The OSEGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon. Saturday looming, April 21, 1345
PAGE FOUH
resott
THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY t
CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor and Publisher .
' (j Member of the Associated Press 5
rae Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of at
news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper.
IA One-Way Ride
If anyone in Japan is looking for employment
and wants only one job he can get it by volun
teering to pilot a Jap suicide plane. The Japs
are building special plane for this purpose, for
which they issue, to be sure, only a one-way
ticket. They are building them upin Manchuria,
out of present sight of American bombers, and
the planes are built to a special design. The
charge a long ton of high explosive is built
right into the snout of the ship. The charge ex
plodes when the nose or a wing hits a solid object.-.
.
To get back to the pilot: he sits in the center
of the plane, which is of pusher type, propeller
in the rear. He is locked into the cockpit from
the outside and given no parachute it really
Is intended as a one-way trip. When the plane
takes off the pilot circles the field three times
while the men on the ground stand at attention
and salute. Then he sails off to join his ances
tors, hoping to take an American battleship or
carrier along with him.
That these suicide pilots do attain some suc
cess in their missions is indicated in the casual
ty reports from Okinawa which show that thei
navy has suffered more heavily there than the
army and marines who made the landings.
Naval losses, chiefly from aerial attacks, were
689 dead, 2220 wounded and 1491 missing; army
and nWine casualties 493 dead, 2530 wounded
and 265 missing.
While the ships point heavy cones of fire at
suicide planes, when they come in waves it is
possible for some to get through and sink or'
damage some of our ships. Our ship sinkings
from this source have been few, but the dam
age must have been extensive, judging from the
casualties to personnel that have been reported.
In the Bag
What an assortment of German big-wigs are
falling into the allied 'bag now. Among them
are Field Marshal vort Mackenson, one of Ger
many's great field commanders in the first
world war, and Count Felix von, Luckner, rov
ing sea devil of that war, also two sons of the
late kaiser, Franz von Papen, the grey fox of
German diplomacy, Fritz Kuhn's wife, the di
rector of I-G Farben Industries, great chemical
combine, and in the Ruhr pocket, 24 German
generals.
Also in the bag are important documents, in
cluding the entire card index system of records
for all the prisoners of war captured by the
Germans. Announced Friday was the capture
of 30 trainloads of government document in the
Hart z mts., presumably papers shipped out of
Berlin. This material is of great importance be
cause with it historians can reconstruct the pat
tern of the nazi government.
I Of course the big game for which the trap is
yawning is Adolf Hitler himself, with his prin
cipal associates, Himmler, Goebbels and Goer-lng.
Salvaging Wastes
, For years pulp and paper mills have sluiced
their sulphite liquor as wastes into streams,
throwing away, valuable materials and pollut-;
' Ing the streams. But they could find no practical
way of rescuing by-products profitably.
V Chemists at the University of Washington an
nounce the discovery of a practical process for
obtaining butyl alcohol from these waste liq
uors. It will be. a great thing if some economic
use is found for these wastes. Here in Oregon
we are interested because we have pulp mills
along the Willamette valley from Lebanon to
St. Helens. ,
. Aid for Education
' The Delta (Miss.) Democrat-Times opposes
federal aid to education, saying:
We in the south, especially, should fight fed
eral aid for education, because we should know
-3-by now that federal money is not ear-marked
according to. race or color. It would present a
. problem that is not very savory to contemplate
at this time.
The editor let the cat out of the bag in those
comments. Because federal aid isn't earmarked
mostly "white" he doesn't wantany of it.
Gold Beach, the only county seat in the state
that was not incorporated, has finally voted
to form a city government. The need for sewage
disposal and other services finally forced action.
When comrnunities become thickly settled they
require joint- action to provide certain com
munity essentials: fire protection, sewage dis
posal water supply, policing, library. When a
s section becomes thickly settled it should form
its own corporation or, if adjacent to a city,
come into the city government, because it is
xio longer rural.
Editorial Comment
ED COMMENT
NOT A PEACE CONFERENCE ..
Contrary to popular description, the United Na
tions meeting opening in San Francisco next Wed
nesday will not be a peace conference. It will not
deal with boundaries, or reparations, or questions
concerning the disarms mrit and control of the axis
countries, or with the trial and punishment of war
criminals. This, the U. S. state department empha
sized in a special statement received this week by
The Argus and other newspapers.
The conference will have a single purpose, "to
prepare the charter of aa international organization
. for presentation to the proposed member nations for
adoption , , the foundation stone for the structure
of international cooperation," says the official state-
merit. -w.
In some respects, the conference of San Francisco
. may prove even more important than the later
peace table sessions. Its discussions will foreshad
ow the degree of agreement that may be antici
pated among the United Nations on questions of
, peace settlements. It is looked upon by the state
, department as the birthplace of whatever sort of
formal international organization we shall be able
to achieve to effectuate and protect the much-hoped-'
for lasting peace to come. ML Vernon, Wash. Argus.
Wo Fnvor Swayt Us; No Fear Shall A
From first Statesman, March 23, 1851
Gty Flag ) 1 -
; Oregon City is in somewhat of a dilemma over
a city flag. It seems that a cruiser is soon to
be launched in an Atlantic port that will be
named after the city that was Oregon's first
capital, and a city flag is needed along with a
state flag. The town venerables are scratching
their heads over a flag design,, the city in its
long past never having had that problem to
face before. One man suggests that the design
include the Dr. John McLoughlin house and the
original power house from which the first long
distance (15 miles J to Portland) transmission
line for electric current was built. The cham
ber of commerce suggests i flag with the city
seal and a covered 5 wagon. The Rotary club i
taking the matter up; so the city commission,
which presumably has the final say, will not
lack for ideas. f '
Where so many and such fertile brains are
active there is no need for outside suggestion.
Of Course there was a time; when upstate com
munities on highway 99 would have recom
mended a bottle-neck as an appropriate design
for Oregon City's flag; but fortunately that is
now quite outdated. Therf are others who at
this season of the year might suggest a "sal
mon rampant" (especially if it shows a fishline
hooked in hir mouth). The Statesman, which
first broke water in Oregon City 94 years ago,
makes no recommendation! Anything the En
terprise and the f Banner-Courier agree on
should satisfy the rest of the staie, which has no
concern in the matter anyway. We do wonder,
though, who will be PCs Betsy Ross.
Unionizing Farm Labor
Back -east the teamsters union is reported
planning to unionize operators of milking ma
chines. Could be. And what about tractor driv
ers and combine operators?, Already in the west
the sheep-shearers are pretty v?ell organized.
Farmers have been learning fast about labor
costs and labor standards. The government lays
down stiff requirements on those who employ
Mexican labor, because of ; agreement with the
Mexican government. Standard conditions as
to wages and working conditions are imposed;
and the labor can't be just turned out to grass
on the rainy daiys. f
The end of the War should see a change in
number of workers available, but farmers must
expect stiff er terms from the men they hire,
as compared with! times before the war. And
a machine is a machine, whether working in
a field, or in a building. 4
Franklin; Roosevelt
As I Knew Him
BY KIRKE L. SIMPSON
AP War Analyst and Long-time Friend
(Associated Presi staff writer Who knew Mr. RooseTelt
for SO rear.)
WASHINGTON, April 20-;P)-I have come now
in my memories of Franklifi Roosevelt to the sad
last chapter.
All the nation, the civilized world, grieves at his
untimely loss; but to none other than his own kin
can that grief be more personal than to the small
company his brave and buoyant spirit had bound
so closely to him the cuff-links club.
There seems no point in recalling all those Roose
velt birthday dinners, of Which the cuff-linkers
were an invariable part. I i
The last session Came just a day or two before
the president set off on that fateful trip to Yalta to
to
i
.meet Winston Churchill and Joseph Stalin for the
last time. f ft " '-
My last personal contact with Franklin Roosevelt
came that night I saw himilast (put at a distance)
at the White House correspondents dinner after his
return from Yalta. ! He looked weary and was sad
dened by the death of genial Brig. Gen. Edwin M.
"Pa" Watson, his military aide and secretary.
But entered into all the fun and banter and gal-'
lantly sought to throw off his obvious fatigue.
I like better to recall the Franklin. Roosevelt of
earlier White House days and I am moved to tell of
what actually happened at the -White House the
night Al Smith took his "walk away from Roose
velt party leadership, in February 1935. j
That afternoon I was summoned for a stag din
ner with the president. The group included Secre
tary Morgenthau, jHarry Hopkins, "Pa Watson,
Vice Adm, Ross T. Mclntlre, the president's friend
and physician, Steve 'Early, "Mac" Mclntyre and my
self. As we started downstairs Mr. Roosevelt sent
me back to the study to pick up a scratch pad and
pencil. He said he had 'a "game in mind.
At the table he decreed that each of us should
write his guess as to just how and on what grounds
Al Smith would' take his coming walkout on the
administration. Each would put in a blue chip and
after we had listened to Smith's speech on the radio
decide who won. 1
We did that, and I remember Harry Hopkins
rhymed his effort I wittily. J I filed a claim on the
president's penciled guess, and, he scrawled his
initials on it. I have it before me now. :
As Smith's voice filled the room the . president
showed no emotion except for a dancing light in his
eyes, but when the speech ! ended he clutched my
knee with his big fist. I had black-and-blue marks
to show for it next day. !
"Do " you know what that means, Kirke?" he
asked. ""It means 500,000 votes for our side." ;
. We then divided up the blue chip poL The presi
dent won. Thij was what he .hi scribbled as his
guess:- ; '
"Because the president and his administration
have failed to live up to the 1932 platform and have
instituted unconstitutional ? and gunAmerican poli
cies, he and his administration no longer represent'
the democratic party.' . - :
There are many Other happy incidents I could call
back to life. Among them was a trip down the Po
tomac on the yacht Sequoia that had a lot to do
with Senator Tom Connally's reelection that year
in Texas. r 1 - - j
Connelly had stiff opposition : for renominatiooi,
which with democrats means reelection in Texas.
Word had gotten out that Mr. Roosevelt favored his
: opponent. . The Roosevelt answer was to invite the
senator on an overnight trip down river and make
public the fact that he had been invited. .
It is possible Mr. Roosevelt hoped I would take
note of the senator's presence and comment upon it
and its political significance in my AP "Bystand
er column. No one suggested that, but I did it I
heard later it was something of: a campaign docu
ment In Texas. S ,
' ''--'" " '"' . - a ; .-. .. - i
XXrtr&ati by B3bc Trntmrn SrmeVat
Vr MrmiH wife TU Wahncto Btae
Thumbs Up 1
pews Behind the News
f By P.AUL MALLON ! r
(Distribution by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Reproduction tn whole
or in part strictly prohibited.)
I WASHINGTON, April 20-The
world WPA idea and the post
war world spending notion have
evaporated in the light of some
tine words Mr. Truman express-
ed in signing
the lend-lease
bill.
I Just a few
days before Mr.
Roosevelt's
death there had
been a big ar
gument in con
gress, which
had delayed
this extension
Of 1 e n d - lease
authority - until
raal Malloa
I year from next June 30 (not
the end of the war). Frankly, a
majority in both houses was sus
picious that the administration
spenders intended to use this
blanket lend-lease authorization
for relief and rehabilitation in
Europe. ,
I They had heard the French,
for instance, were already re
habilitating their railroads and
putting machinery into factories
from our lend-lease kitty. Sup
posedly this government felt the
rehabilitation of French rail
roads was essential to hauling
'pur war supplies to the front,
and looked at the installation of
pur machinery in French facto
ries the same way.
I But this war has cost us $238,
00,000,000 already (Morgen
thau's last figure) and lend-lease
already had amounted to $35,
400,000,000 last December 31.
Our financial position is not im
proving, i
Lend-lease should be about
-fover as far aa big figures are
concerned, because no new con
tract could now be made in time
ito do any good in Europe and
the Far Eastern "war is largely .
our own effort except for lend
lease to China, whose ports are
still closed.
Furthermore, we face the
prospects of putting out above
!$25,000,000,000 more abroad for
post-war without any lend-lease,
f An official British statement
estimated she would need $5,
500,000,000 the year beginning
next July 1, mostly for civilian
relief. The French want $2,500,
1 000,000 now and more after Ger
:mao resistance ceases. No one.
knows Russia's needs, but she
f has asked $8,000,000,000 of cred
its. '"J.
I British contracts already made
wiU run to $7,500,000,000 for this
year. Our UNRRA is aupopsedly
1 planning an increase; in its $1,
1 200,000,000. The Export-Import
bank is said to want 11,300,000,
f 000 more. These unspecified
J prospects could run up to $50,
I 000,000,000 outside of lend-
fTHE YOUNG IDEA" By Mossier
Tbaak goednen, the baseball
. , ene radie prerrxm
- , r
lease.
No one in this government has
yet said anything about cutting
down, so the house tacked a mild
amendment on the lend-lease
extension expressing the ' idea
(no more) that lend-lease should
not be used for post-war. For
eign economic administrator Leo
. Crowley promised it would not
be so used, but in view of the
reputation of the administra
tion, this was not enough for
the senate.
The Taft direct restriction
against such use failed there by
a tight tie vote, with Mr. Tru
man himself voting against it
This bare - if not invisible
margin of success for the! gov
ernment gave full warning that
international post-war spending
policies probably can not get
through congress, at least that
no such loose policy would be
allowed. ?
Yet the administration prob
ably can do as it pleases, be
cause its authority now has more
than a year to run and it could .
pretend practically any expense
was actually in the war effort or
made necessary "to close up old
contracts.
That is the cloud in which the
matter was wreathed, when Mr.
Truman got it at the White
House. He signed the bill, with
great praise of the Roosevelt
policy, using several hundred
words to do it, but he wound
up with this promise:
"Lend-lease will be carried on
until unconditional surrender or
complete defeat of Germany and
Japan." , . !
Somehow congressmen believe
Mr. Truman has more regard for
money than Mr. Roosevelt had.
They look on him as less of a
spender. .His promise was there
fore interpreted as being : what
congress wanted.
However,' it is all up to him.
The law will let him do practi
cally anyting (the extension bill
being merely a continuance of
authority, without- mention of
any sum of money).
But to the very day this was
written, no one had beffi able
to get from the government any
estimate of post-war costs, eith
er as to lend-lease, Britain, Rus
sia, China, UNRRA, Export-Import
bank, or any other phase.
Senate committees have, .re
peatedly called upon the budget
bureau for estimates of what'
will be needed, but the bureau
always replied it did not know.
In the truest sense, then, the
post-war spending policy is still
running open-ended, although
congress is rearing warningly .al
ready against, looseness, and Mr.
Truman has promised lend-lease
at least will stop at the war end.
S7?
season's started again. Thai' the
those twa agree enf -
mum
TKiinmrs
' (Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1)
If any, on the quotas that may
be set for future campaigns?
Would it be possible to consol
idate the various campaigns for
prevention of specific diseases
into a single health program? If
not where will the , limit be?
Will we have new organizations
to combat arthritis, cardiac dis
eases, venereal disease, etc?
Frankly I do not know any
control that can be imposed. This
is a free country still, so far as
soliciting money for charities is
concerned. But the public be
comes weary of so many impor
tunities. The community chests
can hardly take in all the men
dicants who come along, no mat
ter how worthy their cause may
be. A unification . of appeal
seems needed. More than that
some scrutiny of the program
ought to be made so that there
may be some balance in the ex
penditure of funds. ; Otherwise
by dint of peculiar appeal or en
terprise of the promoters more
money may be raised for one
cause than for another where
the need is greater.
The question is one which
needs to be studied by friends of
public health and by those na
tional, state and local leaders in
efforts to raise money for hu
manitarian causes.
The Literary
Guidepost
By W. G. ROGERS
THE FOLDED LEAF." fcy William
MaxweU (Harper; sz.M).
Tennyson's line about the
"folded leaf woo'd from out the
bud" furnishes the title for this
unusual novel.
Two boys, Lymie Peters and
Spud Latham, get acquainted as
the book opens and grow into a
fast friendship through high
school and college,' where the
story leaves them. Lymie is the
intelligent one, introspective and
sensitive, and Spud in many re
spects his opposite.
What Spud feels toward Lymie
is summed up in this: "The near
est to an enemy that; he could
find was Lymie, who; was also
his only friend. Lymie was the
enemy to the extent that Spud,
who feU in love with Sally, was
Jealous of him. '
. The reader's interest mounts
steadily to a climax which has
been subtly prepared. I Little in
cidents, mainly of a! domestic
cast,' really form the body of the
story, and are treated reflective
ly, I might almost say casually,
in a sort of , take-it-or-leave-it
manner. Maxwell seems to be
leading his story along; he sort
of walks beside it, now coaxing.
now giving it a- tug, now wonder-
- ing why it chooses to; turn in this
: direction or that. i
The scene is in and near Chi-
cago, Lymie's first visit to the
Latham . home, his trip to the
cemetery with his,' father and
events in classrooms are perhaps
the best realized passages.
The time is back at the end of
World war I, so that; a middle
aged reader has the feeling that
he's looking back on ; his own
youth. Time is important to
Maxwell, as if he were a true
Bergsonian, like Marcel Proust
' and Joyce and Stehv He keeps
extending the implications of
his story into the past fend the fu
" ture. Lymie's father remains a
youth in a derby, i Lymie -too,
- while he grows older, will be un
, able to grow out of some of the
things which happen to him, such
as the high-school fraternity inl
. tiation. Prof. Severance as a boy
' of five was separated once in a
store from his mother, and the
saleswoman "tried ftp comfort
him, but a child tost goes on cry
ing, right down to the end of
' time."' - : !
- This is a novel to mull over.
; I ; .
" . '- ' 3
r .& v.y - - ' ... i mimmmm
: c UJS. 3rd Infantry ;
N , Recjarda Itself as f
.:rt- , Ona of Toucjbcat
1;. : AT f HE FRONT! . . . .
By Lewis Hawkins
(Subbing for Kenneth I. Dixon)
WITH UJ5. SEVENTH ARMY
-V-The Third infantry division
with Its proud record of 22 con
gressional medals of honor re
gards itself las' one of the tough
- est outfits in any army and its
commander, Maj. Gen. -John W.
OTJanieV who came up through
the ranks, fits right into the pic
tare, 4
In a recent battle, "Iron Mike"
O'Daniel watched from a Cub
plane while a company took one
position but hesitated to move
forward without reconnaissance.
The general's plane swooped low
and he dropped a note saying
"No Boche for two kilometers.
Get moving., ; The company
moved, i
Cpl. Donovan Bailey of Par
kersburg, W. Va a medic with ;
the 4th division, was going down
a road looking for a wounded
man when he came upon a Ger
man soldier loading a rifle.
Bailey, unarmed, glared at the
soldier and demanded that he
surrender. : The German just
grinned j 'and patted his rifle.
Things were tense until Bailey
had an inspiration and in faulty,
but adequate German demand
ed "you want to eat?"
- The German dropped his gun
and came along.-
ment
Funds Could
Diminish Fast
"Although! a reserve of $65,
000,000 has been piled up from
payments under the state's unem
ployment! compensation commis
sion assessments, 150.000 men
suddenly . thrown out of work
could take $36,000,000 out of the
fund," David H. Cameron, super
visor of the 'commission, told
members of the Salem Board of
Realtors at their noonday meeting
Friday in Hotel Marion.
It was explained to the realtors
by the speaker that the amend
ment to the law by the last leg
islature did not make it manda
tory for real estate brokers and
salesmen ' to forego the present
law. Instead, he nointed out
broken after having taken advan
tage of a year's operation are
eligible for ! exemption from the
payments but that this exemption
must be asked for at that time.
Also the only exemption that .can
De asked are for those workers
who receive' only commissions, no
salaries.
Cameron also said the return of
veterans would have no effect on
the state's unemployment fund,
pointing out that a returned vet
eran, out of employment, could
apply for compensation and it
would be paid by the state but
that the; federal government in
turn would jreimburse the state.
Migratory; workers, in the state
for the probable duration of the
war, he said, would be eligible for
payments fron the commission.
On the other hand, he pointed out,
some Oregon citizens, now work
ing in other; states, likewise would
be entitled) to payments from
other states, creating a balanced
offset i i
3 17-Year-Olds
Admit Series
Of Robberies
Three 17-year-old bors who
started out on stirring career of
lawless, with Salem the city in
which they "stepped off the deep
end, are in custody in Santa Bar
bara, calif,; charged with a series
of crimes, to which, according to a
letter received Friday by Chief of
Police Frank A. Minto, the youths
have confessed.
The boys are Maurice Edward
Jones and . Richard Lee Bishop,
both of Portland, and Dick Jerome
Schimpf, of Vancouver. Wash.
Each of the boys, the letter said.
nave served tune In the Woodburn
training school.
; The boys told the California po
lice they, left Portland April 5 by
bus. stole a 1941 Ford sedan in Sa
lem; abandoned it at Roseburg
wnen it -tnrew a rod"; hitch-hiked
to Yreka, Calif., stealing a 1040
Chevrolet there April 6; abandon-
Though it is not uniformly suc
cessful, it gets hold of you and
worn jet go.
S7EVEIIS
See Or Seteetie ef '
KX3TS
;WESDXNO KINGS .
A Trtrld- ra
Unemploy
All hurryun babies aren't born
In taxi cabs. " CpLf Robert F.
Danielowicz of Providence, R. L,
had just retired to his billet in a
French home when his excited
landlady woke him with the in
formation her sister; was about
to have baby, f 1
Danielowicz called . for help
and CpL William Long, Waggon
er, Okla came up with a jeep,
the expectant mother was bun
dled into a blanket and carried to
the back seat. Then, they set off
at 50 miles an hour over a rough
road to the nearest town.'
Reaching . the hospital a scant
jump ahead of the stork, the 45th
division infantryman! jumped out
and banged on the door, but it
was closed tight ' for the night
Turning back to the jeep he had
just started to tell long , to take
off for the battalion surgeon
when a faint wail ; came from
the back seat Mother and child
both did well, j j
Sgt Chris Rhodes of pallas,
Texas, led a 44th division unit
which liberated .150 French,
Spanish, Russian, Polish and
German political prisoners in
Mannheim. Before he could
dodge the grateful 1 Frenchmen
covered him with kisses, but his
buddy, - PTC George Martinex,
Los Angeles, saw them coming
-and "I stuck out my hand real
quick and they had; to shake it
but it was a close calL !
ed that car at Maxwell and hitch
hiked into San Francisco, where
on April 8 they stole a 1934 Ford
and abandoned it April 9 at Gon
zales; broke into a store in San
Jose on April 9; hitched to Santa
Maria, broke into a store and later
stole a Plymouth sedan; the sedan
was bad luck when it hit an army
truck in Los Angeles, ft. was aban
doned. -- V - f . j . ... '
A store was burglarized In Santa
Barbara and the youths arrested.
They admitted everything, the let
ter, to Chief Minto said.
Plans Proceed
For Willamette
eekend
Plans are well 'under way for
the May weekend activities at
Willamette university scheduled
for May 4 and 3. ; Chairman Bill
Stortz, junior from Salem, has ap
pointed Bill Bauman, V-12 mem
ber from Medf ord; Thyra Jean Cur
rey and Val Sloper, both of Salem,
to assist him: j n j
The traditional weekend will be
highlighted by the presentation of
the spring term play, -"You Can't
Take It With You" on Friday ev
ening, crowning of the queen Sat
urday afternoon, and the May
dance honoring the queen and her
court Saturday night in the gym
nasium. ! j
Friday noon a' campus picnic
will be held followed by the inter
sorqrity sing constituted as a part
of the weekend last year. Later
in the afternoon the tug-of-war
and greased pole cljlmb will be
staged on the athletic field.
Coronation day will be ushered
in with the usual YWCA May
morning breakfast held on the
campus lawn. The crowning of
the queen will be in the early af
ternoon on Saturday. Queen Betty
Hanauska and Princesses Emma
Lou East and Wilma Froman have
chosen Janet Blake, Sally Mc
Clelland and Yvonne Kauffman
respectively for their attendants.
A formal dance that night will
end the weekend of festivity.
:.- : 1 !'
"-.;: -'., . : i
Myer Stands
Up for Nisei
PORTLAND, April XO-tfVThe
national director of the war re
location board said, here today he
doubted America wants to see
the, little i people beaten around
merely because someone wants to
be a little Hitler." f
The statement was made by
Dillon S. Myer, Washington, D. C,
in reference to anti-Japanese ac
tion in northwest coastal areas.
He said he found most Americans
wanted ! Japanese - Americans
judged on a basis of individual
character rather than racial char
acteristics. ; s
Myer said the WRA would be
"out of business" soon after Jan
uary I, 1948, when all relocation
centers except the one at Tula
Lake will dose. '
. Diamonds ;
FOR MEN
Smart Stylai
to choos from at the right
prlcea. :-
tZt Cert St.
MayW
f -
r!gSCTams jeg$V