Page 4 THE BATTALION Thursday, January 24, 1952 Coca-Cola is the answer to thirst. If you’re digging a well or boning up for exams- keep fresh for the job. Have a Coke. According to Plautuo It is wretclieJ ousiness to te Jigging a well just as tkirst is mastering you. Moslcllaria BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY The Bryan Coca-Cola Bottling Company "Coke" is a registered trade-mark. © 1952, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY Specials for Thurs. P.M., Fri., and Sat., Jan. 24 - 26 YOU WILL FIND IT FUN TO TRY TO BE THE DAILY LUCKY CUSTOMER EVERY DAY, for an indefinite time, some CASH customer of ours will find waiting for her FREE an amount of extra goods equal to the amount bought on the winning ticket. Simply SAVE ALL YOUR CASH REGISTER RECEIPTS, and WITH-IN SEVEN DAYS come in and com pare your ticket numbers with the winning numbers that are posted EACH DAY in the store. No blanks. No trouble. No red tape. No added cost. Details are displayed in the store. Winners the first week include Mrs. E. C. Cuhningham, $15.77, and Mrs. Dale Honeycutt, $9.90’, and Capt. T. V. McGannon, $1.70. (Average value of winning tickets $9.12). • FRESH FRUITS & • VEGETABLES Imperial Valley Calif—No. 6 LETTUCE . . per head 5e Green Heads—Texas CABBAGE .... peril). 7c 1 '/•[ Lb. Cello Bags—Fancy CARROTS bag 15c Large Size Florida AVOCADOS . . . each l()c F’ancy Bell—Green PEPPERS .... per lb. 29c Fresh Bunches RADISHES.... bunch 5c Fresh GrCen ONIONS hunch 5c WE HAVE ONION PLANTS AND NO. 1 CALIF. POTATOES • MARKET SPECIALS • Decker’s Tall Korn Breakfast SLICED BACON . . lb. 39c F’rom Choice Heavy Vealers ROUND STEAK . . lb. 99c Choice Veal POT ROAST . . . . lb. 69c Loin End F’resh PORK CHOPS . . . lb. 49c F’resh Tasty Tender CALF LIVER . . . lb. 79c Hormcl Pure Meat FRANKS . lb. 55c Fresh Select OYSTERS . pint 89c Armour’s Star—Pure—1 Lb. Rolls PORK SAUSAGE ... 39c ® GROCERY SPECIALS • Imperial Cane Sugar 5 lbs. 45c — REPEATED BY POPULAR REQUEST — You Will Be Pleasantly Surprised If You Haven’t Tried This Lately. SANITARY PASTEURIZED Milk-i/ 2 Gal. ... 2 for 79c (Limit 2—Plus Bottle Deposits.) Campbell s CREAM OF PER CAN Mushroom Soup . . . . 15c Campbell’s Chicken Gumbo can 15c Swift’s Jewel or Mrs. Tucker’s—Carton Shortening ... 3 lbs. 79c Sunshine—1 Lb. Box Krispy Crackers .... 29c Fclger’s (Limit One) Coffee lb. 79c Popular Brands Cigarettes . . . carton $1.99 Guaranteed to Please—Kimbell’s Besl Flour 10 lbs. 79c Bring Us the Coupon Appearing in Bryan Eagle. PILLSBURY’S—With Coupon Flour .5 lbs. 31c (WITHOUT COUPON . . 5 LBS. 46c) I Can Makes 9 Quarts TNT Popcorn . . . can 15c The Only Brand We Carry That is Labeled Extra Fancy—Orange Pekoe & Pekoe LB. McCormick’s Tea . . . . 23c Kraft’s Table Grade Parkay Oleo .... lb. 29c Made of Pure Sweet Cream—Meadowgold Butter lb. 95c ® FROZEN FOODS • Strawberries . 3 pkgs. $1,00 12-oz. Honor Brand Honor Brand Baby Limas .... pkg. 28c Honor Brand Ford Hook Limas. pkg. 28c 6-oz. Snow Crop Orange Juice . . 2 cans 35c Snow Crop or Honor Brand Broccoli pkg. 29c 15’s Patio Tortillas pkg. 19c Pets Go for Hills Horsemeat . . lb. pkg. 20c We Reserve the Right to Limit All Quantities Southside Food Market SAVE ALL YOUR CASH-REGISTER RECEIPTS. EVERY DAY WILL BE DOUBLE-VALUE DAY FOR ONE OF OUR CUSTOMERS Artists Series Will Hear Trio The Concert Trio will pre sent the third program of the Bryan Artists Series Tuesday, Jan. 29, at Stephen F. Austin auditorium. The trio is composed of Bill Palmer and Bill Hughes, accord ionists, and Len Manno, bass vio linist. The accordions used in the trio have an extended bass designed by Palmer which enables the trio to play selections from Bach, Bee thoven, Schumann, and Prokofiev, almost as the original score is written. Single admission tickets will be sold at this concert. A special price to students and adults of $1.20 will be made for this pro gram only, announces Mrs. R. H. Harrison, chairman of the Bryan Artists Series board. Ag Graduates Find College Profitable , I% es I 11 ™ 1 ™* 1 il 1 l .° 1 ne P cr Seniors! Increased inner satis* cent a n fatal motor vehicle acci- factions from Post Graduation dents\last year. Studies. Hubbies Guests At Club Dinner Roy Snyder, of the animal hus bandry department, demonstrated the proper methods of carving tur key and ham to about 146 people at a dinner given by the Foods Group of the A&M Social Club honoring the members husbands recently at the Educational Building of the A&M Presbyterian Church. Smoked turkey and baked ham with green beans, potato salad, vegetable salad, buttered bread, coffee and apple pit with cheese balls were served buffet style. Mrs. Armstrong Pri Sefjwas host ess, and Mrs. John Rbj d| and Mrs. R. W. Carpenter were! michairmen. Resident Dies J. L. Moore, ’26, died at his home in Clovis, N. Mi, Saturday morning. Services wefe held at Coolidge Monday. He was a brother of Mrs. C. W. Crawford, whose husband is head of the mechanical engineering de partment at A&M. Moore was a businessman at Clovis for a number of yeari and a native of Rosebud, Texas. 'He was connected with the Soil Con servation Service and the Exten sion Service for some years prior to going into business in Clovis. He was 51 years of age. Ever since there has been an agricultural colege, people have been asking these two questions: 1. “Why go to college to learn to farm?” 2. “Why do agricultural grad uates not iro back to the farm?” For the first time an attempt has been made to find a reasonably accurate answer. That answer is contained in a bulletin of A&M en titled “A Study of the Agricultural Graduates of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas.” Its author is Charles N. Shepardson, dean of the school of agriculture. Questionnaire To ferret out the facts and fig ures, Dean Shepardson mailed a questionnaire in April, 1950, to the 4,702 A&M agricultural graduates whose current addresses were available. By Sept. 1 replies had been received from 1,927 graduates —about 41 per cent of those to whom the questionnaire was mail ed. The replies seem to constitute the best answers available to the age-old questions. The answers are: 1. It is profitable to go to col lege to learn to fai'in. A&M grad uates now engaged in full-time farming reported an average an nual income of $8,450 as compared to the $2,800 average for all Texas farmers. 2. The majority do go back to the farm as owners or operators as soon as they can accumulate sufficient capital to make this pos sible. Of the group answering the questionnaire, 44.1 per cent are farm owners or operators. The per centage is lower in the group of recent graduates and increases to 68.2 per cent in the group who graduated before 1920. Capital Big Drawback The graduates reported their greatest hinderance to progress as being lack Of capital, lack of ex perience and inadequate training and vocational indecision, in that order. The greatest benefits received from their college training, were listed as technical foundation, abil ity to find information, practical training and development of self- confidence. A large percentage of the agri cultural graduates of A&M contin ue in some phase of agricultural work, with more than two-thirds of them ultimately becoming farm or ranch owners or operators. Your spotted, dirty clothes are returned to original newness by . . . Campus Cleaners • Over Exchange Store • Next to College Laundry • New Dorm Area YOU MAY BE LEFT OUT I IN THE COLD! Shaffer’s Layaway Plan Will Change All This. Yojfr books are packaged and waiting for you when •yo| return for next semester. No strain. No pain. Jjpt fill in the coupon below and take it to Shaffer’s Book Store. Shaffer’s Book Store North Gate SEND IN YOUR LAYAWAY COUPON NOW Title of Book Author MSC To Hold Smorgasbord Smorgasbord-MSC is on the menu again Saturday night at the MSC, today said Miss Teresa Tun- nell, food service director. Serving hours are from 6-8 p. m., Jan. 26. Reservations are being taken now, said Miss Tunnell. She urges diners to call 4-5124 and ask for “Miss Smorgasbord”. This will in sure against disappointment, she continued. Reservations are $2 per person. Smorgasbord-MSC is planned as a regular Saturday night event for the spring semester. So round, so firm, so fully \>acVed, So filled with quality'. Verse Recitation Scheduled by Club Mrs. W. H. Delaplane, College Station, will present a program on Emily Dickinson and her poetry at the A&M Social Club meeting, Fri day at 3 p. m. in the ballroom of the MSC. Carl Best, of the Stephen F. Austin Senior High School in Bry an, will sing several selections. Mrs. L. R. Spence is chairman of the Hostess Committee. Others on the committee include Mesdames W. H. Holzmann, Howard Badgett, P. K. Leighton, John Hill, W. C. Freeman, Cody Wells, Wallace Locke, A. C. Baker, E. N. Pianta, Clifford R. Barth, H. W. Gooding, and Charles F. Williams. Erna Bergmann City College of New York lucky! LUCKIES TASTE BETTER! It takes fine tobacco to give you a better tasting cigarette. And Lucky Strike means fine tobacco. But it takes some thing else, too—superior workmanship. You get fine, light, mild, good-tasting tobacco in the better-made cigarette. i»o-huea with quanty i TWs Lucky Strike the wodds best smoke, That’s why Luckies taste better So Be The cigarette for me 1 tt ^ ate ucuu. ou, dc Happy-GoLucky! Get a carton toda^ LnUttf ti iokfe And utu* taste; , U '’ d - terrific news cant he suppressed- It's there for all to see; for those who want the best in Smokes# Its L.S.f fA.F.T. H. F. Krackenberger North Carolina State College Alan B. Wood University of Pennsylvania ls./m.ft- Ludcy Strike Means Fine Tobacco PHODUC