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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 20, 1956)
The Batt&lion College Station (Brazos County)', ’Texas PAGE 4 Tuesday, November 20, 1956 Just for Women Social Whirl A bingo party will highlight the Civil Engineering Wives Club meeting Wednesday at 8 p.m. in the south solarium in the YMCA. Each member is asked to bring a white elephant gift. A short bus iness meeting will also be held. * * * Wildlife Management Wives Club meeting, originally scheduled for this evening, has been post poned to Tuesday, Dec. 4, due to a conflict with the meeting of the Fish and Game Club. The Wives Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. on the 4th in the cabinet room of the YMCA. NEW! REMINGTON Cl&uetPAiteft, Th« only Portable with Miracle Tab end Super-Strength frame construe tlon. Has 33 other outstanding fea» tures. Freel Touch Method Instruction Book. Carrying Case. Budget Terms. Tost type and compare It today at City-Wide Service To Be Conducted Annual community Thanks giving church service will be held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the First Baptist Church of College Station. Townspeople and students of all faiths are welcome. The Rev. Nolan Vance of the A&M Methodist Church will deliver the sermon. In charge of general arrange ments for the service is the Rev. Norman Anderson, pastor of the A&M Presbyterian Church. NO DOWN PAYMENT! —o— $1.00 A WEEK First Payment Starts February 1, 1957 Waterless Recipe Strands Readers High and Dry Dolores Perry, Family Fav orites contributor of three weeks, ago, has received quite a few calls concerning her praline recipe. Seems it omitted a very im portant ingredient — IVz cups of water! For those who would like a repeat of the recipe, here it is— Ingredients: 2 cups white sugar, 1 cup brown sugar, 1 tablespoon white Karo, pinch salt, 114 cups water, 2 cups pecans, 14 stick butter, 1 tea spoon vanilla. Method: Mix sugar, Karo, salt and water and boil until hard ball stage is reached. Add nuts, butter and vanilla. Spoon out onto greased cookie sheet. Taylor (Continued from Page 3) for the night and the Owls picked up their total early in the third quarter. Neither team did any thing the first time they got the ball, but Osborne’s shoi't, 12-yard punt, gave Rice their chance mid way in the period. WITH A FIRST and 10 on the A&M 15, the Owls got a break as A&M was penalized 14 to the one for a person foul. Hill kept for the touchdown with 6:40 left in the third period. Jerry Hall’s try for point was good and the game was all but over. “Battlm’ Burke” is being taken to the cleaners. . . . Which reminds me, I send my clothes to — CAMPUS CLEANERS Bryan Office Equipment Co. Phone 3222 Texas Avenue TAylor 2-3620 Bryan, Texas FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE, THESE NEW TYPEWRITERS MAY ALSO BE PURCHASED AT THE — A&M PHOTO SHOP — North Gate The BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION WIVES CLUB Will sponsor STANLEY PARTY, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 20TH, at 8 P.M. in the CASHION ROOM OF THE YMCA. All wives are cordially invited to attend — A lamp will be raffled off at $.10 a chance — Refreshments will be served. BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES One day .... 3^ per word per word each additional day Minimum charge—40£ DEADLINES 5 p.m. day before publication Classified Display 80f* per column inch each insertion PHONE VI 6-6415 For Sale New 24-volume set Book of Knowledge. Reasonably priced. A-l-D College View. 190t8 Ladies grey fox jacket size 14. Like new. $25.00. Call VI 6-6459. 189t8 Motor scooter, Cushman, 3-wheel. 123 Meadowland, College Station. 189tfn 150 series 1954 2-door Chevrolet sedan. $875.00. Call E. L. Scott, VI 6-6310. 190t5 Help Wanted Young men, veterans, boys or students 18-24, neat appearing, to assist manager of World-wide Ad vertising Agency. Good pay, per manent position with rapid ad vancement. See or phone Mr. Steele or Mr. Fisk, Room 400, La Salle Hotel. 192t3 Young lady, neat, efficient, to address cards and answer phone and assist manager of World-wide Advertising Agency. See Mr. Steel or Fisk, Room 400, LaSalle Hotel. 192t3 A&M MENS SHOP 103 MAIN — NORTH GATE AGGIE OWNED PROMPT RADIO SERVICE — Can — SOSOLIK’S RADIO AND TV SERVICE TL3 8. Mala St (Aero— from Railroad Toww) rapNTC TA B-1841 BBTAW Work Wanted Experienced typist desires work at home. Prompt service. Phone VI 6-5987. 190tl6 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- Vig call Doctor Fixit at the Mar lon Pugh Lumber Company. 100% remodeling loans, no down pay ments. Phone VI 6-5711. 174tfn For Rent Room with private bath. Meals if desired. Call TA 3-4375. 174tfn Sewing machines, Pruitt Fabric Shop. 98tf Lost Reading glasses, natural color, plastic frames, in brown case, in or near MSC. Return to Battal ion. Reward. 194t2 Cotton suede coat, senior section, Saturday game. J. R. Gill, Dorm 16, room 232. 194t3 Found Male red Cocker. VI 6-6250. 194t4 Pets Dogs, cats boarded—low daily, weekly, monthly rates. Grooming, Puppies. Free pickup, delivery. BAYARD KENNELS, Highway 6 South, College. VI 6-5535. 70tf Town Hall is held in the G. Rolle White Colisum seating 8,500 per sons. • ENOrNTDERnVO AND ARCHITECTTRAI. SUPPUEB • BIjUK LINE PRINTS • BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS SCOATES INDUSTRIES M3 Old SnlpfenT Spring Road BBXAN, TEXAS Business Opportunities Man or woman. OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS. A new item. First time offered. Start in spare time, if sat isfied, then work full time. Refilling and collecting money from bulk ma chines in this area. To qualify you must have a car, reference, $360 cash to secure territory and inventory. De voting 4 hours a week to business your end on percentages of collections should net approximately $175 monthly with very good possibility of taking over full time. Income increasing accord ingly. If applicant can qualify finan cial assistance will be given by Co. for expansion to full time position with above average income. Include phone in application. Box 43, c/o Battalion. 192t3 Special Notice ATTENTION WORKING MOTHERS! All day nursery $25. per month. Phone VI 6-4142. 191tfn SUL ROSS LODGE, NO. 1300 A.F. & A.M. College Station, Texas Called meeting Tuesday, Nov. 20, ■ 7 p.m. Work in FC degree. Members and visiting brethren cordially in vited. L. P. Dulaney, WM 194tl N. M. McGinnis, Sec’y. Day and night nursery. Two blocks from North Gate, Reason able rates. Expert care. 416 Tau ber. VI 6-4430. 162tfn VISIT . . . COULTER FIELD in Bryan Highway 21 East • AIRPLANE RENTAL • FLIGHT INSTRUCTION • RIDES TA 2-9400 OFFICIAL NOTICES Official notices must be brought, mailed, or telephoned so as to arrive In the Offlct of Student Publications (Ground Floot YMCA, VI 6-6415, hours 8-12, 1-5, dallj Monday through Friday) at or before tin, deadline of 1 p.m. of the day preceding publication — Director of Student Publica tions. Dr. Carlton R. Lee OPTOMETRIST 303A East 26th Call TA 2-1662 for Appointment (Across from Court House) A Doctor Says — A Misbehaved Child May Be A Troubled Child By DOROTHY V. WHIPPLE, M. D. AP Newsfeatures “Doctor, I’ve come to drop my problem in your lap,” Mrs. Stimson announced as she entered the office. “Steve bites—he bites me.” (She demonstrated an ugly black and blue spot on her arm.) “He bites his little brother, and now he’s taken to biting the children in the neighborhood. It’s gotten to the point where all the other mothers grab their children away when 4 they see Steve coming. And much as it hurts me to see them do it, I really can’t blame them.” She took a breath and went on: “I’ve done everything I can think of to stop it. I’ve bitten him back—good and hard, too. I’ve washed his mouth out with soap; I’ve punished him until I’m blue in the face, and, if anything, Steve bites more and harder. Now it’s your turn, Doctor. I want a miracle and I want it quick.” Mrs. Stimson laughed as she said this and settled back in her chair for the formula of the mir acle. Steve was a little over three; his brother, Paul, was just about a year old.- Steve had been pretty jealous of Paul. Mother seemed always busy with that squally baby when he needed her, and Daddy went right over and picked Paul up when he came into the house and didn’t pay any atten tion to Steve the way he used to. One day when the two of them were cooing over the baby on the sofa, Steve crawled along the floor and took a good bite out of Mother’s leg! Something surely happened then! Mother howled and grabbed her leg and Daddy forgot all about Paul, he shook Steve and talked big and loud. Steve didn’t know much what he said, but be loved having both Mommy and Daddy forget about Paul and pay attention to him. Next day Stevie tried it again; he bit Mommy on the arm when she was giving him his breakfast. This time Mommy bit him back. It hurt, but Mommy was excited and forgot about Paul. Steve lived in a neighborhood with a lot of children, but they were all quite a bit older than he was—mostly four, five and six- year-olds. Steve liked to play with them, but he couldn’t quite keep up; he couldn’t get places fast enough on his fat little legs; he lost out on turns; he was slow making cakes with the sand. When Harry took his shovel he bit him, and he got his shovel right back. LADIES . . . For a Free Home Demonstration of the finest Sewing Machine in the world— DIAL VI 6-6723 LIBERAL TERMS Bryan Sewing Machine and Appliance Co. Ridgecrest Shopping Center Biting seemed a good way to Steve to get what you wanted. Mommy bit him so it seemed the way to act. Steve had just discovered a way to solve his problems. It was up to the grownups to figure out a better way. First it was neces sary to recognize that Steve did have problems. He needed more attention from his mother and dad. He needed to realize that Paul had not replaced him in their affections. Second, he needed playmates that were more nearly his age— children with whom he could cope without resorting to biting. “You mean he should go to a nursery school?” asked Mrs. Stim son when she began to see the picture. “Yes, I think that would help. He needs to be kept in a simple, easy situation, in which he feels adequate and secure both at home and for play .time. He will need some careful supervision to pre vent him from resorting to this trick he has found works so well. Gradually he will find that he doesn’t have to bite.” Methodist Men To Hear Dr. ha nun At Banquet Meet “Some Recent Developments in Higher Education as Related to Religion” will be the subject of Dr. Robert - B. Kamm’s address at the banquet meeting of the Methodist Men of A&M Method ist Church at 6 p.m. Wednesday. Dr. Kamm, dean of personnel services of A&M College, will be introduced by Howard S. Whitney, president of the Methodist Men. Assisting with arrangements for the affair are Bob M. Gallo way, vice president; Leslie . B. Hawkins, secretary-treasurer; the Rev. Nolan R. Vance, pastor of the church, and the program planners, Jarvis Miller, Ben Worm- bly and R. E. Leighton. Food planning for the banquet is in the hands of Robert Shrode, Murray Brown, C. B. Godbey, W. R. Horsley, Barney Welch, R. E. Leighton, and Ralph Harris. President Whitney states that all interested men of the commun ity are invited to attend and brings attention to the fact that the ban quet is being held at 6 p.m. in stead of the conventional hour of 6:30 to allow time to attend the special Thanksgiving services at 7:30 p.m. Electrical Engineers Civil Engineers Mechanical Engineers LOOKING FOR A CAREER WITH A FAST-GROWING ELECTRIC COMPANY? Texas Electric Service Company, one of the largest utility companies in Texas, (but not so large that an ambitious young man wouldn’t be noticed) offers numer ous opportunities for college graduates. Representa tives of the company will be glad to give you more details about the type of job opportunities in this rap idly growing electric utility firm. A REPRESENTATIVE OF TEXAS ELECTRIC SERV ICE COMPANY IS AT TEXAS A&M TODAY. AR RANGE WITH THE PLACEMENT OFFICE FOR AN APPOINTMENT. Study of Antiques May F aseinatingHobby for Amateurs p»-— By VIVIAN BROWN AP Newsfeatures Writer Sometime in her life a woman is likely to be bitten with the antique bug. She buys a little thing, perhaps a piece of old glass, pewter or a love seat, and bingo— she begins to dislike everything else in her home, particularly her furniture. That is only the beginning. Even after she has attended a few auctions, visited some antique shops and read some books, she realizes that for all her interest, she is antique-ignorant. She doesn’t really know one piece from another. How do the “experts” gain such knowledge ? Some study their subject ob jectively as others study archi tecture or engineering. Others trust to luck with the help of books and articles. The best informed may be fooled occasionally. There are short-cuts to the knowledge for amateurs. Certain details of a piece of furniture may give a clue to its origin. Pie-revolutionary chests and secretaries made in New York, for instance, reflect the Dutch in fluence—wider proportions than pieces made during the same per iod in New England. “New England furniture gained much of its beauty from inte grated design and slender propor tions,” says one of the country’s leading antique dealers, Albeii; Sack, who displayed some inter esting museum-like pieces at the recent International Antiques Ex hibition and Sale in New York. Most furniture may even be pinned down to the eity it was made in once you get the knack— PHILOSOPHY FOR TODAY “You ask me why I smile,” he said, “When H-Bombs hang above my head. My car’s a wreck . . . my gal has fled My money’s gone . . . I’m in the red . . Why do I smile? ... You ask me why? CHESTERFIELDS! THEY SATISFYl’* MORAL: Everything looks bright with your Chesterfield alight! Cheer up every smoking moment with more real flavor, more real enjoyment. Smile, friend .. . with the smoothest- tasting smoke today, packed more smoothly by ACCU • RAY I - Like your pleasure big?.. • Smoke for real. . • smoke Chesterfield! © Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. BONFIRE SPECIALS USED FATIGUES ... 95c One Pair ... $1.50 (Save your good fatigues and use these) COMBAT — JUMP — ZIPPER Boots - $10.95 & up LOUPOT’S 9 eajwuz, CttflcMAjkOL? That's where the pause that refreshes with ice-cold Coke began. Now it’s enjoyed fifty million times a day. Must be something to it. And there is. Have au ice-cold Coca-Cola and see... right now. BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY BRYAN COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. nCotca" It a registered trade-mark. © 1956, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY