commercial or industrial consum ers using sewerage services for business establishments: 1st 7,000 gals, or fraction thereof of water used ; 50* Each additional 7,000 gals, or frac tion thereof of water used 25* Where it can be shown that any con siderable part of the water used by commercial and industrial consumers does not reach the sewers, the City Council may make such ^adjustments in their rates as shall be deemed just and equitable. SECTON 2. Payment of bills: (A) All charges due the City from consumers of public utilities services shall be based on bills rendered by the City to the consumer, and such bills shall be due and payable not later than the 15th day of the month next vhich place their n; lame on H. L. HEATON, Registrar. ORDINANCE NO. 86 AN ORDINANCE FIXING THE SCHED ULE OF UTILITY RATES GOVERNING PAYMENT OF BILLS, PROVIDING FOR DISCONNECTIONS AND RECONNEC TIONS, AND REPEALING ORDINANCES OR PORTIONS OF ORDINANCES IN CONFLICT WITH THIS ORDINANCE. Be IT ORDAINED by the City Council of the City of College Station, Texas: SECTION 1. Schedule of rates. The monthly rates to be charged consumers for public utility services—nam tricity, water and/or sewerai —shall be in accorda ules as follows: (A) Rates for electricity 1. For domestic consumers using electric ity in households or offices only: 1st 20 KWH 8* per KWH Next 40 KWH 5* per KWH Next 40 KWH 4* per KWH Next 80 KWH 3* per KWH All in excess of 180 KWH 2* per KWH Minimum charge for Domestic Lighting, consumi lely, elec- age connection ith the sched- Minn $2.00. 2. For commercial or industrial consum- ic mon eeeding the month during services were rendered. (B) All bills shall be discounted in the amount of 10 per cent under the rate specified in the schedules appearing ii Section 1 of this Ordinance, provided but provided only, that such bills ex ceed one ($1.00) dollar in amount and are paid within the 15-day period set forth in Article (A) above. SECTION 3. Disconnections and recon nections : (A) All electric, water and sewerage connections shall be severed for any consumer of public utilities services who fails to pay all or any part of his total bill for such services within 15 days after the same shall be due and payable as provided in Article (A) of Section 2 above. (B) When connections for public util ities services have been served, as pro vided in Article (A) of this Section, the same shall be restored only when all amounts due the City shall ha been paid and an additk $1.00 shall also have be< cover the expenses or the res for each type of service to be recon- SECTION 4. Any ordinance or portion thereof in conflict with this Ordinance is hereby repealed, and the provisions of this Ordinance in case of conflict shall portion of this ” ,ve of additional fee lave been paid to iteration not atlect tfte other portions thereo: Passed and approved this the 13th da of December, A. D. 1945. December, PROVED: (SEAL) ATTEST: ERNEST LANGFORD, Mayor S. A. LIPSCOMB, City Secretary FOUR-ROOM HOMES FOR SALE Complete with Bath, Hot Water, Lot, etc. Lots on Highway 6 600 Feet North of Sulphur Springs Intersection SEE JOHN A. SMITH Room 203, Dorm 15 or Write Box 3003 After 7:00 p.m. telephone 4-9704 STOHAOC 214 SOUTH MAIN BRYAN, TEXAS Dramatic Club to Be Re-Organized Tuesday Night Next Tuesday night in the As sembly Hall, an organizational meeting will be held for the pur pose of starting a dramatic club at A. & M. All cadets, veterans and wives, employees and wives, and faculty and wives are invited to attend. The first meeting will con sist of the election of officers and appointing of certain committees. There will also be a reading of the play “The Green Pastures”. Tentative plans call for the club to give two major three-act plays, which are “You Can’t Take It With You”, by Hart and Kauf man, March 15-16; and “Major Barbara”, by Bernard Shaw, to be given later in the year. At all regular meetings, a num ber of three-act plays will be read, and general talks on the theater will be given by competent speak ers. Students interested in the work may gain training in these various fields: directing, acting, publicity, finance, make-up, stage construc tion, scene painting, lighting, and other allied fields. The Student Council will back the club until it will be able to finance itself. Taylor Wilkins is Added to Staff of Student Affairs Lt.-Col. Taylor Wilkins, a Tex as A. & M. graduate of the Class of 1936, has been added to the staff of the Office of Student Af fairs, it was announced yesterday. A major in Rural Education, Wil kins was a three letter man in sports. Earning his “T” in foot ball in 1934 and 1935, he served as team captain in the latter year. He lettered in basketball in 1934, 1935, and 1936 and in track in 1935 and 1936. Called to the service in June, 1941, he served with distinction in an airborne division, earning the Bronze Star and five campaign stars. He is married and has two children—“an Aggie aged eight, and a little girl of four”. Wilkins will serve in the capa city of advisor on veterans’ affairs and will occupy an office in Room 28 of Milner Hall. Horticulture Award Will Be Resumed Here The Burpee award of $100 an nually to Texas A&M College jun ior students in horticulture will be inaugurated during the coming February semester, it was announc ed here by Dr. Guy W. Adriance, head of the department. The W. Atlee Burpee Company of Philadelphia and Clinton, Iowa, has established the award for hor ticulture students for scholarship, practical experience and interest in research, to encourage study of horticulture, especially vegetable and flower growing, Dr. Adriance said. Recipients of the ward no doubt will have employment op portunities with the sponsor of the scholarship, it was said. Carlton W. Adams Arrives Here Carlton W. Adams of San Anto nio, recently employed as archi tect for Texas A&M College, ar rived on the campus this week and reported for duty. He was in con ference with T. R. Spence, who is in charge of the college construc tion program. For the present, Adams will de vote his energies to closing out prior commitments and only a portion of his time will be given to the college. As these prior com mitments are finished, he will de vote more and more time to the college until he is able to serve on a full time basis. The construction program of A&M has two aims at present. The first is to bring the present plant to a peak of perfection and the second is the erection of a me morial union building. In connec tion with the latter project, Adams will make a survey of union build ings at colleges and universities over the nation before drawing up plans for the A&M building, which will be the latest in such bwild ings. Made-to-Measure UNIFORMS . . . SHIRTS . . . SLACKS We can make prompt delivery on made-to- Measure Uniforms . . . Shirts and Slacks. These garments are made in our own shop by Military Tailors who know the smart styling and tailoring that Aggies want. See Us Today ‘‘TWO CONVENIENT STORES’’ COLLEGE STATION BRYAN WATCH REPAIRING ONE-WEEK SERVICE All Work Guaranteed n T.C.HINMAN Jewelery Store and Watch Repair in the LAUTERSTEIN Bldg. aasssssssssssssss \ /