The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 10, 1952, Image 4

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    Friday, Octaner 30, 1952
Page 4 THE BATTALION _
College Station’s
Church Schedule
“A Religion That Matters” rs
the topic of the sermon to be de
livered by the Rev. Noianan Ander
son, pastor, at 11 a. m. at the A&M
Presbyterian Church Sunday.
Church School will begin at 9:4. r )
a. m.
Kirby Page, nationally known
Christian youth leader, will speak
at an open meeting in the sanctu
ary at 6:30 p. m.
First Baptist Church
The Rev. R. D. Longshore, pas
tor, will deliver the sermon entitl
ed “The Thithe Belongs To Cod”
at tthe worship service of the
First Baptist Church Sunday. Sun
day School will begin at 9:40 a.
m.
The training union will meet at
6:15 p. m. and will be followed
by the evening worship service at
7:15 p. m.
Bethel Lutheran Church
The Rev. T. J. Klenk, missionary
among the Negroes in Dallas, will
speak at the worship services of
the Bethel Lutheran Church Sun
day. Sunday morning the service
begins at 10:45 and Sunday even
ing at 7:30 p. m. The Rev. Wil
liam C. Peterson will speak on
“Row Jesus Recognized Nathan
iel” at the vesper service Wed
nesday at 7:30 p. m.
A&M Methodist Church
“We Live By Great Convictions”
is the title of the sermon to be
delivered by the Rev. Nolan R.
Vance at the morning worship
service of the A&M Methodist
Church at 10:55 a. m. Sunday
School will begin at 9:45.
The Wesley Foundation will
meet at 6 p. m. The evening wor
ship service will begin at 7:30
p. m. The Rev. Vance will speak
on the “Three Life Philosophies.”
St. Mary’s Catholic Chapel
Masses will be delivered at 8:30
a. m. and 10:30 a. m. Sunday and
6:45 Friday. Confessions will be
heard from G:30 to 7:30 p. in. Sat
urday.
Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter Day Saints
The Priesthood Meeting of the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter
Day Saints will begin at 11:30 a.
m. Sunday in the YMCA Chapel.
The Sunday School will begin at 10
a. m.
St. Thomas Episcopal Church
Services at the St. Thomas Epis
copal Church will begin with Holy
Communion at 8 a. m. Sunday. The
Church School will be taught at
9:30 a. m. The Morning Prayer
and sermon will be delivered at
9:30 a. m. The Morning Prayer
and Sermon will be delivered at
9:30 and 11 a. m.
Our Saviour’s Lutheran Church
Sunday School with Bible Class
es will be taught at 9:30 a. m.
Sunday at Our Saviour’s Lutheran
Church. The morning worship ser
vice will begin at 10:45 a. m.
A&M Christian Church
A summai'y of the church pro
gram will be reviewed at the wor
ship hour of the A&M Christian
Church Sunday at 11 a. m. The
coffee hour will begin at 9:15 a.
m. and the Sunday School at 9:45.
Kermit Page, nationally known
Christian youth leader, will speak
to students of all denominations at
4 p. m. The DSF will meet fol
lowing the service.
A&M Church of Christ
“Concerning Parents and Child
ren” is the title of the sermon to
be delivered by James F. Fowler at
the A&M Church of Christ at
10:45 a. m. Sunday. Bible School
will begin at 9:45 a. m.. Young
People’s Meeting at 6:15 p. m.
and the evening worship service
at 7:15 p. m. The sermon topic
will be “Church Music.”
College Heights Assembly of God
Services at the College Heights
Assembly of God will begin with
Sunday School at 9:45 a. m. Other
services of the day will be the
morning worship at 11 a. m.,
Christ’s Ambassadors at 6:45 p. m.
and evening worship service at
7:45 p. m.
Christian Sciences Services
Man in God’s likeness is neither
a hopeless sinner nor a helpless
invalid, according to the Lesson-
Sermon entitled “Are Sin, Disease,
and Death Real?” which will be
read at Christian Science services
Sunday at 11 a. m. in the YMCA
Chapel.
Jewish Services
The Hillel Foundation will meet
at 7:15 p. m. Friday in the YMCA
Chapel.
Miss Lou Burgess
MR. AND MRS. Ilershel E. Bur
gess, 112 Lee St., announce the
coming marriage of their daugh-
ter, Lou, to Mason Lee Cushion
Jr., son of Mrs. Mason Lee Cush
ion, 107 Bell St. The bride elect
is employed at the College Sta
tion State Bank. The bridegroom
to be is a senior BA major. He
is president of the Interfaith
Council. The wedding date is
Dec. 27.
Texas Land
Prices Reach
New Peak In’51
Land prices in Texas reached a
new peak in 1951.
The state average jumped from
$49.95 in 1950 to $62.15 in 1951,
the report of the agriculture ex
periment station of A&M showed.
The report noted that Texas vot
ers had. approved a constitutional
amendment to furnish a revolving
fund of 100 million dollars to en
able veterans to buy farms at low,
long-term interest rates.
The program started in 1950
with 25 million dollars.
The report said: “If these addi
tional funds should be loaned at
a rate equivalent to that of the
first 25 millions, the veterans pro
gram would become the dominant
factor in the land market in many
areas, if not in the state as a
whole. The consequences could only
be inflationary in a market which
is already booming.”
tUY, SKIX, RENT OR TRADE. Rates
. . . V. tie a word per Insertion wltb a
IRe minimum. Space rate in classified
Section .... 60c per column-inch. Send
VI classified to STUDENT ACTIVITIES
UFFICE. All ads must be received In
Student Activities office by 10 a.m. on the
lay before publication.
• FOR SALE •
FOR. LEASE or sale—Strictly modern three
bedroom house, central heat, hardwood
floors, vry desirable location. Lease to
college personnel only. Available immedi
ately. Apply Box 284 FE.
WHOLESALE MEATS: Now’s the time
to fill that locker or deep freeze with
some good Baby Beef. Contact Tom
Ooodson, B-20-A, College View or call
John Cowsar, 6-1303 after 5 p.m. or
Saturdays.
• LOST •
LOST, strayed, stolen—or in hiding:
A senior Aggie who promised to buy life
insurance fro.m me. 5’ 10” tall, brown
eyes black hair. Call 4-666 with any
information as to his whereabouts . . .
Eugene Rush, North Cate.
BLUE SHAEFFER fountain pen with sil
ver top between gym and new corps area.
Name Glen Whitley in it. Dorm 7-102.
RED WALLET in vicinity of stadium. Keep
money in wallet but return papers. Phone
4-9652 or 6-1643.
WALLET at Kentucky game Saturday
night. Miss Bea Shipp owner. Finder
see C. D. Gwin, Dorm 7-428. Reward.
t v-:.-- 1 T-t—
• WORK WANTED •
Increased land prices in 1951
were attributed to the high price
of cotton, together with the pre
season removal of acreage allot
ments, and greatly expanded activ
ity in oil and gas leasing and de
velopment.
Prices went up in all but two
of the State’s 17 major type-of-
farming areas. In the Grand Prai
rie the average price dropped 13
per cent and in the high plains
and trans-Pecos grazing area a de
crease of 22 per cent occurred.
The report said drought condi
tions probably influenced prices
in both areas.
Prices went up the most in the
north-central grazing area, with
an increase of 65 per cent. The
coast prairie registered a 61 per
cent increase; the Edwards Plat
eau and central basin, 46 per cent,
and the Rio Grande plain, 31 per
cent.
New Club Started;
Krueger President
RESERVE your Christmas puppy now!
The friendly, economical BAYARD KEN
NELS has clean, comfortable hoarding
facilities. Trimming, bothing, nail dip
ping. whelping, stud dogs, dog food,
supplies, crate rental. Open Sundays.
On Highway 6 south of College.
• HELP WANTED •
PART TIME grocery worker. Experience
preferred. Thursday and Friday after
noons and Saturday. Oden, South Side
Food Market.
CASHIER, car hop, waitress wanted, ex-
rlence unnecessary. Must be over IS.
e Mr. Ferrer! at Triangle.
STUDENT to work part time on a dairy.
Dairy experience and car preferred.
Phone 6-3338.
Directory of
Business Service*
.in', i. . —
. INSURANCH of all kinds. Homer Adams,
North Gate. Call 4-1217.
Dr. Carlton R. Lee
OPTOMETRIST
SOSA East 26th
(Across from Court House)
Call 2-1662 for Appointment
FENCE
IF IT’S FENCE I HAVE IT
—Also—
Flowerbed and Driveway Trim
NO DOWN PAYMENT
3 Years to Pay I Free Estimate!
Permanent and Portable
Lawn Sprinkler Systems
HUDSON TRADING POST
W. C. (Bill) Hudson
Rt. 1, Box 355A Ph. 3-3840
Bryan, Texas
WILL CARE for children for working
mothers. Reasonable rates.. 104 Sul-
pher Springs Road (3 doors behind Mats
Grocery) or phone 4-8326.
• SPECIAL NOTICE •
The Second Installment of fees are pay
able to the College Fiscal Department
on or before October 17. Board to Nov
ember 21, .$4 6.20; room rent to Novem
ber 21, $11.65; laundry o November 21,
$3.75; total fees due is $61.60.
Official Notice
All student organization officers are re
minded that Student Life Regulations re
quire that all student home town clubs,
technical societies, departmental societies
and honorary societies, hava e current
constitution and a list of their officers
on file in the Office of Student Activities
2nd floor, Goodwin Hall. Officers or fac
ulty sponsors of these clubs and societies
should call by this office as soon as
possible and comply with this regulation.
W. D. Hardesty
Club Advisor
Student Activities
Notice of Sale of Abandoned Bicycles
Notice is hereby given that eight bicy
cles have been abandoned on the streets
and picked up by the city during the last
several months. Owners of these bicycles
may have the same by identifying them
at the City Hall. Those not claimed by
the owners will be sold thirty days after
this notice.
CITY OF COXjLECE STATION
By (Mrs.) Florence Neelley
Ass’t City Secretary
Dr. M. W. Deason
Optometrist
’ NORTH GATE
313 COLLEGE MAIN
8:00 to 5:00 Phone 4-1106
The Building Products Market
ing Club was organized in a meet
ing held recently, Jack Steel, the
club’s sponsor said. The club elect
ed Doyle Krueger as its president.
Other officers elected were James
Gregory, vice president; Walker
D. Guthrie, secretary-reporter;
Fred E. Burns, program chairman.
The next meeting of the club
will be held Nov. 6 when the mem
bers will be addressed by W. A.
Mathers, of the Celo-Tex Corp.
Meetings will be held on the first
and third Thursdays of each month
and will have speakers at each
meeting.
The club is sponsored by the
Lumberman’s Association of Tex
as, who give four scholarships
each year to boys interested in
building products marketing.
The building products marketing
courses are designed to prepare
the students for positions as man
agers of lumber yards and as
salesmen of building products, said
Steel, who is also curriculum ad
visor for the course. This curri
culum is only three years old and
is a combination of business, arch
itecture and engineering, he said.
A&M Film Society
Tickets On Sale
Season tickets for the A&M
Film Society are now on sale in
the office of Student Activities
and the MSC for one dollar.
The society will show 15 top mo
tion pictures with a possible four
bonus films, according to Ed Hold
er, president, _ ___ i
V
Ag. Eng. Seniors Plan ASA Officers Now Take New Posts
Inspection Trip to Fair
Thirty six senior agriculture en
gineering students will leave Sun
day, Oct. 12 for the Annual Fall
Inspection Trip to Dallas and vi
cinity.
On Monday, Oct. 13, the group
will go through the Ford Auto
mobile Assembly Plant and will
then spend the remainder of the
day inspecting farm machinery,
tractor, and automotive exhibits
at the State Fair.
On Tuesday the group will spend
most of the day in the vicinity of
McKinney inspecting the flood con-
ti’ol work being carried on by
the Soil Gonservation Service in
that area.
Build Dams
This organization is building a
number of earthen dams on small
rivers and streams in the area for
the purpose of controlling runoff
during heavy rains.
The students will be given an
opportunity to see the construction
of the dams in all stages, as well
as the completed structures.
The final event for the trip will i
be a tour through the branch of
fices and warehouse of the John
Deere Plow Company Tuesday af
ternoon.
Make Trip
The following students will
make the trip: G. L. Black, W. S.
Blair, J. J. Bohuslax, C. P. Briggs,
C. G. Chandler, F. X. Coronado,
L. F. Ernstes, D. E. Flatt, J. L.
Fulbright, R. B. Gibbs, W. R. Hale,
G. S. Hare.
II. J. Holley, D. M. Jennison, R.
J. Lavender, E. W. LeFevre, O. L.
Lewellen, J. W. Mann, G. D. Mar
tin, I. W. McCarty, K. W. Monroe,
W. C. Nelson, F. O. Placke, B. W.
Powell, K. F. Schwarz, A. L.
Shumbers.
N. O. Smith, H. G. Williford, I.
L. Winsett, C. D. Young, R. K.
Ford, Aloe Ylsis, Kerim Becer,
Pedro Perez.
The American Society of Ag
ronomy officers took over their
posts recently for this year.
The officers elected are: Presi
dent Glenn Black; Vice President
Harold Scaif; Secretary Bobby
Henderson; Treasurer Leonard
Thornton; reporter Pat Hitt; Par
liamentarian Tom Payne; Faculty
Advisor Clarence Watson; and
Representative t o Agriculture
Council Tom Payne.
At the last meeting. Curt Goode
and Pat Hitt were elected to rep
resent the Society at the National
Convention at Cincinnatti in No
vember. Dale Fischgarbe, who is
national treasurer, also will attend
the meetfrng.
Any student interested in agron
omy is uxged to attend the meet
ings, President Black said.
Dr. H. E. Hampton of the agro
nomy faculty staff showed the
cotton tomr slides at the meeting.
This toui" is made each year by
three seniiors and a Faculty mem
ber to various parts of the Ameri
can hemisphere. They qualify
by competitive examinations, the
highest tlpree having the honor of
going on the tour.
First American Life Insurance Co.
In Texas - - - - At Fioiiston
Bryan - College Agency
REPRESENTATIVES
L. E. (Skeeter) Winder, ’50
A. H. “Heeter” Winder, ’52
308 VARISCO BLDG.
PHONE 3-3700
The Church... For a Fuller Life... For You;
A
CALENDAR OF CHURCH SERVICES
A&M CHURCH OF CHRIST
9:45 A.M.—Bible Classes
10:45 A.M.—Morning Worship
6:15 P.M.Youth Meeting
ST. THOMAS EPISCOPAL CHURCH
8:00 A.M.—Holy Communion
9:30 A.M.—Church School
11:00 A.M.—Morning Prayer and Sermon
COLLEGE STATION BAPTIST CHURCH
9:45 A.M.—Sunday School
10:50 A.M.—Morning Worship
6:15 P.M.—Training Union
7:15 P.M.—Evening Worship
BETHEL LUTHERAN CHURCH
(Missouri Synod)
800 S. College Ave. Bryan, Texas
9:30 A.M.—Sunday School and Bible Classes
10:45 A.M.—Morning Worship
COLLEGE HEIGHTS ASSEMBLY OF GOD
9:45 A.M.—Sunday School
11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship
7:00 P.M.—Young Peoples Service
8:00 P.M.—Evening Worship
A&M CHRISTIAN CHURCH
9:45 A.M.—Church School
11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship
5.00 P.M.—DSF
OUR SAVIOUR’S LUTHERAN CHURCH
9:30 A.M.—Church School, Bible Classes
10:45 A.M.—Morning Worship
ST. MARY’S CHAPEL
Masses at 9:80 and 10 a.m.
A&M PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
9:45 A.M.—Sunday School
11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship Service
6:30 P.M.—Student League and Fellowship
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY
YMCA Chapel
11:00 A.M.—Morning Worship
A&M METHODIST CHURCH
9:45 A.M.—Sunday School
10:55 A.M.—Morning Worship
6:00 P.M.—Wesley Foundation 3jl
HILLEL FOUNDATION
7:30 P.M.—Friday night.
II
to k wo/ffi WflfW ww) ok Ns I L
k!
...J
In fact as man continues his quest for the best
gadgets, there is a more modern way of doing
almost everything.
But beware lest you lose sight of the old dis-.
coveries that will never become obsolete.
For instance, there is no more modern way
to peace and happiness than the Christianity our,
ancestors treasured before us.
And when you need a text-book for living, there;
is no book-of-the-month to equal the Bible your,
Mother gave you.
And when it comes to gaining spiritual insight
and moral strength, there will never be any stream
lined substitute for the Church down the street.
You see, in spiritual discovery, man didn’t have
to await modern science. Long ago God gave us
"Truth and Power. That is why the age-old faith
the Church teaches is THE LATEST MODEL
FOR LIVING.
a . i
THE CHUfiCH FOR Au '
, T- “lb* ,1“ CW «
on earth for th«» 5 v edfesf * ac '
survive. There can
reasons why everv ^ f sound
attend services r ea u .^ SOn sho ^d
£°rt the Church rf ly and SU P-
Por his own Jll They a re: (1)
childrens Take ^ J 2) hi,
of his community anrf° r saic9
For the sake of lh» r-i. natlon " G)
wh ich needs his h ,!L Ch > Urch itse U,
t9 rial support - ° ral and
support PC 01 - d --
chu rch regularly t0 g0 <°
-Bible daiiy. Y and r8a d your
Sunday .. BO p s k aIms Chapter Verse,
Monday \ 4 1-8
£--fay.;; f-33
V^dnesday Mark f 30 ' 37
Kd^.- & h m n «
Saturday ., Galatian* ^
Copyright 1952, Keister Adv. Service, Straaburg, V».
City National
Bank
Member
Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation
BRYAN
American
Laundry
AND
Dry Cleaners
BRYAN
The
Exchange
Store
SERVING
TEXAS AGGIES
College Station’s Own
Banking Service
College Station
State Bank
NORTH GATE
Central Texas
Hardware Co.
BRYAN
• HARDWARE
• CHINAWARE
• CRYSTAL
• GIFTS
Bryan Communities Since 1909
First State Bank
& Trust Co.
Member Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation
BRYAN
LAUNDROMAT
HALF-HOUR LAUNDRY
& CLEANERS
Authorized Dealer Hamilton
(Home) Dryer
One Block East of College View Apts.
COLLEGE STATION
Henry A. Miller
& Company
Phone 4-1145
HARDWARE
FASHIONS
TEEN-TOT
Lilly Ice Cream Co. Bryan
MELLO CREAM
“A Nutritious Food”
►