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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 6, 1948)
> ' I Vf . ''Z ;■ ** ■:/ i ; In , (• jr% JL-Jj TEXAS of 626 AUSTIN, appointment Texas’ 137 local . will be teconsmended Truman, by (iov. Bea 1 r Membership o n range* from] three to! six, county boards repress ' to five couni ies. : ' Harris cou ity has Dallas ferson, 2 each. The (draft ed b: Vf z. ($, Be:ar 5, T* El Pa po, Nue< boards wpre a Jesteii as foil J 1, Pjalestine. y)—R y Perr 'nr F ~ - * 1 III V The to >ards lent Jester, board .Inter- t from two ight .boards, nt 1 4, Jef- and Travis mL TAndersoti of Frank- f Palestine f Ralestine. gelina and ...r V-. ■ count r _„ T „ ston, W. Cj Quick and Ji W. Valentine No. 2, Ltfkin , ( Trinity counties)—C.tB. Fairchild of; Burke, R L. Woods of Lufkin and J. Roy Dudley oif Groveton. No. d, Muli shoe (Bailey, Cochran and Liamb bounties) George G: .Johnson of Ijluleshoe, W.' B. Evans of Morton and Floydi Coffman of Littlefield, j ’ ; ;1 H T- . No., 11, Toxarkana f Bowie coun ty)—C. S. Hervey jof Texarkana, Paul D. Carioll of Tejcarkana, and James Taylcjr Heath iiof New Bos-i lyson of erman Gdr- Roberts, Wheeler counties Walker of Pampa, Luther fear- son of Pampa, William E- Hodges of Clarendon, W. H. Craig of Mi ami, and Cliff R. Weatherlj Wheeler. No. 53, Sherman (G county) — J. W. Adai Denison, H. R. Bone of SI and Hardie McAdams donville. No. 54, Longview, (Gregg coun ty)—J. Malcolm Crim of Kilgore, Walter M. Stelter of Longview and Melvin Young of LongvieW. No. 64, Marshall (Harrison county) — C. M. Beckett, Ji W|. Cyphers and Marvin W.[ Gooch, all of Marshall. ' No. 66, ! Athens (Henderson county)—Leon R. Barron, Forrest L. Robbins, and A. P., Srpith, all of Athens. ■ , ' -i •] No. 67, Edinburg (HI ed to Texas Draft Boar "T h: -ni i i -yf ire (Hidalgo . Starr counties)—H. C. Aderhold ans of Edinburg, Clell Solether of Wes laco, C.j Hinojosa of Edinburg, J. of RiofGrande Cjity and :v. v v ick, Dimniitt, and Zavala coun- i)—John R. Studer of Uvalde, tee W. Large of Leakey, J. D. | Plumb of Eagle Pass, L. P. Butler of Carrizo Springs and Wil liam H* Paysinger of Batesville. No.-123, Del Rio (Val Verde add Kinney 1 counter-Raymond tmple of Del Rio, J. S. Brad ford of Del Rio and Sam M. Harwood of Bracketville. To. 126, Victoria (Victoria, Re- fugio and Calhoun counties)—^Tim Piqkering of Victoria, John C. Johnson of Refugio and F. F. Mon- tier of Port Lavaca. No. 128, Laredo (Webb, and Za- pat|a counties)—R. J. Benavides of Latedo, Ray 0. DeLay of Mirando City, Leon Shapu of Laredo and Ross Swisher of Vdo. JNo. 129, Wharton (Wharton and county)—Bow E. Duncan of Egypt, R. H. Hancock of El Campo and Frank Sorrell of Wharton. No. 130, Wichita Falls (Wichita county)—Fred J. Elbert $r. of VTi- chita Falls, C. E. Birk of Iowa Park, D. M. Perkins of Wichita Falls, T. Leo Moore of Electra, J. T. Brady of Burkburnett and Frank Kelley of Burkburnett. ] \ No., 131, Vernon (Wilbarger, Hardeman and Foard counties) —Joe Shipman of Vernon, Wal ter Mabry Barbee of Quanah and J. M> Crowell of Crowell: No. 135, Gainesville (Cooke county)—^W. Hill Campbell, John W. Culp and J. C. O’Brien, aU of Gainesville. No. 137, Midland (Midland) Sterling, and Glasscock counties) —J. 0. Shannon of Midland, R. 0. Walker, of Midland, John D. Davis of Sterling City and C. M. Spark man of Garden City. ton. . r, No. 13, Brownsville, mondville a of Rio | Grande Vii Br$an'' {Brazos and Grimes Counties) -4 Travis B. Bryan, of Bryan, N. A. Stewart of Bryan and Gerald C. Fahey of Navasopi. Not 16, San Benito (Cameron an# .Willacy counties)—Larry j. Pow ers of HarlijBgen, J. W. Tbeadway of Saii Berito, H. A; Garda ofj C. R.,, Huff of Ray-? td Russell C. Cherry: ,:n« : • ■ ' of Raymondiville. U [. •' f k No.! 1, fjimmitt (Castro, *beaf Smith, Parmer, Randall and SwisKer counties)—Robert Rstes ; of Dimmi t, S. O. Wilson of Hereford, )avid Moseley of Fri- ! ona, 8. H f Condron of Canyon f and Henry Teubel of Tulia. No. [22, McKinney (Collin coun ty)—Marvii /Collins of' McKinney| C. P. Legate of')McKinney, ; and Raymond Cpmnes of Farmersyille. No. 25, I|)alhart (Dallam, Hart ley, Mjoore and Sherman c —F. 0. Ltscombe qfv Dal C. Johnson, of Dalha Hartley, nd Arthur Rpiis jenton ((Denton county) veless, Qr. H. E. Rob- J. , Williams, all of 1 ■* • V i i, K; J I '1 aero (DeWitt and Go^ Had counties) — C. F. Cuerp, Albert Hartman —W. M. erts and Dented NoJ 34, Combs dt ^ of 1 Guero,, and ^Victor! Albrecht of Goliad. ; ( No. 35, Bah Diego (Duval, Jim. Hogg and j Jins Wells counties)— .' George W.) Ward o( Freer, Robert - cfs - - - - Garcia of Ean: Diego, L. L.! David lebbrohVille, of ( He of '. Hehbrc(nville Flo & a . of 3 t j f (Eastland s)—E. M> > ! ; i\\ Albert Saldana and, J»cob> A.. lice.. ^ f. - 36, Eastland and Stephens counties) Howard Of Rising Star, Frank? Sparks oif Eastland, and E. J: Norville of Breekenridge. ; NO. 37, jOdessa (Ector and An- drews douhties)—Frank R; Spald ing, of Odessa,, S. 'Ai. Waits of Odessa an^ H., F, Albright of An drews. i ^ n No. 43, Bonham (Fannin county)' —James R. Johnson, Neal FallS, Alton H. Kincaid, Jr., Joe penton. and A. yf. Wainwright, aU of Bonhiam. 4 •' ' Plain view i Floyd, Hale -^1. M. Wil- H. May Martin Cavazas City. No. 68, Hillsboro (Hill county) —Glen Marshall of Hillsboro, Hen ry W. Gibson of Blum and J. G. Marks of Hillsboro. , No.. 71, Big Spring (Howard, Martin and Mitchell counties) !—f T. ,A. Thigpen of Big Spring, A. Emmett Pittman of Stanton and C. C. Hamilton of Loraine. J No, 72* Greehville (Hunt coun ty) — L i. Taggart of Green- iyille, Frank Marion of Green ville, and S. R. McWhirter of Campbell. > I ..j ! j ■. No. 73, Borger (Hutchinson, Armstrong and Carson counties)— Fred C. Herbst of Borger, and T, G. Fields of Groom. • No. 74, Beaumont (Jefferson county) — R. A. Kinnear, W. - D. Norwood, Clifford H. LeBlanc, aU of Beaumont. \ No. 75, Port Arthur (Jefferson county)—Fred Dodge, Henry W. McCorkle, Dr. Thomas B. Sapping- ton, all of Port Arthur. No. 83, Paris (Lamar county) —Ben Mooring, A1 Dunifing, J. C. Coker,: Sr., and W. E. Watson, all of Paris, and Lee Caviness of Chi- cota. —No. ,94, Nacogdoches (Nacog-i doches, Sabine and San Augustine counties)—L. G. Hunt of Nacog doches, W. E. Goussons of Hemp hill and K. (1 Flournoy of Broad- dus. No. 95, Corsicana (Navarro county)—Robert Robinson Cocke, B. W. Wooley and Luther A. John son, Jr., all of Corsicana. ■; No. 99, Perryton (Ochiltree, Hansford, Hemphill and Lipscomb counties)—A. J. Kelly of Perry- ton, Lester D. Baumann of Perry- ton, Curtis A. Jones of Spearman, H. S. Wilbur of. Canadian and D. B. McNamee of Higgins* No. 100, Orange (Orange, Jasper and Newton counties)— Hunter Beaty of Orahge. Rob ert Pattfti of Jasper and Sam C. Collins of Newton. No. 105, Pecos'(Reeveis, Loving, Pecos, Ward and Winkler counties) —W. H. Knox of. Pecos, A. A. Wil liams of Mentone, Claude C. Bak er of^ Fort Stockton, C. S. Sitton of Monahans,'and C. A. Robinson, M. D. of Kermit. No. 106, Henderson (Rusk coun- Templin to Direct U. S. Soil Survey) Party in Far East I , M Edward H. Templin, soil scien tist ' for the Experiment Station and the D. S. Department of Ag riculture, has been given leave for one year to supervise soil survey field parties from headquarters in Tokyo r Japan. Templin will be with the Military Geology Section of ‘the U. IS. Ge/ ological Survey which is in charge of all) soil survey phases of the Pacific geology mapping program. The program is being conducted in cooperation with the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers. / j The: field partie.4 whiph Templin will supervise are now mapping the Palau Islands, Yap and Okin awa. Surveys of other areas in cluding Guam and portions of the Ryukyus are to be started this year. , Templin has been connected with the Experiment Station in sol survey work since 1923. He be came chief of its Division of Soi i Survey In 1945 upon the death of W. T.1 Carter. In reorganization of A & M ’ s agricultural functions, Templin has headed soils work for the Agronomy Department) MAJOR GENERAL WILLIAM S. KEY, commanding general, 45th Division, congratulates CADET WILLIAM D. BARNETT of A&M upon his graduation from the summer ROTC camp. First Sergeant George Stott, instructor at St. Marys University, San Antonio, reaches for Barnett’s diploma. Agriculture School to Instruct Plant Physiology and Pathology i N ^- 45 >, and (Motley counties)—J. son bf Floydada. Jqss D. Lockhart of Plainvijw, D. E. Pitts of Ma- 52, .jH .Pampa ((Gray, Donley, FOR TE DEM t WHO THE BSJST . . College Shoe Repair North Gate 1 • If i ' I /i For Your S|>ortln? Good* Needs JONES SPORTING GOODS r ; y 1 I 803 S. Main Bryan Ph. 2-':832 —'-r- I R i, RADIO REPAIR 1 • .* I ' • *1 1 . I 1 * . * . ; ■ ■N prise, Herbert R. Knauth of Join- ervijle, *nd B. Allen Burton of Henderson!' No. 109, Tyler (Smith county) 4—A. Cl Booty, E. L. Pinkston and Cone J. Thompson, all Off Tyler. No. 110, Sonora (Sutjton, Kim ble, Schleicher, Crockett and Ed wards counties)—Joe F. Lbgan of Sonora, J. L. Coleman of Junction, J. F. Oglesby of JEl Dorado, Oscar Kost of Ozona and J. L. Balentine of, Rocksprings. ■ - No. 115, Abilene (Taylor and Callahan counties)—Victor Wo mack of Abilene, Luther L. Mur- , .ray of Merkel and Oral D./Stra- han of Cross Plains. No. 117, • Mt, Pleasant 1 (Titus, Camp," Norris}, Franklin( ebuftties) —Fred L. Hogan of Mjt. Vernon. ■No. 118, ISan Angelo , (Tom Grteh, Irion and Coke counties)— Jared P. Hill, -Frank CargHle and John Keys, Ml of San Angelo, Mans Hoggett of Mertzon and J. A. Ste phenson of Bronte. No. 122, Uvalde (Uvalde, Real, I is bur specialty THE RADIO SHOP -J.,: ;T;. ■‘A member of Philco Service” I : . H . " f v ' 'i . ^ One block west of Post Office- ‘ j v > on W. 2^h St Bryan , 4 / \ i 11 i i\ : il. P H 6 N E 2-2819 Cbmplete repair on all makes and models of radios. I :U Resident instruction work in pljant physiology and pathology will be transferred from the De partment of Biology inlthe School of Arts and Sciences to the De partment of Plant Physiology and Pathology in the School of Agri culture, C. N. Shepardson, Dean of Agricultural has announcedr- The transfer is effective September 1. (Dr. A. A. Dunlap, formerly cljief of the division of plant phy siology and pathology in the Ex periment Station, will head the new department. Dr V. A. Greulach aihd Dr. E. M. Hildebrand who have b«en handling instruction in these fijelds will be transferred to the new department, Dean Shepardson s»id. * j“This organization of the work thjology fiakes experience as chief of the division of plant physiology and patl in the experiment station hirri especially well qualified to head the combined teachini, re search and extension program in this field. Plans are already under way” for a greatly expanded pro gram as fast as additional i staff and laboratory facilities cfn be provided", Shepardson declared. ty)—Tom Arnold ^of Mt. JEnterr iq plant physiology and pathology t» w i t.._ 0 |j en j. up a rea j opportunity for greater progress in curbing or pre venting agricultural losses due to plant diseases,” Shepardson point ed out. “Through closer coordina- tiom of teaching and research in t)iis field, we will be rible to strengthen our training program aind interest more students in the Pjossibilities of a career in plant disease control. j “Present losses, due to disease iii field crons alone, run into mil lions of dollars. The same may be skid of our great fruit and vege- ■table industry and the floral jfmd njiirsery business. The rapid grow th of these industries in Texas bjas far out run the supply of men trained in this field who ane need- ejd not onlv in actual production work* but also in further research tjn find the J means of combating tjhe long list of pathological and hysiological problems confront- i g these industries. ' "We feel that Dr. Dunlap’s long New Fire Towers To Be Erected In East Texas Pines rpJ&AT. ACofe^ .e. 1945 ALitoft —1 Reserves Attend Military Courses At San Antonio 1 .HOUSE NUMBER ONE is ready to be moved to .. CENTER. This house has been bought by the First Christia between the Bookends Lockridge’s ‘Raintree Cour Recommended for the Curio i Exams Are Slated By Civil Service } The Civil Service Commission Announces examinations for the positions of Medical Officer, Den- t a 1 Officer, Rating Specialist (Medical), and Rating Specialist (Dental) at entrance salaries rang ing from 54149.60 to $7102.20 per jrear. : Employment will be with the Veterans Administration establish ments, in the States of Texas, Lou isiana, and Mississippi. J. Application forms and further information may be obtained from Rbger W. Jackson, College Station fos$ Office. j« ( j Two new lookout towers for de tection of forest fires will be erec ted in the .East Texas pinejlwoods within the next few months r while othey existing (owers will b^ mov ed! according to J. O. Burnside, protection chief for the Texans For est Service. One of the ‘new towers Will t>6 erected in Jasper County, the oth er in Newton County at sitfs still to be selected. This will bring the total number of towers in 31 coun ties to 76. Visibility studies Were made be fore it was decided to mojve the five pther lowers. Knox Ivie) Texas Forest Service law enforcement officer,-has been placed in charge of moving one of these in Polk County from Hortepse to Cpmden. Aribther Polk County tower will be shifted from Peachtree to Bprnum. Others slated for new s^tes hre the one from Humble in Harris County north into Montgomery County, the Hooks tower ins Bowie County to a new site outside the Army ordinance tract, aiy) a slight ' shift in State Forest No. li tower at Kirbyville.. The latter will be increased in height to 120 feet be fore moving. I ’ ■ j v ' V (ALSO BATTERIES K: I ; FOR YOUR PORTABLE I «r. 1 Dr John S. Caldwell Optometrist Caldwell’s Jewelry Store Bryan, Texas Vets Pick College For GI Bill Study Colleges and unjversJitiCs attrac ted nearly 60 percent of the World lYar II veterans who were? enroll ed in educational institution* under the GI Bill and Public Law 16 on Jlune 1, according to the Veteifans Administration. . f The remaining 40 percept were taking courses in high [schools, trade schools and other educational institutions below the college level. On June 1, a total of 1,632,780 veterans were training in educa tional institutions under (the GI Bill. Of these, 962,297, of 159 per cent were in colleges and universi-/ r 8 - l.i 4/ SAMT0NE SERMCE ‘The better kind of Dry Cleaning” “We specialize in Reweaving garments, draperies, upholstery materials” / f 1 F j^| We Pick-up & DeUver — Ph 2-8665 PERFECT0 2005 South College Road / ■ . ! ! ", A two week intensive course the litest trends of military'intel-* ligence began August 2 at Fort Sam Houston, according to Colonel Oscar B. Abbott, senior instructor of the Organized .Reserves. Ap proximately 72 officers of the) Fourth Army area will attend. The school, under the supervis ion of the G-2 Section of the Fourth Army, will include such subjects as strategic intelligence,! photographic interpretation, coun-j ter intelligence, order of battle, in terrogation of prisoners of war, and other allied military subjects: Colonel Abbott announced that Colqhel Glen S. Finley, regulap Arniy reserve instructor for thp San Antonio area will be the School commandant. Colonel Finley hai spent many years w Rh vdriou? cavalry units in Texas and: com manded the famous 7th Cavalry Regiment at Fort Bliss and ovep- seas! I s - General Thomas T. Handy. Com manding General of. the Fourth Arpiy, opened the school with aP orientation of the reservists at 8:30 a. m., August 2. The students will be expected to remain on the post during the entire course except for week-ends. Instructors for the school, ane Reservists who have voluhteered their services for 90 days! to re fresh their intelligence irtsthietidp- ^1 Ability. j . Yf ' Liquid Gas Course In Progress Here The Liquid Petroleum pas Ap pliance Short course get under way this week with lectures by W. J. Lawson and Nat Harris. Addressing the 50 men attending the short eburse Lawson, execu tive secretary of the Texas Bu tane Dealcrs r Association, told the men Monday, “I urge you to do a , ...... ,, better job, in a more courteous Lockndye isqn the book would By CHUCK MAISEL RAINTREE COUNTY, by Ross Lockridge, Houghton Miffin Co., Boston, Mass., 1066 pages. Ever since Whittier said “When you touch this book, you touch not a book, but a man,” readers have ( been trying to find the inner char acter of the authors of .all works. Ah, but when an authol commits suicide and his book is given as the reason, the sale of the novel zooms skyward as each amatuer psychologist tries his hand at finding evidences of a diseased mind in the book. Raintree County was a best sel ler soon after its publication, but when its author, Ross Lockridge Jr., decided to end, it all, an all time high was reached. Raintree County is at first and last glance a most carefully writ ten book. Although it can’t be classified as a historical novel, its picture of small town society of the Nineteenth Century is amaz ingly accurate. Told in a series of flashbacks, the story is essentially a biogra phy of Raintree County's most re spected citizen. John Wickliff Shawnessy, and perhaps an auto biography of Mr.- Lockridge him. self. As Shawnessy pluses through forty years of the past during a one day period, the history of Raintree County is recounted, the history of a place which .ekists nowhert and yet agrfin in the reader’s own locality. It defies time or place and could easily be the story of Brazos County of the Twentieth Century. Each flashback is a story with in itself and could be separated from the whole. The character^ from the county of Raintree are leal and tangible. They experience love, hate, desire, and desperation, hs do those of other stories, but they also are selfish and small and often experience unhappy ends. This writer’s ,guess as to - just manner than the customer? ex pect.” Tuesday Nat Harris, | engineer fop the Texas Railway Commis sion, warned against the wide spread practice of using a ball- peen hammer and ice-pick to “con vert” natural gas ranges for use with liquified petroleum. He point ed out that state regulations pro hibit use of liquified petroleum gas with equipment not approved by the Railway Commission and the American Gas Association. : The appliances short coufse, first of its kind to be held in Tpxas, is sponsored by the Ex tension Service of the A&M Sys tem, the Butane Dealers’! Associa tion, and the State Board of Vo cational Education. It is designed tq bring to the gas service men the latest and most modern meth ods in gas application. | C. ECHOLS ; Realtor Over Canady’s Pharmacy Bryan Phone 2-6454 Letter tslr ,7:30 lock in t-|ind-run terrier hep re- wjth pa- fijoni the STUDENT MEM ORjAl ton Burkhalter is Out oJ Burl (halter expressed BE CAREFUL, DRIyEl Editors, The Battalion: Sunday morning al)bu on 27th Street in the 70() Bryan, some cowardly driver ran oyer our rit puppy Sally. {Summoning mabiing strength and thetic yelps, ?he got up street and managed to dnkg' her self up on a neighbor’s li.wji where she quickly'dipd, much b the con sternation of 1 thq neigl boirs j who had come to know am li)Ve the little pup. V It could not have beeh Shat the driver did not} see her, b sed use she was following a large :ollie (her ~ T,j: . favorite playmate) a:r<iss the P erc l eT ! t of street when s^e was hi,. ! My husband! and I dje nj>t know about the accident until we ar rived home from collegt yesterday afternoon. Instead of ,ht enthu siastic welcome which ivej always received from! our pup t re were greeted with the sad t diigsi that Sally was dead and Wis jymg by the door in a pox into Vni<Jh One of No ’ton R. Burkhalter of College j ^athn, runner-up canlidate for j Ijrazos County tax assejisor-collec- , jiais withdrawn fron th«| run- f 5 :!■!]. I i I In a letter to N. C. Cole, jehair- rtan of, the Brazos Cou sty Demo- *ati: executive committee, Burk-; miter ijsaid: ' f . - “Aftjjer Iconsidering dl of the jctcrfji involved and ’wishing, to do v e patriotic and gracio m thing, I ereby wish to request your com- ittee to omit my name from the n-off ballot and certify Mr. I, 4. Wdqdon as the only candidate or nomination to the office of tax tsse mtu-colleetor of Brazos Coun- j :y, Tejpcas, for the secord primary j :o be held on August 211, 1948.” ciati for W i ion adi plac- the thoughtfulj 'neighboi ed her. Therefqre, rather th in terim between the dayp the evening’s studying with an uplifting romp that time yesterday vfi|s |spent in buryipg our pup. If you drive, please and try NOT! to hit who might be|in the st ee:. the in ork and >ei!ig filled h jSally, b* cpreful tlher Sally’s Mrs. Z. O. Dan The under-water sqel the United States is hold large deposits wells have alpeady beejii the tidelands of Cali more recently), in deep Louisiana in the Gulf Consult Dr. Carlton R. Lee OPTOMETRIST For Your Visual Problems 208 S. Main — Bryaa Phone 2-1662 be the obvious, 1 namely the hero Shawnessy. Shawnessy lives a doubt** life in his mind. He is first the Mr. | Shawnessy of the fine manners and morals' to whom the county pavs its respects, But he has his twin—mr. shaw- nessy, whose love for the baser things knows no bounds. Mr. Shaw- nessy is successful and happily married; tnr. shawnessy is frus trated and pictures the women about him sans garments. - mr. shawnessy aspires to lead the lustiest of lives and Mr. Shaw- nefcsy will never be entirely happy unless he does. But the Shawnessy of the capital letters hasn’t the courage to commit mental suicide and allow* the lower case to emerge. Each flpshback is well written and defies criticism, but of the whole—who can say? If for no other reason than curiosity, Rain- tree Countv is good wading. Above all, it is diffewnt. still teac try. arou'nd mlieyed to il. Oil pped inf announcing his vuthdrawal, ori to the voters of the county their kindnqsa and a uppopt. is estimated that about 15 all elementary school pup ls ! ip the United States aru ip t tattght ' in one-room, one- hqr schools in the open coun- »is appra- THE LARGEST ELECTRICAL A F PL I AN C E STORE IN BRYAN— || Comie in and dee tis !or large or small appliances: RADIOS, electric, irons STUDENT LAMPS, FLOOR AMPS. PRESTO COOKERS , i COFFEE MAKERS KELVINATOR . . . J . . HOTPOINT ;and many other usefuls i UNITED APPLIANCES FARM A HOME STORE > A AGGIE RADIO PKbne 2-1496 V CAFETERIA For Food of International FAME 311 N. Main Bryan MID WA YCLEANERS Special Rates on Cash AdCarry TWO •DAY SERVICE '■il -iv Satisfaction Guaranteed MIDAWAY AND COLLEGE ROAD I fj.' Z\ y i 'i v jf.: I' <2*23-1 U / \i/M Liist . 1 i i Jicious nutritioi s,ful !.> eryvfhere know that de* tine •flavored ICE . i i'< ■ clinicix for any regulgjjy ■» »♦- •li' ■ - u . i' • ' f -1 I ■ ^ . :■ ■,;,■■■