The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 12, 1957, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    ♦
I
v
PAGE 4
Thursday, December 12, 1957
SOCIAL WHIRL —
By appointment purveyors of soap to the late King George VI. Yardley & Co. ltd London
THIS AFTER SHAVE LOTION
CONDITIONS YOUR FACE, TOO
Invigorates and softens the skin; soothes razor burn
after any shave, electric or lather. . . $1.10, plus tax
YARDLEY OF LONDON, inc.
Yardley products for America are created in England and finished in the U.S.A. from the
original English formulae, combining imported and domestic ingredients. 620 Fifth Ave., N.Y.C.
YARDLEY PRODUCTS MAY BE SECURED AT
ELLISON PHARMACY
YOUR REXALL STORE
College Station
Aggie Wives Bridge Club will
not meet tonight, since the regular
meeting room is not available. The
regular meeting will be held next
week.
Industrial Engineering Wives
will meet for election of officers
at 7:30 tonight at the home of
Mrs. Stanley A. Wykes, 733 In
wood, Bryan. Bennett Ruiz and
Jo Ann Garretson will be co-hostes-
ses.
Regular business meeting of the
Animal Husbandry Wives will be
held at 7:30 tonight in the south
solarium of the YMCA.
Members are asked to bring old
clothes and toys for the needy
family the club has adopted for
Christmas.
Jan Wallace will be in charge of
the Christmas program. Hostesses
will be Doris Garbode and Charlene
Ragsdale.
Agricultural Economics and
Rural Sociology Wives will have a
combination Christmas and Ph. T.
dinner at 7:30 p. m. Monday at
The Western.
Members of the Dames Club are
asked to notify La Vonne Droemer,
VI 6-524(), not later than Monday
as to whether they will attend
the club’s Christmas party. A
charge of 50 cents per couple will
be made for refreshments.
Civil Engineering Student Wives
Club will hold its Christmas party
at 7:30 p. m. Saturday at the Lit
tle Girl Scout House in Bryan.
All members and their husbands
are invited. Each wife is asked to
bring a snack.
Corps To Review
For Gen. Romulo
The Corps of Cadets will pass in
review honoring Gen. Carlos P.
Romulo, Philippine representative
to the United Nations, Friday aft
ernoon at 4:15.
Gen. Romulo will be on the cam
pus as part of the Third Annual
Student Conference On National
Affairs.
Classes will be dismissed at 3:30
Friday afternoon for the event.
GROCERIES-
No. 2 V 2 Cans—Libbys
Sliced Peaches Can 32c
303 Cans:—Libbys
Pumpkin 2 cans for 27c
46 Oz. Cans—Libbys
Pineapple Juice Can 29c
No. 2 Vi Cans—Hunts
Fruit Cocktail Can 37c
No. 2 Cans—Luckyleaf
Sliced Apples 2 cans lor 47c
303 Cans—Kimbells
Pitted Pie Cherries .. 2 cans for 47c
303 Cans—Diamond Brand
Pineapple Chunks .... 2 cans for 39c
Maryland Club
COFFEE 1 Lb. Can 91c
46 Oz, Cans—Texsun
Grapefruit Juice Can 25c
Nabisco—Premium
Saltine Crackers 1 Lb Pkg. 25c
No. 2 Cans—Van Camps
Pork & Beans 2 cans for 35c
3 Lb. Can
CRISCO , 89c
No. 2 Vz Cans—Alma Brand
Sweet Potatoes Can 22c
6 Oz. Jars Chase & Sanborns
Instant Coffee Jar $1.15
FROZEN
-PICTSWEET FOODS-
Sliced Peaches,
Sliced Strawberries Lkg. 27c
Baby Whole Okra, Baby Green
Limas, Ford Hook Limas .. Pkg. 27c
Cut Broccoli Spears,
Squash Pkg. 19c
-MARKET-
pen FED BABY BEEF CUTS
Round Steak
1 Lb. 75c
Loin Steak
1 Lb. 75c
Square Cut ;
Shoulder Roast
1 Lb. 49c
Meaty Short Ribs
1 Lb. 35c
Veal Chops
1 Lb. 65c
Harm els—Dairy Brand
All Meat Wieners
1 Lb. 49c
Deckers—Tall Korn ;
Sliced Bacon
1 Lb. 53c
Wisconsin—Daisey
Cheese
1 Lb. 59c
-PRODUCE-
Large Crisp
Celery Stalk 10c
Juicy Texas
Oranges 5 Lb. Bag 25c
California Jumbo
Lettuce 2 Heads 25c
California
Bell Peppers Lb. 10c
SPECIALS FOR THUR. AFTERNOON, FRI. & SAT. — DEC. 12-13-14
jl l <
FOOD
MARKET
NORTH GATE
— WE DELIVER —
COLLEGE STATION
'i V-' A- • : scA* r
The Battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texas
3,
cimilij ^j-oivorit
ed
By LENA ORR
(Lena Orr and her husband, Carl, principal of Travis Elementary
School in Bryan, reside at 707 Inwood Drive, Bryan. Mrs. Orr is an
accountant at the A&M Press.)
APPLE CRUNCH
4 large tart apples
(or canned apples)
Vi, cup granulated sugar
1 cup water (do not use
this if you use canned
apples)
Vn. cup butter
% cup brown sugar
% cup crushed cereal
flakes
1 cup chopped walnuts
or pecans
Pare, core, slice apples and cook until tender with the
granulated sugar and water. Place in a deep 9-inch pie plate,
butter, add brown sugar, cereal flakes and nuts. Cover apples with
mixture and bake in a hot oven (400 degrees) 12-15 minutes. Serve
warm with plain or whipped cream.
Vi cup
Cream
3 egg yolks
1 cup mashed potatoes
IRISH POTATO CAKE
Cream together:
1 stick butter or oleo
2 cups sugar
Sift together:
2 cups flour 1 teaspoon soda
2 teaspoons cocoa % teaspoon salt
Then add to creamed mixture with:
Vi cup sweet or sour milk 1 cup chopped huts
1 cup coconut (angel flake)
Fold in:
3 stiffly beaten egg whites 1 teaspoon vanilla
Bake in 3 layers. Grease and flour bottom of pans or line with
wax paper. Bake at 350 degrees for 30 to 35 minutes.
CHS Girl Enters
Contest Semifinals^
Mary Margaret Hierth, A&M
Consolidated High School senior,
has been named a semifinalist in
the National Merit Scholarship
competition.
Miss Hierth is one of the 7,500
high scorers on the scholarship
qualifying test, a nationwide col
lege aptitude examination given in
14,000 high schools Oct. 22. She
outscored 300,000 fellow seniors to
move a step closer to the $4 mil
lion to be awarded in merit schol
arships in 1958.
The rigorous three-hour semifi
nal test will be given throughout
the country at testing centers on
Jan. 11. Students whose high
scores substantiate their earlier
test performance will become fi
nalists in the competition.
At least 7,000 of the semifinal
ists are expected to survive this
second hurdle, according to John
M. Stalnaker, president of the Na
tional Merit Scholarship Corpora
tion, which conducts the annual
competition.
ICING
1 cup finely chopped nuts
1 cup undiluted evaporated
milk
3 egg yolks
1 teaspoon vanilla
Mix all ingredients together in saucepan and cook over low flame,
stirring until thick. Beat until cool. For best results, use angel flake
coconut.
1 stick butter or oleo
Vi can coconut
1 cup sugar
1 tablespoon flour (mixed
with sugar)
WESSON WONDER BROWNIES
1 cup all purpose flour % cup Wesson oil
Vi teaspoon double-action 2 squares cooking chocolate,
baking powder melted
% teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon vanilla
1 cup s\agar % cup nuts, coarsely
2 eggs, well beaten chopped
Sift flour, baking powder, salt. Beat sugar into eggs; mix in Wes
son oil, chocolate, vanilla. Add flour, all at once; mix well. Add nuts.
Turn into paper lined pan (7 by 11). Bake in moderate oven (350
degrees) 20 minutes. Cool 5 minutes. Turn out of pan; cut into 16
squares.
COLLEGE STATION STATE
BANK
A HOME OWNED BANK, SERVICING THE
COLLEGE STATION AREA
Start A Checking Account!
COMPLETE BANKING FACILITIES
3% Interest Paid on Savings
MEMBER—
Federal Reserve System
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
North Gate
VI 6-5511
Foreign Students
To Be Entertained
Pan - American Roundtable of
Bryan and College Station will
hold its annual Christmas fiesta
for students at 7:30 p. m. Monday
at St. Thomas Episcopal Church in
College Station.
A musical program will be pre
sented, and carol-singing in both
Spanish and English will be feat
ured. Ballroom dancing will con
clude the evening.
No gifts will be exchanged this
year.
In the final phase of the compe
tition, high school grades, extra
curricular attainments, and the
leadership and character of the
competitors will be evaluated.
About May 1, 800 will become the
merit scholars of ’58.
Winners make their own choice
of college and course of study. The
value of the four-year merit schol
arships varies with financial need
of each individual student, ranging
upward from a minimum of $100 a
year to $2,200, or more.
Colleges chosen by the scholar
ship winners will receive grants-
in-aid averaging $2,200 per merit
scholar to help defray the actual
cost of educating the students.
The merit scholarship program
is now in its third year. It was
established in 1955 through grants
of $20.5 million from the Ford
Foundation and the Carnegie Cor
poration of New York.
The program is designed to
search the nation for students who
will be most able to benefit from
a college education, regardlpss of
means.
Once discovered in the national
talent hunt, the students are sup
ported by funds provided by spon
soring companies. About 14,000
merit scholarships have been
awarded in the two years of the
program, and the winners are now
enrolled in over 265 different col
leges.
Merit scholarships are sponsored
by about sixty business and indus
trial firms, as well as professional
societies, foundations and individ
uals. The Sears-Roebuck Founda
tion is the largest sponsor, with
.00 awards worth $500,000 being
granted annually.
€4t QjfrM&wean
BV BEOKvRAV
$25.95
For today’s Suburban Living:
THE COUNTRY COAT
'—warm, light ready for anythingt
This is the swagger new look of the outdoors-
man—completely at home behind a wheel or
a snow-shovel—warm enough for winter^
worst when you button up the storm collar;!;
cinch up the sleeve tabs. There’s more than
a “touch” of elegance in the splendid fabrics
and tailoring—the square leather buttons—
side vents—oversized flapped patch pockets,'
You’ll wear it more than your overcoat, now-
till Spring!
Shown in luxurious, thick-pile Kashlura' 1
Fleece, a blend of wool and cashmere; with
regimental striped quilt lining.
^Jhe (^xclianqe
ore
an^e
‘In Its 50th Year of Serving Texas Aggies”
1
PEANUTS
By Charles M. Schulz
PEANUTS
/IF YOU WON T
WRITE mETTR?
TO SANTA OAUS.
IU WRITE IT
DOWU HEAR ME? I
NEED YOUR HELfi
CHAfiUE BROWN! I CAN
WRITE IT MYSELF!!!
T
WHICH END OF THE
.PENCILDO YOU USE?,
r
J2-/2
/■*
r