Page 4 THE BATTALION Thursday, September 3, 195v3 College Station Churches First Baptist Church Open house for all Baptist fresh men will be held at the First Bap tist Church, Sunday, September 6. Students are invited to Sunday morning services, and afterwards will be entertained for lunch in the homes of church v embers. Serv ices will be at 10:50 a.m. and the sermon topic is ’’The Master Work man,.” Sunday School is at 9:45. Sunday evening training union will be at 6:15 and worship service will be held at 7:15. On Wednesday, September 9 at 7:15 p.m. freshmen will be enter tained at a special open house pro gram at the church. Refreshments Will be served. Mrs. R. O. Berry is in charge of arrangements. Job Calls • The Beaumont Public School District is in need of a man to serve as Supervisor of Maintenance. This will require supervision of some 150 employees, including painters, electricians, carpenters and custo dians. Business administration, in dustrial education, mechanical, in dustrial and electrical engineering majors may qualify • Black & Vetch, a consulting engineering firm at San Antonio, has openings for two hydraulic en gineers for water suiwey work. This work will last eighteen months and then employees will go to work for the City of San Antonio. Civil engineering majors may qualify. • Walter Kidde Engineers, Inc. of Houston is in need of a man trained in civil engineering or arch itectural construction to assist the superintendent on a job at Waco. Work would be surveying for con struction work. Duration of job will probably be five or six months, but there is a possibility that it will be permanent. • The Helium Division of the Bureau of Mines : —USDI, at Amar illo, has vacancies for mechanical engineers whose work will deal principally with designing; chemi cal engineers who will be assigned either to the Engineering Branch or to the Research Branch for work pertaining to gas-processing of compressors, generators, etc., pet roleum engineers who will be as signed to the Gas Fields Operations Branch, and chemists who will be assigned to the Research Branch for work pertaining to the helium plant operations. • The Busacker Electronic Equipment Company has a vacancy in their office for a man trained in business administration or account ing for work as bookkeeper. This company, located in Houston, is fast growing—has ten employees now and will be expanding. A&M Methodist Church As a welcome to new students A&M Methodist Church members will serve a supper for all incoming students Sunday at 6:30 p.m. For this annual affah - the church fam ilies will pack basket suppers for themselves and the guests. The pastor, Rev. Nolan Vance, has returned and will again be in the pulpit Sunday. His sermon topic for the 10:55 worship is “The Pre-emptions of Faith.” Sunday There will be 4,005,670 babies born in the United States during 1953, if births continue at the rate for the first half of this year. So far births are running three per cent ahead of last year, when the national total reached the rec ord breaking figure of 3,889,000 registered and unregistered births, according to the Public Health Service. Eng. Extension Stages Meeting In Coordination Members of the Texas Engineer ing Extension Service will meet the representatives of the State Health Department and the Texas Water and Sewage Works Asso ciation today and tomorrow to dis cuss plans for closer coordination of work between the thi-ee groups. To be held in the Memorial Stu dent Center, the conference will center around field training prob lems. The Health Department is re sponsible for inspecting and ap proving water and sewage systems and the examining and liscensing of operators. The Texas Water and Sewage Works Association is interested in seeing each plant and employe in the state meet the recommended standards; and the Engineering Extension Service of fers field courses to meet the needs of these people, according to E. L. Williams, vice-director of the Serv ice. Service personnel who will meet with the Health Department and association representatives are Williams; Joe H. Sorrels of the Col lege’s Civil Engineering Depart ment and the Engineering Experi ment Station; I. N. Ronhovde, chief instructor for the Water and Sew age Training Service, and Leon R. Holbert, field instructor, Engineer ing Extension Service. Post Offices (Continued from Page 1) financial loss, but many are main tained as a public service. Often the fourth-class offices are in small country crossroads stores, or private homes. Here are some of the smaller Texas post offices, with last year’s receipts first and postmaster’s sal ary second: Fate, $840 and $2,045; Joy, $699 and $1,763; Loco, $654 and $1,762; Lariat, $593 and $1,588; Old Glory, $941 and $2,177; Moscow, $1,329 and $2,611. Thrift, $411 and $1,327; Thrifty, $283 and $979; Dollarhide, $1,144 and $2,494; Dinero, $611 and $1,762; Pep, $725 and $1,914; Laz- buddie, $828 and $2,045; Roosevelt, $531 and $1,588; Lincoln, $878 and $2,045. BUY, SEI.T., RENT OR TRADE. Rates i ... 3c a word per Insertion with a EQc minimum. Space rate In classified •ectlon .... 60c per column-inch. Send fill classified to STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE. All ads must be received in Student Activities office by 10 a.m. on the iay before publication. • FOR SALE • LATE ’51 PLYMOUTH Sedan, excellent condition, low mileage, priced to sell. Phone 4-8439. TWO BEDROOM home In with or without furniture. Phone 4-5202. College Hills Real bargain. 1948 CHEVROLET 4-door gedaji. clean, ex cellent mechanical condition. Priced rea sonable. Phone 4-4594 or 4-7554. iOOD USED BICYCLES—cheap. See after 5 p.m., 214-216 N. Munnerlyn Drive, turn left at Humdinger. WANTED WOULD like to keep children at my home while mother works. Convenient to North Gate—4305 College Main—Call 6-3856. Z A R A P E Air Conditioned . . . Restaurant Open every day—5 to 12 Closed Sunday K&B DRIVING RANGE NOW OPEN On Fin Feather Road Bryan, Texas NURSERIES WEE AGGIELAND Kindergarten has a few vacancies. For registration. Phone Mrs. R. R. Lyle, 4-8414. • FOR RENT ATTRACTIVE ROOM and bath. Private entrance, near College. S35.00 a month. Phone 4-7822. ONE NICE BEDROOM near campus. Phone 4-7054 or come to 401 Dexter, South- College Park. ROOM with private bath and private en trance, and garage. Available 1st of September. Phone 4-4364. SEWING machines, Pruitt’s Fabric Shop. Directory of Business Services (NSURANCH of all kinds. Homer Adame. North Gate. Call 4-1217. SPECIAL NOTICE VOL ROSS LODGE NO. 1300 A.F. A A.M. Called meeting for Sept. 3rd at 6:30- p.m. Work in E.A. and M.M. Degree. Ed Madeley, W. M. N. M. McGinnis, Sec’y. Prompt Radio Service — C A L L — Sosolik’s Radio Service 712 S. Main St. PH. 2-1941 BRYAN school ivill be at 9:45. Wednesday Choir practice is at 7:15 p.m. St. 'I’homas Episcopal Chapel “Towcrr’d Christian Maturity” is the topic? for the Sunday morning sermon ait 11 a.m. at St. Thomas Episcopal’ Chapel. Holy Commun ion will l>e given at the eleven o’clock ser’vice. Sunday school and the morning prayer and sermon are scheduled frxr 9:30. Holy Commun ion will also! be given at 8:00 a.m. Sunday. \ Christian Science Services “Man” is th'e subject of the Les son-Sermon to' be read at Christ ian Science Service this Sunday at 11:00 a.m. at the MSC. The Christian Science’ College organiza tion will meet Wednesday at 7:30 at the MSC. A&M Christi&'n Church “The Church and’ Campus Life” will be the sermon t'u>pic for morn ing worship at the A.&M Christian Church at 11:00 a.m. Sunday. The services will be preceded by a coffee hour at 9:15 ;and Sunday school at 9:45. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Sairrjs Latter Day Saints scfjvices be held Sunday at 10:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m. at the YMCA ChapeL College Heights Assembly of God The College Heights Assembly of God will hold worship services at 11:00 a.m. Sunday. Sunday school will be at 9:45 a.m. Our Saviour’s Luthern Church A special vesper service for new students will be held at Our Sa viour’s Lutheran Church Sunday at 7:30 p.m. The serman topic is “Your Calling.” Regular Sunday morning church school and Bible classes are at 9:30 a.m. and morn ing worship and Holy Communion at 10:45 a.m. The morning ser mon topic is “Our Christian Com munion.” The week’s schedule in cludes the Brotherhood meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, and Choir re hearsal Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Faith Evangelical and Reformed Church The Faith Evangelical and Re formed Church, which meets at the American Legion hall in Bryan, will have Sunday school at 9:15 a.m. and morning service at 10:30 a.m. T he sermon topic will be “The Wheel of Jesus.” A&M Presbyterian Church “God’s Grace” will be the sermon topic at services ar the A&M Pres byterian Church at 11:00 a.m. Sun day. Sunday school will meet at 9:45 a.m. Conference Is Heated (Continued from Page 1) the West by aggression against Korea or Indochina. Just before this warning note was sounded, the legion itself de manded full-scale action, includ ing use of atomic and hydrogen bombs, to drive the Communists out of Korea if the peace negotia tions there fail. “There is the risk,” Dulles said, “that, as in Korea, Red China might send its own ai’my into In dochina. The Chinese should rea lize that such a second aggression could not occur without grave con sequences which might not be con fined to Indochina. “I say this soberly in the inter est of peace and in the hope of preventing another aggTessor mis calculation.” Dulles sounded another warning note when he said the Communists could not count in “privileged sanctuary” in Manchuria if they renewed aggression against South Korea and when he said this coun try would not sit “indefinitely” at a peace conference with the Reds. “We are always ready to nego tiate in good faith but we expect the good faith to be mutual,” he said. Dulles upheld the United Nations as the “town meeting of the world,” which he said is the reali zation of an early American con cept and a vital factor in keeping world peace. The legion criticized the U. N. for what it called its “weakness and even impotence” but held that as long as World War III had been averted there was a “basis for hope” in it. The legion suggested in a reso lution that the world organization be strengthened by limited use of the veto against aggression, inter national control of scientific weap ons and the creation of a formid able army of its own. The convention recommended in vestigation of “infiltration of Com munist elements and other Social ist hand-maidens” into religion, education, community affairs, la bor, government and organizations such as the YMCA, YWCA and community settlement houses. LEGAL HOLIDAY Monday, September 7, 1953, being a Legal Holiday, in observance of Labor Day, the undersigned will observe that date as a Legal Holiday and not be open for busi ness. First National Bank City National Bank First State Bank & Trust Co. J / College Station State Bank / Bryan Building and Loan Ass’n. CLOSED MONDAY- LABOR DAY-SEPT. 7th CHEF PRIDE PINTOS 2 lbs. 35c 4 Oz. ^ DRUGS ★ Pint Size—70% Isop Alcohol . . . . . 2 for 2lc ’ $1.00 Size Woodbury Lotion . (Plus Tax) . ... 49c DEAL—Chlorodent—($1.12 Value) Tooth Paste .... ... 59c / DEALDEAL—Palmolive & Colgate Shave Cream .... (88c Value) . . . 49c 20’s Schick Inj. Blades . ... 61c VAN CAMP’S VIENNA SAUSAGE . 2 cans 35c V-j Size Tin ROYAL HAWAIIAN CHUNK TUNA ^ MEATS ^ 1 Pound Can 46 Oz. Can—House of George Maryland Club Coffee . . . 89c 3 Lb. Can Crisco 2V2 Size—Hunt’s .87c 303 Size—Frost Whole Beets . 300 Size—Frost Halves Peaches ... 2 cans 45c Black Eye Peas 46 Oz. Can Hi C Orangeade 25c Special Trend 2 boxes 39c 45c 29c hams ^ end • ... lb. 55c ... lb. 67c • 9 SIRLOIN STEAK . . ... lb. 59c < • 29c T-BONE STEAK . . . . .lb. 65c pint SPARE RIBS .... . . .lb. 89c BOLOGNA . . . . . lb. 29c . 19c Rath—1 Lb. Roll SAUSAGE . . . . .... 45c Swift’s Premium FRANKS . . . ; . . lb. 43c . 2 cans 25c Swift’s Oriole BACON . . .. . '. . . lb. 69c . 2 cans 25c Kraft’s Mild CHEESE . . . . . lb. 49c Glinat Size Trend 1 Lb. Sunshine Serv Pack Krispy Crackers 25c 6 Oz. Sunshine Marshmallow Peanuts . . . 15c Qt. Size Real Kill 11 Oz.—Velvet Peanut Butter . . • • • • • . • c ^ FROZEN FOODS ★ 10 Oz. Pictsweet 10 Oz. Skinner’s Strawberries 25c Cut Macaroni . . 19c 12 Oz. Birds Eye 10 Oz. Skinner’s Baby Limas 25c Cut Spaghetti . . 19c 12 Oz. Birds Eye Peas 19c Chicken Chow Mein Dinner, 69c 7-IN. COPPER BOTTOM FRYING PAN WITH PURCASE OF 3 TALL CANS BORDEN’S MILK 73c 29c Lip ton Tea 34c 16 Count Upton Tea Bags 22c $1.39 Vi Gallon Size Pur ex «/4 Lb. 2(4 Oz.—Red Seal Shoe String Potatoes . . . . 10c 7 3 4 Oz.—Towie Stuffed Queen Olives 43c Qt. Size—Stokely Fresh Pack Kosher Dill Pickles 39c ^ PRODUCE ^ California Cantaloupes . . . 54 Size . each 12c Avocados . 2 for I9c Yellow’ Squash .... . 2 lbs. 15c Radishes . hunch 5c Green Onions . bunch 5c MILLER S SUPER MARKET FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE . . . . WE ARE OPEN OPEN 7 A.M. TO 9 P.M. — MONDAY THRU SATURDAY — CLOSED SUNDAY SPECIALS FOR THURSDAY, P. M., FRIDAY and SATURDAY - SEPT. 3 - 4 & 5