1 i
PAGE FOU3
Tha CZZGCII CTAimAIL Cdsa. Orjta, Ccriay I!cn-, Ortcbrr 21. ICIi
. v "Wo Facor Sways C7; No Fear Shall Aim
- From Tint Statesman. Much 28, 1831 .
THE STATESMAN PUBUSIilKG C03IPANY
CHARLES A. SPRAGUZ, Editor and Publisher
Member of the Associated Press
- . . . .. -
Tht Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use (or publication of all
news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited In this newspaper.
CI Joe and the Fraulein
" ' The orders of General- Eisenhower lor the
military government of occupied Germany are
terse -and firm. They are inshort: "no foolish
ness." For civilians who mind their own busi
ness, no interference; for those who do interfere,
death. But death will not be visited on the in
nocent by way of reprisal as is the nazi custom.
Hard as it will be to preserve order and foil
4ka f!rmin . underground, nerhans even . mora
difficult will be carrying out army orders that
the GIs can't date the German frauleins. General
Eisenhower has ordered 'no fraternizing" with
the German population, and that Includes wo
men! But, as an army officer remarks, the
American soldier "is normally friendly, trust
ing, easy-going and ready to pick up acquain
tance everywhere.' So it's going to be hard to
get him to look straight ahead when German
frauleins,' bereft of men of their age for years,
cast coquettish glances in their direction.
In the last war the American soldiers enter
ing the Rhineland after the armistice met and
some of them mated with the German women.
They enter the country now with the war still
on, and with the German people in a different
temper. They will need to be on guard against
every German civilian, women included, fear
ing either personal betrayal or espionage. So the
mrmtr ' nil t lnriniiHtfwl! v wiiu and soldiers
themselves if they have some costly exper
iences may learn to avoid fraternizing with the
population. We can still count on soldiers pas
sing out sticks of gum to children however. That
privilege should not be denied the soldiers; and
children carry an appeal in every language.-
Acquire Bush Pasture
t V- V- n.A-l.
out under which the whole 100 acres of the
Bush tract in the heart of Salem may come into
permanent public use. The city now has deed to
the 57. acres of flat land, possession to come af
ter the death of Miss Sally Bush. Now the Bush
interests indicate willingness to sell the city the
remaining 43 acres of upland for $175,000. One
condition is the deeding of from seven to 10
arrp tf the nastim in WiTlamptte university for
- ii t i ? t i rni . : 1
an auueuc liexa. -iiie new pnee is a nuwuuu
of $75,000 from that formerly put on the prop
erty. : , , j.:.-:.--' :
The StatesmanThsts that a satisfactory fin
ancing plan can be worked out so the city can
' acquire this property. The opportunity is most
unusual to obtain so large a tract for a public
park in the heart of a city. The improvement of
f Via linivcrrciftt rmrtinn rnuM ha imA in -with tho
tll K t . , V fcj rUlmwm .... wm ww mwMM ..... -
: "ter on the flat" . .'. :,:Z ,r r;.';
The acquisition of the property , .would not
come until the death of Mr. A. N. Bush and Miss
The city will, need to develop a comprehen
sive park program, not only for the utilization
of the Bush. Pasture but for providing suitable
parks in other sections in anticipation of future
growth of baiem. The present oner furnishes a
great opportunity, and a real responsibility as
well. "
Dewey on Foreign Policy
' The New York Times came out for Roosevelt
because it approved of his "foreign policy." That
argument was pretty well punctured by Gover
nor Dewey before the Herald-Tribune forum
Wednesday night. He showed that in critical
situations the "president's own foreign, policy
had been wrong, , notably the snubbing of De
Gaulle, the tardiness of relief for Italy, and the
forgetting of the Atlantic charter's renunciation
of territorial gains in the handling of the Rus-so-Polish
boundary question.
In this respect Governor Dewey reached clear,
over to the left to pick up the protests and dis
appointments of the "popular front which has
been definitely dissatisfied with the manage-'1
meat of these foreign relations. However tht
"popular front' puts the primary blame on the
state department while Dewey put it on the pre
sident himself and gave a neat bouquet to Sec
retary Hull. - :
The Dewey tour-de-force is formidable be
cause it penetrates to the core of our perform
ance in terms of our war aims. Dewey has, how
ever, the benefit of hindsight on these situations.
His own outline of policy for world affairs is
sketchy. He proposes the punishment of war
criminals, removal of the power, of Germany
and Japan to wage war, and the international
ism of the Ruhr, He makes no reference how-
ever to the great and turbulent f orces"which
are loose in Europe and reveals no attitude
tnwflrH th Hiffiriilt stmrt'1 nt thm ?pmrMrati
idea for survival on the continent. A political "Last of an Old German Line"
candidate hesitates to become detailed in . his
program, yet we find ourselves wishing for a
clearer note from Dewey as to what his own
policies would be as president.
Tonight President Roosevelt is to speak on
foreign affairs. ; Will he undertake to answer
Dewey's criticisms, and will he outline what
his policy will be for an ensuing four years?
Two fine Oregon citizens have passed on dur
ing the week, Lyle Kiddle of La Grande, one of
the splendid family of that name in Union
county, and George E. Aitken of Sisters, whose
drug store was always a pleasant stopping place
and whose interest in central Oregon and espe
cially in wildlife was always keen.'
General Mud,' the old familiar of the first
world war, is contesting for command on the
western front. But we hear nothing about coo
ties. Evidently the new chemicals protect ' the
soldiers from these plagues of former years.
Here is the way to end this Berlin-Distomo
fuss. When the allies capture Berlin, Germany,
rename it Distomo. Make the Germans carry
the punishment and the shame.
The Russians have captured Szeged and Cluj
in Hungary. They can have them, sparing us the4
necessity of leering how to pronounce them.
'ySsyv tSM
I , Ztvll about Wounded ;
s ' ; . Hen Aching for More
' Action la , 7ust X5uxuV
Tho Literary
Guidcpost
Br JOHN SELBY
The Safety Valve
tetter" from Stateatnan Reader
Vote Republican !
If you scan the county , ticket on the ballot
you will find that all republican i incumbents
are running without opposition. This is quite
a tribute to the persons holding those offices
or else it indicates the low estate of the demo
cratic party in Marion county. v
'The one office in the court house held by a
. democrat is that of county sheriff. The repub
lican nominee for that office is Denver Young,
who has had experience as a chief deputy in the
office, and in addition has had business ex
perience. He is a man of good reputation, who
appears to be in every way competent to do a
good job as sheriff! He would be the actual, not
the nominal sheriff. So The Statesman says:
"Vote Republican -vote for Denver Young!"
m a a
interpret
An increase of 50,000 eating places is fore
cast for the period immediately following the
war. That will provide jobs for the million wait
resses we already do not have. .
Editorial Comment
ANYHOW, WE LTJUE IT- V .
In no other country in the world but the United
States could rival sets of political leaders be lam
basting each other especially during war time
as President Roosevelt and Governor Dewey now
re doing. .'.'.:. '-...C,.-. i1'". -'.:.:
- The president started the mud-linging when
he descended from his "commander-in-chief pin
nacle, in an address before the international team
sters. The democrats now concede that this was
the most ill-advised campaign speech ever mSde
by Roosevelt '.
All along he had assumed the role of "unwilling
candidate." He was being drafted by his country.
Jle-did not want a fourth term, but he was a "good
soldier" and would not , shirk his - duty." Then
speaking before the teamsters' union, he suddenly
reverted to type. No longer was jt the "commander-in-chief
speaking. Instead here-was just an
other candidate, desperately seeking office and
resorting to mud-slinging, satire and Innuendo
In his attempt to attract votes. V
. , President Roosevelt "led with bis chin," in this
address, and he gave Governor Dewey an unexpec
ted opportunity to get In some effective wallops.
Since then the affair has developed into a politi
cal brawl of the first water, with both sides slug
ging it out and no quarter asked.
Yet, despite the Jeat that .has been generated .
by this campaign, the American people stia are
1C3 per cent united in support of tla jva'r effort
In other words we can have a good cld-fashioned .
family quarrel, even in the middle or a war, and
still not lose our sense of perspective. ' -
No woniar every other nation in the world re
gards us with amaiement Even the liberal British
hardly can understand us, and "Uncle Joe Stalin
rrobatly is " wendsrirj why Roosevelt docs not
have his rivals shot " I :
It rr.-'r fm crazy, but we Lke fU The. Dalies (
:mg ,
The War News
. " " K1RKE L. SIMPSON
ASSOOATgD PBXS3 WAK ANALTST
American hearts thrilled , with pride as the war
bulletins brought tidings of heavy new American
blows against Germany and Japan alike, matching
Russian victories and the steady, remorseless ad
vance of allied comrades elsewhere, j
A triumphant announcement from General Mac
Arthur confirmed Japanese reports that American
reoccupation of the Philippines is well under way.
In Europe shell and bomb riddled Aachen, the first
German community of size and tactical and stra
tegic consequence to be taken ,fell to American
arms, a desolate, war-wrecked symbol of the fate
awaiting other German cities at allied and Russian
hands.. . - s-'.; ..:'
There were notable developments on other fronts
to match these. The Russian Invasion of Germany
proper via the break-through into East Prussia
was in full motion by Berlin admission. In Hun
gary Russian columns 'closed swiftly on Budapest
and intensified the growing threat to Vienna. A
nazi retreat except for sacrificial rear guards from
the last German held islands of the eastern Medi
terranean and Aegean seas was clearly discernible.
It was westward across the Pacific that American
eyes looked first, however,. to appraise. the total
change in the war which MacArthurs return at
the head of a, powerful army to the Philippines
represented. His own bold words in announcing
the successful descent upon Leyte to catch the
Nipponese foe o guard left m doubrthat Ameri-, stronfc cntr
BCILDINO OF JALNA,- ky
Mas la Baca (UtUe, Brws;
It would be nice to know how
much of Mazo de la Roche's Jal-'
na story was the result of a long
term plan, and how much of it
simply grew that way. When Miss
de la Roche published "Jalna" in
1927 the book was winner of an '
important prize, and was also a
commercial success. It's my im
pression that 'the author never
intended to do nine books on the
same people, but that public de
mand and commercial possibili
ties dictated that course.
What is so remarkable about
the Jalna books, ninth jot which
is The Building of Jalna," is
- Miss de la Roche's continued in
terest in her fictional people. Her
publisher compares her to Trol
lope, and although her style and
his are antipodal, there is some
I validity in the comparison. Even
j after nine books, this remarkable
Canadian I views her creations
warmly and treats them gener
ously. This time she has gone
farther into the past than ever,
in order to describe the founding
of the Whiteoaks clan in Canada.
This means, that much of the
course which the new book runs
has been predetermined by the
happenings of the others and if
anybody think it is easy to do a
series of books in reverse, as it
; were, let, him try it One Is' for
ever finding that something
dropped into a book carelessly
and for! no particular reason,
when extended back into time, is
channeling the behavior of char
acters in a wholly unexpected
way., j i-,.V! , :
This sort of thing could devel
op into a straightjacket It has
not for Miss de la Roche. If I
had not already read most of the
Jalna - series," I should never
dream that Adeline and Captain
Whiteoaks were not fresh from
the de la Roche stable, instead of
familiars for the last 17 years.
Adeline is known to most of the
novelist's admirers as an old, a
peppery, and a delightful woman.
.Here she Is a young wife, remov
' ing from India to England to Ire
land to Canada. Her husband Is
Chronic1.:
can valor to-come decisively to grips with a treach
erous enemy ashore as well as afloat and in the air.
. The striking aspect of that long amphibious jump
bypassing Mindanao to land on flat and productive
Leyte above it and knife powerful Japanese armies
in the Philippines apart at a single stroke, is that
it closed in to its designated beach landings unde
tected. That again demonstrates the overwhelming
Americaivair and sea superiority built up in the
Pacific It even more strikingly repeats the lesson
of the sustained carrier plane bombardment of For
mosa which Tokyo so frantically sought to con-,
vert in Japanese eyes Into a great naval victory.
But for the fact that Japan had been blinded and .
rendered impotent in the air' and her still power
ful fleet been herded into remote hiding places, no
commander would have dared take the risk of that
long voyage. Eyewitness accounts indicate an ar
- mada of surface warcraft and troops and supply
. ' vessels involved that covered many miles of ocean
in transit. Yet there is no hint that the foe learned
of its approach before it had penetrated into wide
: Leyte gulf itself. Y"r: " ,"-' ' ; '1 "
There can be no question that General MacAr
thur will have not only the willing and effective
help of Filipino forces he so promptly and eloquent
ly summoned tq action from his beachhead com
mand post, but that he was fully Informed of ene- .
. my dispositions in advance of his actual attack.' It
. seems certain that no enemy troop movement to
cope with the American invasion anywhere in the
islands has gone or win go unreported to the com
mander by watchful Filipinos. - ,
The MacArthur estimate of 5C0.C0D ; Japanese
. troops potentially cut off in the southern end of the
Nipponese South China sea conquest zone looks
. ahead, probably, to early, seizure of other central
islands and the opening of the Philippine inland
sea to fleet passage Into the Suu archipelago and
- the lower China sea itself. . j
. The . divide-and-conquer pattern of ; Amcricaa :
strategy is clear and perfectly executed. It could
yield far quicker results than army spokesmen are
yet ready to forecast
acter, Adeline the wonderful
product of a wild Irish fine and
Canada becomes' actual and
beautiful v before the ' reader's
eyes. '
DEFENDS LITTLE
TOWNSEND PLAN
To the Editor:
A few comments on your edi
torial of October 18. The num
ber of Townsend pensioned peo
ple who j would trade in Salem
would be iabout 5000, which would
bring over $300,000 each month
more- than now. Do you think
that; would increase your busi
ness any? You say, - "it would
add to all other taxes." Not to
all other taxes. The taxes for the
upkeep of poor f, houses, state
pensions, and all other expenses
for helping the elderly and dis
abled, will be done away with,
which will be four or five times
as much as the cost of the
Townsend taxes.
You say, "the gross inteome" tax
n UNFAIR, because it does not
accurately measure ability to
pay a tax." It is the fairest' tax
known, because only those who
sell something pays this tax, and
if one does not sell for enough
to pay the tax does not have
to selL ' y-x: : .;.!
It cannot become a sales tax
on a person's salary, for when a
person receives money he pays
an income tax. And you say,
"when he buys merchandise he
pays the accumulated gross in
come tax," and not a sales tax. .
But it cannot become a "double
barreled " shotgun which ' carries .
a powerful kick," for he can pay
but one tax on it ' v--
. One would hot want to add to
the price of wheat, for the ex
tra number of bushels which can
be sold, would - add enough to "
the amount one could sell, would
more than make'; up for the
amount of the tax. More goods ,
sold, more profits. And much
.' more will be sold, because there
will be $300,000 more; that must
be SPENT each month, or the
pensioner will get NO pension
check the next month, if he does
not. spend it alL ,
But Dr. Townsend is FAIR.
' If. one cannot' spend the , whole'
of the $60, (or whatever I the
amount is, probably nearer $90)
he does not have to apply for:
only the amount he can spend.
You say much about the rise of
the price of bread!." This has ell .
been figured out, and it . wiS
raise the cost of bread about one
: fourth of a cent per 10c loaf.;
Oh people do not be frightened,
for we will all live and the edi
tors will be making more money
too, and be awfully glad we have
fought for 10 years the 15th day
of last July that you might have
the benefits of these years of
, labor. y. , :
Do not be alarmed about the
rise of the price of goods in
stores, for. if you will go into
any store now and ask if they
will discount 3, for a deal of
$25 or $50 worth of goods they
will gladly discount the bQl be
fore they will let you pass out of
the ; store , without making the
. You close your editorial by
saying, "Even if we were to ac
.cept the Townsend, theory that
the spending will f improve busi
ness" that still would not erase
the inequities of this gross In
come tax. This alone is sufficient
ground for rejecting the propos
al. The Statesman-recommends
Vote $17 Nc" BUT I SAY, VOTE
318 YES, and in a few months
we w&l all bless the day for, how
it win help the business men and
crippled soldier boys, who will all
be entitled to this pension. Who
would not be willing to give 'the
3 tax, even" if it did not re
duce other taxes more. .
; i 1 R I. Rummer.
WITH THE AEF IN FRANCE,
Oct le-(Delayed)-ff-Ten re
turn to unit" men stood in a sep
arate group,
talking quietly.
They had come j-
to the last leg
of the front
ward trip with
hundreds of
new replace
ments raw
rookies in the
combat zone
and like them
; SOOn WOUld - gO imJ
into the line. Ktmn L. otxoa
But there the similarity ended.
The KTU men aU had been,
wounded, injured or ill. Unlike
the rookies, they were unequip
ped except for the clothes they
wore out of the hospital Jbut It
did not take that to distinguish
between them and the newcom
ers to the front .
Whereas the rookies most ob
viously were possessed by a curi
ous and fascination and fear of
the unknown as they neared the
front, the RTU men are busy try
ing to steel their nerves to make
the transition from the placid
life of recuperation to the flimsy,
dangerous, miserable life of the
combat zone.
"How's it going there?" asked
Pvt. ' Alexander McCabe, 36-year-old
New York city rifleman.
He was one of the few men who
were wounded in the fight after
the original landing.- .
"They say it's getting pretty
rough again especially the ar
tillery," said Pvt Charles Bute
houn, 19-year-old Long Island
rifleman who was wounded in
the early days of the ITrench
campaign. .
. "I hear it's the artillery again
the same old story," said Pvt
Woodrow Wilson, 25, Port Ar
thur, Tex., rifleman In a soft,
musing voice. He had been
wounded back In Italy near .
Rome and then -fell iU during the
early part of the French drive.
The others nodded silently, each
lost in his own memories.
"Come on, Dick, tell him how
you were wounded," grinned
Staff Sgt Thomas Wristen, Santa -Anna,
Tex, reconnaissance man,
suddenly breaking the spell. Pvt
Richard C Hamblen, 22, of Ama
rUlo, Tex, assumed a dramatic
' pose....::-.- ;''.;-: ; j : --V-- vy
"I was storming a position in
a French barn," he said. -"My
mission was to bring back an
armload of hay but I didnt see
a loose board in the hayloft and
I fell. And that is how. I was
wounded." ' ;;!-.'
Then Hamblen added, "Ten
him about your wounds.": ,
. "Aw, a blamed blowtorch blew;
up. In , my face," said Wristen ;
. wryly. Everybody laughed.
- For a moment the artillery was
forgotten but a short time later
Pfe. Clarence Hagerty,t 21, of
Wilmington, Del, a rifleman, and
Pvt Richard T, Porter, 21, of
mn ITIfM. Vmnm . tana- tffrfw
started talking about it; again.
Hagerty had been wounded In
the Rhone valley and Porter had
been sick. . " - j ;:-
"It wasn't the artfllery that got
me," interrupted CpL Randolph
T. Myers, BenQeyvflle, Pa, re
connaissance man who had been
wounded at Lyons. "They got
me with either a machine pistol .
or a carbine slug when I! wasn't
down low enough." t
"Where did it bit you?" tame.,
one asked. j .
, ' "You can put in the paper I
was hit in the hip," Myers said,
his broad grin disclosing he was
missing a front tooth. "But be
tween you and me J am going to
have a heDuva time after the war
when the old ladies ask! to see
where I was wounded." !
After another burst of j laugh
ter "the conversation again turned
. aa a mm . .
v me gnm subject of enemy ar
tfllery and other front-line con
ditions. Pfc Ernest Gamier, 27, of
Skowhegan, Me, and his buddy,
Pvt Thomas Jones, 20, of Pulas
ki, Tenn, who were riflemi
wounded in the Rhone valley de
cided that "if they need this
many replacements it must be
pretty rough up there." '
I Everybody agreed tensely as
' they watched ; the replacements
wander aimlessly about the biv- '
ouac area. 'Pretty soon they vot- I
ed unanimously that I should put j
in the paper that "this j stuff .
about the wounded just aching to
get back into the line again is
Just so much bunk." ,
They meant it too. But a
short time later Pvt John Black,
jr, a brand ; new replacement
from Cleveland, L, came up and
asked with understandable ner
vousness if it was as bad "up
there" as some -guys have been
telling him, : . ;v . c .
"Hell, ho,' buddyfc" said Gamier
quietly, without hesitation.
wa, eaa. uic, . wuuiUil DC SOillB
ba,ck if It was that bad." ;
OTP
(Continued from page J)
clothes, with his pipe or his
jowls, or ' his ' paunch, or his
stoop-shoulders, or his towering
height or whatever r personal
characteristic . the man may
have." U ; , A: :
Here are the names of persons
included in this -living hall"
Roosevelt, Wallace, Stone, Ray
burn, Hull, Morgenthau, Stim
son, Biddle, Walker, Knox, Tor
restal, Ickes, Wlckard, Jesse
Jones, Perkins, Truman; Stettin
us, Patterson, Leahy, Marshall,
King, Arnold, MacArthur, Eisen
hower, Nimitz, Halsey, Hopkins,
Byrnes, -Nelson, Wilson, Land,
Bowles, Bush, McNutt, Marvin
Jones,. Barudx, Jeff era. Hoover,
Davis, Price, RockefeUer, Dewey, "
. T? " -: Bricker, Green, Murray, Lewis,
"THE YOUNG IDEA" - By Mossier if. a?.
V . LiDnman. Bob Hope.
' There can be many an argu
ment over! the inclusions and
omissions. But at least It Is a sig
nificant project, preserving.in
working pose the principal Cg-'
ures of this time. . v -.
War; Fire Los? Comparable;
Irreparable Says Thompson
. War and fire losses are comparable and irreparable, Seth B.
Thompson, state insurance commissioner and fire marshal, told
members of the Salem Board of Realtors at their noon meeting
Friday in Marion hotel. Thomas was introduced by President
George D. Alderin. - i . I !
"There is no way to replace the wealth lost in fire and la war,"
Thompson said, "except " through
self denial and accumulation from
other sources. No use can be made
of heat generated by uncontrolled
fire. The same is true of war.
Ammunition is blown up, facilities
of peace . are - converted to war
manufacture. In the final analysis
there is a definite loss to world
economy and the loss is never
salvaged. ' -Jastlfy
esltlea l. v
"Because of the hopelessness of
war, advocates of peace - at any
price have tried to justify their
position. Dr. David Starr Jordan,
of Stanford university, almost cre
ated an international crisis some
years ago when he - referred to
France as a 'decadent nation. Ac
tually he did not mean morally,
but economically, as the result of
the loss of life for a- century in
wars.;; 'y:);-;"- xj": " .t..:;;i
. Thompson eplained the . ease
with which a good situation may
develop into a bad one where fire
Is considered. He said there was a
plywood plant operating in this
valley in a most efficient; manner.
A critical ; inspection one day,
however, he said, disclosed 29
needed corrections. The manage
ment was not aware of j any of
them. Manpower shortage and
pressure of production for the war
had created the situation, he said.
Leas Dlstrfbvted '"W 1
When property burns, Thomp
son said, the loss Is distributed
between many, but the loss re
mains the same. There is a world
tendency now to view war in the ,
same manner. Dumbarton Oaks
may furnish the answer, j : -
A new concept is brewing," he
said, "and the world Is : coming
closer together. There Is no great
er need for indemnities now than
before. However, distribution of
losses may become worldwide."
SSS- it ;
"Yee ten msther YOU broke It and m teU her Tve ALCCADY
spaaked yea!" .
Brigadier Howell ,
To Conduct Revival
; Brig, and Mrs. Francis Howell,
Salvation Army evangelists, will
conduct revival services at the
Citadel, 241 State street. October
21 to 28. Week night cervices COO
p. m. Sunday lkCd am. and 729
p..m. . , , ' . ' i-1 ' ,
Brigadier Howell has held im
portant positions in the Salvation
Army in Canada and this country
for 30 years 'and the past three
years has been conducting evan
gelistic meetings up and down the
western coast The general pub
lic Is invited.
The US constitution provides
that the total membership , of the
house - of representatives . never
shall exceed .one for every 33.CCD
persons but that each state shall
have at least one "representative.
Votorans? nirrhts and Bonbf iU
- (Daily in -flus space wmibe pukUihed a porttoo ml aa fficial
pamphlst giving faCormatlon oa the rights and. privUegss l war
veterans tmdar federal laws.) v- ' -
Catling a Government Job ; v "
If you were a Federal Civil Service employee (other than temp
orary) when you entered the war, you should apply to the agency
where last employed within 40 days of your discharge or to the
Civil Service Commission in the event you experience difficulty in
being reinstated. If you satisfy the requirements (see "Getting Your
Old Job Back" above? you are entitled to your former position or
. one "of like seniority, status, and pay." , . ,.
Ityou didn't have a Civil Service job before, but want to get one
after you are discharged, you will get special consideration, and pre
ference In Civil Service examinations This preference also applies.'
to wives or widows of veterans under certain circumstances! ? -
ONE OF AMERICA'S
FINE WATCHES
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