And My Fellow Man GIVE to the Heart Fund
4 Th Ntwi-Revitw, Raicburg, 0r Thur. Oct. 13, 1955
Published Daily Ixetpt Sunday by th
News-Review Company, Inc.
(taratf Iim anallar Mar t. It:, al lha aait alflea at
ftasabara-, Oraiaa. tsaar aol f March t. lall
CHARLES V. STANTON, Editor and Man. jar
Mimbtr of tho Aiiociattd Prait, Oragon Ntwapapar Puollihart
Attociaiion, tho Audit Bur.au of Circulation!
Baaraaaala kl WEST-HOLLIDAT CO., INC., allk.a la KK tark, Ckloaia.
Bak rraneUea, lM Anfalaa. laallla. rartlana. nanvar
UBICIirtlON KATCa la Oraian Mall Pat liar, $I.M; all maalaa, M Ml
Ikraa kianlba, MM. OlIaMa Or.aa. n Hall Par taar. I1".M; ala aiaalka.
kl.to; Ikraa rnantha. SI &a.
Bp Nawa-ftarlaw Carrlar Par laar. Ill.at da aavaaca, laaa Ikaa aaa ja.r,
pa, aiaklk. II.U.
A BIRD IN THE HAND
Charies V. Stanton
The series-of debates held by Senator Neubertfer and
Kepresenlalive Sam Coon, relative to the public power con
troversy, created widespread attention. Kven' here in
Southern Oregon, where our power development must
come from private rather than public development, the de
bates were followed with considerable interest.
As predicted earlier in this column, public attention
was focused on the novelty of the act rather than on the
arguments Ihemselves. People were more interested in
the sideshow than in the circus. In fact, the debaters
brought lorth few issues which hadn't been hashed over
time and again in the past. It is iiesuonaiie wnemer pie
conceived opinions of listeners were changed. Those fa
voring public power probably still favor public power,
while those who went to the debates believing in develop
ment of power by private enterprise are still of the same
mind.
The arguments may be resolved, I believe, into a sim
ple statement that Coon believe in the old adage that a
bird in the hand is worth two in the bush, while Neuberger
prefers to gamble on baiting the two elusive biids.
Coon argued that private enterprise is prepared to fi
construction of John Dav dam in return for power
distribution rights for 50 years. Neuberger argued that
only the government can furnish cheap power and that only kj ..p lfm I cC Al.l KOmrllli
cheap power will attract industry. MUtiear Ui6 TT 111 IVUITiain
Cheap Power Fallacy 'Oil High Level, SayS AEC
Coon, in my opinion, failed to spike this argument as a"" L. A, a t
well as should have been done. While he refuted it cap- i VrillCIl IiTIG II AT OnlGrGllCC
ut.. u. .imm'i u:. .:.iA .r a. ....... na mnv, am. r
Hilly, lie mull k Ktvrj inn nine ui me n I g ii iiiciii, .- iimi.ii ......
phasig as it deserved, 1 believe. If he did stress the point, ,. ''AS VKGAS. Nev. The
f . i , , i i lime is near when America s war-
ho was not adequately quoted in press reports. ; planes and naval craft will be
Neuberger kept harping on the low cost power from ; nuclear powered, the chairman of
Uonneville and presented the argument that the 2-plus mills i the Joint, Congressional Committee
of federal nnwur cnut won rl nrnvu p attractive hail to in- '""'" f"1"11"
diiFtry and that the state needs industry. On the other
hand, he claimed, private companies would sell the power
for 8-plus mills, and that this high cost would keep indus
try out,
GAO Advises Against Quick
Settlement Signing Away
Right To Dixon-Yates Test
WASHINGTON' The Gener-I
al Accounting Office. Congress'
watchdog on spending, disclosed
Wednesday it has advised against
any quick settlement that would
sign away the government's right
to a court test on whether the Dixon-Yates
contract is "void or voidable."
It appears certain the recom
mendation played a part in the
decision by the Atomic Energy
Commission to hold up action pend
of the pact.
Ihe AfcaL. stand came to light
Monday in a letter from Lewis L.
Strauss, AEC chairman, to Sen.
Anderson (D-NM), chairman of the
Senate-House Atomic Energy Com
mittee. Robert F. Keller, assistant to
Comptroller General Joseph Camp
hell who heads the GAO. told
Wednesday of that agency's part
in the matter in response to a
reporters queries. He said there
had been two go-stow letters, both
answering AEC inquiries about the
long disputed, now dead contract.
Keller said A EC first asked for
advice soon after President Eisen
hower directed last July 11 that
the contract be canceled.
Later the commission sought
clarification of GAO's position and
a second letter was sent Oct. 3.
Strauss' letter to Anderson was
dated Oct. 7.
The purport of both GAO letters
I was the same. The agency advised
I AEC that it believed the contract
was valid to the extent that the
requirement to make it effective
had been met. Some congressional
critics of the contract disputed .
; this. !
I But GAO said the congressional
I investigation of the contract, con
! ducted by an antimonopoly sub
' committee under chairmanship of
Sen. Kefauver (D-Tenn) had raised
1 a question of whether the contract
was "contrary to public policy."
1 If this were held to be the case
legally, the government would not
have to pay any settlement costs,
' running probably to .several mil
lion dollars.
I Kefauver has contended his sub
committee uncovered a "conflict of
i interest" law violation in connec
' lion with the contract, and has
I asked the Justice Department to
i study this.
The alleged violation chiefly con
i cerned the role of Adolphe H. Wen
' zell, former vice president of the
First Boston Corp.. New York in
vestment banking firm.
' Wenzell served the Budget Bu
' reau as a consultant on the Ten-
I naeeaa Vfllldv Anlhnrilv u-hilp still
working for First Boston, and
wrote a report which Kefauver
says led to the Dixon-Yates con
tract. First Boston laler became
financial agent for the Dixon-Yates
private power group.
Britain's Unions
Threaten Fight
With Bevanites
By TOM OCHILTREE
MARGATE, England Brit
ain's powerful trade union leaders
Wednesday threatened the left, wing
Bevanites with ? fiijht to the fin
ish unless they quit trying "to di
vide the Labor Party."
Charles GVldes, president of the
giant Trades Union Congress, de
livered this blunt union warning to
the Labor Parly's annual confer
ence; "An attack on the voting system
of this parly conference has now
developed into an attack on the
'whole trades union movement." he
said. "The trade unions know how
to fight. It would be a tragedy if
they had to direct their force
j against the new enemy."
1 Geddes did not mention left wing
leader Aneurin Bevan by name. He
j did not need to. Every one of the
I 1,500 persons in the Congress Hall
; knew to whom he was referring,
j Bevan angered union bosses at
; a closed conference session Tues
day when he said the forces that
sought his expulsion from the La
i bor Party bore some responsibility
i for the party's defeat by the Con
' servatives in the national elections
last .May.
; That broke the uneasy armistice
i belwcen the party moderates
' backed by the big union leaders
and the left-wingers whose strength
comes from local, party branches.
Demos, McKay
Exchange Jibes
Over Policies
i
j WASHINGTON W The Domo-
Icrnlic National Committee,
a hydrogen reactor "could never I through its magazine Democratic
take the place of a compact f is-! Digest, and Secretary of the Inler
sion power plant for mobile use 1 ir McKay exchanged political
and never could be used in the J'w mesday.
propulsion field.'
ncsday
Sen. Clinton P. Anderson (D-NM)
in a speech prepared for the Amer-1
ican mining Congress, said no one
J knows the variety of military uses
Bonneville can sell power at low cost partly because, i,n
it. was built during depression years and with depression
labor. It would cost many times as much to build today
In The Day's News
(Continued from Page One)
lent workers. But I can't help won
dering a bent older people and han
dicapped people. If they could sup-
The magazine characterized Mc
Kay as "(he giveaway king," ac
cused him of following policies of
"favoritism to husiness and indus
try." and said that under his stew
ardship the public power program
had been bVought to "a virtual
standstill."
McKay said this all was "a typi
cal evample of a misguided missle
powered with hot air."
He added in a statement issued
through the Republican National
table for atomic air .and surface
shins.
and would require a rate at leaat double the present chaise- Kor instance, he pointed out "we
to retire investment. Furthermore. Bonneville wholesale "L; their oensmns and their. Committee:
most of its power. The rale quoted bv Neuberger does not j enei.iv planes in the air." !s,,L'ial swuniy with a reasonable; "The Democrat gadflies are un-
include cost, of transmission to farms and homes, the e-t -'-My
of mamtainmjr other than main ransmissmn lines, nor the i XXk thtin" mi -!" hjimu-r .nd better off and and discrediled 'Rive.w.y gag.
enst of operating billing and Collection offices, service do- I et for atomic, malerlnls winch iwuul1' llve Ioniser. However. 1 can point to some-
partmentB, etc.. required of private companies in retail i may develop in the field of radia-1 lhi"8 which has been thrown away
power (llRtrimitlon. n industrial process. I BpeaKina 01 010 men, mere is " S"1"
"It ranges Irom the use ot railia- Loanceiior Adenauer 01 i.crmany. . ,," "T , mIM"""1- "IJl .
i WHO IS Koing on BO. lie IS one ol;"","J' "" miuuu.ii uiosuemy can
:lhe world's ercat statesmen. Ilc:c0"lc only from an unrestrained
RnnnA.rilln nn. ...... i. -..1.1 I.. I II..
u. ..,. i me iwnci m nuui hi iMiu","ia VU14111.V t"usltM1KI B : ion as a catalyst to radio slcriliza
by the RKA. REA shoulders distribution and service costs. ,ii,m i,i
If 30 per cent or more were to be added to KKA rates, to
offset taxes charged to private companies, Bonneville pow
er would nave little, If any. ailvanlajfe in DoiirIiis County
, , . . u-iidis iim.v ut-cinii' siiiiipiv aiier n"u "
iNeuPcrfrer kept repeating the statement that private ( the present government uuaran- rosy hope
Mr. s.iiri In ti'.i, Irvine to niivn'in . had ail attack of bronchial nnen.
loutpourin'' of federal tax funds and
(he concern of uranium prospec- j monia the other day that scared I a ''e f.perpetual war.
Inr llial HminU niinr ItliP (roc n;,linns mif nf thrfir l.nnln! 'that idea Went Ollt with thp
terials may decline sharply after 'and filled the Kremlin bosses with ; mink .roat ('eeP freeze and 5 per
The battle lines for the Big Four
foreign ministers' meeting at Ge
neva Oct. 27 are now being drawn.
In fact they are being fixed so
firmly that a stalemate appears
almost inevitable at that conference.
Within the past few days the i
leaders of the West have decided I
to give priority at Geneva to the I
is s ile of German unification. This
is the one matter the Russians ev
idently do not wish to discuss real
istically. As has been well aired before,
the Kremlin will have no part of
a unified Germany attached, as
Western Germany now is, to
NATO and the allied family of free i
nations. I
The only idea the Big Three dip- j
lomats have come up with to make
such an arrangement halfway pal-1
alablc to the Russians is a E.irop-1
ean security pact to protect all i
sides from a remilitarized, Western-oriented
Germany, I
This plan, authored by Prime
Minister Sir Anthony Eden of Brit
ain, is now being hammered into
final shape for Geneva. But every
thing indicates the Russians will
not buy it.
They believe time and circum
stance are on their side. Having es
tablished diplomatic relations with
the Bonn government of Chancel
lor Adenauer, they think they can
deal directly on the unity issue
without the intervention of the
West.
They do not expect the crusty
old chancellor to buckle and give
them the kind of unification the
Communists want. But they know
he must die some time, and they
figure his successor might not re
sist so well the pressures within
West Germany for restoration of
the full nation.
Perhaps they imagine that even
he will find his purpose eroded by
time, that he will one day make a
deal with the East German Red
regime because he has at last real-,
ized unity any other way is impos-
sible.
However that may be, the imme-i
diale prospect for settlement of the f
question at Geneva is dark indeed. :
The Geneva agenda does have!
two other ma.ior items, disarma-!
ment and the improvement of East-:
West contacts.
Progress of the disarmament ef-
forts recently made under UN au
spices does not augur well for this j
item. Perhaps the foreign minis-1
ters can find some way to break1
the log jam, but it would be a sur-1
prise if they did.
East-West contacts already have
shown some betterment in the
months before and after the "sum
mit" meeting at Geneva. Further
improvement surely would be wel
comed. But it is exceedingly doubt
ful that this alone would be enough
to allow the world to hail the for
eign ministers meeting as a great
triumph.
Once Oct. 27 arrives and the dip
lomats of East and West get down
to cases, they will find themselves
hard pressed to keep the heralded
"spirit of Geneva" from flagging.
Derelict Barge
Towed Into Port
ASTORIA W The Coast fiuard
cutler Yocona towed a derelict
barge into port here Tuesday night.
The cutter picked up the 75-foot
barge in the ocean some 40 miles
off Coos Bay Monday morning. The
barge had broken loose from the
molorship Tanginn in heavy seas
Sunday. The tug Salt Air. also
abandoned by the Tanginn Satur
day, was towed into Coos Bay
Monday by the culler Bonham. The
tug's four crewmen were unhurt.
Ihe motorship, the lug and the
barge were en route from Van
couver, B. L.. to San Diego when
the tug developed pump trouble in
a storm. The next day the line on
which the Tanginn was towing the
barge snapped.
A plane from the Port Angeles.
Wash., Coast Guard station spotted
the barge and guided Ihe Yocona
to it. The eulter tried to take it to
Coos Bay but could not cross the
rough bar and proceeded here.
The Tanginn continued its voy
age to San Diego. All three craft
are owned by Sea Tankers Inc.,
with offices in San Francisco. The
barge, built this year in Japan,
had a partial lumber cargo.
ELKS
MEETING TONIGHT
THURSDAY,
8 P.M.
companies would reap some $!-billion in profits, but his fig
tires were based on wholesale and not retail costs. I'ower
rates are regulated by the Public Utilities Commission, thus
precluding excess profits. Had relail and service charges
been taken into account, together with taxes, the $5-billion
figure would have been shown to be ridiculous.
Power To Ba Isiui
cent influence peddler,. The ills.
teerl buying program ends in l2. I'm glad Adenauer is able to go eiples of the gimmie school of poli-
"I believe that our output of ! on working ana i in nappy 10 .. -: me giveaway i
nuclear weapons mav remain on a learn this morning that be ap- sn'ekescreen. They are experienc
ing!! level for an indefinite period pears to be recovering from bis ed masters of this kind of camou-
to come," he declared, "chiefly be- illness. flage." I
cause we steadily find new mili ' i "
tary applications and hence design i Bouncing back from old age to j
and build new devices." youth, you've probably noted that
( e preoiciea tnal ny llie end ol i a large share of southern Oregon s
Ihe century "perhaps Do per cent1 1'nited Fund monev will be ex-
building
(particularly if
KpiihIiiiv. Aim-to ami v. !,.. !.,.i; ., i , i, , "ew cenlral station power pended for Ihe support of youth
. . .. ,., ..t.,sl ,,,, Mnm-nit-u iii.il scneraiing rapacity installed each training and character
iney intend to make public power the chief issue in the year will run .m atomic power." agencies.
forthcoming election camnaiirn. Thev are dnnirlinv before' discussed another worry of You may ask
Oregon Voters the lmil nf .m..ll.m.rf,..--..ll,i,r n. f.l. mining industry-lhe you have no young children
fvmm.... n.m.i .( ..... - possibility of liuililmg livdrogen "VYhv should I put up monev
cial government they assure us, will lake care of our power reactors which might out- for Ihe support of youth (raining
power needs. Our water resources, thev declare, belong-1 mode uranium reactors. I and character building agencies?''
to the people and should not be exploited 'bv private iiulus- He said a hydrogen reactor, if ,
trv nllliniiirh Ihm. .u i..i t n. r . .i . u . n i one could be huill, might run on' I Ins is the best answer I can
.' ....v iiiiiwii iiiir i in i 1 1 in i i r 1 1 it- it--,
it j ing 1 has ever been convicled of a
crime involving moral turpitude.
Character building like that
I PAYS OKK.
If pays off for EVKRYBODY.
i .I....I....;..... ..i.- i i i i il,ini- ,.r
ami lies, sou anil uresis, are lelt to private development, in huge quantities in the sea j It is Ihe proud boast of the Boy
It is an attractive proposal, of course, that monev will ! I'redictuig that Ihernionurlear re- Scouls that no Kagle Scout (Kagle
be taken from other stntea ui.,1 I I. i,,i i,- i..;r.-.. : actors will be huill. he added, how Scout is the highest rank in Scout
'ni-lhnot .1 i !.............. ... . . . ' ... lever, "progress will he slow: i
..... .....i..,i. i .-iC,,, inuiuinHi empire lo compete with : will be geared to Ihe eventual de
ine miiusiiiai areas Irom which Ihe money is taken. I'.ut , pleiion of ihe fossil fuels iroal and
there seems to be a KTowinif reluctance on the part of I hose '" aml ", anium and thorium de
states ami their representatives in Congress to continue v"Vrs or'n'ime'" Me "'niT' ih'rino'
this drain of money to build conipelitkm. Zt mav i,,' ,Mr,me"v
It IS my opinion that if the I'acil'ic Northwest wauls to large, heavy and expensive, be
bt:ild its industrial empire, we should use the opportunities '''"""' "' """ p;ll'l'n"' temperatures
at hand and immediately available, rather than wait for Ihe ; "ft h ca. reasoned,
hope that a handout eventually will be fortlominjr from
Vh , l V . . . Kovmin,(,'. 1 Hlove down the eale. a bird which has n.. With the bro,dening of the prior-
me out HdHffe ot a bird in the hand still contains a more no real natural enemy? ilav Timet same iHv sud hVanrn ,,v rm,P. " allocation of vaccine
" . ' ' ' 111 wK.-iau.Mic salt nn he tl ','" n,-t 1 , ' ', j
tails of the two hir.l. in thn , Alaska, said Heck, ' but I doubt
the Eugene Hegister-
From
Gun rd.
When France walked out of the
Tinted Nations in a fit of pique,
this newspaper said France "pick
ed up Us doll runs and went
home. Lea ling through Ihe ex-
More Children
On Eligible List
WASHINGTON' ijl The govern
ment Wednesday acted lo put addi
tional children and pregnant wo
men in the top priority firoup to
receive Salk antipolio vaccine.
A flexible program announced
by Secretary of Welfare Kolsom
allows each stale to broaden Ihe
priority group oy not more than
five addition.:! years of age within
a range frcni birth through 14
years of age. Oregon did lhat Tues
day. Heretofore. Ihe top priority group
under Ihe voluntary control plan
has consisted of children aged 5
through 9. Kolsom said some slates
might utilize Ihe five additional
years of age by extending their
priorities downward to include chil
dren from birth to age 10.
Others, he said, may extend the
limits upward In include children
S through 14. That was Ihe decision
in Oregon
(Qk&tM kite.
iriy i iino, NHiiie ua, ai(i r ranee ' ,, . , ,, . , :
pitked up its ball bat and went fmon- Ihe stales will he based on
than 8 AH hi left in
home The Albany Democrat-Her
ald, (lie same dav. said France
JJaf (botjfe-
i i
Ihe I nltcd Stales east of Ihe Mis- p,,,,, p ; maV'hPS alld went na,lt wol,u'n
' . nome.
hundreds of thousands.
their need to complete the vaccina
tion ol children under 15 and preg
In one area in which I counled
.British Naval Cuns Boom
As Russian Ship Visit
W.M AMI.k, Pa. If the eattle would nnlv K,.t
bald sooner in life, he'd have a Iwitar .buM,., ..r
u...i..... ii i. . " '"'"""i,
ii.-nn-ii n. neiK. an expert who helie
.III 1 nn, ..I 1 ... i . r
. .....,,1 ,., ,iC, nan niijrm is liii ing- pnssihle extnu'tiiui
within the next 7l years, explained:
"The eaKles don't develop their distinctive white head'
iMiiiuoKf iiiuii ine iourth ear. Hefore that
rown !
roKTSMDl'TH, England -!
Naval guns boomed in dense tog ,
Wlt if l'..iln.l V.lmn. 1....1 .-..I.
..... wvi,i.u in m. .i .mi.. ho e,i t0 consider whether or not
there arc now only M to, :10. Alaska and llawai belong lo Ihe
Heck, nearly mi. has been a life- ! sut(., r shmlll, ,,,, s,,t ,
long naturalist as his father was i. i v iciugiri.' im ivimv
!r',',"!"T,JhP Pa- PKNilKNTNA'noNS. w'd'ha oLMe 77T
pmbahlv ,he n, pierthful bir i m KL" k"" wr " ""K " " '"
ees this f1.a,h,.n,(i!Aim-r.ca be fears lhal even strict .0, s add that phrase to Ihe Channel lo make', social call on
-' .siii.s iu lu.ui- outers. Britain
loo laic lo s.ne Ihe bald eaglet . V, . .' n.. t i. u
lion, Ihe same fale. Wben a spec-1 AU,.a ,, , of th(. Krrnch Ik '
''"."!. "esinsto .leeline. it Republic. II ' as much as pan s, e l I naval d, -
1 Miiiieiuues oies mil nespue any CI- ( franro as Al.-itf an,l ll..,
fin-,.,.,... ,....1 I ,. n.M'I'eil (rl i s; ,1 ....; .' "j 7" i.""", 01 v.eoiKe u in
in l,i ,,. : j f"r alkln "'" when lulled Na- cannonading.
On Sept. 1. SS8 ji,l 4J years nons (with all Ih. communisl
laler. 1 saw a flock of l.vi lo 175 members suppurling the motion i c p ll . f a.i-
passenger p.geons and tried un- voted lo cons der whether r Z, . SeC. DulleS Gives NlXOIl, -
successliillv to stalk Ihein. 1 am Aleeria sli,n,l,l l. ,i., .-,..,.i r DaU.. P.nn kjl.i.
niemher nf tli 11... L-..... i "
Beck, a reined chemistry nro
fessor, holds Ihe nielancliolv
i.n'c ion being .T. .f",n Z"r".'J
onlv
eagle sanctuary thai no longer has
u ragic in ii
The sanctuary, believed ihe mil.
eagle refuge in the world, was n- won t be
laonsneri on .Ml. Johnson Island in
leriuiltenlly occupied since IHIS
II Ihe male is killed Ihere will
be a replacenirnl." Beck said, i
mil ii the lemale is kilted, there ,
living
I lie oiilx
American Ornithologists' Cmon
who ever jaw a flock even that
U....L f-l .1 .
u. .- , ,, .' ims uii iiiiiny i.irmels.
n icriR ,J a " ,,r"'r J'"" nespue a S.HKI fine lor dcslrov.ng
?'16 b..lhc Audubon Assn. .Nev- a bald eagle, ollcn shoot down Ihe
ei more man one lamily of eagles fierce-looking birds in Ihe false be- large
mi for th. h,l,l .. . " ' h,"l"'' are major barnyard raid "The last passenger pigeon.
IZ'iZ, i ,11,?"'', SP" "p crv M;,rlh. ' Ihe t'.ncuinal, Zoo
' ..b.ii. I I II BI UIIIIOUC
WASIUNIITON i.t" Secrelarv nf
PLUNGES TO DEATH 'Stale Holies Wednesday save Vie.
riAt.l.AS. lex '.r A high school President Nixon and other lop of.
girl was plunged lo her dc.ilh here finals a report on his talks with
eslerilav at the Si:ii.. I.'..,.- .,f 'r.,.- l)r.,l.i L-,...l... n..n.
cartel . ,l'' " " examination of ' ' i ncse nirus which, as when a pivol on a Do fool high Dulles met at the White House
"Bald .aid... .r. h.,.i i , . '""'"" "'"maehs shows thai 9S per '"""'ers reported, once darkened Kerns wheel broke ami dropped for an hour wilh Nixon. Attv (Jen.
nahstic Reek "Ti ""''V"1' of ,h"r ,,kkI " " ""l k,"1 " "" " "ht her seal lo Ihe ground. , Urownell. Secrelarv of tlVlW
travel in fh'cks T,e, .U7 ",?'''' 1 ,'hp h"''l "nes along u ... ., v., '"'"bcsi. ,7, a member un Humphrey and presidential
own erritone ,A "P '"" large lakes, ruers, and ha" ,n , ,' ' ? 'K Bflk '" th,nk "l,at Memphis. Tex. high school staff members.
rXZ bv nth??' Al'1,k"' .. and the easie ,'n ' ?, ' " ', b"' '' '. be. ,.nmi. a dead on arral al Bav- "I jusl reported on mv .tnp."
eniroachment b, olhcr eagle, , f ,,,, , ,,,, S(n(.!( his life ,s through have to lor Hospital. Two companions In Dulles told reporters alter Ihe
The big untidy. S tool-wide ncit mm Honda. I'1 . , , na,'k ll'r hill if th. sen with her-Kav l.rlie. 15. mceiing. and declined further com-
..op an 85-foo, ull red oak Ire, How deeply has c,v,lat,on cut sTmhToi Cr,rn'powerV'nS crLlZrT"' U ' h her pameipant, also
The extra years enrich I.q its great Bourbon flavor
XrakT ,t : y
ULU
30
5Qt.
O80
'Pint
OLD
HICKORY
HICKORY
SIRSIGHTBOURBONWHISK1f
SIX YEARS 01D
86 PROOF
OLD HICKOtY DISTILLING CORPORATION PHILADELPHIA, PA,
O
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