The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, July 10, 1951, Image 4

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    Page 4
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Tuesday, July 10, 1951 * *
To Wed Henry W. Engelbrecht
0
Dan Walkers Live
In College View
Miss Frances Simek
To Marry Wednesday
Miss Frances Jane Simek and
Henry W. Engelbrecht Jr., will be
married Wednesday morning at 8
o’clock in the American Lutheran
Church. The Rev. Swygart will
officiate.
Miss Simek is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Simek. She is
a graduate of Consolidated High
School where she was head yell
leader during her senior year.
She finished high school in ’50
and attended Southwest Texas
State Teachers College in San
Marcos where she was a business
major. Presently she is employed
Dr. Carlton R. Lee
OPTOMETRIST
203 S. Main Street
Call 2-1662 for Appointment
as a secretary in the Physical Ed
ucation Department.
Engelbrecht, whose parents are
Mr. and Mrs. Henry W. Engel
brecht, was graduated from A&M
on June 1 in horticulture. He was
a lieutenant in A Comp, and was
active in sports. He received a re
serve commission in the Army and
expects his call this month into
active service. He is also a grad
uate of Consolidated High School.
The bride-elect will be manned
in a white linen and lace dress.
She will carry white flowers and
her other accessories will be white.
Miss Margie Parker will be maid
of honor and Billy Burkhalter will
serve the bridegroom as best man.
A wedding breakfast for mem
bers of the family and the bridal
party will follow the wedding. The
bride-elect’s parents will be hosts
for the breakfast at their home on
Highway 6.
New residents of College View,
apartment B-18-W, are Mr. and
Mrs. Dan Moody Walker who were
married Saturday at the Calvary
Baptist church in Bryan. The
bride is the former Miss Maurice
Taylor, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
A. L. Taylor of Bryan. Her hus
band’s parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Dawson Walker of Palestine.
Mrs. Walker was given in mar
riage by her brother-in-law Wil
liam Lanehart. She wore a gown
of white organdy over taffeta
fashioned with a very full skirt, a
fitted bodice and low off-the-shoul-
der neckline. The neckline was
trimmed with wide bands of em
broidered insertion and the same
insertion was used as panels in the
skirt.
The Rev. R. L. Herring, Jr., of
ficiated at the double ring serv-
Recent Grad,
Bride to Live
In Milwaukee
On July 1 in tne garden at the
home of her parents, Miss Har-
inett Holland was married to Don
ald L. Rogers, recent graduate of
Texas A&M College.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Holland
are the bride’s parents and Mr.
and Mrs. J. E. Rogers are the
bridegroom’s parents.
The Rev. Patrick Henry Jr., of
ficiated for the ceremony. Miss
Caroline Day and John Bumstead
provided the nuptial music.
Miss Pat Jones was maid of
honor. Bridesmaids were Mrs.
Ralph Knight, Mrs. Robert B. Hol
land, Jr., Miss Jo Ann Whittle,
Miss Virginia Buettner and Miss
Diane Truett.
Jerry Rogers was his brother’s
best man. Groomsmen and ushers
were Robert B. Holland Jr., Buddy
Porter, Robert Payne, Archie
Crumpton, Richard Long and
George Charlton.
Assisting in the garden recep
tion which followed the ceremony
were Mrs. L. B. Hughes, Mrs. D.
W. Clark, Mrs. W. K. Strother and
Mrs. Arthur Voekel.
Mrs. Rogers is a graduate of
Hockaday School and attended
Southern Methodist University
where she was a Kappa Alpha
Theta.
Don received his degree in EE
in June. He was a member of
Tau Beta Pi, Phi Eta Sigma and
the American Institute of Electri
cal Engineers.
ice. Miss Kathleen Akin and Miss
Margaret Ann Holbrook provided
the wedding music.
Miss Nadine Taylor was her sis
ter’s maid of honor. She wore an
ice blue organdy dress over taf
feta fashioned on similar lines as
that of the bridal gown. Identical
gowns were worn by the brides
maids, Mrs. Thomas Shipley and
Miss Edith Wilson.
Barbara Lanehart, the bride’s
niece, was flower girl, and Jim
mie Meads was ring bearer.
Walter Vetterick of San Antonio
was best man. Ushers were Felix
Goodrum and J. C. Giraurd.
Mrs. Walker is a graduate of
lola high school and attended Mc-
Kenzie-Baldwin Business College
and Hardin - Simmons University.
Mr. Walker graduated from Pal
estine High School and plans to
graduate from A&M in August.
When the couple left for a wed
ding trip to South Texas, Mrs.
Walker wore a sheath dress of
navy cotton topped with a white
jacket. With it she wore white lin
en opera pumps, a white hat and
other accessories of white. Her
corsage was a gold throated white
orchid.
Fox-Campbell
Set Wedding
For August 3
New College Station- residents
in the Fall will be Miss Nancy Vir
ginia Campbell and Gus M. Fox
who will be married on August 3.
The engagement was announced
this past weekend in Dallas by
Mr. and Mrs. John F. Campbell,
parents of the bride-to-be.
At a buffet supper on Saturday
in the Campbell home, the future
wedding date was revealed. A
miniature wedding party surround
ed by pink and blue sweetpeas on
a reflector centered the buffet ta
ble.
Daisies, gladioli, zinnias and
stock were used in the reception
suite. Twenty-two guests attend
ed the betrothal party.
The wedding is scheduled for
the E. P. Turner Clubhouse. Mrs.
Bobby L. Caldwell will be her
cousin’s marton of honor. Miss
Mary Lou Arnold will be brides
maid and Martha Francis Tucker
will be flower girl.
The bridegroom-to-be’s attend
ants will be Aggies Choyse Hall,
David Behne and Dale George.
For the convenience of our College Station
customers, we are opening our SALE at our
College Store .... with the following out
standing values:
SLACKS
yi off
STRAW HATS
$1.00
SOX
49c _ 4 for $1.49
TIES
89c _ 2 for $1.39
SWIM TRUNKS
V2 Price
“T” SHIRTS
69 c - 2 f° r 99 c
SPORT SHIRTS
$2.89
SWIM TRUNKS &
SPORT SHIRT SETS
KNIT-BOTTOM
PULLOVERS
y 3 off
$1.89-2 for $2-89
SEERSUCKER
SPORT SHIRTS
$2.39 _ 4 for $8-88
ODDS & ENDS
SHIRTS
$1.49
REGULAR
“T” SHIRTS
Fancy - off
“"(OokUtyp
& co.
HENS CLOTHIN« SINCE IS4S
At Our College Store Only
The Last Word
On Brides, Grooms
And Other People
By VIVIAN CASTLEBERRY
Battalion Women’s Editor
T^O BE residents of College Station in September are Mr. and
-l Mrs. Jack Pearce who were married recently in Trinidad,
Texas. Jack, a graduate of Arlington State College, will en
roll in A&M in the Fall. His wife, the former Miss Bobbie
Lynette King, will be an attractive addition to the young mar
ried set. . . . Mr. and Mrs. Paul R. Ellis, Jr., who were mar
ried June 30, are at home in Dallas where Paul is a junior at
Southwestern School of Medicine. The bride is from Galveston
and her husband’s parents live in Sherman. Paul is a ’48 pre-
med graduate of A&M.
Honeymooning in Cuba and Guatemala following their
marriage recently are Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Katten. The bride
was Doris Quicksilver. Her husband, Edwin, is a ’46 grad
af A&M in ME . . . Ruby Mae Dickenson and William Glenn
McDaniel, ’44, ChE., were recently wed in Corpus Christi. The
bride is a graduate of Del Mar College. After a wedding trip
to Mexico, the couple is at home in Houston.
Civil engineering graduate James Webb Burks, Jr., '50, and Miss
Katherine Hailey will be married August 18 in Dallas. The wedding-
will be in the Gaston Avenue Baptist Church.
Mr. and Mrs. David Chicotsky will be at home in Fort Worth
following a wedding trip to New York City. David, Aggie grad, and
Jennie Cobbel were married Sunday afternoon in Fort Worth. . . .
Mary Margaret Meacham of Smithfield will be married to John E.
Washburn, ’44 Aero, on August 20. John is a resident of Cleburne.
Earle and Sarah Anne Stanford were married in Cleburne
Saturday. He is a graduate of A&M, ’46, EE. His bride, the
former Miss Kimbro, is~a graduate of Texas Wesleyan
College. The couple will live in Galveston.
Lt. and Mrs. Horace S. Goswick are at home in Killeen
where Lt. Goswick is stationed following their recent
marriage in Dallas. The bride was Mary Lon Wood. Her
husband is a ’49 M. E. graduate of A&M.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph R. Lloyd Jr. will live in Houston
when they return from a wedding trip to the Ozark moun
tains and to New Orleans. Ralph is a ’45 entomology grad
and his bride, the former Marjorie Jones, is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. George H. Jones of McKinney.
A Bryan ceremony Saturday evening united Lorene Law
and Lt. Donald F. Carroll in marriage. The bride attended
North Texas and Don was graduated from A&M in January.
Lt. and Mrs. Carroll will be at home in San Angelo where he
is stationed at Goodfellow Air Force Base. .. . Glorianne Wil
son and George H. Rice Jr. will be married August 18 at the
First Baptist Church in College Station. The bride-elect is a
graduate of Consolidated High School and is a junior student
at Baylor University. George graduated from A&M in ’49.
No bride-to-be we’ve met recently is any more excited over
the wedding presents that come in as bridegroom-to-be Dave Cos-
lett. Daily he receives letters from his fiancee, Marilyn Bowden, in
Ballinger telling him of the parties and showers she’s being given.
She pends lists of the presents and Dave proudly displays them
claiming, “I now own half interest in an electric toaster,” or two
more pastel sheets, or another piece of silver, or a pyrex baking
dish. . . . Petite auburn-haired Marilyn, a former teacher in Miles
High School, is being showered abundantly with wedding presents.
We can’t help but feel a little sorry for Dave-who isn’t there to
admire each gift as it comes in. Half of the thrill of getting married,
according,to our own better-half, was in tearing the wrappings from
the presents as they arrived. And he always felt cheated when our girl
friends gave a party and had us open the presents on the spot.
It was, after all, his wedding, too, he insisted and he should be
able to open his share of the packages. . . . Dave and Marilyn will be
married on August 4 in the Ballinger Methodist Church.
HE HAS SOMETHING THERE. Recently, according to
the way the story goes, the Army has been making an
attempt to keep together in service brothers who wish it.
Not so long ago the “top-kick” was lecturing a group of
new recruits. After he had indoctrinated them into Army
know-how, he asked “Anybody here who has a brother
he’d like to be with?” From the back of the room a hand
was raised. “Where is your brother?” the sergeant
wanted to know. “He’s home,” came the reply.
The recruit, the story goes, is still serving on K. P.
A recent visitor to Aggieland was 16-year-old Jane Skeen from
Los Angeles, California, who came to visit her sister and brother-in-
law, Joy and Cleon Bellamy in Munnerlyn Village. Jane’s visit was a
short one, but she managed in the time she was here to leave a few
Aggies sighing. . . . From near Hillsboro comes pretty high-schooler
Nancy Porter to visit with her sister, Dorothy Copeland. Attractive
brunette Nancy will be a College Station visitor for the next two or
three weeks.
Pretty bride-to-be Frances Simek
and her fiance, Henry Engelbrecht
had quite a time getting their ro
mance underway. They grew up
close together and both graduated
from Consolidated High School.
Only drawback was that Henry
was four years older than Frances
and when one is quite young four
years is a big, big difference.
RADIOS & REPAIRING
Call For and Delivery
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ANTHROPOLOGY. Outline of General
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USE BATTALION CLASSIFIED ADS TO
BUT, SELL, RENT OR TRADE. Rates
. ... 3c a word per insertion with a
!5c minimum. Space rate in classified
lection .... 60c per column-inch. Send
111 classified to STUDENT ACTIVITIES
OFFICE. All ads must be received in Stu-
ient Activities office by 10 a.m. on the
lay before publication.
• HOME REPAIR •
ALL TYPES home repair work—additions,
roofing, siding, painting, concrete work,
and redecorating. Low down payment
and 30 months to pay. For free esti
mates call 4-9589 or 4-4236.
• FOR SALE •
PRE-WAR BOOTS, 12C, Large calf; 2
pairs boot pants, approximately 34-36
waist; boot hooks; all for $40. Ross
Meredith, ’42, 3703 Kerbey Lane, Austin.
BABY BATHINETTE. Excellent Con
dition. Phone 4-4489.
N I- C E L Y FURNISHED duplex, newly
painted. Private baths and double ga
rage. Near Campus. Also record player.
Phone 4-9428.
FOR SALE—Several head of range cows,
all have calves. Steve Andert, 8 miles east
of Bryan on Highway 21. Call after 5 p.m.
• WANTED TO BUY •
USED BABY STROLLER. Phone 4-4433.
USED CLOTHES and shoes, men’s —
women’s — and children’s. Curtains,
spreads, dishes, cheap furniture. 602
N. Main, Bryan, Texas.
• LOST •
BLACK key case with keys near North
Gate post office. Finder please leave
at Post Office window or Box 1331.
• HELP WANTED •
BATTALION Circulation Manager. See
Roland Bing, Room 211 Goodwin Hall.
• MISCELLANEOUS •
FREE termite inspection and estimate.
International Exterminators Corporation
Power spraying for flies, mosquitoes, and
other pests. Phone 2-1937.
Official Notice
NOTICE TO AGRICULTURAL STUDENTS
The Extension Service has announced
that, in the future, all prospective county
agents will be required to have credit
for Ag.Ed. 441 and Psychology 301 or
303. Students who plan to seek employ
ment with the Extension Service on grad
uation should plan to include these two
courses In their program.
Chas. N. Shepardson
Dean of Agriculture
Summer students to be graduated at the
end of either six weeks terms are remind
ed that July 20, 1951, is the last day on
which they may order graduation an
nouncements.
Walton D. Hardesty, Bus. Mgr.
Student Activities
Graduate students bring your course of
study to registration with you on July 16.
Ide, P. Trotter, Dean.
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
The Board of Trustees of the A. & M.
Consolidated Independent School District
will receive competitive sealed bids for the
erection of a five classroom Elementary
School and Cafeteria on the Jersey Street
Campus and a two room Negro Science
Building at the Lincoln School Campus
until 3:00 P.M., July 31, 1951 in the
Library of the A. & M. Consolidated High
School on Jersey Street. A
Plans and specifications will be avail*}
able after July 10, 1951 at the office
the Architects, Paul G. Silber & Company,
1919 Cinncinnati, San Antonio, on deposit
of $30.00.
All bids must be submitted on forms
prepared and supplied by the Architects.
A certified check or bid bond made
able to the Board of Trustrees
A. & M. Consolidated Independent School
District in the sum of $2,000.00 for the
Elementary School and Cafeteria, and
$500.00 for the Negro Science Building
must accompany bid on the general con
tract, $500.00 on the Plumbing and Heat
ing, $250.00 on the Electric Wiring and
$400.00 on the Kitchen Equipment.
The Board of Trustees reserves the right
to accept any and reject any or all bids.
Signed:
L. S. RICHARDSON, Supt.
A. & M. Consolidated Schools
pay-
F the
NENA ANN HARRIS, M. D.
announces the opening of her office
above Aggieland Pharmacy, North
Gate, College Station. Practice
limited to infants and children.
Hours, 10-12 a.m. — 2-5 p.m.
Office Ph.: 4-9052 Home Ph.: 2-7708
SAFE-T-WAY TAXI
Phone 2-1400
Can we afford to face the future with Federal
Government in a snarl? Here’s howjyow can help
finish the job of cutting the red tape, and
waste that threaten our National Security!
In 1947 the bipartisan Hoover Commission uncovered
shocking conditions of confusion and waste in our
Federal Government. To correct these conditions, the
Commission outlined in its famous Report a series of
measures for reorganization.
Today, 50% of the Hoover Report recommendations
have been enacted into law. A big start has been made
in the important job of modernizing our government
machinery. Waste has been cut by billions of dollars.
Now the rest of the Hoover Report recommendations
are before Congress. Only through their passage can we .
reach the goal: a government in fighting trim to face 1
any eventuality—billions of dollars saved.
Here’s what you can do. Send today for the FREE
booklet, "Will We Be Ready?” This booklet gives the *
story behind the Hoover Report-the facts it disclosed
—the progress it has made. With it you’ll be well pre
pared to work for better government-to help finish a r
job on which our National Security may depend.
The Hoover Commission and The Citizens Committee
for the Hoover Report.
The Hoover Commission was ere- — . f
ated unanimously by Congress in C vviPIldCU
1947 on a bipartisan basis—6 I
Democrats, 6 Republicans. The *
Citizens Committee is a bipartisan,
non-profit group to encourage
enactment of Hoover Report rec
ommendations for greater effi
ciency in theFederal Government.
TEAR OUT COUPON TO REMIND YOURSELF TO
GET THIS FREE BOOKLET WITHOUT FAIL
Hoover Report, Box 659, Philadelphia, Pa.
I WANT TO LEARN more about how I can work for "better
government at a better price.” Please send me your free binarman
booklet "Will We Be Ready?” Bipartisan
Name—
Address.
This advertisement published in the nation’s interest by
THE EXCHANGE STORE
“Serving Texas Aggies”
The Battalion
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