Singing
Leave Saturday
Forty-seven Singing Cadets will
leave College Station at 11 a.m.
Saturday for Wichita Falls, where
they will present a concert in the
High School Auditorium, accord
ing to Bill Turner, director of the
organization. The concert is spon
sored by the Wichita Falls Former
Student Association.
Soloists for the concert will be
Buddy Boyd, baritone; Elton Tur
ner, tenor; Leonard Perkins, bari
tone; Helmut Quirum, bass; and
Ralph Wheat, tenor.
Sunday morning the group will
sing at the morning services of
the First Methodist Church and
will be guests of the church at
their noon meal, Turner said. They
will return to A&M Siinday after
noon.
Rev. Lenox Will
Conduct Service
The Rev. Asbury Lenox will con
duct services at the A&M Metho
dist Church in the absence of the
pastor, The Rev. James Jackson,
who is conducting a revival ser
vice at Cady, Texas, Otis Miller,
a steward of the church, said to
day.
“Utility of Christian Religion”
will be the Rev. Lenox’s subject
for the Sunday morning service.
The topic of the evening service
will be “Is Religion Worth What
it Costs.”
Otis Miller, C. B. Godbey, Ralph
Stein, C. G. White, and Dr. Bob
Shrode, began a new study series
at the Wesley Foundation. The
group will meet every Sunday
morning at 10, Miller said.
Camera Club Will
Meet Monday Eve
The Camera Club will meet at
7:30 Monday evening in Room 33
of the Physics Building, R. A.
Johns, reporter, announced.
The purpose of the meeting will
be to discuss regular business and
work on the dark room, Johns sta
ted.
Officers elected at the last
meeting are Robert B. Mays,
president; Fred S. Thurmond Jr.
vice president; K. W. McCatty,
secretary-treasurer; R. A. Johns,
reporter; and R. R. Hunt, social
chairman.
BARBELL ENTHUSIASTS!
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HE ALTS g WAYS
The
Exchange Store
“Serving Texas Aggies”
'THE STORE THAT SPONSORS
HEALTHWAYS FOR HEALTH!
StT-
So You Know A & M ?
: :
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il*i C . :
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Whats Cooking
AGGIE CLASS, of the First
Baptist Church, 5 p.m., Saturday,
West Side of Goodwin Hall. Pic
nic.
AGGIE WIVES CIRCLE OF
THE A&M METHODIST Church,
7:30 p. m., Monday, YMCA Chapel
Joint Meeting with Hillel Club.
BRAZOS VALLEY PI BETA
PHI, 3:30 p. m. Saturday, 504
Restwood.
CAMERA CLUB, 7:30 p. m.,
Monday, Physics Building.
' ENGLISH DISCUSSION
GROUP, 7:30 p. m., Monday, YM
CA Lounge. Dr. S. S. Morgan will
discuss Plato.
FFA COLLEGIATE CHAPTER
7:30 p.m. Monday, Ag Engineering
GEOLOGY CLUB, 7:30 p. m.,
Tuesday, Room 140, Geology Build
ing. Dr. Marcus Hanna will speak
on “Salt Domes.”
HANDBALL CLUB meets Uni
versity of Texas Handball Club, 4
p. m. Saturday.
SAM WIVES CLUB, 7:30 p. m„
Tuesday, 306 Highland, West Park.
Student Chapter of the American
Newman Club Will
Attend Communion
The Newman Club will receive
communion in a group at the 8:30
mass in St. Mary’s Chapel Sunday
morning, Rev. Mgsr. J. B. Gleiss-
ner announced. There will be an
other mass at 10 Sunday morning.
Services at the Chapel during
the Lenten season will be held
every Wednesday and Friday night
at 7:15 and a mass at 6:45 Friday
morning.
The Wednesday services will be
Rosary and Benediction. On Friday
night the Way of the Cross will
be held, followed by Benediction,
Mgsr. Gleissner said.
Some fashion experts suggest
that men wear red-blue-green neck
ties with gray suits, red-brown-
green for brown suits and red-blue
gray-yellow with blue suits.
ATTENTION! MARRIED
STUDENTS
Invest your money in a home, 3%
room frame with garage and 5/8
acre, for $32.50 per month. 2%
miles south of College on Highway
6. Lakeview Acres Addition, Wel
don Wilson.
THE BATTALION
Like the stork is always the first on the scene
when it comes to A & M Campus news
SEND THE BATTALION HOME
THE REMAINDER OF THIS SEMESTER
Only $1.50
i THE BATTALION
I Texas A&M College
College Station, Texas
Please send The Battalion to the following address for the
remainder of this semester. Enclosed is
I Name
Address
City State
Battalion
CLASSIFIED ADS
Page 4
FRIDAY, MARCH 11, 1949
SELL WITH A BATTALION CLASSIFIED
AD. Rates ... 3c a word per insertion
with a 25c minimum. Space rates in
Classified Section . . . 60c per column
inch. Send all classifieds with remit
tance to the Student Activities Office.
All ads should be turned in by 10:00
a.m. of the day before publication.
• BUSINESS SERVICES •
HAVE your themes, thesis, typed by ex
perts. Phone 2-6705. THE SCRIBE
SHOP, 1007 E. 23rd.
• FOR SALE •
FOR SALE—1946 Ford, black, convertible.
Brand new 1949 engine. New top. In
excellent condition. See' at 702 A.A.
E. 26th Street, Bryan.
HOUSE FOR SALE—$1,875.00. Contact
A-7-A. College View.
FOR SALE—Maroon ’47 Ford Tudor Se
dan. Radio, heater, new “Air Ride”
tires. See at B-3-Y, College View, after
5:00 p.m.
FOR SALE—1941 Plymouth, 4-door, very
clean and in excellent condition. Radio,
heater, new paint. Pokes, 423, Dorm 14.
FOR SALE—Trailer L-9, Area 4. Room,
refrigerator, two couches, gas heating
and cooking stoves. $700.00. Reece
Wilburn White free show at Campus.
FOR SALE—Bed, springs, and new mat
tress—$15.00. Couch—$15.00. Apt. 28-
B, Vet Village.
• LOST AND FOUND •
LOST—Brown leather jacket in vicinity of
Physics Bldg, about March 3rd. Quilted
lining. 6-H, Law.
• FOR RENT •
FOR RENT—Nice clean room with adjoin
ing bath. 500 College Main. Phone 4-4819.
FOR THE BEST in . . .
HAMBURGERS.,
Stop by,
NITA’S NEWSSTAND
North Gate
USED CAR
HEADQUARTERS
Your Friendly Ford Dealer
BRYAN MOTOR CO.
N. Main St.
CHIROPRACTOR
Geo. W. Buchanan, D.C.
COLONIC X-RAY
305 E. 28th St.
Phone 2-6243
EXPERT SHOE REPAIRS
While You Wait
Cowboy Boots made to order
JONES BOOT SHOP
Southside
LAUNDER IN LEISURE . . .
LAUNDROMAT EQUIPPED
ONE-HALF HOUR LAUNDRY
—Open Daily 7:30 a.m.—
Last Wash Received—■
Mon. 7:30 p.m.—Sat. 3:30 p.m.
Other days 5:30 p.m.
STARCHING & DRYING
FACILITIES AVAILABLE
White & Wychoff
Monogrammed
Stationery
Names ...
Monograms • • •
Seals • • •
Printed to Order
$1.50 per box
^Jlie ^xchanc^e
Store
“SERVING TEXAS AGGIES”
Don’t Forget the Near By . . .
BETSY ROSS DRESS SHOP
When thinking of clothes for all occasions
HATS — BAGS — JEWELRY
EVENING BAGS
And the Best in Formal Wear
East Gate Next to Fussell’s Open From 9-6
Radio Repair...
... is our specialty
The Radio Shop
One Block west of Post Office on W. 26th St.
“A member of Philco Service”
BRYAN
PHONE 2-2819
COMPLETE REPAIR
... on all makes and models of radios
Also
BATTERIES
FOR YOUR PORTABLE
LI’L ABNER My Memoirs—Chapter Two
By A1 Capp
LI’L ABNER
My Memoirs—Chapter Three
By AI Capp
_, PUFF/S-THAT
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LOVERS NEARLY
MASSACRED ME.V
M ^I'LL READ MY FAN ,
MAIL. THAT'LL TELL
’ ME HOW MUCH
OTHER PEOPLE
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So Bp-1 GIVE UP.Y
THE SHMOOS
WILL RETURN
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THE THIRTEENTH^
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FOR THOSE WHO
DEMAND THE BEST . .
College Shoe Repair
North Gate
CREAMLAND
"To Serve You Better
We Serve You the Best”
101 So. Main, Bryan
New York
Cafe
118 S. MAIN
BRYAN
EYES EXAMINED AND
GLASSES FITTED BY
DR. JOHN S. CALDWELL
—Office—
Caldwell’s Jewelry Store
Bryan, Texas
DOUG’S CAFE
HEY AGGIES!!
College and 27th
The Cadet Cafeteria
Specializing In
OFFERS YOU GOOD FOOD
MEXICAN DISHES
ANYTIME YOU WANT IT!
CHICKEN FRIED STEAK DINNERS
Formerly
AGGIES ALWAYS WELCOME
NISBET’S CAFETERIA
NORTH GATE
C! it « 9
ante.
ahead...
if we all pull together!
• Let’s compare yesterday with today. . N
that will give us an idea of what tomor*
row can be!
. Machine Power: Since 1910 we have increased out
supply of machine power 4J^ times.
Production: Since 1910 we have more than doubled
the output each of us produces for every hour we work.
Income: Since 1910 we have increased our annual in
come from less than $2400 per household to about
$4000 (in dollars of the same purchasing power).
Work Hours: Yet, since 1910 we have cut 18 hours
from our average workweek—equivalent to two pres
ent average workdays.
HOW have we achieved all this? Through the
American kind of teamwork! And what is teamwork?
American teamwork is management that pays
reasonable wages and takes fair profits—that pro*
vides the best machines, tools, materials an4
working conditions it possibly can—that seeks
new methods, new markets, new ideas; that bar*
gains freely and fairly with its employees.
Our teamwork is labor that produces as ef&»
ciently and as much as it can—that realizes its
standard of living ultimately depends upon how
much America produces—that expects be tter wages
as it helps increase that production.
Teamwork is simply working together to
turn out more goods in fewer man-hours—mak
ing things at lower costs and paying higher
wages to the people who make them and selling
them at lower prices to the people who use them.
What we’ve already accomplished is just a fore
taste of what we can do. It’s just a start toward a
goal we are all striving to reach: better housing,
clothing, food, health, education, with ever greater
opportunities for individual development. Sure,
our American System has its faults. We all know
that. We still have sharp ups and downs in price#
and jobs. We’ll have to change that—and we will!
It will continue to take teamwork, but if we
work together, there’s no limit on what we
can all share together of even greater things.
THE BETTER WE PRODUCE
THE BETTER WE LIVE
What we have already
accomplished is just a
foretaste of w hat we
can do—if we continue
| to work together.
Approved for the
PUBLIC POLICY COMMITTEE of The Advertising Council
by:
EVANS CLARK, Executive Director, Twentieth Century Fund BORIS SHISHKIN, Economist, American Federation of Labor PAUL G. HOFFMAN, Formerly President, Studebaker Corp.
Published in the Public Interest by:
THE PURE OIL COMPANY
General Offices, Chicago