V 't i The Battalion College Station (Brazos County)) Texas PAGE 6 Tuesday, March 19, 1957 Popular Dinner Dish Chicken Fricassee Heads Tasty Menu For March A cheery dinner menu these March days features chicken fric assee with dumplings. It’s an old- fashioned dish • but an ever-pop- ular one. Here are directions for mak ing G to 8 servings: Simmer one 4 Vz -to-5-pound (ready-to-cook weight), cut-up stewing chicken with 3 teaspoons of salt, 1 medium onion, a tip of While I’m trying the next case, take my trousers to be pressed at — CAMPUS CLEANERS bay leaf, and 4 cups of water until fork tender—about 2% hours. Remove chicken from broth. Strain broth. Spoon fat from sur face of broth and save for other cooking needs. Measure broth and if necessary add water to make 3 cups. Heat to a simmer. To prepare gravy, blend % cup of the chickep fat, % cup of flour and 1 cup of milk until free of lumps. Pour slowly into simmering broth, stirring con stantly unfil thickened through- out. Cover and simmer about 5 minutes. Place chicken in gravy and heat thoroughly. Season to taste. Make the dumplings from your own favorite recipe or one found in any good cook book, or simply use biscuit mix, following pack age directions. Garnish the dump lings with parsley. Mrs, Gutierrez Guest of Honor At Farewell Tea Mrs. Manuel Gutierrez, who will leave soon for her native Ar gentina, was $uest of honor Sat urday afternoon at a farewell tea given by the Pan American Round Table at the home of the director, Miss Sadie Hatfield. Members of the Round Table and many guests and friends of the honoree called between 4 and 6 in the afternoon. In the house party receiving with the hostess were Mrs. Mary Ellen Vincent, Mrs. Silvio Navarro and Mrs. Charles Moore. Mrs. Frank Gould and Miss Wara Wiseman alternated at the silver tea service. The tea table was graced with an arrangement of white iris, and bouquets of iris and redbud blossoms were used throughout the house. Mr. and Mrs. Gutierrez will leave next Wednesday for a tour of the United States before sail ing from New York for Argen tina. Gutierrez, who is head of the Cotton Experiment Station in Chaco, Argentina, has been doing research on cotton and grasses for the past year at the A&M Experiment Station, under the auspices of the Rockefeller Found ation. Social Whirl Wildlife Management Wives will meet at 7:30 p.m. today at the Bryan Sewing Machine Comp any, 3515 Texas, in the Ridge crest Shopping Center across from Orr’s. Following the business meet ing, Mrs. Ruby Gandy will give a sewing demonstration for the group. * * * J. J. Gunther will speak on “Identification and Selection of Cuts of Beef” at the meeting of Aero Wives at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Aero Lounge. * * -Y- Oceanography and Meteorology Student Wives Club will meet this evening at 8 in the south solarium of the YMCA. This will be a business meet ing at which the constitution will be presented for approval and the officers of the club will be elected. All department student wives are urged to attend. Hostesses for the evening are Pat Smith, Jerri Sutherland, Pat Van Hulla and Marian Proctor. * * * “How to Spend Your Money Wisely” will be discussed by H. G. Kenagy of the Business Admin istration Department at the Civil Engineering Wives Club meeting at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the south solarium of the YMCA. Spring picnic plans will be dis cussed. Hostesses will be Sandra Boyd and Janie Hart. Coat-Dress Costume Gets Dior’s Vote Of Approval CATERING, for 4^' SPECIAL OCCASIONS Leave the Details to me. LUNCHEONS BANQUETS WEDDING PARTIES Let Us Do the Work — You Be A Guest At Your Own Party Maggie Parker Dining Hall W. 26th & Bryan TA 2-5069 PARIS (A 5 )—The importance of the coat-and-dress costume gets added impetus this season from no less a personage than Christian Dior whose 10th anniversary col lection features a series of fragile and feminine ensembles in sheer floating fabrics and romantic mood. The transparent coat of organ die or chiffon over a dress of slightly heavier fabric is a high light of the collection. A&M MENS SHOP 103 MAIN NORTH GATE AGGIE OWNED BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES Pne day 3^ per word 24 per word each additional day Minimum charge—IO4 DEADLINES B p.m. day before publication Classified Display 8O4 per column Inch each Insertion PHONE VI 6-6415 FOR SALE ’57 FORD. Why pay more? Graduating seniors can get small down payment and notes. Call Jack Quinn, TA 2-6246 after 6 p.m. 245t4 (2) Underwood typewriters, 11 inch carriages; (1) Royal type writer, 11 inch carriage. May be seen at the Athletic Department. Sealed bids will be received in the Office of the Business Manager, College Administration Building until 10:30 a.m., April 1, 1957. The right is reserved to reject any and all bids and to waive any and all technicalities. Address Business Manager, A&M College of Texas, College Station, Texas, for fui’ther information. 245t2 Sealed proposals for the pur chase and removal of two one-story farm cottages, Nos. AEX17132 and AEX17133, behind the Dairy Breeding Center of the A&M Col lege of Texas, will be received at the offices of the Department of Dairy Science, Room 209, Agricul tural Building, College Station, Texas, until 2 p.m., Wednesday, April 3, 1957, and then publicly opened and .read. Information and proposal forms may be obtained from the Dairy Department. The Department reserves the right to waive any technicalities and to re ject any or all bids. 245t3 PESTS EXTERMINATED! $4 per College View Apt. For information call — JOHN R. DEEGAN VI 6-5y25 C-12-A C.V. PROMPT RADIO SERVICE — Call — SOSOLIK’S RADIO AND TV SERVICE TLS 8. Main St < Aeraaa from BallroaS Tower) rmOKTK TA 9-1-541 HR YAH a ENGINEERING AND ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES • BLUE LINE PRINTS 9 BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS SCOATES INDUSTRIES •S3 014 RnlpAnr Sprint* Roa4 BRYAN, TEXAS FOR SALE FOUND Twin beds, dresser, typewriter, dinette set, curtain stretchers, bi cycle, ladders, etc. 602 Montclair. 245tl Small ladies purse, near North Gate, containing several dollars. Call VI 6-6676. 244t2 WORK WANTED Air Force officers uniforms worth $250, summer and winter. Size 42 blouse, 32 trousers. $100.00. C-8-D C.V. 244t3 Will keep small child for work ing mother. VI 6-5305. 906B Welsh. 245t4 For sale by owner, one bedroom house with attached garage. In first class condition. Large lot; excellent rent property. Price $4,750. VI 6-4084. 244t5 Day nursery, monthly rates. Day or night sitting on week ends, Christian home, experience, cheap. TA 2-6076, 3007 South College Ave., Bryan 233tfn All day nursery. Have had nur ses’ training. 304 West Dexter oi call VI 6-4142.. 225tfn AKC registered Collie pups, wormed and inoculated. VI 6-4994. 243t4 PETS SPECIAL NOTICE One million dollars to loan! Yes, DOCTOR FIXIT has one million dollars to loan foi* repair and ad ditions to your home or rental property. Call DOCTOR FIXIT today at the MARION PUGH LUMBER COMPANY for free es timates and 100% repair* loans. Five years to pay. Phone VI- 6-5711. 245t4 PROTECT YOUR FEMALE PETS IN SEASON Free pickup, delivery BAYARD KENNELS Highway 6 South, College VI 6-5535 FOR RENT SUU ROSS LODGE, NO. 1300 A.F. A A.M. College Station. Texas /To, Called meeting Tuesday, March 19, at 7 p.m. E.A. and M.M. examinations. Work in F.C. degree. All ’“v brethren studying for E.A. examination are urged to at tend. 245tl L. P. Dulaney, W.M. J. J. Woolket, Acting Sec’y. Furnished three room apartment. Large screen porch and garage. Near Southside Shopping Center. Call VI 6-4452 after 5 p.m. or any time Saturday or Sunday. 244tfn One two room furnished house and two furnished apartments near college. Apply 403 Jersey or call VI 6-5427. 237tfn OFFICIAL NOTICES Official notices must be brought, mailed or telephoned so as to arrive In the Offlc* of Student Publications (Ground Floor YMCA, VI 6-6415, hours 8-12, 1-5, dall) Monday through Friday) at or before th. deadline of 1 p.m. of the day precedlnt publication — Director of Student Publica tions. Sewing machines, Pruitt Fabric Shop. 98tf Dr. Carlton R. Lee OPTOMETRIST SOSA East 26th Call TA 2-1662 for Appointment (Across from Court House) March 30 is the last day on which seniors may place their orders for rings to be delivered before the ring dance. Please place your order before March 30 If you expect to have the ring for the dance. H. Li. Heaton, Director of Admissions and Registrar SMITH GUN WORKS Factory trained Gunsmith for complete service and supplies. New & Used ... GUNS, SCOPES, MOUNTS, COMPENSATORS, RECOIL PADS, REBARRELING, etc. 1 mile South of College Highway 6 S. ADMIRAL Appliances DEARBORN Coolers EASY Washers DIXIE Ranges MATHES Air Conditioners MODEL AIRPLANE SUPPLIES TV-RADIO SERVICE JOE FAULK ’32 Auto-Appl. 214 N. Bryan TA 2-1669 Home Center Cavitt-Coulter TA 2-6138 One such costume has a white organdie coat over a short even ing dress of white linen trimmed with bands of narrow black velvet ribbon run through beading. The opposite combination is seen in an afternoon ensemble with a green silk faille coat over a dress of sheer black lily-printed organdie. With these costumes Dior shows big-brimmed hats in the garden party manner. It is one more indication of the new mood of elegance and formality evident throughout spring and summer fashions on both sides of the At lantic. Minister Kills Bankrobber At Road Block JEFFERSONVILLE, I n d., (/P)-A Methodist minister shot and killed a fleeing bank rob ber yesterday just after the gunman, had killed a state po lice sergeant at a highway road block. In quick succession, only half an hour after the bank robbery at nearby Sellersburg, the double shooting cut down Marvin E. Walts, 49, a veteran of 19 years’ state police service, and William Hassett, 25, Louisville. The Rev. Robert Gingery, pastor of Trinity Methodist Church in neighboring New Albany, was rid ing with Sgt. Walts, a member of his church, on Walts’ day off when the police radio sounded the manhunt alarm. Walts was sent to a roadblock four miles north of Jeffersonville. Jeffersonville is across the Ohio River from Louisville, Ky. At the nearby Charlestown post, where Walts had been first ser geant almost 10 years, Walts’ voice came over the radio from the roadblock, reporting that he had captured the bank robber. He asked for reinforcements to help bring the man in. There was a few moments’ si lence. Then a shaken voice came over the radio: “This is, Rev. Gingery. Mar vin has been shot. I have killed the bank robber. I’m sure Mar vin is dead.” Later at his home in New Al bany, the minister was near shock. State police said the minister re ported Walts ordered Hassett to get out of his escape car at the roadblock, about six miles south of Sellersburg, and that Hassett drew a gun and shot Walts in the head as he got out. Gingery said he then grabbed a shotgun from the state police car and shot Hassett. Later, two women tellers from the bank of Sellersburg identi fied Hassett as the man who rob bed the bank. The $1,655 loot was recovered. Walts, who once served as a school principal), lived in New Albany. Delta Kappa Gamma To Present Program By Mrs. L. Delaplane Alpha Xi chapter of Delta Kap pa Gamma will present Mrs. Wal ter H. Delaplane in “A Passing Review” at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Bryan Woman’s Club. Pro ceeds will benefit the chapter’s scholarship fund. Mrs. Delaplane’s program will be composed of a variety of brief reviews from the works of James Thurber, Silvia Wright, Rebecca West and Fiji Yoshikawa. Wife of the dean of the A&M School of Arts and Sciences, Mrs. Delaplane is a graduate of Ober- lin College, where she engaged in speech and debate activities. While her husband was on the faculty of Duke University, she was a member of the Durham, N. C., Little Theatre Group and was for two years director of the Durham Junior Community Play ers. She has appeared in several Aggie Player productions, includ ing “Family Portrait,” in which she played the leading role. Tickets for the review are on sale at the Stephen F. Austin ■» High School library and the La mar Junior High School library in Bryan and at the A&M Consol idated High School library in Col lege Station or may be obtained by calling Mrs. C. K. Leighton, scholarship chairman. .* ' \\ // r ivHAr is ClGAR&Tf SI*°K £ C0U> 0M {see p*k* gKAPH aT right ) WHAT IS A FRAGILE HEADDRESS? Frail Veil CHARLOTTE SCHRADER. ARLINGTON STATE COLL. STUCK FOR DOUGH? START STICKLING! MAKE *25 ^ We’ll pay $25 for every Stickler we print—and for hundreds more that never get used! So start Stickling— they’re so easy you can think of dozens in seconds! Sticklers are simple riddles with two-word rhyming answers. Both words must have the same number of syllables. (Don’t do drawings.) Send ’em all with your name, address, college and class to Happy-Joe-Lucky, Box 67A, Mount Vernon, N. Y. uoixt: CIGARETTES WE FEATURE CARRY OUT FOOD SERVICE — Delicious meals of your choos ing packed in a disposable container — A great conven- ince and time saver. — And all at no extra cost! Ask for one of our Souvenir Menus 2),./ Warmoh Restaurant — Delicatessen — Catering Phone TA 2-4749 2008-10 Texas Ave. (In The Plantation Shopping Center) CALENDAR says it’s spring . . . but it ain’t necessarily so. The freezin’ season may still come up with one last blast. And when that happens, your cigarette smoke makes a mighty Crisp Wisp! Of course, with Luckies, you can forget the weather. Luckies taste fine all year round—and no wonder! A Lucky is all cigarette . . . nothing but fine, mild, good-tasting tobacco that’s TOASTED to taste even better. Forecast: You’ll say Luckies are the best-tasting cigarette you ever smoked! I 'j WHAT CAUSES A LOST SAFARI? Jungle Bungle EDWARD SAMPLE. WESTERN MICHIGAN COLL. WHAT IS A LIMPING LEPRECHAUN? Hobblin' Goblin TRAVIS SLOCUMS. JR.. V.P.I. WHAT IS A GAY 90’S DRESSING PROBLEM? Bustle Tussle MARILYN SHURTER. MIAMI U. Luckies Taste Better “IT’S TOASTED’’ TO TASTE BETTER . . : CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER! ©a.t.co. PRODUCT OF AMERICA’S LEADING MANUFACTURER OF CIGARETTES