The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 01, 1956, Image 7

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    Campus Study Club
To Hear Bonney
Warren C. Bonney, Basic Divi
sion counselor and assistant pro
fessor and director of the College
Hospital mental hygiene clinic,
will speak on the clinic before
members of the Campus Study
Club at their meeting Tuesday.
The meeting is scheduled for 3
p. m. in the YMCA. Hostesses for
the afternoon will be the Mes-
dames R. L. Jackson, W. C. An
dres, Otis Miller and W. E. Street.
Prof. Bonney is the author of a
number of articles in the field of
psychology and holds membership
in the American Psychological
Assn., American Pei-sonnel and
Guidance Assn., Texas State Guid
ance Assn, and the Texas Psy
chological Assn.
Pie received his B. A. from Ohio
State University in 1948 and his
master’s degree from North Texas
State College two years later.
From 1952 to 1954 he did graduate
work at the University of Texas.
The mental hygiene clinic of
which Prof. Bonney is director was
designed to provide psychological
therapy for any student desiring it
and to serve as a central agency
through which the total mental
health efforts of the college can
be organized.
Social Whirl
Hostesses to members of the
regular group of the Aggie Wives
Bridge Club at their last meeting
were Fay Spears and Dorothy
Mills. Prizes were won by Lillian
Powers, Mary Lyles, Jeannie Crist,
and Joan Tietan. Joyce Planna and
LaVern McDonald will entertain
the group when it next meets.
The intermediate group met with
Ahdell B e r e n s and Janette
Clemens. Sue Muir, Lee Cox and
Ahdell Berens won prizes. Hostes
ses for the next meeting will be
Jean Sinclair and Patricia Locke.
Barbara Mullen and Audrey
Lindner entertained the beginners
group. At the next meeting
hostesses will be Nancy Mc-
Mardie and Anne Johnson.
•I- -i* -t*
Wildlife Management Wives will
hold an organizational meeting at
7:30 p. m. Monday at the home of
Mattie Wilkerson, 808-B Cross.
:1c :S< ^
A social meeting of v the Agri
culture Economics and Sociology
Wives Club is planned for 7:30 p.
m. Monday at the home of Mrs.
Dan Russell, 106 Lee St. All mem
bers are asked to bring copies of
the constitution for discussion of
new amendments.
Fast Fry
OWINGSV1LLE, Ky. GP)—Sweet
potatoes were cooked in a hurry on
the electric range in the Robert
Toy home. Lightning struck the
pan of potatoes and cooked them
to a crisp. The bolt also burned
a hole in the pan and damaged
the heating element.
Attention Girls
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (^—Van
derbilt University now has three
male students for each co-ed. “It
won’t be long” remarked Vice
Chancellor Madison Sarratt, “until
we can promise every girl who
comes to Vanderbilt not only a
diploma—but a husband!”
HERE IS THE ORIGINAL CLOTHES DRVER KNOWN AND
LOVED BY MILLIONS OF FIOUSEWIVES THROUGHOUT
THE NATION
No Clothes
Hanging Problems
No
Stolen Clothes
Get all 6 Hamilton dryer features!
1. Carrier^Current Drying 4. Sun-E-Day Lamp!
2. Fabri-Dial Temperature 5. Double Pass Lint Control
3. 130 Minute Timer 6- Fluff Dry Drying Extra
SALES — RENTALS — SERVICE — LIBERAL TERMS
Call today for free home demonstration
Bryan Sewing Machine & Appliance Co.
Ridgecrest Shopping Center VI 6-6723
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
WANT AD RATES
One day . . . . 3f per word
20 pdf word each additional day
Minimum charge—400
DEADLINES
5 p.m. day before publication
Classified Display
800 per column inch
each insertion
PHONE YT 6-6415
Itor fe>aie
1941 Cadillac club coupe. Excel
lent running condition, good tires.
$150.00. .Call VI 6-6459. 182t8
Premier upright vacuum cleaner,
$12.00; window evaporative cooler,
$10.00; Eclipse lawn mower, $12.00.
Call VI 6-4181.
182t3
Fur Rent
Well-furnished bedroom. $5.50
i week. Call VI 6-5559. 182t3
Room with private bath. Meals
if desired. Call TA 3-4375. 174tfn
Sewing machines, Pruitt Fabric
Shop. 98tf
Help Wanted
WANTED—Student Linotype
operator. See Steve Andert at
A.&M. Press.
Work Wanted
Accurate typist desires work at
home. Thesis experience. Phone
VI 6-7265. 182tfn
Child care by hour, day, week
or month in my home at 1104 Mil
ner. Baby sitting during all games
and socials. For information call
VI 6-4892. 176tfn
For all types repair and remodel
ing call Doctor Fixit at the Mar
ion Pugh Lumber Company. 100%
remodeling loans, no down pay
ments. Phone VI 6-5711. 174tfn
A&M MENS SHOP
103 MAIN NORTH GATE
AGGIE OWNED
\ -.Vv • ' '-T-' v V • • ”... c
WANTED
USED
BOOKS
Refinance At
LOU’S
Wanted to Buy
Two used play pens. Call TA-
2-3129. 184t3
Found
Dog—half wire hair, half dach-
sund ( ?) near South Gate. Call
VI 6-6126. 182t3
Special Notice
Anyone interested in joining a
European Women’s Club, call Mrs.
W. G. Cantrell, VI 6-4493. 181t4
ATTENTION WORKING
MOTHERS!
All day nursery, with supervised
play. F’enced yard. Close to cam-
p u s. Transportation furnished
from College View. I have nurse’s
training and my helper has nursery
school experience. Call VI 6-4142
for appointment. $25. a month.
Will sit for football game, $1. for
the afternoon. 176tfn
VISIT . . .
COULTER FIELD
in Bryan
Highway 21 East
• AIRPLANE RENTAL
• FLIGHT INSTRUCTION
• RIDES
TA 2-9400
Day and night nui’sery. Two
blocks from North Gate. Reason
able rates. Expert care. 416 Tau
ber. VI 6-4430. 162tfn
Pets
Dogs, cats boarded—low daily,
veekly, monthly rates. Grooming,
Puppies. F’ree pickup, delivery.
3AYARD KENNELS, Highway 6
^outh. College. VI 6-5535. 70tf
Wanted
Practice piano. Call VI 6-4142.
179tfn
OFFICIAL NOTICES
Official notices must be brought, mailed,
or telephoned so as to arrive In the Office
of Student Publications (Ground Flool
YMCA, VI 6-6416, hours 8-12, 1-6, dallj
Monday through Friday) at or before tht
deadline of 1 p.m. of the day preceding
publication — Director of Student Publica
tions.
Students expecting to graduate in Janu
ary 1957 may order graduation announce
ments in the Department of Student Activi
ties, room 210 YMCA building, beginning
Nov. 7. 1956, and continuing through Dec.
6, 1956.
• ENGINEERING AND
ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES
• BLUE LINE PRINTS
• BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS
SCOATES INDUSTRIES
M3 Old Snlphnr Springs Road
BRYAN, TEXAS
PROMPT RADIO SERVICE
— Call —
SOSOLIK’S RADIO AND
TV SERVICE
713 8. Main St.
(Aeross from Railroad Tower)
PWOVYC TA EBYAJf
cum
iii H^civoriteS
By DOLORES PERRY
(The Perrys—Howard and Dolores and their children, Howard S.
Ill, 10 years old, and Pamela Ann, 9—have been Bryan residents for
about four years. Three of those years Mrs. Perry has been employed
in the Housing Office on the A&M campus. Her husband, ai member
of the class of ’44, has two degrees from A&M—a B.S. in industrial
education and a master’s in education. He is Battalion Staff Assistant
Officer, 386th Armored Engineer Battalion, Headquarters and Service
Co., 49th Division.)
PRALINES
2 cups white sugar 2 cups pecans
1 cup brown sugar ' % stick butter
1 tablespoon white Karo 1 teaspoon vanilla
Pinch salt Pl&’jMtil - ‘ ,
Mix sugar, Karo and salt and boil until hard ball stage is reached.
Add nuts, butter and vanilla. Spoon out onto greased cookie sheet.
CONGEALED SALAD
1 package orange Jello 3 carrots, grated
1 small can crushed 3 or 4 stalks celery,
pineapple chopped fine
Prepare Jello the usual way (with 1 cup hot water and 1 cup cold
water). Add carrots, pineapple and celery. Place in refrigerator and
chill until firm.
BREAD PUDDING
2 cups dry bread crumbs % cup sugar
4 cups milk, scalded 4 slightly beaten eggs
1 tablespoon butter 1 teaspoon vanilla
14 teaspoon salt
Soak bread in milk 5 minutes. Add butter, salt and sugar. Pour
slowly over eggs, add vanilla and mix well. Bake in moderate oven
(350 degrees) until firm. Serve with a vanilla sauce.
MOLASSES MARLOW
1 envelope unflavored gelatin % cup milk
14 cup lukewarm water % teaspoon salt
16 marshmallows 1 cup heavy cream
1/3 cup molasses 14 cup chopped pecans
or almonds
Soften gelatin in water. Place marshmallows, molasses, milk and
salt in top of double boiler. Add softened gelatin, cover and cook
over boiling water until marshmallows melt. Cool in refrigerator until
mixture begins to thicken. Whip cream and fold, in with nuts. Pour
into refrigerator trays and place in freezing compartment 3 to 4
hours. Makes 10 servings.
BARBECUE SAUCE
14 pound oleomargarine 1 teaball filled with pickling
1 whole onion, peeled spices
14 lemon 114 bottles catsup
14 cup Worcestershire sauce
Combine all ingredients and cook slowly about 30 minutes.
Resort Prediction:
Just Plain Black And White
Seen On Fashion Horizon
By DOROTHY ROE
Associated Press Women’s Editor
In any season when color is
rampant, just plain black and white
begins to look awfully, awfully
smart.
This is the reasoning of Mr.
Mort, the bachelor who turns out
dresses by the ton for enthusiastic
juniors all over the country. So
his new resort collection, forecast
ing the new look for next summer,
puts strong emphasis on sun dress
es, play dresses and cocktail
dresses in plain white, plain black
or a combination of the two.
“Nothing dramatizes a good sun
tan like black and white,” says
this alert authority. “The kind of
girl I like to be seen with in the
good old summertime is a girl with
a golden tan and a white dress,
that does things in the right
places.”
Mr. Mort also has a yen for
Coeds and Burglars
ALBUQUERQUE—UP> — Coeds
who live at the University of New
Mexico’s new Hokona Hall won’t
be able to sneak out at night with
out tripping a burglar alarm. The
building is equipped with photo
electric cells at archways leading
into two enclosed patios. The cells
will set off alarms if someone
passes after the 10 p. m. curfew.
polka dots this season, a group of
his most striking r.esort fashions
being various treatments of black
and white dots. One style bound to
stand out at any resort is a sleeve
less patio or cocktail dress of white
cotton printed in graduated black
polka dots arranged to look like
stripes. The Empire look is
achieved by narrow black bands
which criss-cross under the bust
to tie at the waistline in front.
Another is of plain white cotton
with a harem skirt and a criss
cross band of black and white
polka dots wrapping and tying
around the midriff.
The group includes half a dozen
other variations of the black and
white theme, all in crisp, easily
washable cottons, designed to flat
ter the youthful figure.
Black
#
FOR THE FINEST IN DRY
CLEANING AND LAUNDERING
Bring your clothes to our modern plant . . .
or . . . Phone Victor 6-4112 for pickup and
delivery service.
o
WE GIVE VALUABLE PREMIUMS!!!
Ask for a Premium Savings Book
the next time you are in.
■o-
SAFE • FAST • ECONOMICAL
COLLEGE HILLS LAUNDRY
AND CLEANERS
902 Foster, E . . . One Block Off Highway 6,
Directly Across from the A.&M. Campus.
The ItattnJion .... College Station (Brazos County), Texan
'Thur^ay November 1, 1956 PAGE 7
Local Observance Planned
For World Community Day
Satisfied Custom ers
Won’t Let Him Quit
SOUTH HAVEN, Mich. </P> — A
gray-haired farmer in a bright
checked shirt hopes this is his
last year as a dressmaker.
But Martan of Chicago, designer
of women’s clothes, is finding it
hard to become plain Joseph
Martan, fruit farmer with 83 acres
of orchard to spray and care for.
Martan closed his elite dress
shop in Chicago two years ago
and retired to become a farmer.
But he found that the customers
for whom he had been creating
wardrobes since 1918 didn’t want
him to stop.
When he isn’t working his farm,
Martan is fashioning fine frocks
with the touch that only he can
give. In a day of clothing mass
production, Martan’s skill is in de
mand by women who can afford
his exclusive styling.
As a rule, it’s a good idea to
melt marshmallows over simmer
ing water. Stirring often hastens
the melting process.
“For the sake of my brethren,
my kinsmen” will be the theme of
World Community Day Friday,
which will be observed locally with
a service at 9:30 a. m. at the A&M
Christian Church.
Offerings taken on World Com
munity Day, sponsored by the
United Church Womeh and the Na
tional Council of Churches, will
assist in the work of the Depart
ment of Irtter-church Aid and
Service to Refugees of the World
Council of Churches and also go
toward the support of projects of
the United Church Women.
Among those who will be aided
are physically handicapped victims
of war who need vocational train
ing, aged and sick refugees who
may never be able to emigrate,
students in Indonesia who are try
ing to fit themselves to replace the
Dutch ministers who withdrew at
the time of independence. Also in
line for assistance are small
Christian hospitals in Southeast
Asia in need of equipment,
medicines and surgical supplies.
The United Church Women will
continue to extend their programs
of study and action, with plans
to send an observer to the United
Nations and to study and support
human rights, foreign aid, the
admission of refugees, a humane
immigration policy, progressive
disarmament and the peaceful uses
of atomic energy.
In addition to money offerings,
those wishing to participate in
World Community Day are asked
to collect and bring to the various
local observances clothes and
blankets for “Parcels for Peace”
l to be sent to India, Pakistan.
THE CARTER OIL COMPANY
Affiliate of Standard Oil Company (N.J.)
Will Interview Students on November 6
CARTER’S RESEARCH LABORATORY in Tulsa, Oklahoma
Has Positions For: Physicists, Chemists, Mathematicians,
Geologists, Electrical, Mechanical, Chemical, and Petroleum
Engineers.
CARTER’S FIELD DIVISIONS Have Positions For: Engi
neers in Field Producing Operations. Geologists in Field Ex- *1
ploration.
Make an appointment through your placement office.
at low, low prices
^ GROCERIES ^
3 Lb. Can
C R I S C O 89c
No. 2 Cans—Libby’s
CRUSHED PINEAPPLE . can 25c
No. 2 Cans—Libby’s
PINEAPPLE JUICE . . 2 cans 29c
Libby’s Asparagus St3de
GREEN BEANS .... can 35c
303 Cans—Libby’s Golden
CREAM CORN .... 2 cans 35c
303 Cans—Libby’s Whole
SMALL BEETS .... 2 cans 35c
1 Pound Pkg.
LIPTON’S TEA $1.19
^ FROZEN FOODS ^
— PICTSWEET —
LEMONADE, LIMEADE
ORANGE JUICE, GRAPEFRUIT
JUICE .... 2—G-oz. cans 35c
GREEN PEAS, MUSTARD
GREENS, SPINACH . . . pkg. 17c
+ PRODUCE ^
432 Size
SUNKIST LEMONS . . doz. 23c
Ruby Red
GRAPEFRUIT .... 2 for 15c
Tender Valentine
GREEN BEANS .... lb. 15c
F resh
CELERY stalk 10c
^ GROCERIES ^
No. 2 Vi Cans—Libby’s
BARTLETT PEARS . . can 41c
No. 2 i/^ Cans—Hunt’s
PEACH HALVES . . . . can 29c
No. 300 Size Cans—Kimbell’s
PORK & BEANS . . .3 cans 25c
14-Oz. Bottles—Del Monte
CATSUP ...... bottle 19c
Maryland Club
COFFEE . . . . 1 lb. can 99c
Nabisco Premium
SALTINE CRACKERS . .lb. 25c
No. 2'/2 Cans—Yambrosia
SWEET POTATOES . . 2 cans 41c
^ MARKET
Armour’s Canned—Heady to Eat
BONELESS HAMS
3 lb. size $2.59
6% lb. size
$6.15
Decker’s Tall Korn
SLICED BACON . . .
. Ib.
47c
LOIN STEAK
. lb.
65c
ROUND STEAK . . . .
. lb.
65c
SHORT RIBS
. lb.
29c
Fresh
GROUND BEEF . . .
. lb.
30c
VEAL CHOPS ....
. lb.
49c
Square Cut
SHOULDER ROAST . .
. lb.
39c
GHARLI
NORTH GATE
— WE DELIVER
FOOD
MARKET
COLLEGE STATION
SPECIALS FOR THUR. AFTERNOON, FRI. & SAT, — NOV. 1-2-3