The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 11, 1955, Image 4

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    Page 4
THE BATTALION
Tuesday, October 11, 1955
Library Club Op ens
Book Fair Thursday
Such books as “Man in the Gray-
Flannel Suit” by Sloan Wilson,
“Marjorie Morningstar,” the Caine
Mutiny author’s new book and No
bel prize winner Thomas Mann’s
“Confessions of Felix Krull” will
be among the 300 books on sale at
the Book Fair, Thursday, Friday
and Saturday.
The Fair, sponsored by the
Friends of the Library, will be held
in the showroom of Massey Motors.
Since there is no trade book store
in Bryan, the Fair will give resi
dents the opportunity to select
popular books.
Persons interested in purchasing
particular books are requested to
place their orders in advance with
Mrs. C. W. Simmons, Mrs. Roy
A CHIlORtN UNDERI2 YEARS- (RfE
TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY
“SEVEN ANGRY
MEN”
Raymond Debra Jeffrey
Massey Paget Hunter
— PLUS SECOND FEAIIRE —
William Bendix - Arthur Kennedy
in
“CRASHOUT”
TODAY thru THURSDAY
k ALL SHE ASKED
FOR WAS A
JGOOD NAME!
s*"‘" 9 ANNE BAXTER
ROCK HUDSON
* UNIVERSAL-INTERNATIONAL PICTURE
Snyder, president of the Friends,
or Mrs. A. W. Melloh, Carnegie
Librarian.
The Carnegie Library will bene
fit from the fair by a percentage
of the sales. Cokesbury Book
Store in Dallas, who is sending the
books on consignment, will give a
liberal percentage of all sales.
Among the 150 adult novels ex
pected are “The Haunted Hacien
da,” by Madison Cooper; “The
Genius and the Goddess” by Aldus
Huxley; “The Tontine,” by Thomas
Costain; and “Homecoming” by
Jiro Osaragi, a translation of a
work by one of Japan’s foremost
novelists.
Also ordered for the fair are 150
childi'en’s books among which are
both versions of Peter Pan: the
original by Sir Philip Barrie and
the Walt Disney version and “Hor
ton Hears a Who” by Dr. T. Gei-
sel Suess, atuhor of the classic “To
Think That I Found It On Mul
berry Street.”
The Book Fair will be open from
8 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Thursday and
Saturday and from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
on Friday.
CIRCLE
TUBS. & WED.
“Hell’s Outpost”
Rod Cameron
— A L S o —
“Ricochet
Romance”
Marjorie Maine
TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY
M-G-M’s advanture-hit ftt COLOR
—rand CINEMASCOPE!
STEWART GRANGER
GRACE KELLY •
PAUL DOUGLAS ^
Starring JOHN ETCCSON,
\\ uu I
K of C Invites
Visitors To
Join Council
The Knights of Columbus are
holding a get-acquainted party at
7:30 p.m. Wednesday at St. Mary’s
Catholic Student Center.
This is one of the two opportun
ities every year. Catholic men have
the chance to join the order.
At 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, which is
Columbus Day, three A&M stu
dents, Walter Parsons, Don Dier-
schke, and Johnny Petter will pre
sent the history of the Knights ov
er WTAW.
Named after the famous explor
er, the Council was originally form
ed in 1882 by Father Michael Mc-
Givney of New Haven, Conn, as
an insurance aid to the laboring
class.
Grand knight of the Council is
Bob Manning. Other officers in
clude J. O. Koehl, deputy grand
knight; Louis Gorzycki, financial
secretary; Johny Ferguson, re
corder; Clyde Wharton, chancel
lor; Richard Dilts, warden; Bert
Hoff, secretary; L. M. Novorak
and Ed Holick, trustees; Don Dier-
schke, advocate and past grand
knight; Father Sylvester Fuchs,
chaplain; John Petter,*general pro
gram chairman; Harry Kilena,
lecturer; and Jules Cabeen, Rob
ert Peters, and Bill Cooper, guards.
The main project of the Council
is to help obtain finances for the
new chapel to be erected in the
near future.
Biscuits and muffins reheat
beautifully when they are tightly
wrapped in aluminum foil and put
into a moderate oven for about
twenty minutes.
Win. Gottlieb
D.S.C.
Doctor of Surgical
Chiropody-
Will be in Bryan
Wed. Oct. 12
at the
LaSalle Hotel
For the Diagnosis and
Treatment of Foot
Conditions
OFFICE HOURS:
9 A.M. to 5 P.M.
Condensed Statement of Condition
FIRST STATE BANK & TRUST COMPANY
Bryan, Texas
At the close of Business October 5, 1955
ASSETS
Cash and Due from Banks
$2,017,904.22
U. S. Government Obligations ZZZZiZrZiZiZZZ! 2> J 5l’,700:00
Municipal Bonds __ ^^ gQQ qq
Loans and Discounts ZZZ 2 541 172 44
Banking House, Fixtures and Parking Lot . ’ q«
Stock of Federal Reserve Bank ZZZLl 6,000M
Other Real Estate 2 00
TOTAL ASSETS $7,348,938.64
LIABILITIES
Capital Stock
Surplus
.___$
Undivided Profits
Reserve for Taxes
DEPOSITS:
Individual
U. S. Government
Banks
$6,056,743.90
72,432.95
75,000.00
100,000.00
100,000.00
278,383.76
15,362.54
Other Public Funds ZZZZZZ 651,015.49
TOTAL DEPOSITS
-$6,855,192.34
TOTAL LIABILITIES
-$7,348,938.64
FIRST STATE BANK & TRUST COMPANY
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
W. S. Higgs, Vice President
J. N. Dulaney, Vice President
Pat Newton, Cashier
OFFICERS
W. J. Coulter, President
Curtis Mathis, Assistant Cashier
L. E. Nedbalek, Assistant Cashier
Willard E. Williams, Assistant Cashier
Services Are Held
Social Whirl
Dames Club will meet at 8 p.m.
tonight in the south solarium of
the YMCA for a business meeting.
* * *
Agricultural Education Wives
Club will meet tonight at 7:30 in
the lobby of the Agricultural En
gineering Building for the election
of officers.
* * *
Milam S. Kavanaugh will speak
on child psychology to the Archi
tect Wives Club Wednesday in
room 3B of the Memorial Student
Center.
Kavanaugh is an associate pro
fessor in the Psychology Depart
ment. \
* * *
The Civil Engineering Club will
meet at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the
home of Mrs. S. R. Wright, 700
Hereford St. for a business meet
ing. Mrs. Wright, wife of the
head of the Civil Engineering de
partment, is sponsor of the club.
Mid-Week
Our Saviour’s Lutheran Church
The church council will meet at
7:30 tonight at the church. The
Junior Mission Band meets at 4
p.m. Wednesday and the Lutheran
Studont Association meets at 7:15
p.m.
St. Mary’s Catholic Chapel
Mass is said every day at 6:45
a.m. at the chapel by Father
Charles Elmer. Services are held
at 5:15 p.m. Wednesday.
St. Thomas Episcopal Chapel
Communion will be held at 6:30
a.m. Wednesday at the chapel fol
lowed by breakfast. The Canter
bury association will meet at 7:15
p.m.
Bethel Lutheran Church
(Missouri Synod)
Aggie Walther Club will meet at
7 p.m. Wednesday in the Memorial
Student Center. Vesper services
will begin at 7:45 p.m. Wednesday.
A Lutheran Aggie dinner will
be held at 7 p.m. Thursday in the
Triangle banquet room.
College Heights Assembly of God
Vesper services will be held at
7:45 p.m. Wednesday and local
singing will be held at 7:45 p.m.
Thursday.
A youth roily will be held at
the Snook Assembly of Cod Fri
day. The Rev. Mr. Charles Taylor
will preach. Interested persons
will meet at the church at 6:30
p.m. Friday. .
A&M Presbyterian Church
Dr. Bardin H. Nelson, associate
professor of Agricultural Econom
ics and Sociology, will speak on
“Importance of the Social Sciences
for Christian Students” at the fel
lowship program at 7 p.m. Wednes
day announced the Rev. Mr.
Charles Workman, director of the
student center.
Christian Science Society
Services will be held at 8 p.m.
Wednesday for the Christian Sci
ence Society.
A&M Christian Church
Disciples Student Fellowship will
meet at the YMCA at 7:15 p.m.
Wednesday.
Church of the Nazarene
The Rev. Mr. Harold Carlisle
will continue his services on “After
Sanctification, What Then” with
his second sermon in the series.
Wednesday’s 7:45 p.m. sermon will
be entitled “Adding Knowledge to
our Faith.”
Visitation program will begin at
7 p.m. Friday at the church. Mem
bers will visit prospective mem
bers.
Hillel Foundation
The Hillel Foundation, composed
of Jewish students, will hold their
services at 7:15 p.m. Friday in
the south solarium of the YMCA.
Church of Christ
Evening services will begin at
7:15 p.m. Wednesday. The Ladies
Bible Class meets at 10 a.m.
Thursday at the church.
Baptist Student Center
Vespers will be held at 7 p.m.
Friday at the center.
Wives’ Bowling League
Starts Tonight In MSC
The Wives Clubs Bowling
League will begin tonight in the
MSC Bowling alley at 8:15. There
have been six clubs enrolled in the
“round robin” tournament.
“It’s not too late to join the
tournament”, said Joy Jones, sec
retary. “Any club interested may
send five members tonight and
they can be scheduled.”
John Geiger, manager of the
bowling alley, will be on hand to
instruct the girls on rules, correct
approach, and form.
The newly formed Wives Coun
cil, consisting of representatives
from the Wives’ Clubs on the cam-
Football
(Continued from Page 3)
pus, is sponsoring the league to
give a recreational outlet for the
wives, many of whom work.
Blue jeans, pedal-pushers, or tor-
reador pants may be worn but the
MSC requests that the girls not
wear shorts or Bermuda shorts.
Bowling will cost $1 a night
which includes regulation shoes and
the alley. If you have your own
bowling shoes, the charge is 90
cents.
Each club will have five players
on its team with alternate players
as substitutes.
A rules committee was appointed
to decide whether handicaps be giv
en to individuals or teams, along
with setting up rules for the tour
nament .
and promptly fired a pass that
was good for six points. Dudley
kicked true to make the score 21-0.
Quarteiback Jimmy Wright in
tercepted Erway’s pass on the Ag
gie 34 to begin a 66-yard drive that
netted A&M its last touchdown
just 20 seconds before the final
gun sounded. Wright’s 23-yard
pass to Hall was the longest gain
in the march that took only eight
plays. Wright scored on a keeper
from 2-yards out, but Dudley miss
ed the conversion try, the first for
A&M this season.
Rill Willis Named
Bill Willis was elected president
of the Ai’ts and Science Council at
a meeting held last week.
Other officer’s are Dwayne Bai
ley, vice president; Bennett Rags
dale, secretary-treasurer; Richard
Gentry, senior representative; and
Leland Pratt, junior representa
tive.
Committee
(Continued from Page 2)
izations. Members are drawn from
the Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, public
schools, Recreational Council, Col
lege Station Kiwanis Club, College
Station Lions Club, the city, and
the Community Chest.
Current members of the commit
tee are Bob Cherry, chairman; Her-
vey, Mrs. Patterson, Charles Haas,
E. E. Ivy, Herbert Thompson, W.
A. Tarrow, L. S. Richardson, Rog
ers, Ran Boswell and Bennie Zinn.
A project for the current year,
accomplished by the committee,
was the developing and lighting
of a softball field for the Negro
youth of our community. W. A.
Tarrow, principal o f Lincoln
School, has said that this project
was the finest thing of its nature
ever done for the Negro children
of College Station. The cost of
the field was about $2,000.
JO million
times a day
at home, at work
or on the way
There’s
nothing
like a
1. SO BRIGHT IN TASTE..•
nothing like it for
Sparkling, tangy goodness.
2. SO QUICKLY REFRESHING.,
nothing like it for
a bracing bit of energy,
with as few calories as half
an average, juicy grapefruit.
BOTTIED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BV
BRYAN COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO.
*' Co,ce " '* ° registered trade-mark. © 1955, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY
First Baptist Church
Workers supper is held at 6 p.m.
Wednesday and the teacher’s meet
ing follows at 6:30. Prayer meet
ing is held at 7:30 p.m.
Men’s prayer service begins at
7 a.m. Thursday followed by the
serving of coffee and doughnuts.
Wesley Foundation
Vance Engleman will show slides
of the regional Student Leadership
Conference at Mount Sequoyah in
Arkansas at the 7:15 Wednesday
services.
Vespers will be held at 7 p.m.
Friday at the Foundation.
We Highly' Recommend To You
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5 25
Gal.
1 59
Qt.
SPREAD SATIN is the most beau
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use paint we’ve ever seen. Do it
yourself and get beautiful results
on walls and woodwork.
Chapman’s Paint & Wallpaper Co.
210 W. 26th BRYAN Phone 2-1318
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