The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 20, 1947, Image 1

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A (TORS PROTEST
WASHINGTON, Oct 20
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PUBLISHED iN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A AM COLLEGE
Volume 47
Attorney* for 19 Hollywood actors,
writers and producers announced
yesterday they will ask the House
un-American activities committee
to squish subpoenaes afainat their
clients when the committee opens |
its movie investiyation today.
- DeGAUlLB LEADS
-PARIS, Oct. 20 IAP)—Geaersl
Charles De Gaulle's anti-Consmu-
nirt. rally of the French people (R.
P. F.) **>k an early lead Sunday
nifht in returns from municipal
elections held throughout France.
• A PETRILLO SPEAKS
CHICAGO, Oct 20 -(AP)-
James C, Petrillo, president of the I
AFL American Federation dL-Mu- A petroleum research program of major
• t£k» r ‘.' Pf^ponloM. particukrly in the f.eld of mc-
unanimously” to stop makin« U. ond »7 recovery, wa* proposed Saturday by
eordinfs am) transcnptions • ..nci President Gibb Gilchrist. The proposal calls
lot for immediate joint action by A&M College
COLLEGE STATION (Agfieland),TEXAS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1947
Number 49
A-M-UT Petroleum Research
Program Urged by Gilchrist
» I * 4 * ^ P** 1
Proposal Suggests That State Grant Fifty Graduate
■Fellowships to 2 Schools; With Railroad Commission
By PARRIS BLOCK
COMMUNIST NEWSPAPERS
URiypn
ATHENS, Oct *0 (AP)-Gmk
police seised all Cummunist news
papers and periodicals Saturday.
Police occupied the offices of the
Communist party newspaper Rim
and Texas University, together with the
Texas Railroad Commission to put the idea
in motion.
’47 Longhorns Arrive; Line Forms
At Goodwin Tomorrow Morning
Fluorescence inraveU Role
I Of Sunlight, Noyes States
Cd Coalition Earn (National Liber
ation Kront), v
WAU.ACRTAliTS PKACR
J(KW YOW Oet. 20 — (Af)
Henry A, Wsltie# layi dun tf the
iqweent "iNiienlial war" pallejee of
the Dfmorretie and Republlcen
re will
•tend
ring the Die of sun*
(Id in
C rttee are eonUnued "ther
a third party that wi]f
far iwate
ta the Uti
.1 party
with Wh
utmoet."
leh PH
HROP IN ItftKt) CARl PRM RP
DETROIT, Oet. wfLuri-;
Daaler rstwru and indepeMaBtl
Hirveya of the used car market In
dlrste i pHce ’•softening" whlc-h
raeulu both iiAm # natural sea
aanal decline and a rtee In buyer
resistance.
OILMEN OBJECT .
SAN ANTONIO. Oet. 90 -<AP)
Oilmen attending the Texas mid
continent oil and gaa asscx istiwn •
2hth annual conventkm here ad'u
ed a rewrtution denouncing the Su-
■ preme Court's decision on the Cali-
femu tidelands eaee. ,
1 i ;- K ■ • I t
NO THOUGHT OF WAR
\ WARSAW, Oet 2« -(API-
Eight labor members of thy Brit
inh Parliament say Prv
Watin AoM tllig
him in Rueaia recently that
wished to resolve political and eco
nomic Isaues with the United States
and Britain and impressed them as
having po thought of war.. . i* ..
PRINCE DIES
BANGKOK. SIAM. Oct tr(AP)
—Prince Singha, 42nd ton of the
late King Chulalongkorn mad unde
of the present Siamese King
PRumpiphon Aduiet, ..died here
kUaraay. Chulalongkorn had 180
wives. 24 recognised families, and
more than 800 children. „ -
FRENCH STRIKE* CONTINUES I
PARIS, Oct. tO —(AP) —fans’]
subway and bus workers voted Sat
unlay bn the eve of French muni
cipal elections, to continue their |
■trike, which the government has
charged was politically motivated
With the strike In its sixth day
a Communist union leader assailed]
■ the American government
artionary" and charged that th«
United States was attsmatlng to]
dictate to Soclafat Premier Paul]
Hamadlrr
j KRUG TO Visir IN TRXAB
WASHINGTON, Oet N —(AP)
••Vtiterlor Department "tup Urass
will vruvttBle toward th«, MMh<
west and west (or the reel nf thk
* SMNmv
Serretsty of the HtlirWf Krwr
•aid, thDrufS nie press offteap, h
±OTUb»v0s r
Myaturiua of photochemiBtpy, embitcln;
light in promoting plant growth And providing food for man,
are boinc unravtlad by tha atudy of fluoraacenot, Dr, W.
Albert Noyux, Jr., prealdant of tha Amarican Chamleal So*
ciaty, told a maatlng of tha A. A M. Ractlon Thumidy Night.
Hunllght profMan tha anargy nacaaaary for planta to
manufaeture •ugar frwm water and^ iSSfc-—I
thf mahwule ta ehemteal ittaeh
hy nihei moteeules, he saiil,
For molecules containing several
alums, preetue sc lent I De knowledge
of this meehanism la In most rases
aeanty. Dr, Navaa declared, "but
the data available to Indicate the
typee of molecules which may have
long . lived activated statea. and
those which may be expected to re-
act In certain waya photochemical-
toe
A study of the effects of pres
sure on the intensity of Duores-
eaore stay reveal much about the
phenomena of the disasaociation of
atoms and the way In which mole
cules containing many atoms dis
tribute their internal energy, ac-
cordirgto Dr. Noyes.
Dr. William M. Potts, chairman
el the A. A M. section, presided at
the meeting. Ti
the carbon dioxide In (he air hy
the prueeee known as phntoeynthe
•la, which la a typical photoehemi
cal raartlaii The auger Is later
converted to cMrvh, cellulose, and
other maierlale which mnetHute
plant tieaue.
Keveral ether photochemical pro
waosa have found industrial ap
dtcations, notably In the preparp
tlon of vital chemlcali from petro
leum and chlorine gas.
Fluorescence is the glow that I*
given off hy some substances when
they arc excited by energy In the
form of heat, eiectririty, or vteible
tr invisible light. Dr. Noyce ex
plained, pointing cut that such
uibetances am need to coat the
aside surfaces af tha teng bulbs
employed la asodem fhioiWacent
ighting and %ro also eeaar.tiel to
tha reproduction of Images on tale-
fMm
n
a molecule, the back unit
that is manifested as boat
mergy, chemical anergy, or fluor
wcencc, according to Dr. Noyes,
jrho is chairman of the depurtmont
rf chemistry ia the University of
Rochester.
This energy may weaken TH
ronda uniting the atoms that con
(tRutc the molecule, thus exposing
Cooking?
SCIENCES FAC-
«., Tuesday, Phy-
Such a program baa been urged in recent
speeches before important oil groups by
Chairman E. 0. Thompson and Commissioner
William J. Murray, Jr„ of the Railroad Com
mission. r j T .
Last Thursday before the Texas Mid-
Continent Oil and Gas Association, Thomp
son proposed that the state undertake a re-
-+search program and grant fif<
graduate fellowships to A.
< Ollege and Taxaa University.
Earlier in the week, Murray had
outlined a similar suggestion be
fore the Gulf Coast Section of the
American Institute of Mining and
Metallurgieal Engineers. Murray
C lnted out that as much oil Is
ing left In the ground aa Is being
taken out by present recovery
method*, and that the stale should i
appropriate the money to retry on
research In secondary recovery,
When President Gilchrist made I
his proposal, he slatmli
"Such a puasildluy has already
been discussed Informally by our
Hoard of Directors and with mein I
here of the M«>ard of Regents of ]
the University, meeting with hear-
tv aupiwvsl In nil raaee,"
M Wo believe that ijtree great ]
state agenrlee, the Commleelon, the
University and A. A M. CoBBgt.
working together on such a pro
ject, could accomnllah much for
the atate In this field," he adddi.
Resources of the state's two
largest schools could be pooled un
der the direction of a committee
composed of the heads of the pe
troleum engineering departments
of the University and A. A M. with
one other man from the faculty
of each of these deportments and
with a member of the Railroad
Commiasion, to be appointed by
the Commiasion chairman, as the
fifth member, Gilchrist suggested.
a group,” he pointed out,
tha research problems
m wdR as the min power
and equipment of the two schools,
assigning to each school those
studies for whkh it is best equip
ped. Duplication and waste of
fort could
the benefit
In order
s maior undertaking if the next
Legislature sees fit to finance the
type of nrogrsm now being recom
mended by Commission members,
the committee could be set -up im
mediately and the two schools
‘Best Book Since Forever
Amber’ States Reviewer
By MACK T. NOLEN
No book in recent years, except perhaps “Forever Ant
her", has caused as much comment as the 1947 Longhorn.
That much sought after volume, km# delayed by the printers
to sharpen the subscriber’s appetite, has arrived!
Harry Saunders, last year’s Longhorn editor, fainted
"■ 1 ! n T i " , ♦ daad. away when the bank mea-
p . I , eUngcrs presented him with the
Social Lhairmen I
To Select Dates
For 'IH Calendar
Joins Information
M 1
Department Staff
MISS NANCY Dl'kir^ "taiy Acres, Waco, win repress
Baylor at U* Aggie Rodeo October 94-U. MUM DLR1E, a
junior at Bay tor, la a WiWsbsr of Delta Alpha PI aad the Waco
1 xagBatw (Saddle) Cob aad preoMeat af the Baytor-Waco Chib.
me has participated ta Use Bear Chib, Port Worth Stock
Show, and Waco Laaghom dub rodeo*, also having appeared la
Stamford, OatmvUIr.
Bishop CWmcats, Texas newspa
perman, has joined the staff of the
deportment of information and will
have charge of the information of
fice.
Clements leaves the Beaumont L
Journal, of whkh he has been exec- could allocate necessary funds for
utive news editor. Previously he; the first two yean of work, he
>ie,
- Weary Aggie Fans Return From
HwS,: ‘Lost Week-End’ in Cowtown
7:80 p-m.
Academic.
m.,
ititM (he metal mtnina tt
wnl ton al 11 Pe*i, Tetaa. 0ft
ami will Inspert tha HI Plan re
r lama Use project
T T a. m.
i, Obadwtn
I, 7i|0 a, m
RXEMrr
LA GRANGE
(API Dr Row
land. Ohio, one
Wading experts
* ntotimatic frv
riRR
Oft. N «
Own
of thf sounlry''
In thf field *
ever and Its effects oi
iraai
that Dr. Lloyd Roes, charged wlti
■» roadside staying of foar pooplt
was suffering with the disease th*
day of the tragedy. ‘
RAYBURN NOT INTERESTED
laUNGVIEW, TEX., Oct » -1
(AP>—Rep. Sam Rayburn (D-Tex)|
told the Texas yoOng Democrat.'
laturday that he was "in no re
molest sense" a candidate for tiu
nomination for vke-proeident*' on]
the Democratic ticket ia 1948
BABY SITTING TECHNIQUE
CRANGED » i
NORMAN, OKLA., Oct » -
(AP)—The University of 4)kUho
■ta, whkh pioneered a mesa hah-
sitting experiment two
changed its technique
the r —
its
for the Kanfas-Oklahoma gasM.
Tha original baby sittin| vontur
was voted along with Id# axpena
money by the student senate •
student parents could toe km
games.
Saturday, with $100 mm% th
school arranged for tndn idual bab
titters to de the wort
Student senator FerriJ
who proposed the origi
then pet stuck mai
scheme, now hopes he
ARTS AND
'LTY, T M p.
tics Lec'.ure R
AUSTIN CLUB,
doadey, Room 108, |
(Originally October 8S.)
ASTRONOMY CLUB, 7 90 p
VlonHay, Room 108, Phyeks.
AGRONOMY SOCIETY, >I:ia
t. m., Wednesday, AI Lecture
Room.
AIEE meets Tueedey, 7:10 p.m„
?.E. Lecture Room.
AGGIE RODEO, October 1441
AGRICULTURAL ENGINEER-
NO SOCIETY, 7:80 p. n„ Tuee-
ay. Agricultural Engineering Lee-
*AMnrW1Y99 CIECLB. fil
damiay. heme of Ufa, J M IngUa,
•* ana Jackeen Street, Cetiege
*lATTALION STAFF
Vmlnexlay, Rmtm 801
Et'ONOMK'S p
fueettay, Ream 807. AeadamW
ENGI.TSH STAF^, Annex Eng
lah Staff In entertain eatnpus Eng
lah faculty, 7tl0 p. m„ Thursday,
tnnex Student Cantor.
ENGINEERS COUNCIL, 7:00 p
w„ Menday, Petroleum Engineer
ng Library.
PISH AND GAME CLUB, 7:18
*. m„ Monday, Room 111, Al Bldg
tarbeeue plan*.
KREAM AND ROW KLUB,7:M
t. m.. Tuesday, Cremery Lecture
teem. Dr. J. H. Quleenherry to
*HEART OF THE HILLS CLUB
':80 p. m„ Wednesday. Room 221,
Vcademk.
INTERNATIONAL RELA-
’IONS CLUB 7 p. m., Monday,
loom 187, Academic. Subject:
What Shall We Do About Patoa-
*)ne?" ! - H
PREMED-PREDENTAL SOCIE-
*T, 7:80 p.m., Tuesday, Science
ecture Room. Election of officers.
RURAL SOCIOLOGY CLUB.
*:80 p. m., Tueedey, Room 808,
'Jfkultural Building.
SOCIAL CHAIRMAN, 7 p. m .
tooday, Room 208, Goodwm.
SOCIETY OF AUTOMOTIVE
NG1NEERS, 7:80 p. m.. Tueaday
(E Lecture R'-om. Film "Som.
King to Shoot For", on Cleveland
Mr Raeto- =«-
-r A850C, 8:00 p.m., Wednes
V. Oct R, Lecture Room of C.E.
Mit -mmm
VETERAN WIVES CLUB. 7:80
•. m. Tuesday, TMCA. Salad de-
wwtraUon by Mrs. J. S. Modford
WACO-Mc LBNNAN COUNTY
LUB, 8 p. to.. Monday, Room 801
I Joodwto Hall.
had been state editor of the Fort
Worth Press and telegraph editor
of the Dallas Times-Herald His
earliest newspaper experience was
in the Rio Grande Valley.
Mra. Clemenu will join him here
leter. the couple heve no children.
R. Henderson Shuffler ia men-
eger of the department of informe-
lion.
Heiba Will Head
International (Tub
At a recent meeting ef the In*
tomattenal (Tub of Foreign Stu
dent*, A, I. Heiba was elected
president, Other offteers ehoaen
were Ramiro Domingues, vice*
presidenti Julln Cawis, aecreteryi
and Kudanmal Gurnani, Ireaeuror
Hni.a la from Eiypt, whlW De
mlngues and < asas hall from Van*
Muelo. Gurnani rams te A4M from
Hit | if
proposed. This would esUblish ma
chincry which would be ready to
handle a program of any aiae
Texas might undertake, and would
enable the schools involved to
build the nucleus for research and
gradvate instructional staffs nec
essary to effective operation on a
larger scale.
"As a combination of research
in problems of the oil Industry and
graduate training to furnish this
important industry with a larger
number of highly trained young
men, this joint effort would be of
tremendous value to Texas Pos
sibilities of Incroeeed Income for
Texas schools alone as the result
of greater oil produrtion, paying
more Uses, would make thla a
sound investment. We hearlll;
vur the roeent proposal*
members ef the Railroad
slen, ami are reedy te join In
mediately Into (he naeeeaory ef*
fori to actuate them," Pfeeldeat
tiilehrtst concludM,
By JIMMIE NELSON <1
A. A M. and TSCW students
several thousand strong—ipvaded
Port Worth last week-end for their
] joint annual corps trip. Literally
“taking over" the town, they flood
ed the Texas Hotel lobby, head
quarters for both schools, and
poured into the streets among the
milling crowds.
Early arrivals wandered over
“Oowtown" Friday, some visiting
an informal TSCW styla show at
the ’'Fair” department show, a few
making qokk trip* to Dallas for
a glimpse of the state fail, and
the majority just out seeiag the
town.
ActWHiea started Friday at mid
night when the Aggie yell leaden
(limbed on a trailer in front of
the Texas, and as Uaffic was di
verted through side streets, led
Aggies, Teesma, ami nthar school
supp triers In the customary yell
pi set tee preceding conference
mpu.
One saturated, ami quite drunk
"Dumyanhee' from Uhleago milled
through the humpura, heartily
cheering far TCU, Nat MtotoWt to
he the tone Merited Krug support
sr in the aeaemblage, the itpey
A meeting ef all social chairmen
of clubs, organisations, or rlaaaea
which plan to have dances or other
maior socle) events thla year will
be held toaight at f p m, In Room
MNI, Qeodwln Hall
Grody Elms, a|ub advisor, stated
Hatur4ay that all such urgenisa
lions should he represented so that
a date may he assigned for the
eeelal ev*n«, Rlnee there la a limit
ed number ef Week-ends available,
social chairmen should heve In
mind a primary and secondary
choice of detoe, lima aald.
U the club or group doee not
hava a uoclal chairman, the prval-
dent or e delegated retiresrniative
should be proeent tonight.
The following schedule of major
events sponsored by the Rtudent
Actlrttirs Office has already been
set for the fall semester, Oct. 88,
Western Style Dance, Sbisa Hall,
and Little Aggktand Dunce in
Student Center; October 24-26,
I 1 ssikeail ig
Colon Hall (7:80 p. m.) With
NTSC Variety Troupe.
Also luted ere: Nov. 10, Chris
topher Lynch on Town Hall; Nov.
22. Stag* Show, Guton Hull; Nov.
26, Dunce in Sbiau Hull, and Pig-
akin Parade in Gukm Hull. 6:30
p. m.; Dec. I, Girts Choir, UT.Qlee
Club dt Little Aggklund, 7:80 p.
m.; Dec. 6. Girls Choir, UT Glee
reveler searched long and with
negative results for “just one white
man from Texas Christian.” When
last seen, he was weaving toward
the yell leaders to “exercise his
privilege of free speech."
Saturday morning the Cadet
Corps paraded through downtown
Fort Worth, as townspeople and
visitors lined the streets.
After a quick lunch, the rush
started for Horned Frog Stadium
During half-time activities —* the
most enjoyable nart of the after
noon for Aggie fans, Aggie Sweet
heart Laura Sessions was preaeq-
ted to the Cadet Corps by Coloupl
Bill Brown.
Post • game enjoyment was
found by many at the dance in the
Texas Hotel sponsored by Fort
Worth ea-Agglea. Others, perhaps
seeking to get away from it all,
went to Dallas for the state fair.
8unday, weary Aggies and Tes
slea trekked baek to College Nto
lion and Denton after a gay, but
disheartening, week-end,
Club at C.uion Hall, 7:30 p. m; and
Dec. 13, Stage Show, Guion Hall,
7:30 p. m.
Non-Military Pica
Must Be Taken For
Annual by Dec. S
All n.m-mlttUry students who
hava nut had thulr pictures taken
tot tha 1848 Umghom should go
to tha A. A M. Photo Shop before
November 8, Tommy John, vetoran
editor, announced today.
AceortTng to the schedule, non-
military students whose surnames
begin with W. X. Y. and Z should
now have their pictures made at
the Photo Shop, these four letters
will complete veteran students, ex
cept for the left-overs.
Thiee veterans who have not had
their pktures made should do so
aa soon aa possible, John stated,
to avoid the last-minute rush on
November 6. After that date no
non - military picturea will be
CUJBRATtNG the thirty-sixth
ef the lepwhBc ef Chtua are eevea graduate *tu-
itauta me a wife ef a faculty member
Left to right are: SHU AN UN, rivU eagto-
eurtag student from Hhaagbal; HUA-RHENti
1U, imsatripeJ aad saaitary eagtouertag toadeat
I) U CHEN, agricultural eagtaero
I HUANG, rBimltory
C.UAO.I
VKECHANO TSOCN.
Tha eevea etudsato
or DouMe IrtHk, Wtth
Bryaa. wtth MB. aad
CHl-
tt FAO*TtTNG
W. B. ALLEN,
v of the Extra
ea that day to toll
facturora' Agaoclntion baing held'
then (KUiber 1I-16. Profeasor Par
nell is a member of the Southwest
College Feed Survey Commit toe, an<
organisation Ml up for tha ihidy,
survey, and analysis of poultry
feed needs In the Kouthweal for
the ranting guar.
Th* Mid-Waal Feed Menufar
torora' Aaaoalalion held* twu
meetings annually whkh are at
I ended by mpmhvi* of Culkge Feed
Rurvey fiHiiliiiii from all nvar
Ih* naiion to tompato ami emmdD
nets e*umales of mmllry prndus-
Gun and tmullry feeds needed tn
tot eurh produrtion asllmatos,
Dr J M, Quieenberrt, head of
9 poultry husbamlrv deparimenk
ilntod out that Professor Parnell
a JNNM
special first copy. Tommy Mfh
his Inst year's managing editor am I
currant almighty adltor, poured
half of a rancid, four-day old coke
over Saunden to revive him,
‘ Togvther, like two children with
• new plav pretty, Saunders and
John thumbed happily through tha
fresh, bright pages of the year*
hook, smearing ink and-smiling i
at the atrocious errors. Example)
prominent commandeni appearing
in Vanity Fair aection.
Tuesday the haying meb af lm*
patient egotists, eager to aee theif
feces leering from the Uinghorn's
pages, will be appeased Rlariiiig
at N a m, the edlluro wll proudfi.
distribute their handlwart, Till
lines will form «n the second floor
nf Goodwin, wind out the weet en>
tranee, twist thrmixh the passage
between Uw and Ptiryear, awing
acme* the hospital area, and file
Into the Campus Theatre where
a motion'picture will hr shown to
while away the lonely hours.
Saunders and his staff effirtive-
ly "dressed up" the '47 1/onghom
and Hi It appear several aectiona
of note. Vanity Fair with artistic
background treatment and picture
arrangement stands out pleasingly.
The club section la not dull and
deadly as In the usual ease. A fhw
lines were added to animate tw
pages.
Tongues have wagged, and
Randan has been censured fee
the lateness #f the yearbook. "I
feal that I have been censured,"
says Saunders. But Saunders feels
that he has forced distasteful
medicine down throats for the ulti
mate good. By delaying delivery of
the Longhorn, he was able to give
coverage to the complete year.
Saunden feels like e martyr For
all the abuse he has received, but
thinks that in yean to come, when
Aggies show the Ixmghorn to their
grandchildren, the Longhorn show
ing the full year, that », he will
v be exonerated.
In the meantime that character
you mey see stalking about the
campus with the fiery red beard
and the patch on his left eye ia
Harry Saunden In disguise. He
will remain thualy till the hostile
feeling blows over. His wife insiils
on R. -
Parnell Attending
Feed Manufacturer
Meet in Chicago
Speak Toniphl
,)ttlla * A1 ee
Dr, A. A. Jakkula, executive di
rector of t)w Texas AAM Research
Foundation, and Professor L M.
Kauai, aupervltor of tha A-T Net
work Calculator laboratory, will
mem MPA al a meeting of the
North Taxes Rectton of AIEE at
Dallas
Du Ji
PUt Jakkula will speak on
lanital Ion and objectives of (be to-
•earth fimndation Professor Haupt
Will dlseues the Use and opsin I Ion
«f the Nelwork Caleulator.
pointori out that
was sent to iht Chlraga maatlng |
aa an eronomk speclalieli his work |
imgltry bus-
i llha with a]
to maka every |
department a spec
ialist In hia Mrtkular field of pout
aabandry wor
RESERVATIONS DUE DEC. |
Reservations for orgsmiational
pictures will be taken in the Stu
dent Activities Office until Decem
ber 6. A list of club off teen to
gether with mailing sddresses
must be submitted when reeer
tioas arc made. A full page in the
'48 yearbook will coat 826, while
one-third page will coat |8.50.
All organisational picturea will
be taken during tha spring sans
tar. Any group which desires to
have its picture made before the
end of the fall semester may make
■pedal arrangements with the A.
A M. Photo Shop
In thla
liandry
plan no
member
try heabandfg wertH
Poultry feed manufacturers are
anxious to aarurately determine
the annual poultry produc tion, Dr.
Quiseiiberry pointed out, because
at least 80 par cant of all manu
factured feuds goes into poultry
food production.
om tha combined reports af
the regional college feed aur
committees, the Mid-West Feed
Manufacturer!’ Association ia able
to determino whether or not to
aurttol or expand certain kinds
poultry feeds.
Cruz, Pela Added
To Senior Court
. Abo! Crux and Edward A. Pela,
members of the Cadet Corps, have I
been added to the Senior Court,
according to an announeem
from the commandant’s office.
Pela was designated aa
be! of the court, and Crux
TUBERCULOSIS
, ASSOCIATION*
Tuberculosis:
The earlier fount
the sooner cured
f
Tuberculosis can be
nnud. Cure la much
castor in the eerty
■togus ef the disease.
This fact suggested tha
slogan above, adopted
by the Bresoe County
Tabcrculosi* .Associa
tion. ,