Page Four: THE BATTALION, College Station (Aggieland), Texas, Thursday, April 17, 1947: CLASSIFIED ADS ATTENTION ENGINEERS: Get your engineers’ math chart at the Exchange Store. THE SCRIBE SHOP—Typing, mimeo graphing, drawing. Phone 2-0705. 1007 E. 23rd, Bryan. REPAIRS: Radio and refrigerator sales and service. All work guaranteed. LEONARDS East Gate Ph. 4-1240 New and refresher classes starting now at McKenzie-Baldwin Business College in shorthand, typewriting and associated sub jects. Phone 2-6655 for information. WANTED to rent 5 or 6 room unfurnished house, College Station or Bryan; will be permanent renter. Phone 4-5684, ask for Emmons. FOR SALE: Senior Boots, 8^-15. 3 pr. boot breeches, one officer’s blouse. See Moorhead, P. H. 14 A, Box 1855. FOR SALE: Good baby buggy bargain. A. & M. Trailer Camp K-l. FOR SALE: House, 2 rooms and bath. Call after 5:00 p.m. 206 S. Munnerlyn Village. WANTED: Pr. of Senior boots, size 8$ or 9 with large calf about 16i-17. See Ben Sustr between 6:00 and 6:00. Dorm 9-420. Billfold lost containing papers and mon ey. Lost about April 2. If found keep money and send billfold and papers to S. Schuleman, Box 1951, College Station. Student’s wife working in Bryan wants ride at 8:00 a.m. Notify Apt. B-12-X. College View Apartments. WANTED: Student’s wife to care for infant in parents home. No housework. Maid and Bendix furnished. Attractive salary for person with small child. Hours 8 to 5 for 5-J days per week. Phone 4-7534. Lamar County Club Meets An important meeting of the La mar County Club will be held to night at 7:30 p.m. in the Academ ic Building. Members are urged to be present. The picture for the annual will be made over at 12:30 p.m. Friday in front of Guion. SPIC/AIS Pet Milk 13c Admiration Coffee, lb. ... 45c Sun Maid Raisins 26c Treet Libby’s Beets ,39c 15c Libby’s Baby Food— 7c Each Alaska Pink Salmon 39c Rosedale Peas, No. 2 18c Swift’s Cleaner 11c Quaker Yellow Corn Meal ..13c MANNING SMITH Fine Foods “At the Entrance to Aggieland”' East Gate (Formerly Luke’s) Poultry Course Slated June 2 The annual poultry short course will be held here for three weeks beginning June 2, according to E. D. Parnell of the poultry department. Those enrolled in the short course may qualify as flock selecting agents and pullorum testing agents for chicken flocks either the first or second week, while turkey se lecting and blood-collecting agents may qualify the third week, Par nell explained. Students enrolled for three weeks may earn college credit while they qualify for a li cense to select and blood-test chick ens and turkeys. A special Visitor’s Day program is being planned for either June 10 or 11. Last year’s short course attendance was well over 100, with 60 agents qualifying. All selecting and testing agents for hatcheries working under the national poul try and turkey improvement plans are trained in schools of this type, said Parnell. BETWEEN THE BOOKENDS Parallels of Present Time Are Bases for Two Books By WILNORA BARTON Reader’s Adviser MIRROR OF THE PAST; by K. Zilliacus, M. P. One of the books written to pro mote the cause of the Labor Party and instrumental in its victory at last year’s general election elec tion, “Mirror of the Past”, survives in triumph the purpose for which it was was written. The political history of the world from 1910 through 1930 is the “past” of the title, and the presentation is in tended to be a warning. A great deal of the goings on diplomatically during the period preceding World War 1 are now well known and what happened to the League of Nations, but Mr. Zilliacus gives a most successfully co-ordinated story of that period. “History as such does not actually repeat itself but plays variations on various themes”—of which ge ography is one—and the import- C0TON BALL CORSAGES J. COULTER SMITH FLORIST Phone 2-6725 Phone 2-6725 when you smoke PHILIP MORRIS! CLEAN, FRESH, PURE America's FINEST Cigarette! First smoke in the morning or last one at night— flavor’s ALL yours, when you smoke Philip Morris! And here’s why . . . There’s an important difference in Philip Morris man ufacture that makes Philip Morris taste better—smoke better—because it lets the FULL FLAVOR of the world’s finest tobaccos come through for your complete enjoyment — clean, fresh, pure! Try Philip Morris—you, too, will agree that Philip Morris is America’s FINEST Cigarette! ALWAYS BETTER... BETTER ALL WAYS ance of this book is that with clin ical exactitude it shows up the var ious historical strands of a deadly PcilTcillcl ASSIZE OF ARMS; by Brig. Gen. J. H. Morgan This is a book which historians will use as source material, but the general reader will find it eas ier going than the footnotes indi cate, and the subject is one of par amount importance to everyone. “Assize of Arms” is the result of General Morgan’s observations of the German Army’s re-arma ment (at first stealthily and then openly) after the last World War. He is concerned that there be no third attempt. When the victors in World War II are still wrangling inconclusively with the problem of what to do with defeated Ger many, General Morgan’s book books come as a timely warning. As British War Crimes Investi gator, Prisoner of War Commis sioner^ and later as Depty Adju tant-general, he perceived from the beginning what the German army was doing, and he has docu mented his book with facts never before published. THE WESTWARD CROSSINGS; by Jeannette Mir sky Miss Mirsky may have here a hackneyed theme, but she puts it in a fresh setting and at a new angle with the emphasis on the personalities of the explorers. The great westward crossings, ac cording to Miss Mirsky, were three: those of Balbo, of MacKenzie, and of Lewis and Clark. These men of vigorous imagination and great vision represent the adventurers of three nations, Spain, Britain, and the United States. They also rep resent the ideals and methods of exploration in three different centuries. Readers will find novelty in this spirited history of the eminent Spaniard who discovered the Pac ific and built ships to sail on it, only to be cruely put to death by a jealous rival. Here also is the fascinating story of the tireless Scot who followed the river which now bears his name to the Arctic. You may be familiar with the great expedition of Lewis and Clark, but Miss Mirsky tells this grand tale much better and with more color and feeling than your history text book. The author tends to empha size narrative rather than analysis and exhibits a talent for rapid, pictorial reconstruction of scenes and events. “Inaudible Sound’ Measures Material Thickness, Flaws Thickness of materials may be measured and internal flaws de tected by “inaudible sound,” ac cording to H. E. Van Valkenburg of the General Electric Company’s General Engineering and Consult ing Laboratory. Ultrasonic vibrations ranging “at least 14 octaves” beyond audi bility by the human ear have been produced and techniques have been developed to direct them into beams, and to detect the beams re ceived at another point, Mr. Van Valkenburg declared in a G-E Science Forum address at Schenec tady, New York. “Ultrasonic signals can be ‘seen’ through solids or liquids—mater ials which are partially or totally opaque to light,” he explained. —DOG SHOW— (Continued from Page 1) children’s division of the show will be given special instruction at 4:30 p.m. on Tuesday and Thursday in front of the Administration Build ing, with C. E. Van Buskirk in charge of these special instruc tion groups. Children’s classes will come under the heading of ju nior classes for boys and girls under eleven years of age, and se nior classes for boys and girls over 11 and under 12 years old. Exhi bition in this competition are judg ed solely for skillful handling, points in the dog not to count. Vanity Fair Beauty Is ASME Duchess Miss Mary Lou Jordahl of San Antonio has been chosen Cotton Ball duchess of the American So- c i e t y of Mechanical Engineers. Also chosen by A1 Capp as a Vanity Fair beauty for the 1947 LONGHORN, Miss Jordahl is at tending the San Antonio Junior College. The Atmosphere and Hospitality of the OLD SOUTH is always to be found — at — HOTARD’S CAFETERIA 311 N. Main—Bryan ‘Where the art of fine cookery has not been forgotten’ -7" Justin McCarty plays a plaid game with this bright little shirt-bosom Peter-Pan- collared dress. Tricky skirt with twin pleats on each side, and a self-belt—and til made of Dan River fine cotton plain gingham $10.95 Budget Shop Second Floor Shop KHAKI UNIFORMS ARE REG AGAIN. . . . CHOOSE YOURS FROM OUR SELECTION Genuine Cramerton Khaki Pants Made by Pool $5.50 Other Pants • $4.95 Fine Poplin Shirts—from Jackson - Raymond $4.25 O’Seas Caps of Tropical Worsted $2.50 Cotton $1.00 Beau Brummel Uniform Ties $1.00 Superba Ranger Ties $1.00 (iTaldrop&fo. Two Convenient Stores College — Bryan