swti MONEY SAVER * IDEA BOOK! WITH THESE COUPONS IN OUR“MONEY SAVER AND IDEA BOOK" WE ARE PROUD TO OFFER o 8 MATCHING PIECES OF BLUE FLORAL GLASBAKE OVENWARE AT TREMENDOUS SAVINGS AND EXCITING OFFER ON WASHINGTON FORGE UTENSILS PLUS OVER $25.00 IN VALUABLE COUPON SAVINGS! LUNCH MEAT Save Over 40% on Washington Forge Kitchen Utensils 2/2 Quart Glasbake Ovenware, Reg. $1.49 WE UTILITY DISH GIVE Washington Forge Reg. $1.98 With Mailer Coupon _ With Mailer Coupon Style — 24 Hour Spray $1.50 Size LADLE Style — 24 Hour $ we DEODORANT S. rjlYp American Beauty — Long or Elbo, Spaghetti or MACARONI S A. F Sliced, 2-Lb. Rkg. BACON Sauve — Normal, E SHAIR SPRAY ■ Cackleberry H| Large Egg 3Pkgs$1 tide With Mailer Coupon Sauve — Normal, Dry or Hard K With Mailer Coupon Grade ‘A’ Dozen WE GIVE Duncan Hines — Layer Detergent Teflon GIVE CAKE MIX Blackboard and Bulletin vve BOARD Each 88 c SKILLET Borden’s am Cottage Cheese Morton PIES Armour Star — Dark and Light Meat Turkey Roast Swanson’s — Assorted owaiison s — o course SJlT.V, DINNERS 59c CHICKEN DINNER 79c MEAT PIES »=• 5 - *1 00 Antiseptic Mouthwash Reg. 75^ CIVE LISTERINE -” 55' QUANTITY Apple, Peach, Coconut 20-Oz. 2-Lb. 6-Oz. Swanson’s — 3 Course Colgate — King Size TOOTHPASTE R ,7,53c PRICES GOOD THUR. - FRI. - SAT. OCT 5-6-7. Lustre Creme — 79^ Size HAIR SPRAY 2 loin Turkeys OYSTERS Fresh Select CERVELAT R ths Rath. Blackhawk Tokay RED GRAPES u,19c K. Y BEANS Lb.25c Washington State — Red Delicious APPLES Lb 19c Vine Ripe TOMATOES Yellow Gold Band 16 to 20 Lb. Avg. |jj 3 Lb*. 29c c By The Chunk .... Lb. i2-0z. 89c 69c CANNED HAM 3 c L . b n $2.89 ONIONS . 32 WEINERS 39 c Rath’s 12-Oz. Pkg. Sliced Lb. 65 Rath, Blackhawk — BREAKFAST LINKS 3 8-Oz. Pkgs :$1 PRESERVES O xs-o, $1 Jars 2 Convenient Locations * Downtown 200 E. 24th St. • Ridgecrest 3516 Texas Ave. THE BATTALION Thursday, October 5, 1967 Page 4 College Station, Texas Ma Baylor Helps Flood Victims Whether the word in current student lingo is “give-in,” “help- out,” “clothe-in” or “hand-out,” the latest thing in student demon strations is nothing more than good old-fashioned good-will. Wanting to protest Hurricane Beulah’s visit to the state and help ease some of the misery caused by recent floods in South Texas, fifty Baylor University students began a drive that netted more than $200.00 cash in two hours and carloads of clothes, cosmetics, food and toiletries Thursday evening—all from stu dents living in dormitories. The drive continued through the week end. Earlier last week the Salvation Army in Waco was besieged with Baylor student callers asking what they could do to help with relief work. The calls were so numerous that the Salvation Ar my contacted Baylor Dean of Students W. C. Perry Thursday afternoon and designated the Baylor campus for student volun teers. The need was great and the time was short, so students went to work quickly. The students, members of the men’s Kappa Omega Tau and women’s Chi’s service clubs, heartily accepted Perry’s proposal that they canvass the dormitories for donations. “Dean Perry called us at 5 p.m. Thursday afternoon,” said Tom Follett of KOT, “and we were happy to get a chance to help." Follett began rounding up members and by 7 p.m. had 20 men ready to begin work. Meanwhile, Mrs. Virginia Crump, Assistant Dean of Stu dents, had called Annette Ball, Chi’s vice-president in charge of service projects. Miss Ball called 30 members and they began knocking on doors in the women’s dormitories about the time Follett’s men were get ting started in the men’s. “Each girl was assigned to a floor,” Miss Ball said, “and they all enjoyed themselves. Helping out was really great.” Follett said word quickly spread around the men’s dormi tories that they were collecting for the flood victims. “You name it and we have it,” said Miss Ball, “shoes, clothes, paper, pens, soap, tea, coffee, cereal, canned foods, cosmetics, toothpaste, purses, anything the students could spare.” The response from the students was so great, Miss Ball added, that it took one girl an hour-and- a-half to cover one floor of a women’s dormitory. “She had to make several trips because she had more clothes than she could carry,” Miss Ball said. “It took three girls to carry the clothes down from another floor.” After collecting for two hours the women had $88.00 and the men $120.00, including two 1-lb. coffee cans full of pennies, which was turned over to the Salvation Army. “Donations ranged from pen nies to five dollars,” Follett said. “Everybody wanted to give.” The women ended the evening with four Volkswagens full of clothes and other goods they had collected, which were turned over to a local fire station to be sent to the flood area. Follett said he had a pile of clothes several feet high, which was still growing larger as stu dents returned from weekend trips home bringing with them clothes their families could spare. Hays To Deliver Paper On Twain Re' By L; SAIGOf Aguiars h Dien Bien battle of C ithorities MASSE “Dr. Mark Twain, Oxon,” a paper by Dr. John Q. Hays of Texas A&M University, will be presented at the annual South Central Modern Language Asso ciation meeting at LSU Oct. 27- 28. Dr. Hays’ paper describes Mark Twain’s final journey to England in 1907 to acecpt an honorary Doctor of Letters degree from Oxford University. It examines and refutes recent critics' ideas that Mark Twain became em bittered in his twilight years. Hays began research for the paper in London in 1965, enroute to Cape TowTk South Africa, as a Fulbright Professor of Ameri can Literature at the University of Cape Town. The treatise was competed and submitted for pub lication this year under grant from the A&M Fund for Organ ized Research. power w »ith brea nonth-lon, fhien and erlookin routes jus jred zone. vri;