The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, September 21, 1955, Image 2

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    2 The News-Review, Roseburg, Ore. Wed., Sept. 21, 1955
Wilsonville Site
Recommended For
Mental Hospital
SALEM m Tho Stale Board
of Control got the official recom
mendation from its advisory com
mittee Tuesday that a site north
of Wilsonville would he best for
the new state mental hospital.
The committee earlier had made
public its preference for that rite
of 401 acres costing $226,790, fol
lowed by one of 445 acres west of
Wilsonville and another of M2
acres three miles south of Hills
bo ro.
The board will make soil tests
and check on water supply before
buying a site. The committee rec
ommended, too, that it get a prop
erty appraisal before final deci
sion. The hospital ultimately will cost
15 million dollars with the first
unit to cost 6 million.
The advisory committee said Hi
first choice is the best location be
cause of its speedy access to down
town Portland.
It pointed out that the tract is
level, and that it would be out of
the range of any H-bomb that
micht be dropped on Portland.
The committee, headed by Fred
erick Greenwood, Portland, said
price was not much of a factor in
picking the sites. Several sites
near Hillsboro were eliminated be
cause they would be in the flight
pattern of jet planes which would
use the proposed Navy airfield at
Hillsboro.
Workshop Series
Scheduled Here
By Theater Croup
A series of workshops concern
ing all phases of the theater is
planned by the Thalia Commun
ity Players during the 1955-55 sea
son. The workshops are open to any
interested persons, according to
President Chuck llcinhart. Initial
filans for them were formulated
ast week. The first workshop will
deal with one-act plays.
The plays will be cast and di
rected by members of the group,
Reinhart said. They will be pre
sented later in the season before
the players for "criticism and in
tcrpretatation," he added.
Thalia players will meet Thurs
day at 7:30 p.m. at the home of
Mrs. Donald Baldridge. 427 S.
Stephens St., Roseburg. The meet
ing is open.
Director of the players is Iir
raine Kesner, who last spring
supervised the group's production
of "The Night of January 16th."
Hospital News
Msrcy Hospital
Admitted
Surgery: Mrs. Joseph Wecker
le, Winchester ;Mrs. Carolyn Hunt,
Roseburg.
Medical: Mrs. Ole Kent and
baby, Evelyn Louise: Mrs. Glenn
Cunningham and baby, Larry Al
len; Cecil Anderson, Winston;
Mrs. Boh Morgan and baby, Rhon
da Elaine: Mrs. Peter Lowen, Mrs.
Robert O'Neil, Silas Turpin, Elvin
Bosworth, Roseburg.
Douglas Community Hospital
Admitted
Surgtryi Michael Simmons, Phyl
lis Stoncbraker, Mrs. Mary Puck
ett, Roseburg.
Mvdieal: Willie Compton, Win
ston: Mrs. Burl Ruth. Mrs. Billy
Pol ley. Roseburg: Clarence
Stumpf. Glide; Mrs. Floyd Givens,
Oakland.
Discharged
Earl Lanning, Suthcrlin; Mrs. Al
len Seymour, Helen Bilner, Mrs.
John Crumpacker, Mrs. Victor Pe
terson, Mrs. Wayne Wagner, Rose
burg; Mildred Neuner, Glide.
Vital Statistics
Divorce Granted
QUEEN Gcraldine Lou from
Troy Queen Jr. Plaintiff awarded
custody of one child, $50 per month
support, household property.
Divorce Suit Filed
TUEL Alice vs. Ernest Noel
Tucl. Married April 16, 1930, at
Shoshone, Idaho. Cruel and inhu
man treatment charged. Plaintiff
seeks custody of four children, $100
per month for two of them and
$50 per month for the others, title
to house and lot, vendee's interest
in house and lot occupied by cou
ple and household property. Plain
tiff would agree to decree award
ing automobile to defendant.
Crandma Batting
Perfect, In Quiz
NEW YORK tl Grandma Myr
tle Power, the baseball sage from
Dixie, has kept up her perfect bat
ting average by hitting safely on
the $32,000 question.
Drawing on her amazing dia
mond lore again last night, she
identified six major league players
who collected 3,000 or more hits in
their careers.
Hal March, master of ceremonies
on The $64,000 Question CBS tele
vision show, gave her Ty Cobb as
one of the seven who made that
mark and asked her to name the
others.
Slowly but without missing a
swing, she named them Cap
Anson, Tris Speaker, Honus Wag
ner, Eddie Collins, Napoleon La
joie and Paul Waner.
The 70 - year - old baseball fan
from Buford, Ga., who has been
working as a housekeeper, can
keep the $32,000 or try for the
grand slam $64,000 question next
Tuesday night. If she goes to bat
and strikes nut, she'll get a Cad
illac for a crying towel.
Forces Of Rebels Win
Accord From Loyalists
(Continued from Pane One)
apart the main headquarters of the
Alianza Nacionalista, Peron's
strong-arm alliance. Later, secur
ity forces were reported to be oc
cupying an Alianza branch eight
blocks from the smoldering head
quarters. Later, Hugo di Pietro, secretary
general of the General Confedera
tion of Labor, came on the air over
the state radio to urge the work
ers "to keep calm and continue
working."
Di Pietro's big labor union had
been one of the pillars of Peron's
strength. One of the problems fac
ing the new regime was the re
action of the Argentine working
force. There had been rumors
since Tuesday that Di Pietro was
under arrest.
The junta, which was headed by
I Gen. Jose Domingo Molina, broad-
cast a warning that any violence
! would he met sternly. The capi
tal city had been tense but gen
erally tree ol violence since the
revolt began last Friday.
BETA SIGMA PHI TO MEET
Tho first fall meeting of the
Beta Sigma Phi city council is
scheduled Thursday night at 8 p.m.
at the home of Mrs. H. B. Moni
ghan. The address is 1125 E. Third.
U. S. Savings Stamps
Will Be Sold At Dillard
V. S. savincs slammi will bo
sold at Dillard Elementary School
I each Thursday this year, accord-
inn iu iTincipni v,. a uyfunRcr.
He indicated to correspondent
Rosa lleinhach that the first sale
instittited last November was so
effective it wan decided to start
the project as soon as leaders and
sponsors can he found.
He told Mrs. Heinbach that In
the 30 weeks of operation last year
about $1,300 worth of stamps were
purchased by the children.
The community sponsors who
helped start the savings program
were: Mrs. Charles Kash, Mrs.
Harold Colt on and Mrs. John Clos-son.
2 Of 8 Convicts
Are Recaptured
ANGOLA. La. tf Searchers
captured Kdward Earl Little, 41,
Tacoma, Wash., Wednesday leav
ing two at large from an eiqht
man break from the Louisiana
state penitentiary.
Little walked onto the Angola
road to a state police patrol car
to he picked up.
"They seemed to know where
I was, so I figured there wasn't
any use hiding any more," he
said.
Little fold officers he became
lost from the other escapees and
had been wandering around by
himself. He said bloodhounds
chased him Tuesday night, and his
pursuers got close enough for him
to hear them talking.
Little surrendered only a few
hours after Luther Talley, leader
of the prison break, was captured.
Talley was hiding in a clump of
bushes near a group of searchers
when an inmate prison guard
spotted him. The guard fired and
wounded Talley in the right hand.
Talley, considered the most dan
gerous escapee, surrendered. He
was unarmed, he told officers.
Broader Marketing
Of BLM Timber Asked
(Continued from Page One)
roads into the area. He said one
road alone, between the Smith and
Siuslaw River divides, cost $900,
000 and now the BLM will not al
low the timber to be hauled out.
Joseph McCracken, executive
vice president of the Western For-
jest industries Assn., which spon
sored the meeting, said the only
! purpose of the agreement was to
! permit crossing of the marketing
line o timber could be brought
into the Eugene area.
"Under what is apparently the
BLM's current policy of keeping
this timber bottled up for the coast
mills, we have nearly one million
dollars and county money tied up
in costly construction going no
where." Eirlier Sens. Morse and Neu
berger hr-d urged a review of BLM
regulations for the Smith River
Burn.
FILES FOR BANKRUPTCY
William Floyd Howard, Riddle
mechanic, has filed for bankrupt
cy in U.S. District Court in Port
land. He lists debts of $2,267.71.
FOR SALE
TWO TRACTS OF LAND - 91 ACRES
GOVERNMENT SURPLUS REAL PROPERTY
Bid ara Invited for purchqsa of approiimataly 70 ocrai of
agricultural and 21 aerat, mora ar Itlt, of eommtrciol-rtl-idanrtal
lond loeottd at Vttarani Administration Domiciliary,
formar Camp White, Jackton County, Oregon. Bidi to ba
received until 11:00 a.m., PST, October 21, 1955, then
publicly opened and read. Information and bid form moy be
obtained from thii Agency ot the add re it ihown below. Tho
property offered heroin hot been icreened against the known
defense and ether requirements of tho Federal Government.
GENERAL SERVICES ADMINISTRATION
Room 126, Federal Office Building
909 First Avenue
Seottle 4, Washington
Fifteen Members Given
Pins At- Tenmile Church
Fifteen members received pins
and cards at a recent candlelight
service at the Tenmile Methodist
Church session of the MYF.
They are: Conrad Lakey. Ray
Dowdy. Rnnald, Judy, Patsy and
(lary Hardrnhrook, Bonnie Vance,
Beverly and Lola Butts, Mary and
Sally Krbe, Margaret Sherman,
Mary Rose, Ellis Vance and Max
ine Vance.
Preceding the ceremony t h
youth group held a song service
according to correspondent Louisa
Coats. Counselor Mrs. Virgil Vance
made the presentations of pins
and cards.
Project1 Chairman Named
By Dental Assistants
June Thompson has been ap
pointed chairman of the Thanks
giving basket project for a needy
family this year in the Umpqua
District Dental Assistants Assn.,
according to a report at the latest
meeting.
Another project, Christmas card
orders, was taken by Dorothy Bal
lon. This is an annual project.
It was also reported that plans
are being made for representa
tives of the group to attend the
American Dental Assn. convention
in San Francisco in October.
Janice Mauro conducted her
first meeting since her election as
president this spring. The meeting
followed a chicken dinner at Carl's
Haven.
Stream Altered
To Make Trout
Fishing Easier
FRASER, Colo. liH They have
changed the course of the Rocky
Mountain stream where President
Eisenhower fishes here to make it
easier to catch trout.
The President and his host, Den
ver investment banker Aksel Niel
sen, stood on the bank of St. Louis
Creek Tuesday afternoon and help
ed supervise a bulldozer and a
stream shovel in the operation.
The swift-flowing creek, which
meanders through Nielsen's ranch,
is being tapped to increase the
supply of water to Denver, 70 miles
to the southeast. The water will he
piped over the Continental Divide
to the eastern slope.
Murray Snyder, assistant White
House press secretary, told news
men the President and Nielsen
who have been fishing for trout
here since 1940 have been plan
ning for years how to alter the
course of the stream to improve
the catch. They decided to go
ahead, Snyder said, when it be
came apparent that the Denver wa
ter diversion project might lower
the stream level to such an extent
as to spoil the fishing next year.
So they had a new channel cut
with the purpose of slowing down
the flow, and in doing that created
a few deep pools where trout like
to lurk.
William Fransham
Succumbs Tuesday
William ' Eugene' Fransham, 60,
died Tuesday at the Roseburg Ve
terans Hospital.
He was born at Bozeman. Mont.
Oct. 14, 1894. He was a veteran of
World War I. Surviving is a sister,
Mrs. Edna Judevine of Orescent
City, Calif.; and one brother,
Charles Fransham, of Yi'eiser,
Idaho.
Graveside funeral services will
be held in the Roseburg Veterans
Cemetery, Friday at 1 p.m. Chap
lain Nathaniel Wallen will officiate.
The Roseburg Funeral Home is in
charge of arrangements.
Toll Of Drh Counted
After Hurriein Lvei
(Continued from Page One)
Another Step Taken
In Streets Renaming
(Continued from Page One)
CHARGE DISMISSED
A citation issued to Daniel R.
Dimick. Roseburg, following a mi
nor traffic accident Sept. 15, has
hern dismissed from municipal
court, according to Police Chief
Slan Olson. Olson said there is not
sufficient evidence to sustain the
charge of failure to yield right of
way. Dimick's car and a new po
lice car were involved in the mishap.
EXAMINATIONS SLATED
The United States Civil service
commission announces examina
tions for clerk, photographer, mi-cro-photogranhcr.
photostat oper
ator and blueprint operator in
Washington, D.C. and nearby vi
cinity. Further information may be ob
tained front Jack Calkins, U-.S.
Post Office, Roseburg.
Ufc
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iin'v" jnei0ywom
JUST LIKE A FURNACE ... BUT WITHOUT
COSTLY, DIRT COLLECTING PIPES and REGISTERS!
ENDS SOOT and SMOKE
Stops heat loss up the chimneyl
Over 1300 cu. ft. of FREE AIR ir
burned with every gal. of oil to
SAVE up to 50 in fuel!
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iir -.iit irrajiMrii awiii p i lar
FrO THE sItTOmLi TMId1(
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TWO-IN-ONI HI ATMAKIR
TROPICAL ItOOl HEAT
FLOATING MOTOR MOUNT
CAST IRON CONSTRUCTION
PORCELAIN INAMIl FINISH
SUMMER COOLINO
raw
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J7ait 1
Blue Star Mothers Set
Next Meet In October
The next meeting of the Blue
Star Mothers of WinstonDillard
will be scheduled in Ortober at
the home of Mrs. Rosa Heinbach.
The exact dale will be announced
later.
The women met for a business
session last week at the home of
the President Mrs. George Carter.
Blue daisies were distributed
among Ihe members for sale for
the benefit of the Roseburg Veter
ans Hospital. Mrs. Zillah Wade
and Mrs. Heinbach were in charge
of distribution in Dillard, and Mrs.
Alice Hill and Mrs. Cecilia Cart
er in Winston. The daisies were
circulated over the weekend.
FATALLY INJURED
STAYTON. Ore. ufi George
William Bracher, 24. Scio was in
jured fatally Tuesday when his
clothing became caught in a plan
er at Ihe Willamette Vallev Build
ers Supply mill at Aumsville.
Survivors include the parents.
Mr. and Mrs. George Brancher,
Lyons, and the widow.
PTA TO MEET
Melrose PTA will hold its first
fall meeting Thursday at S p.m.
at the school. A new president will
be elected to replace Mrs. Emilie
Hargesheimer who has moved to
Roseburg.
Walnut Lane (Cloake's Ferry) to
Sherwood Avenue.
Harvard Avenue (Laurelwood) to
Laurelwood Court.
Alley adjacent to VA property
west of Ballf Street to Fir Street.
East Harrison Street to H 0 p e
Avenue.
West First Street to Nash Street.
Second Street (Terrace) to,Wild
wood Avenue.
East First Street to Atlanta
Street.
East Second Street to Boston
Street.
East Third Street to Casoer
i Street.
East Fourth Street to Denver
Street.
East Fifth Street to Erie Street.
East Sixth Street to Fulton
Street.
East Seventh Street to Gardiner
Street.
Second Avenue South to Diamond
Lake Boulevard.
First Avenue South to Odell
Avenue.
First Avenue North to Crater
Avenue.
Second Avenue North to Klam
ath Avenue.
Avenue A to Oswego Avenue.
Avenue B to Tahoe Avenue.
Third Avenue North and First
Street to Phillips Avenue.
Fourth Avenue North to Arrow
head Avenue.
West Second Street to Lincoln
Street.
West Third Street to Polk Street.
Beacon Street (between Stephens
and Winchester) to Taft Avenue.
Unnamed street between North
Jackson and Winchester to Wilson
Avenue.
Unnamed Street off Mvrtle Au.
, nue (Fairhaven) to Nevada Court,
j Riverside Avenue ( Hamilton Ad-
dition ) lo Arizona Street.
; Broccoli Lane (that part of
Broccoli already known as Sharn
Street) to Sharp Street.
Unnamed Street off Kline Street
(Huciesl) to Utah Drive.
Hassell s Alley to Wyoming Ave
nue. Hamilton Street (near Glen) to
Texas Avenue.
First Street (Terrace Addition)
to Kansas Avenue.
Third Street to Florida Avenue.
Fourth Street to Nebraska Ave
nue. Fiflh Street to Illinois Avenue.
Sixth Street to Michigan Avenue.
Ash Street to Vermont Street.
Park Street to Wright Avenue.
Benson Street to Cobb Street.
Rainbow - Sunset to Rainbow
Street.
Alpha-Hess to Alpha Street.
Stanton-Scott to Stanton Street.
Council - Chatham - Corey
(north of Harvard) to Chatham
Court.
Fullerton - Ford to Fullerlon
Street.
South - Rice to Rice Avenue.
Cass - Overlook to Cass Avenue.
Bowen - Spruce to Spruce Street.
Eight Persons Die
In New York Fire
NEW YORK Ml Wind-fanned
flames swept through four frame
rooming houses near New York's
Coney Island amusement park
early Wednesday and eight per
sons perished.
Fifteen others, several rescued
in dramatic action by firemen,
were injured.
Names of the dead could not be
established immediately. Bodies
were burned so badly that the sex
of only two-a man and a woman
was established.
Among die injured were men
and women ranging from 33 to 80.
The blaze broke out only two
hours after another fire in a bath
house on the Coney Island board
walk seven blocks away. The co
incidence aroused suspicions of au
thorities. The second fire occurred about
8 a.m. in a middleclass residen
tial and rooming house area heav
ily populated by Italians. It was
brought under control two hours
later.
morning 150 miles southeast of
Halifax, N.S., traveling at a last
clip ol 45 miles per hour.
Gales extend 300 miles from the
. h And. SOIlth
i Storm ceiuei wi ,
and southwest and 200 miles to the
west and norm, me ne.iu. -reau
reported.
Hurricane Hilda spent herself
Tuesday in the north central
mountains of Mexico, but rain
swelled floods still harrassed strick
en cities behind her.
At Tampic, an oil port of 110,
000 persons, the port captain said
the exact number of dead and
missing may never be known, due
to the "greatness of the ca-
taelrrtnhe."
With Its land communications en
tirely cut, the city could be
reached only by plane. There were
reports of damaged and sunken
ships in the harbor.
Ninety per cent of Tampico's
buildings were reported damaged.
Pilots flying rescue missions to
the city brought out reports of
people being swept away by angry
floodwaters of the Panuco River
as the buildings in which they
sought refuge collapsed.
Rickett Claims
He Acted As Spy
TOKYO Wl-Walter A. Rickett
said today that U.S. naval officers
told him "to keep my eves open"
when he first left for Communist
China on a Fulbright scholarship.
The 34-vear-old ex-Marine lan
guage officer told newsmen that
officers at Seattle's 13th Naval Dis
trict headquarters gave him these
instructions on the basis of his
previous training with the Marine
Corps and intelligence.
Rickett arrived in Tokyo today
en route home after more than
four years in Red Chinese prisons
; on cnarses Ol espionage,
, Rickett repeated that he was
j guilty. When released at Hong
Kong last week, he said he had
spied for the United Stales.
"There was no ouestion about it.
It was spying in the Chinese Com-
mtinist dictionary. . .and in my
.dictionary too."' he said,
j "I gave political and military in
i formation to the American consul
in Peiping."
Scientist Wants Size
Of A-Bomb Stock Told
WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS,
W. Va. ii A nuclear scientist
has called upon President Eisen
hower to reveal the size of this
nation's atom bomb stockpile in
the belief that the revelation
"could be a potent force for
peace.
Dr. Ralph E. Lapp, director of
Nuclear Science Service in Wash
ington and former consultant to
the Atomic Energy Commission,
said the stockpile already
"amounts to several tons of TNT
for every inhabitant of our planet.
The world's population is esti
mated at 2'.i billion persons.
Dr. Lapp said the pile is so fan
tastically large that there is no
longer any point in keeping it
secret. He spoke yesterday at a
convention of the U.S. Tea Assn.
Dr. Lapp described a hydrogen
bomb which would produce the
same destructive force as li mil
lion tons of TNT.
DESSERT LUNCHEON
Th U'nm.n'a GnHAlu nt friric-
Han Service of the Methodist
I Church will hold dessert lunch
eons Thursday at 1:30 p.m.
The five circles will meet at the
homes of the following: No. 1
Mrs. G. H. Lennox, 1001 Corey
Ave.: No. 2 Mrs. V. T. Jackson,
Winchester; No. 3 Mrs. H. L.
King. Veterans Administration;
No. 4 Mrs. W. E. McComan. Mel-
' rose Road, and No. 5 Mrs. H. C.
i Wells, 811 Lilburn St.
WCTU Organizes
At 'Lookingglass
A Woman's Christian Temper
ance Union group has organized
at Lookingglass, according to a
report from correspondent Hazel
S. Marsh.
The union was organized at a
meeting inis monin conoucted by
n-. r W Pnrn.1, nf D l '
She is Douglas County WCTU pres.
ident. The Rev. Valeria Cleveland,
newiv eiecieu secretary 01 the
county WCTU, led the devotional
service.
New officers of the organization
are: President, Mrs. Mary South
wick: vice president, Mrs. Mary
Jacoby; secretary, Mrs. Pearl
Malhis, and treasurer, Mrs. John
Jlaauox. inner cnaner members
are: Mrs. Sadie canton, Mrs. Le.
Uitnlrl Mr. Utrni-.l 1.
Comas and Miss Gladys Johnson.
ine group pieua uj meei on the
third Thursday of each month. The
...t m.Atinff will h at th.
of Mrs. A. A. Jacoby Oct. 20.
ine cnaner mecung was neid
at the home of Mrs. Edith Ackert
Eden Holds Meet
With Cabinet
LONDON i Prime Minister
Eden met with his Cabinet Wednes
day to put final approval on a
government report on the Burgess
Maclean "runaway spies" case.
Eden, fully recovered from a re
cent attack of influenza, drove up
to Ix)ndon from his country home
to preside over the meeting.
The Cabinet met in the midst of
the most serious newspaper attacks
made on the Foreign Office in re
cent years for its handling of the
case of Donald Maclean and Guy
Burgess, British diplomats who
fled to the Communist East in
1951 after serving as longtime Rus
sian spies.
For four years the Foreign Of
fice, under both Labor and Con
servative governments, main
tained tight secrecy over details
of the men's defection. This was
broken only last week-end when
former Russian spy Vladimir Pet
rov disclosed they were Soviet
agents for a long time.
The Foreign Office then con
firmed Petrov's disclosures and
said Burgess and Maclean were
under investigation when they fled.
Spurred by angry newspaper
criticism, the government prom
ised an official white paoer this
week giving full detailt of tht
case.
MOTHER PASSES
PORTLAND ii Mrs. Mary
Updearaff, mother of Rear Admir
al William N. Updegraff (ret.) of
San Francisco, died here Tuesday.
George G. Updegraff, judge of
Wheeler, Gilliam and Sherman
counties before his death two
years ago, also was a son.
Requiem mass will be said here
Saturday.
BAND PARENT MEET
I Wesley Hedeen, band'riirector of
I all Glide Schools, calls the atten
j tion of parents who are interested
j in having their children join the
! school bands, to attend a meeting
j tonight at 7:30 at the high school
for prospective hand students. At
Jthis meeting instruments will be
demonstrated and several music
; companies will have a display of
new instruments.
PICNIC SCHEDULED
The Retired Teachers of Doug
las County will hold a 12:30 noon
potluck picnic at Umpqua Park
Saturday. However, if the weather
is inclement, a 1:30 p.m. dessert-
j luncheon will be held instead at
the home of Marie Martens and
1 Irma Blumer. 1032. N. Jackson St.
The committee in charge reports
ail nun vamiK, piuiaii! Ilfll ueen
planned.
Dr. Dean B. Bubar O.D.
AND
Dr. F. Joseph Agost O. D.
OPTOMETRISTS
Announces with pleasure their association
in the practice of optometry ot
129 N. Jackson-Roseburg-Ph. OR 3-6526
IFlOOR PKOBl'M"
CARTER TIRE CO.
444 N. Stephens St.
ORchjrd 2-2689
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Providing life's daily necessities Is lnporlanl.
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But Woodmen qet far more than "bread alone."
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HARRY HATCHER, Ucal Re.
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