page roua
The OnTGOII STATESMAN. Salem Oregon, Thursday Morning, December 21. 1S44
"Wo Faror Sways Vs; No Fear Shall Atoe .:
I From First Statesman, March 28, 1851 r . ,
THE STATES3IAN PUBLISHING C05IPANY , ,
CHARLES A. SPRAGCe, Editor and Publisher
i
?
I.
.
- i
Member of the Associated Press . . ,
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication .of all - '
news dispatches- credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. - ".
Sine Die , I BuUder of the West :
The 78th congress adjourned sine die on De-' One of the great builders of . the west was
cember 19. It has only two more weeks of life, Here this week-for the Oregon Reclamation con-
anyway, for its successor will, be organized on
T.n.ian f . ;- , : - . -..-4
The final action of the senate was to confirm
the six members named to high positions in the
draartmpnt of state.- When the president ad
vised senators that if his appointees were re
jected he would resubmit the same names in
January the opposition collapsed, not because
it approved the appointees- but because since
the nresident is primarily responsible for di
recting foreign policy it did not want to create
the impossible situation of a hiatus in the run- -ning
of the department and Jof blocking, the
president's! will as to his assistants. The ap
pointments however, as predicted in this paper,
have shocked the -new deal front, a fact the
president will have to reckon with.
While the rivers and harbors bill died for
jacK 01 agreement Detween me two nouses, we
larger flood control bill was passed. It includes
authorization of the Niagara dam on the North
Fork of (the Santiam, one of jthe items of the
Willamette project.' The mohey authorization
is for $20,000,000, but no final decision has been
made on whether to build a high or a low dam.
The new congress will have a considerable
change in ' membership. The democrats will
-have a larger majority in the house, but in the
senate their lead is just about the same. While
ordinarily this might be taken to mean that the
president can count on stronger support in the
congress, this does, not necessarily follow, as the
revolt on hisstate department appointees indi
cated. j ' . .,
The problems of war and of peace will still
be dominant as 'the 79th congress moves into
being. 'The turn of the war" jin Europe has a
very sobering effect there Certainly was no
hilarity reported as the 78th congress ad
journed. . : ' ' i
gress, yet a man whose name does .not . clutter
up the headlines very ."much.'"- He 'Is Frank A.
Banks, director for region No: 1 of the U. S.
reclamation bureau. Born and educated in the
state of Maine, virtually all of his professional ;
career as an engineer has been with the recla
mation service. In fact, his connection with this
work extends over nearly the whole life of .the
bureau. 'Starting in as an" engineering aid on '
the lower Yellowstone project in Montana in
1906, Banks has progressed ,tp' his present 'posi
tion. Among the great dams the construction
of which he has supervised are the American
Falls dam on the Snake river in Idaho, the
Owyhee dam in Oregon, and the Grand Coulee
dam on the Columbia in Washington. Banks is
project engineer for the whole Grand Coulee
project and makes his home at Coulee Dam. -During
this period his salary has always been
the modest competence which government' pays
to its professional employes. He has seen engi
neers and contractors in private enterprise pile
up fortunes while he ground along at the gov
ernment stipend. He finds his great satisfaction .
in the transformation of arid western lands into '
productive farm lands sustaining farm homes
and communities. 1,1 - . N
The Grand Coulee dam is the greatest engi-, -neering
job of its kind in the history, of, man- .
kind. That in itself might be regarded as a
monument to Frank-Banks; but he doubtless
finds more gratification in the contribution it
makes through powerand will make through
irrigation, for the welfare of mankind than he'
does in the dam as a massive work of masonry. :
. The west certainly ! owes a lot to Banks and to
the men like him who for modest compensation
spend their lives in public service. .
. ; ; jw the bttLmrcsss col J ;
- ' - , . . .-';"'....--MS.-'-'-- .'. "t
Wyoming 'Cowboy
Wia .Eld Almost- :
AnylLIag Into Flcar '
kr rrmasHWBt with Tht WuhinrtDa 8tat Ti"
But They Can Celebrate Now
The Literary
Guldepost
Br John Selby
Coast County J
The Eugene Register - Guard reports that
there is some talk on the coast of forming a new
county out of the western portions of Douglas,
and Lane? counties. Probably just : talk, be
cause if the residents out there start figuring
costs of a new courthouse and a separate county
establishment they, will conclude they had bet
ter remain as they are, inconvenient as it is with
their county seats, Eugene and Roseburg, so far
away. Perhaps the purpose of the gossip is to .
get some road concessions -out of the county :
court. .' ,vi I i
-The last of the coast counties to be created
was Lincoln which was cut off from Benton
county in 1893. The other", coast counties are
very old: Clatsop dates from! 1844, Coos and
Tillamook from 1853, Curry from 1855. The
time is past for creating new counties unless or
. until there is a great increase in taxable wealth
and in population. Improved highways and'
communications ' lines makes large counties
ifore practical, although it must be hard to gov
ern satisfactorily counties' which stretch from
the Cascades to the Pacific ocean as do Lane
and Douglas. V L fl
Lift Another Ban 1
The ban has been raised on the Japanese- -Americans
but not on civilian flying along the
coast. There have been many appeals filed for,
permitting civilians to fly again, but so far they
have been of no avail. It is a deep mystery why
our;, western airports cannot be used when a
few miles inland that is permitted.
There is a real demand for removing this pro
hibition. ' Many private - citizens hold licenses 'i
and would like to be able to fly their planes,
again. Flying instruction needs to be resumed '
in this area. Surplus planes are being offered
for sale but flyers here are out as purchasers
because hey can't fly them in their home re
gions, -i. - 'r -Im,,v vl';"'f -:
'Maybe, if aviaijon groups, keep .everlastingly
at it they can convince the air command that
private flying should again be permitted along
.the coastal strip. :
" .For weeks the Townsend Teekly has? been
telling how close it was to haying enough sign
ers to get the Townsend bill, out pn the floor of
.the house for a vote. At the jfast it lacked one
vote, so the bill died with the session. Prob-
, ably most of the signers were
glad they werert
put on the spot by having, the bill actually come
up for a vote. They know the
- but want to play along with
.their votes; ! 1.
bill is screwball,-
Townsenders for
' Editorial Comment
BRIBING CONVERTS . .
Myron C. Taylor, President Roosevelt's special
public to open Its purse to the Italian people to pre
vent tbem from' going into communism.. ".
.:of the reason America is in the war and also of the
Sited desires. . . . r; : " , ; ' "'- ' . ..
s The United States is at war because its national
existence was threatened by the German brand
of fascism and-Its Italian auxiliary. We have dis
pelled the Italian threat .and, with & hard fight
ahead, shall dispel the German threat. '' I . :
The; United States did , not enter the war to de
itermine the political beliefs of Europe. T We Moubt
tf the capacity of; the. American people to buy off
'communism In Europe. We' also doubt their am-
. bition to do any such thing.- :; --
There are -48,000,000 Italians
sdve them 11000 aoiece ho doubt' ther would be-
come conservatives and remain so until they spent
New Mead for C of C
Loyal Warner is an excellent choice for pres
ident of the chamber, of ; commerce, i.He has
proven his -capacity in many civic endeavors
and is familiar with the chamber work through
his service on its board of directors.
' To Carl Hogg, who has had the unusual dis
tinction of serving: for three terms as chamber
head, goes the gratitude of the members and of
the whole community for the outstanding job
he has done He has energized the chamber
and the town, and kept people happy while he
was doing it. 1 ,
Interpreting
The War Neivs :
K1RKE 1. SIMPSON - :
ASSOCIATED ; PRESS WAH ANALYST
CHINA TO ME,1? y KmOy
(Donble47r Doran; 3. ( -
Emily Hahn's China to Me
is the most accurate - picture ot
an expatriate I have seen for a
longtime. Except for the setting,
which is China, the book might
be a long letter home from one
of the girls (or boys) who used
to infest the Left Bank of dear
old Paris,1 15 or 20 years ago.
There isjexactly the same belief
in the validity of one's own ex
perience, however dull, that used
to -animate the boys at the Cafe
Dome. There is the same series
of parties,' rather loose relation
ships, drinking bouts, and super
ficial judgments. And there: is
. likewise - the determination to
write about such matters, "fran-
uy." - ::t;"
It doesn't -add up to much in
Miss Hahn's case."-
Miss Hahn went to China tn
1935; I believe. She thought. , at
first, she was merely stopping
off on her way. to Africa, but;
Shanghai "got - her. It was- no
time until, she admits candidly,
the various sets were anglingrfor
her. There were parties by Am
ericans and . parties by British.
Neivs Behind the News
, " 5 : By PAUL MALLON - ""' I.
'(Distribution by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Reproduction tn whole
. "-v or in pert strictfy prohibited.)'
I
s WASHINGTON, Dec. 19
- Queer . doings . have taken h
stagerhere. , j -: '
Mr. Jloosevelt did not veto the
bill preventing,
another 1 and 1
per cent hike
for worker and
management in
. social security
taxes. , A veto
message had
been written
for him by his
social security
board. Assist-
a n i iresiaens - paui MaUoa
"James Byrnes lipped icongress--"
"men definitely , the veto would
. come. -: r j-'j . .
i The average stereotjped . in- ,
terpretation is that the president
is getting somewhat more con
, servative, I do not .think . so.
. Congress was -ready to pass the
- bill over, a veto, had the votes in
. 4ine. The president could not
stop. it. His. action; therefore,
r, simply implies he has reached
i jthe. age where he is not inter-.
psted in provoking losing fights .
, (or at least this pne)'. ior poli.ti
cal purposes only. ... . f
Those who think, he has gone
conservative , on social security
'will be dismayed- next month
There were also mixed . parties - ,when he sets forth a CIO-ish
and if .we '.would
Despite a slight lifting of the Allied news black
out,' the situation on the American First army right
wing front in Belgium remained to obscure at the
end of the fourth day of the sustained Nazi counter
attack to warrant the conclusion that it had already
run its course. , .. ' ; ' , - A i
" But pieced together and based on negative rath
er than positive factors involved, the current battle
reports indicate that while the enemy may not have
been completely halted, his effort has been con
tained. "The surprise effect is wearing off and theife
is no evidence that the enemy has been able to con-
solidate his four thrusts into a single dangerous
" salient or begin a wheeling movement northward.
. An important fact in the present incomplete and
.scanty outline of the situation is American recaps 441
ture of Monschau. The town Just within the Ger- -
man border was vitally important to the rfazis for
and even some at. which the
mixture , Was Chinese and Occi-'
dental. Suddenly Miss Hahn de
cided this vas the life fori her. .
She must have been right
She. admits she was an egoist
She insists upon it, to be more
accurate. But Miss Hahn's ego-. -Ism
took curious formsJ For ex
ample, it led her to take a flat in '
the red light district,; largely (I
gather) because she thought it
shocked people. It doesn't; occur
to her, so far as'I could deter
mine, that the people might have
been either; disinterested or do
ing a -little leg-pulling.' Miss
Hahn is likewise frank (just; as
used to be the Left-Bankers)
about her male friends, and here
again the effort seems ' hardly .
.worth the candle. :
-Miss Hahn did newspaper '.
work, -knew a great many Jap-.
anese after the occupation, chat- '
ters about the Chinese, and all
the polyglot men. and buzzards
of ' strangling China. "She chat
ters about them as if they re
volved about her, and this Is, I
feel ' sure, misapprehension.
And a bore. ' - ,
Djerba, off Tunisia, Is the larg
est island on the .'Mediterranean
Barbary roast . , ,
; program for its radical expan
sion. , . ;.
' -, But the queerest of all new
goings-oh is "the-anti-administra-
tion, revolt of the Guffey-Pepper
new dealers, resisting Mr. Roose
velt's appointees to the StetUn
ius regime in . the state depart
ment The revolters are the ones
who. claimed, for? 12;; previous
'new deal years, that anyone was
practically a fascist for question-.'
ing Mr. Roosevelt on ' anything.
A republican who has watched
the progress of their un-natural
conduct from across ; the - aisle
surmises they ere trying to con
vince Mr. R... they won the elec
tion for him, and he must do as
they say. '. ' : ''.- ' . .
.j I doubt the full implication of
this analysis as the men involved
are not Borahs, lone wolves or
of a strongly-Independent char
acter. Joe Guffey.'is h 69-year-old
professional politician whose bi-
ography in the congressional di--rectory
(where congressmen
generally set forth all the glories
of . their careers for' constituents
. to see) is tersely this:
"Joseph 'F. Guifey, democrat
Pittsburgh,- Pa., 'Unmarried.'' . -
Just as his record is unmarred
by marriage, it is also unmarred
by any opposition to; CIO. Ob-
THE YOUNG IDEA" By Mossier
the money or the cleverer ones among them got it , protection of the Hank and rear of the; indicated :
That would cost $48,t)0P,000,000j for our. first ex
periment in making political 1 conversions- at the
paymaster's window. San Francisco Chronicle. . .
Z NAVY SPECIAUST f .
Congressman James 3Iot, who was here Sunday
and Monday on an official visit to Klamath's two
- navy installations the marine barracks and . the
' navy air station is the dean of Oregon's congres
f sional -delegation. . ' (",,.- . . .
, The death of Senator McNary last year made
Mott the oldest'member of the delegation, in point -
of service. He began his congressional career, as
4 representative of the first (northwestern Oregon)
( district h 133 succeeding .WiUis Hawley.
n Prior to . going into congress, Mott was Oregon
corporation commissioner under Gov. Julius Meier,
. and won widespread attention in connection with
-the investigation and liquidation ot several shakv
; building and savings and loan associations.
'.' In congress, Mott has made navy affairs a pe
r ciaUy and In the new congress, will be the ranking.
r republican, member of the naval affairs committee,
which .carries with it such heavy1 duties as passing
upon every property acquisition; proposed by -the
-navy. He is a member of the naval group which
f will tour South Pacific bases. In January and Feb
- ruary. - i'-r; v ' . -r.-..., ""' ..- ' ."
The visit of Congressman Mott to Klamath Falls
4his week gave him a first-hand view of two of
the navy's major installations in Oregon. His aid
was enlisted in behalf of toe "housing problem here,
and his interest and knowledge should be helpful
in connection with future navy activities and de
velopments in the Klamath Falls area. Klamath .
Falls Herald-News. ' ;r'-. :? "V ";;
narrow sahent reaching to the.Stavelot area. Back
in-American hands it represents a polential counter-thrust
jump-off site to lop that whole Stavelot.
salient off at its base. '.
. I Latest ' field reports indicate' there has been no
material change in the situation at the apex of the
- Nazi Stavelot salient since it cut the Aachen-Lux-
embourg highway and possibly the Ljege-Luxem- ;
.bourg railway beyond it both important communi-
, cation laterals for quick ThifUng of Allied troops to
danger points. Presumably it isupon the basis of -the
overrunning of one or both of those arteries .
-Berlin founded its otherwise meaningless claim of -having:
cut the First army in two In Belgium.
To effect a break-through of a critical nature, the
German counter-attack must drive many miles far
ther westward, however, than it has yet reached, or
"wheel abruptly north of northwest to outflank Al- 1
lied Aachen communications. The 15-mfle gap be
tween the Liege section of the Meuse and the west4
and of Hurtgen lorest offers the only discernable "
threat to rear communications via Aachen with the
Allied front on the Rore. - " -!
But to wheel j.'that way the attackers need , far
- more elbow room than they have yet gained A
turn north from .the. Stavelot area up the Luxenv-
bourg-Aachen highway would merely expose an-;
other flank dangerously to Allied assault fromthe '
" west -' ;t . ' . '-- " -; -', ' ,r V i : '. '
Circumstances still warrant the conclusion that
toe German objective is strictly limited, that the',
maneuver; relied wholly upon - surprise for any
chance of success, and that time is now running out
against the foe with "ever-increasing possibilities
that another crippling German military disaster
will be the ultimate result of so risky a venture, r
JfTTERSUG
mm
n A
"Remember, nowl Lead ulih your Llndy hop, feint with a shag
and then cross with the boette-woogier
, viously Mr, Guff ey. is not burn
ing with anything inside for the
future world. To characterize
him, I would say he is wholly at
toe service of CIO, to burp as it
burns, to flicker as.it flickers
and nothing else. That is where
the votes are in Pennsylvania, or
at least Guff ey's votes. ; '
' The 44-year-oM Pepper is a
different proposition. This Flor-
- idian reflects no glow from Flor
ida,' but mostly7 things from toe
newspaper "PM in New York.
This fire - does hot burn or
glow but erupts like a Volcano.
To say that it has a definite line
or destination ' would require
clairvoyance. It Just throws
rocks,' lava and tongues of fire
in the air amid impenetrable
- clouds of sulphurous smoke.
, For" instance, It and ! Pepper
were bitter about Churchill
when he tried to stop the com
munists in - Greece. Yet - they
were, just . as bitter when he did
. the opposite and gave in to the
communists in 'Poland. J To say
.they are half communists, (as
many, people do) is to state the
matter too mildly, - and inaccu-
.rately. '- :v I';'
True, I judge they would rath
er have a communist regime
than a bankers or' British regime
in ' Greece or anywhere.. , But
they do not hate riches, only cer-
. tairr riches. '.:''. ii
, Among toe state department
appointees none is very j rich, ex-
r cept Will Clayton. You might
surmise Clayton does not have
' the proper revulsion against his
money. But-then neither 'does
Ickes, 4 whom they., love, and
whose, million or morejj never
' ' caused him the slightest nausea.
Nor is their ideology of the world
any easier to define. ..-J .:'J L
For. years they have claimed
the Roosevelt foreign policy was
: toe mark of true international
ism and true hberaJhsnv but they
always hated Mr. Hull a league
of nations Internationalisi, who
made the policy. Now they are
opposing senate .confirmation of
toe six internationalists Who are
on their side of the fence, yet a
few days earlier they ! approved
1 Stettinius, who recommended
these men, although he s prob
ably about as rich as Mr Roose
velt -' y , r M i I
One thing they, think toey are
. clear on is their Mcaase of the
- common man," but their stands
'.generally favor toe common man
jin the CIO unions, less! than the
common man in the AIL or the
r commonest man of all outside
' their small radical group. . I do
- not think they know what they
- want : ' ' -'j S V
- Their group, does not! include
even all the new dealers! i Green
- of Rhode Island and Tunnell of
'Delaware are as - newdealing . as
Guffey and Pepper, yet declined
to go along, with the queer re
volt Whatever - its ' purposes
. therefore, the revolt will not sucr
. 'ceed.' , ;
If, as ihe republican surmises,
it is to prove to Mr. Rj that con
' fusion of this volcanic: nature
: won the last election and not Mr.
: Roosevelt or the war; . situation
which caused so many: people
opposing his policies to vote for
': fcim, toe democratic senate is re
sisting it And, if it represents
CIQ pressure through Guffey to
needle Mr. Roosevelt gently in a
. losing fight Mr-Roosevelt will
; furnish the answer ia future ac
' tions. It seems to me he U get
ting tired and .inconsiderate of
. pressure. After three terms, sen
sitivity to poUtical needling as
; well as indulgence m useless
! fights for political j propaganda
': effect are apt to be less inter
esting, especially in ' wartimes
like these. - -f I.
. Nine times as much castor oil
is used in industry j as for me
dicinal purposes- j f -
WITH THE AEF TN GER
MANY, Dec 13.-(Delayed)rv5V
Sgt Wilkie C Bryten hails from
Cody, Wyon;
has been nick-
- V. V "
boy." He is
willing to ride
almost . any
thing Into bat
tle and since
he -has had
three tanks
shot out from
under him,' he
When the Germans shot at him
with an anti-tank gun and a ba
zooka, from a roadblock, Jerome
vaulted off the, tank and char-:
ged, firing ashe ran. 'A short
time later the roadblock and the
dead Germans were removed
and the tank ' continued on its
way with Jerry still in the sad
to ao,jusiiai.Kenneth u. DbUm
The- "Cow- ' - - ! .
boy lost his last iron steed at
Gereonsweiler. . Then he putiin
little personal rodeo. It hap
pened when three German tanks
got toe- range of the General
Sherman which! the" "CowbojT
commands. - v - , ,ij
The Sherman 3000 yards away
was disabled and one crew
member was wounded. - Every
body abandoned the tank , until
the enemy stopped sheUingjtt.,
Then Cowboy" climbed back; In
and started firing toe 75-mm.
gun. But the range was too great
- So out he jumped and . ran,
through 500 yards of smalt arms
and. artillery fire. to a group ; of
j tank destroyers." . He mounted
.' toe turret of the nearest and took
over direction of its 90mm. fire
against the 'three enemy tanks.
One was kayoed and the other
two retreated. .
If you can read German, there
is- no trouble In finding out:
where CoL Hinds, of Nashville,1
Tenn, commander of the 41st
armored regiment Is, as soon as
you step into his command post)
A signboard .which once read
"Der rektor 1st" now has been
changed to Ter oberst 1st as
this officer moved into a Ger-j
1 man schoolmaster's rooms. Be
low that unfinished sentence are
several alternate notches in
which .45 cartridge currently
indicates whether Cot Hinds is
"bereit" present for duty, or
'"schauer ; or. "auftlarung, on
reconnaissance. If t h e bullet
rests In a notch reading "unter
sclupf,M you'd better grab a fox
hole. That means "in deep shelter.-
.
Another iron horse .roughrider
is Sgt Jerome Debenhardtlj.of
Milwaukee, a 30th infantry,
doughboy. He was, riding atop a
light tank, in a -scrap and Was
4retty much exposed. -h
1 Names Make News Dept
The .town of Julich now besie
ged for the . tenth time In its"
bloody military history domin
ates the main crossing of the
river Roer j on the old Roman
road bewteen i Maastricht and
.Cologne. The first duke of Ju
lich was toe famous tenth cen
tury soldier, Gerhardt the first
Outside the gates 'of Julich fate
today has placed , another . Ger
hardt MaJ. Gen. Charles Ger
(Continued on page 9)
DTP
JJLJl
Stevehs-13
VV-. L I
(Continued from page 1)
'of an "administrative board, the
board of geology and mineral
industries. To deny Strayeij a
seat is just unthinkable. . '
The restriction on office-holding
as set forth in the state con
stitution is as follows:
'j "No person holding a lucra
tive office or aijpointment under
the United States or sunder -this
: state shall "be eligible to a seat
in the legislative assembly. . .
n But the jqb of member of toe .
r state, highway, comnussion is ni
lucrative.. It does not even carry
a per diem as do . some . other
boards and, commissions. ' ' -''
. In toe past the: practice- has
varied. Lew Wallace was denied
a seat in the house of represen
tatives once because he was j! a
member of the game 'commis
sion. But Walter . Pearson sat
as a senator while he was also
a member-of the board of higher
education. So ,the practice his
not been'uniform. xr - ' .
. As. far as public policy, goes
there is general acquiesence-in
the opinion that no person oc-
cupying a high post in an ad
ministrative department should
- sit in toe legislative assembly.
While toe constitutional test' Is
that of "lucrative" it is not the
best policy for members of state
boards to serve in toe . legisla- -ture
where necessarily 'they be
come special pleaders for their
departments. " Also, ; the accept
ance of a commission from a.
governor is often construed ; as
putting the person under-obliga
tion to toe-executive, which 'is
not -wholesome. . - i '
This should be said in behalf
of Chessman: he accepted both
these offices only on the Insist
ence of the people of his own
' community. Democrats as well
as republicans gave him toe
nomination' for senator, and
when the highway appointment
was' offered him his local people
urged him to take it So Chess
man is in, the position of either
retaining both offices to satisfy
his home folks ot dropping one
to meet toe valid criticism
against a person holding two
such offices. One" thing is oer
tain, however, he will not quit
the senate because of the need
ling Which emanates from Mult-'
jxomah county.' politicos."
If Chessman . gives up . either
position - (and if . he doesn't this .
will be .toe first time, a member
of toe . highway commission . has
served at, toe same time as a
legislator) , I hope it is not toe
senalorship. He can do far more
good1 for the state and for his
home community as; a member
.of-the senate than he can as a
member of toe highway com
- mission.- The highway . depart
- ment is Tunning ; smoothly, toe
. highway v program iswell out
lined, so a change oft the com
mission would cause ho serious
. interference with the function
ing - of . this - important depart
ment --'; 7i ".v1 :t
. .. But toe senate will have to
wrestle with some serious and
critical questions. It will need
' as many men as it can - get of
Chessman's qualifications. He
cant be spared from toe senate
nearly so well as, from the high
way commission. So if he con
cludes not to continue to hold
' two public offices I trust he
stays in the senate tand yields
-the other appointive position to
some one else.
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7
hi
ti:
Only 3
Shopping
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9
We have cm exceptional collection of loose dia
monds; : Make yoiir selection and well place '
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store!
There is still time lb have your cjifts purchased,
here, engraved by Christmas. . " ": ' -
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