i r/T ■ “s • ! ' 1 ^ ' ■ : 'r ’ll'.** !l f ■ m ^ Vl\ • Si VI ■ • • • , ' i-|i ! j-: i'r ' > j;. ■j JJ 1 'V /i - ilk V If; ( V * , .V •H . • fir ; ; ( , ? V;-' V ¥ fL ■'t': v RA u»cd by| Boriskin ntent, qx .w URRICANE-HUNTER . . : . Mobile radar unit received from Army surplus will be &M Research Foundation to track hurricanes along Gulf Co#st this summer. B. B. f the A&M physisc department, and A. £. Salis of the electrical engineering depart- equipment with which they will'test feasibility of charting hurricane paths by radar. .'/;r ■ THE BATTALION Page 4 j THURSDAY, MARCH 17,1949 /i ; -4. I... BP|, MADISONVILLE, Texas—UP)—Are you a weather beaten old cowboy who really took a weather beating this Winter? ■’h/; . t . f ; If so, podner, ’light and listen. This is your chance to win a free trip to (ugh) Texas. N Send no box tops. This is the*”" v ■■ ■••••' •' < annual contest of the famed Mad- isonville Sidewalk Cattlemen’s As sociation, the outfit that regu lates boot-wearing in Madison county. You can’t come around Madison county in hoots unless you own cattle. Fellows that break this law get dipped in one of two horse troughs on the shady court house square of this East Texas town/ Vi "We dipped a few strarwers the other day/’ Dr. J. P. Heath, presi dent of the ilsociation said today. "Needed potH troughs." Lata year the association held a contest to pick the out-of-state war veteran who hated Texas most. Ray Halloran of Cincinnati won and/was feted all over the Lone ■ State. When he was safe back e he said he hadn’t changed is Blind. This year, |the cattlemen are look ing for the most weathebeaten cowboy in the United States. “We heard all about those bliz zards they had through the west,” said the tall, booted. Dr. ellath. “We figured to give some pore old cowboy who fought snowdrifts all winter a real sunny vacation.” “We’ll fly him to .Texas and see that he gets around the state. We will set him up with some high- cotton entertainment. He’ll be hon or-guest at our annual barbecue June 2.” So just write, your hard-winter story to Dr. Heath, attaching your picture. *•* \ But get this: “We don’t Want slicker cowboys from New York, Boston or Cleveland,” said the doc tor. “The winner has to ride in our annual rodeo and if Ke can’t ride we don’t pay his way home.” Thfe cattlemen are also flying Miss BeBe Shopp of Minnesota, the current Miss America, to Mad- isonville for their rodeo. “We don’t care if she can ride or not,” Dr. Heath said. \ % ■i . \ AUSTIlJ, Tox.—MP) —Just like Jesse James sajd, seardhers found no treasure near Zanesville, Ohio, yesterday. ! I A man here who claims to be the famed train robber of the 1870s and 1880s, sboffed early yesterday when told that a group was hunting for a Jesse James cache near Zanesville. The,man is listed as Frank Dalton. And just like Dalton—or James —said, the people at Zanesville did not find any treasure. The mine detector they used didn’t even op erate when it got to the area. John s Trahimel, who claims to be, 109 years old and a former slave, had a ready explanation for re porters who wondered What hap pened to: the mine detector. “James, told his hoys that some day they’ll have a gadget to find buried treasure," Trammel s&id. “He told them that he’d bury the treasure so no gadget would ever find it.” , Thq group started the hunt yes terday , in an area where James reportedly cached $1,500,000 in stolen wealth. Yesterday, the Austin man pre dicted they wouldn’t find the cache. Until recently, Dalton ha? been on the - Texas Confederate veteran pension rolls as Frank Dalton, but asserts he is really Jesse James. Dalton returned to Lawton, Okla. several months ago and was au^ tomatically dropped frojm the as Confederate pension list he left Texas. He came back here to yisjf/ fela tives and became ill with /pneumo nia. He was under an oxygen tent at Breckenridge hospital yesterday but still was lively enough to scoff at the treasure hunters. Ex-Convict to Til OKLAHOMA CITY, March 16- i/pi—The defense opened its main legal batteries yesterday to shVe Roy Frank God bey from death in the electric chair. The 53-year-old ex-convict’s law yer conceded he shot down At torney Earl Pruqt last January. But they contend he was out of his mind at the time, brooding and embittered by a false imprison ment of 17 years, j /' Their insanity defense gave the trial unusual speed as there was almost no cross-examination of $1 witnesses. , The trial opened Monday morn- i(ig. A jury qualified for the death penalty was cpmp)eb?d by 2 p. tn, County Attorney Danville Scan- land rested his ^ase with a de mand for the ^hair earljy enough to give the defense an hour for open ing arguments ,before the over night recess, Godbey has admitted walkir into Pruet's law office in the $: iitory First National Building (in January 11 and pumping four ir’i bi Marlines, al ju bullets Into t^e lawyer’s tack.: Cbji- 1 Force. bey walked out u caped in a awr captured a week later i .Texas.! ! : ■ V Pruet was Jeff tiorhey at Wauritti/] and Godbey clatiped “railroaded” him _'to robbery e whs penitentiary) and carried thj^at Godbey s the man h him. He itenti A pn X : Miss Be . duchess fpf the the Cotton PageSih meeting, Ralph Duk dent, announced * A ijfCW fresl burg, will fane / image >anel :M and TS ' /, - f fro >e the tbpic for to be held by students at TSC 1 *$’ «»»• tobacco picks you up wh#n you’re -mild, ripe, light tobacco. No wonder more indepen- I ■ 1 : j - ..i i..t . 1 Li . A . {./>. . i. the Lucky level! That’s why it’s so important houaemen—amoke Luckiee regularly than the next two ejinber that Lucky Strike Means Fine Tobacco leading brands combined! Get a carton of Luckies today! H " /, J . ' ! Be Grtton Duchess Florence Arney, T'KCW setnior, from Marhn/wus chosen by mcm- berk of/the Falli/ County A&M Club «/ Cotton /Pageant Duqhoss lust week, j ^ John E. Sildey, aenldr agrleul- tural education student from Lott, will escort Miss Arney. On March 17, the club will meet in Room 228, Aeaedthic Building, before going out for a barbecue supper. Club president Herbert Radle announced that time for the meeting will be 7:30. AGGIES / & VETERANS For that Spring After noon Picnic — or a Quick Meal in Your . Room . . . Let Youngbloods sMve your food problems . -. We are Prepared to Serve in a box to go ONE WHOLE FRIED CHICKEN Toast - Salad - French Fries $1.70 W FRIED CHICKEN Toast - Salad - French Fries 85c i\ t • j it (Youngbloods Frosted Fryers) ( JUMBO FRENCH FRIED SHRIMP Toast - French Fries Sauce $1.70 - 85c BONELESS HICKORY SMOKED BARBECUE $1.25 lb. Barhenia HandulchcN \ Potato China All (/old Drinks to Take Out NO PICNIC TOO LARGE OR rf and three) Tessi in this pinel di it held Annually. Mattie L. VVcoten, head' of t) rsCW Sqcidlbgy Department,, at Daniel Russell df the Agiricultur Economics Anil 'Sociology Depai ment of A&M ujre the yponson this iwiMkri The girls Vhc will participate the dlscuissibh ure Kathleen Re of 01ney t Chriutlne Peterman i Dallas, and 1 1Jtan Kimbrough u.u„. , / T The AggUW Vho will take m In the nejncl are Boh Smith, wa, mmKlaX, John Juchunau, and ” Wbjmand ' | n]hi it''/l! COLLEGE STATION Free DeHve —^Delivery Hoi 10 a.m. — 4 p.m. Specials for iFri S' Swift’s Processed American CHEESE. .. i •f 1 i • • Ground Veal—With Pork for A.A. Grade Loin Steak. /..lb. 65||| Cut All Green Spears 2 Pfcnic Cans 37 c i Hours— - 6:30 p.i ■VJ I l ox. 67^ Armoujr’s—T- 12-oz. Can TREE! . . r. I. Have a Sample; Bei c Happy Host—No. 2 1 /L> Cans—In Syrup g ) Peaches . . . 2 cans , Whote jjlpicedl. r 1 Libby’S Pineapple—No. 2 C^ns Juicle . . . . 2cans G i : .ii tri i -17-ox. Capi i | • • .1 cans lb 49c 37 i •: • 3uy _ j QUARTS . It59« ! 5 Flavorp [Per Pkg. 5c Sour cjr, Dill—Diamond Bra[nd Pickles . . . V0RY SOAP Large — 1 Regular — 1 Guest All Three for 30c t : ited—No. 2 shed or Slic id cans 63c If. cans 3lc ,1 Cream 59c le—No. 2 Cans . 2 'Cans can 9 ^ . So round, so firm, so fully poefcod — so free and easy on the draw -KB AMERICAN TOBACCO COMR.'.'.'T