The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 08, 1953, Image 4

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    Page 4
THE BATTALION
Tuesday, September 8, 1953
Miss Oden Weds
William N. Pirtle
Miss Judy Oden, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Oden, 605 Fair-
view S., was married to William
Nash Pirtle, son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. N. Pirtle of Throckmorton, in
a ceremony at A&M Methodist
church at 4:30 p.m. Saturday.
The bride wore a white waltz-
length gown of chantilly lace over
pleated nylon net. The strapless
bodice was covered with a lace
long-sleeved bolero. She carried a
bridal Bible covered wuth a wdiite
orchid.
Miss Celeste Curran of Lexing
ton, Mass., was Mrs. Pirtle’s maid
of honor. Her gown was waltz-
length aqua with a strapless lace
bodice and a full net skirt. She
wore a lace stole and a shirred net
head band. She carried a crescent
of white glamelias.
The bridesmaids wore identical
gowns and carried crescents of
pink asters. The attendants were
Misses Sarah Puddy, Ann South
ern, and Louise Street, College Sta
tion; and Misses Barbara Booz,
Port Arthur; Dana Pirtle, Mid
land; and Sue Creekmore, Houston.
The groom’s attendants were
David Wicks, best man, and R. C.
Pirtle Jr., Throckmorton; W. A.
Mason, Alvin; Richard Vick, Beau
mont; Jerry Oden, College Station;
Fritz Welsch, New Braunfels; and
Gene Sparks, San Antonio, ushers.
The brides parents were hosts
at a reception at the Wesley foun
dation immediately following the
ceermony. Mrs. F. R. Brison was
hostess at a coffee for the brides
maids Saturday morning at her
home, 602 Dexter Street.
The bride wor a light brown
faille suit with dark brown velvet
trim and dark brown accessories as
her traveling outfit. Her corsage
was a white orchid.
After a honeymoon at New
Braunfels the couple will be at
home at 200 Montclair in College
Station.
The bride is a graduate of A&M
Consolidated high school, and at
tended the University of Texas.
The groom is a senior at A&M.
Mother’s and Dad’s
Club Plan Projects
The officers of the A&M Con
solidated Mothers and Dads club
met Friday, September 4, at the
home of the president, Mrs. Joe E.
Davis, to discuss plans for the com
ing year’s projects.
Jack Kent was appointed chair
man for the fall pet show; Mrs.
Raymond Reiser, for the spring
community supper, and Mrs. Car-
roll Laverty, for Christmas cai’d
and stationery sales.
Those present at the meeting
included Mrs. Davis; vice-president,
Mrs. John Bertrand; second vice-
president, Mrs. John Bearrie; tim’d
vice-president Mrs. C. A. Bonnen;
treasurer, R. J. Baldauf; recording
secretary, Mrs. J. W. Sorenson;
corresponding secretary, Mrs. John
G. McNeely; publicity chairman,
Mrs. Spike White; school superin
tendent, L. S. Richardson and Mrs.
Carl Landiss, who presented plans
for the teachers’ reception Septem
ber 15.
BUY, SKI. I., RENT OR TRADE. Rates
.... Sc a work per insertion with a
25c minimum. Space rate in classified
section .... GOc pe rcolumn-inch. Send
all classified to STUDENT ACTIVITIES
OFFICE. All ads must be received in
Student Activities Office by 10 a.m. on the
day before publication.
• FOE SALE ®
EXCELLENT Firestone washing machine.
See at 305 Park Place or call 4-9032.
First reasonable offer takes it.
’48 HUDSON, super 6. radio and overdrive:
refrigerator with new motor; solid oak
kitchen table; motorola radio; new couch.
See at 901 A Coulter Drive, Garage Apt.,
After 5.
LATE ’51 PLYMOUTH Sedan, excellent
condition, low mileage, priced to sell.
Phone 4-8439.
TWO BEDROOM home in College Hills
with or without furniture. Real bargain.
Phone 4^5202.
1948 CHEVROLET 4-door sedan, clean, ex
cellent mechanical condition. Priced rea
sonable Phone 4-4594 or 4-7554.
JiOOD USED BICYCLES—cheap. See after
5 p.m., 214-216 N. Munnerlyn Drive,
turn left at Humdinger.
Dr. Carlton R. Lee
OPTOMETRIST
303A East 26th
Call 2-1662 for Appointment
(Across from Court House)
• FOR RENT •
ONE NICE BEDROOM near campus. Phone
4-7054 or come to 401 Dexter, South-
College Park.
SEWING machines, Pruitt’s Fabric Shop.
• WANTED •
WOULD LIKE to keep child while mother
works. Close to Southside. Phone 4-4163.
Directory of
Business Services
CNSURANCB of all kinds. Homer Adame
North Gate. Call 4-1217.
ZARAPE
Air Conditioned ...
Restaurant
Open every day—5 to 12
Closed Sunday
K&B DRIVING
RANGE
NOW OPEN
On Fin Feather Road
Bryan, Texas
. 77 •
Btill
i . ^ >■' ' - 'i
■ 7 77: : '^
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IlmlllllliSii 1 :
I
BRIDE—Miss June Oden of College Station became the
bride of William N. Pirtle here last Saturday. Mrs. Pirtle
is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Oden.
Soviet Not Equal
(Continued from Page 3)
sible loss of job, but prosecution
in the courts as well. Workers
are subject to penalties imposed
by managers for ‘loafing on the
job’ and to court action for ab
senteeism and unauthorized quit
ting of the job.”
In this country a union can bar
gain freely with an owner for the
highest wage a plant will bear and
even strike to obtain its demands.
In Russia a strike is unthinkable
according to the Communist the
ory:
The government owns all indus
tries. All plant managers are em
ployes of the government. So are
the workers. But everything in
Russia, including the plants, be
longs to the people. Therefore a
worker who struck would be strik
ing not only against the govern
ment but against his own property.
Since, a strike is unthinkable un
der this kind of reasoning, a strike
became not a strike but sabotage.
A worker who led his fellows off
a job would not be prosecuted for
striking but for sabotage. Because
the Communist party is the gov
ernment, the Communists can make
the theory a reality by being in
a position to impose the penalties.
The penalties are drastic.
This makes Russian trade
unions not an aggressive instru
ment of the workers’ demands but
an anesthetic to keep them quiet.
Since the government makes the
plans for industrial production, and
sets the cost, it fixes the wages.
Local Woman Wins
Press Book Contest
Mrs. Bluefford Hancock placed
first in a state-wide contest for the
best press book for a local club.
She was reporter for the Exten
sion Service club last year.
The book was composed of news
paper clippings about programs,
special speakers, and club projects.
Mrs. Hancock’s husband is hor
ticulturist with the agricultural
extension service.
Welcome ...
RETURNING STUDENTS
and NEW STUDENTS
3 Convenient Locations . . .
• Main Riant Behind Sbisa
• Above Exchange Store
• New Dorm Area
Campus Cleaners
Phone 4-5114
Instead of bargaining, there
fore, trade union leaders are party
tools for persuading the workci*s
the wage rates fixed by the gov
ernment are not only all they can
get but all they should expect.
Bates and Galvin
Recite Nuptials
Miss Dorothy Bates, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Bates, of
College Station, was married at
7:30 p.m. Friday at the First Bap
tist church of College Station to
Raymond E. Galvin, son of Mr.
and Mi's. H. D. Galvin of White-
face. The Rev. R. D. Longshore
read the ceremony.
The bride’s attendants were Miss
Reba McDermott, maid of honor;
and Mrs. Ernest Wells of Amarillo,
sister of the bridegroom, and Miss
Jonilee Hamblen of Huntsville,
bridesmaids. Sally Ann Miller
was junior bridesmaid.
The brother of the bridegroom,
Tommy Galvin of College Station,
served as best man, and grooms
men were Clifton Bates and Harold
Bates, brothers of the bride, and
Jerry Drake, all of College Station.
Returning from their honeymoon
the couple will live in Seminole,
Okla., where the groom is employ
ed by the Gulf Oil.
The bride is a graduate of A&M
Consolidated high school and at
tended Sam Houston State college
in Huntsville. The bridegroom is
a graduate of A&M.
Aggies - - .
Clip this coupon
and bring to
Dairy Mart
Red Light at
Midway for . . .
FREE TREAT
Nuclear Engineering
Will Be Offered
Nuclear engineering, a course
aimed toward giving an engineer
a working knowledge of the fun
damental nuclear concepts, will be
offered this fall.
Open to any senior engineering 1
student as a three-hour elective,
the course, Ch. E. 447, will be of
fered by the chemical engineering
department.
Brazos A&M Club 1
Holds First Meeting
The first fall meeting of the
Brazos County A&M club will be
held at 6:30 p.m.,, Thursday, Sept.
10, at their club house.
W. W. Meinke, club president,
urged members to attend this Af
fair and to bring; friends. Mem
bers who wish to attend are re
quested to call 4-9911 by Tuesday
to aid in food planning.
'57
FOR FISH ONLY
'57
FREE
New Portable
Typewriter
($111.58 Value)
ROYAL QUIET DELUXE
or
/ I
YOUR CHOICE OF MAKE
You fill out a “name card" at The Bryan Business Machine
Co. and the winning name will be drawn by a famous
Aggie from a locked ballot box at 11:00 a.m. Sept. 18.
Two other Aggies will witness the drawing.
"' ,! X You Don't Have To Be Present /
N To Win
No Box Tops — No Strings
Come to 429 S. Main St.,
Bryan, before 11:00 a.m.
Sept. 18 and get a FREE
CHANCE TO WIN.
■ ip'
/ #
' / V®
f /
Bryan
Business
Machine Co.
429 S. Main St. — Bryan
Phone 2-1328
W. B. ADAMS '51
LOW
/NlVCOTW
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7 J u
•OAPJTWS
highest
IN QUALlTYi
When Vou smoke Chesterfield it’s
so satisfying to know that you are
getting the one cigarette that’s low
in nicotine, highest in quality.
A fact proved by chemical
analyses of the country’s six
leading cigarette brands.
And it’s so satisfying to know that
a doctor reports no adverse effects
to the nose, throat and sinuses
from smoking Chesterfield.
The doctor’s report is part of
a program supervised by a
responsible independent re
search laboratory and is based
on thorough bi-monthly exam
inations of a group of Chester
field smokers over a period of
a year and a half.
CHESTERFIELD best FORYOU
lARGEST SELLING CIGARETTE IN AMERICA’S COLLEGES [
Copyright 193), iiecyrr & Mrats Tos-aooo Oj.