Page 2 The Battalion Monday Afternoon, March 11, 1946 The Battalion STUDENT TRI-WEEKLY NEWSPAPER Office, Room 5, Administration Building, Telephone 4-64444 Texas A. & M. College The Battalion, official newspaper of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texat and the City of College Station is published three times weekly, and circulated or Monday, Wednesday, and Friday afternoons. Member Plssocioted Cp!le6iate Press Entered as second class matter at the Post Office at College Station, Texas, under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1870. Subscription rate $3.00 per school year. Advertising rates upon request. Represented nationally by National Advertising Service, Inc., at New York City, Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles, and San Francisco. SAM NIXON : Editor MARION PUGH Sports Editor: CHARLIE WEINBAUM Associate WENDELL McCLURE Advertising Manager Watch That Speedometer! . . . This is no fable: A veteran student who rents a cot tage in Bryan got up late one morning this week, and rush ed to get to class on time. He didn’t make it. He was ar rested for speeding on the road between Bryan and College, was late for class anyhow, and had to pay an $8.50 fine that took a good-sized nick out of his subsistance check. With the great number of cars owned by veteran stu dents, traffic around College Station has become a severe problem. There have been some bad crashes in the vicinity of the college. The police may feel sympathetic toward a student who is late for school, but they can’t overlook speeding or reckless driving without penalizing everybody else. So, drivers, take a tip. The speed limit on the campus is 20 miles per hour. The speed limit between here and Bryan is 30 miles per hour. If you get caught exceeding those limits, or driving recklessly, you will find yourself short of cash, and nobody will weep for you. —STUDENT— Continued from Page 1 upon the date named, and no other effort is made toward collection. In short, the obligation is strictly one of Aggie honor. All organization commanders or faculty members who know of any cadet who is in need of aid which can be supplied by the fund are requested to contact Dan A. Rus sell, head of the Rural Sociology Department. “SUDAN” in Technicolor DR. N. B. McNUTT DENTIST Office in Parker Building Over Canady’s Pharmacy Phone 2-1457 Bryan, Texas Opens 1:00 p.m. — 4-1181 MONDAY — LAST DAY V B.GLDeSylva c/to'rk Club/ A Poromownl Picture — also — $ Bugs Bunny Cartoon Paramount News TUES. - WED. - THURS. and Pluto Cartoon TUESDAY - WEDNESDAY fr Directed by EDWARD A. BLATT Screen Piey by Thornes Job • Adapted by MtfvM Borowsky • From « Play by ROBERT E. SHERWOOD El®BUY! Paul S. Ballance Acting Librarian THE EGG AND I Many of our returning veterans, and many others too, who have worked under pressure during the war years, may be interested in buying a little place in the coun try, and settling down to a life of quiet and peace. Even if you are not planning to buy a little place in the country, you will enjoy reading Betty MacDonald’s The Egg and I. The author briefly sketches her life in several west ern mining regions, and after she reached eighteen, her experiences on a rundown chicken ranch in the Olympic Mountains of the State of Washington. The characters in the book are so vividly described that you imagine what they actually re semble. In introducing “Gammy,” her paternal grandmother, the au thor describes her as one who wore corsets upside down and her shoes on the wrong feet and married a gambler with yellow eyes. The gambler of Bardstown, Kentucky, took his wife out West, played Faro with his money, his wife’s money and even some of his com pany’s money and then tactfully disappeared and was always spok en of as dead. “G'ammy” lived with the Bards (the author’s maiden name) and even though she was quite old fashioned in her ideas, everyone loved her dearly. Her bed was described as having her night gown, bed jackets, and “chima- loons” folded under the pillow, her Bible tucked under the sheet at the top right-hand side, any book she happened to be reading tucked un der the sheet on the other side. There were little bags of candy, an apple or two, current magazines, numerous sachets and her bottle of camphor just tucked under the blankets or scattered under the pillows within easy reach. Each member of Mrs. MacDonald’s fam ily is just as vividly described as “Gammy.” The author’s nearest contact with a chicken, was fried chicken, and her closest contact with eggs wem fried or scrambled eggs! Soon aft er Bob and Betty were married, they moved to the chicken ranch which appeared to be located in a very lonely section of the Olympic Mountains, with their nearest neighbors some three or four miles down the “hill.” The old black wood burning stove in the kitchen is oft FEATURES en referred to as just “Stove,” in the manner in which one may refer to a person. The MacDonald’s first year was an extremely busy one, because the main house and all of the other buildings needed some re pairs and some remodeling. How ever, the dwelling house was the last one to get repaired, the brood er house, the chicken house and even the hog house had to be fin ished first. She thought however, when these things were done that the house would come next, but it was not so, it was now time to plow and plant the garden. It was late summer before work was start ed on the house, and this began with the laying of new floors, put ting in new windows, kalsomining walls, fixing broken sills and sag ging doors. The kitchen was the hub of all activities. It was here that the egg records were kept, mail orders were written, mail read, meals, eaten, baths taken, where they entertained, planned the fu ture and discussed the past. The day began at 4 a.m. on the Mac Donald chicken ranch and it ended about 8:30 in the evening. The Kettles and the Hicks were the closest neighbors to the Mac Donald farm, one family on either side of them. Mrs. Kettle is de scribed as a mountainously fat (See BOOKENDS, Page 3) Quality Is a Saving A good lesson to know is that quality is a saving—things that you need and use are of little use to you unless they are serviceable. Get your better quality merchandise at The Exchange Store—an Aggie Institution. PriCE quai/ty val^e for SCHOOL NEEDS 1 .1 use the EXCHANGE We have a complete line of school supplies— Stationery, College Jewelry, Text Books, Acces sories—things that you need throughout the school year. The Exchange Store Serving Texas Aggies