Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, November 22, 1949, Page 4, Image 4

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    "Capital jkjJoiirnal
An Independent Newspaper Established 1888
GfORGE PUTNAM, Editor and Publisher
!i ROBERT LETTS JONES, Assistant Publisher
Published every afternoon except Sunday at 444 Che
. meketa St., Salem. Phones: Business, Newsroom, Want
' Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409.
. Full Leased Wire Service of the Associated Press and
The United Press. The Associated Press is exclusively
entitled to the use tor publication of all news dispatches
credited to it or otherwise credited in this paper and also
news published therein.
: 4 Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, November 22, 1949
3 The State Prison Report
A two-months' investigation of the state prison by the
board of control ended with a report hedged with adjust
'ments anion? the penitentiary personnel. Complaints
over alleged carelessness in connection with the death of
. a convict who committed suicide in March prompted the
investigation. ,
m The report avoided the role of judge over individuals
" and their conduct. Instead, it called for reorganization of
j the guard personnel and for employment of a full-time
doctor, two male nurses, and a full-time chaplain. Certain
shifts in personnel assignments were bound to come from
-. such an investigation.
' The investigation has been a good thing. It has amount
ed to an appraisal of the prison by board members who are
-relatively new to the specific administration of state in
stitutions, since two of the three members came into office
' by the election of only a year ago.
v As might have been expected, part of the trouble was
4"in a shortage of manpower and facilities. That is leav
ing aside the matter of personalities and the question of
ti the alleged carelessness in the handling of one of the con
evicts. - As George Neuner, attorney general and the man who
"directed the investigation, said : "The increase of the prison
"-population . . . has overtaxed all of its facilities, and the
:Tack of finances has curtailed operations." The state
. '.prison, like everything else in Oregon, has been growing.
''J;' The report has come forth with a constructive "ac-
- "counting system" for the prison. The board has de
';cided to have the warden, George Alexander, make a
r- monthly report in person. This will permit the warden to
i make suggestions as to improvements. This will permit
",also ready attention by the board following a prison break
which, in one case, terrorized the community earlier in the
year.
Regular, frank reports by the warden to the, board should
permit the members to act in advance to keep the prison in
shape so that the warden will have the facilities and pro
. gram he needs to administer the penitentiary properly.
Or the members will be in position to make recommenda
tions to the legislature if they are not in a position them
" selves to take adequate action.
Such an analysis of conditions by the warden leaves the
decision for corrective action to the board. In this connec
v..tion, it should be noted that the board of control, created
in 1913, has as its "primary function" management of
i! - the 10 major state institutions.
vi Reports by the warden could be supplemented by tin
s' announced visits to the prison by board members to check
conditions.
This combination of personal reports and board visits
might be worked out for the other state institutions, too.
" The Two Jimmies Byrnes and Roosevelt
' James F. Byrnes of South Carolina with a long "record
In both houses of congress, then supreme court justice,
then resigning to become war mobilizer and later secretary
of state, in a speech before the southern governors' con
ference at Biloxi, sharply criticized administration spend
.. ing and called for a cut in federal taxes and public deft.
He stated:
;. "Our real trouble Is debt and taxes. We cannot cure it by
mora debt and more taxes. We should devote to cutting ex
penditures some of the thought we are devoting to taxing and
.borrowing. Bui cutting expenditures is not seriously consid
ered In the executive departments and new taxes will not be
seriously considered in congress. So deficit spending will con
tinue." Byrnes pointed out that if expenditures for national de
fense, foreign aid and fixed charges like interest on debt
;Were eliminated, we are spending in one year $15 billions
for civilian-domestic functions of the federal government.
,In the four years of peace from June, 1945, to June, 1949,
:more than $2 billion in taxes in excess of the taxes col
lected in the 12 years of Roosevelt's administration were
collected from June, 1933, through June, 1945, which in
eluded the depression and World War II.
,', Byrnes stated the number of federal civilian employes
has increased until there are more than 2 million, costing
,'$6.5 billion yearly and the number is increasing daily.
",;',There are 65 departments reporting to the president, we
are making direct payments to 17 million persons one
;'out of nine of the total population. Which, though he did
not say it, '3 enough, with their dependents, to win any
1 national election.
t At the same time Byrnes was warning against debt and
deficit spending, James Roosevelt, eldest son of the late
"president who has announced his candidacy for the demo-
cratic nomination for governor of California, said in New
! York in the American Mercury magazine, that "deficit
spending is the taxpayers' best guarantee of economical
- government,' and that a balanced national budget today
would result in "the utter collapse of every government on
; earth now friendly to us." He further attributed to our
balanced budgets the responsibility for both the stock mar
' ket crash of 1929 and the late war.
All of which reflects the difference between a statesman
., and a demagogue seeking public office and the hopeless
;; split in the democratic party.
Only the Old Lottery Lure
V According to a 1000 man hour study, presumably in
"social science," reported by the University of California
in in Los Angeles, the appeal of radio "give-away" shows,
V with their "vast and variegated array of prizes, lies less in
the acquisitiveness of fans than in their yearning for mod
?r em 'magic' " The reports states :
j. "Contestants and members of the radio audience are made
1 to feel they can re-live the Cinderella story either directly or
J? vicariously as a wave of the program sponsor's wand makes
j : their dreams come true, it was stated. There seems to be an
: increasing need during these confused times for belief in this
;' sort of magic. This belief, rather than the desire for 'loot,' is
tx the prime factor responsible for the increasing popularity of
: such programs ''
;; All of which is so much bunk and interesting only as dis
I closing how professors of social science can waste their
own and students' time in moronic pursuits. The appeal
1 i of give-aways in movies as in all lotteries or games of
! : chance to get something for nothing, which seems univer-
sal in humanity. The joy of the winners frequently turns
'. to howls of anguish when they try to cash in and pay in
: come taxes, and the "Cinderella complex" evaporates.
' Like the old "bank night" lotteries that the movies
, staged during the depression to bolster business, movie
r. "give-aways" are a clever device of the radio to stimulate
its decreasing audience of listeners and offset the ravages
1 of television. Instead of improving their dreary programs
they have substituted the lure of "something for nothing"
r in a new setting.
BY BECK
That Guilty Feeling
WHAT'S THE USE OF CRAMMINS M3UR HEAD lllfirmllTiTrilNiTHnTfMillll
( FULL OP STUFF MXI'LL NEVER REMEMBER? J
1 WHEN I ASKED DAD TO HELP ME DO MY ffl ft fl 1 1
ARITHMETIC, HE 6AID HE'D FORSOTTEN ) I
HOW YET HE'S MADE A-SUCCESS OF ffl III II W J
Shis lifehaswt he? ou're always ll I
isfHV TELLIN3 ME TO DO THINGS THE S lllWMm ffl
SIPS FOR SUPPER
Upset
By DON UPJOHN
Two deeds were filed with the county recorder's office here
today showing transfer of some of the huge timber holdings once
held by the Silver. Falls Timber company jn the Cascade moun
tains east of Salem, these being taken over by a concern from
.ongview, Wash. Of course, a big deal like this is of interest- to
everybody i n i
the county b u t
a feature i n -volved
in it is
of peculiar in
terest to this
column for
probably what!
can be rated a
peculiar reason.
As near as wc
can figure oull
from checking
over the de
Don Upjohn
scription In a casual way the
land involved in this big trans
fer has on it one of the great
natural features of our region,
same being the well known Ta-
ble Rock, which has been doing
'war
L-i ftVJ
its share of keeping this column idea of a Thanksgiving economy,
alive during the years. It makes This, it seems, makes it possible
us wonder whether Table Rock for us husbands to buy our tur
under new ownership and man- key necks and have our Thanks
agement is going to be as giving dinner without monkey
amenable in the future to party ing about the rest of the family
Heddy Swart has assigned to it at all. Let 'em go out and get
in the disposition and determina- their own drumsticks and white
tion of what the weather is go- meat Maybe we'll organize a
ing to be in these parts from club.
time to time. As the customers
know Hedda insists when there's The Chinese communists don't
snow on Table Rock and as long seem to pay much attention to
as It's there there's going to be protests, demands, et cetera on
rain down here in the valley, part of our state department
Now it may be this situation was seeking release of our U. S. con
agreeable to the old Silver Falls sulate officer in China who has
Timber company when it owned been taken into custody by the
Table Rock, but it remains to Reds. It looks as though sooner
be seen whether the new Long- or later this may turn into a job
view company will want to for Sam Spade, Nick Carter, or
change it. Maybe It won't fit some of the other radio sleuths
In with its plans and it may who always seem to get their
want some other kind of weath- man.
MacKENZIE'S COLUMN
British Socialists Advise
Ciergy to Stay Out of Politics
By DeWITT MacKENZIE
UT) Foreign Affair Analrati
Sir Stafford Cripps, Britain's austere chancellor of the ex- -chequer,
advises the Church of England to stay out of politics.
Such a pronouncement by a cabinet minister would in all
events be of great importance, but it takes on peculiar signifi
cance as coming from Sir Stafford.
The chancel-
lor is widely
known as a
Christian who
puts his beliefs
into practice
seven days a
week. He is
credited With
applying his re
ligion to his so
cialist politics as
well as to his
personal life. D'wl" "'"
Even his political opponents Dean of Canterbury Cathedral,
agree on that. who is known as the "Red
So when Sir Stafford takes Dean" because of his extreme
the church to task folks want to left views and his great friend
know what's cooking. ship for Soviet Russia.
Well, not only the chancellor The good dean visited the
but the labor (Socialist) party United States a year ago and re
has been greatly worried lately proved us for our aversion to
over speeches by prelates of the communism. He did a lot of
Church of England. The politi- talking here, and later the arch
cal leaders are wondering what bishop of Canterbury, Dr. Goef
part churchmen may play in the frey Fisher, who is head of the
next general election which will Church of England, sharply dis
determine whether the experi- owned the sentiments express
ment in socialism is to continue, ed by the dean in America and
For example, Dr. Geoffrey Canada.
Fisher, archibishop of Canter-
bury, who is head of the Church Those who oppose the Church
of England, recently referred to of England taking active part in
the coming election as a "gather- politics do say that the clergy
ing shadow." He told the syn- are qualified to pass judgment
od of the convocation of Can- on events from the spiritual and
terbury that there was "need moral standpoints, and should be
for united effort to overcome allowed to speak in these fields,
our economic plight." Other As the public conscience, as
prelatcs have expressed concern scrt the opposition, they are all
over economic conditions. right.
Some political observers have Of course in years long gone,
expressed belief that the church the ciiurch took a most active
leaders may be attempting to part in government. In the mid
bring about a coalition govern- die ages the king's chief minis
ment. The Socialists have tcr was a cleric. But we don't
thumbs down on, that. have to go back that far to see
the influence of the church In
In considering the position of temporal affairs of state,
the Church of England, it must Specifically, the late arch
be noted that it is the establish- bishop of Canterbury, Dr. Cos
ed church, that is, a state cflurch. mo Gordon Lang, was generally
Those members of the House of credited with playing a major
Lords in parliament who are role in the abdication of King
known as the "Lords spiritual" Edward VIII, now Duke of Win
are biships and archibiships of dsor. The archbishop is said to
the Church of England. The have been utterly uncomprom
king himself is "defender of the ising in the matter of the young
faith." king's desire to marry Mrs.
It, therefor. If easy to see Simpson.
er schedule. Anyway, if they
do, it's going to sure be tough
on Hedria.
From Hamburg, Germany,
comes a little dispatch saying
that a Danish truck driver lost
his cognac laden trailer on a
highway near that town and he
only noticed the loss when he
tried to park. The party sending
the dispatch offered the little
side comment that it should be
a well-oiled highway.
This new setup they have of
selling various parts of a turkey
all cut up and ready for the
stove may entirely upset our old
why there is a difference of
opinion in Britain as to how far
the church should become in
volved in political matters. It is
doubly clear when one recalls
that the clergy of the Church of
England are, broadly speaking,
conservative, and therefore are
not in harmony with Socialism.
This statement isn't altered by
the fact that occasionally one en
counters a "liberal" like, the
Very Rev. Hewlett Johnson,
WASHINGTON MERRY
Recent Strikes
Disputes Can
By DREW PEARSON
Washington The nation will be months recovering from the
effects of the coal and steel strikes, but the disputes demon
strated one healthy fact: American industry and labor have
"grown up" In their labor relations. The strikes were attended by
almost no violence.
It hasn't been
many years
since violence
and bloodshed
were the rule in
major strikes.
As recently as
May 1937, Chi
cago police pur
sued and shot
down steel un-
ion pickets, kill- lit
us i. v in
stantly and fa-
Drew Pearion
tally injuring six others in the
May-day massacre at Republic
Steel.
However, e x c e p t for a few
minor outbreaks in coal-mining
areas, both management and la-
uui ici:ciiLiy uciiiuiiaiidLcu nidi.
the American spirit of fair play
can be made to work in labor
disputes.
Much credit belongs to CIO
esident Phil Murray and his
Prpsiripnt
steel workers for peaceful, self-
policed picket lines; also tp cer-
tain omnlnvors nnljihlv iho
Joncs and Laughlin Steel com-
pany.
aj' i n it
,J?Z1Z
and Lauehlin. saw to it that un-
ma j
ion pickets at his plants got free tary. Annual Report of the Chief
hot coffee and doughnuts almost ot Naval Operations to the Sec
every night. Moreell also order- retary of the Navy." Neverthe
ed that huts, equipped with less, that was the first Secreta
electric heaters, be built for the ry Matthews had seen of it.
pickets and even installed a
telephone in a hut at the Ali- LUSTRON BUBBLE
quippa, Pennsylvania, plant so
the strikers could communicate
with union headquarters,
Moreell also made a practice.
whenever possible, of personally
visitine the nicket lines for a
Sfendlv chat .There was nothing
patronizing about it. The saltv,
likable former sea dog respect-
ed the position of the strikers as
much as they respected his.
J c
There were some bright mo-
ments, too, in the gruelling 52-
day coal strike. In the past, most
company stores shut off credit
during strikes.. However, this
year practically all the big coal
companies continued credit dur-
ing the long strike. In the south,
several operators provided hot
meals for miners' children when
they heard the youngsters were
going to school without break-
fast
All in nil it m.i. far nrir
from the hot tempers and tear
gas of a decade ago.
SWEDISH HOSPITALITY
Those insulting digs at Swed
ish hospitality by junketing Se
nator Elmer Thomas of Oklaho
ma contrasted with the story of
another senate subcommittee
which visited Sweden at about
the same time. -,
While Senator Thomas charg
ed that the Swedes snubbed
him, the subcommittee on hous
ing led by able Senator John
Sparkman of Alabama, returned
with glowing accounts of Swed
ish hospitality. The Sparkman
subcommittee included Allen
Frear of Delaware, Ralph Flan-
ders of Vermont and John Brick-
er of Ohio. December. The simple truth is that by
Bricker proved himself a real Dr. Schindler Is chief physician of the Monroe, Wis., clinic, halftime the Browns would have
ambassador of good will in a His article is condensed from a torn the Notre Dame line to
speech at the Stockholm City talk on the University of Wis- you like it, you will escape splinters and smothered its back
hall, lauding Sweden on its ef- consin radio station. " work tension one of the prime s0 often they would have a feel-
ficient housing program and the Fifty per cent of all people causes of psychosomatic illness, ing they were playing in Eider
cooperation shown him and his going to doctors in the U. S to- Have a hobby and in the down quiIls
colleagues. The white-thatched day are victims of this one dis- midst of the day's hustle and And meanwhile, Cleveland
Ohioan injected some American ease, the doctor states. Persons bustle, relax for a moment to wo"ld have passed or linebuck
goodhumor into the proceedings , of any age or any walk of life think about It. Say the cheer- ed the dazed Ramblers silly,
by denying that Senator Frear can contract it, and it is a high- fI thing, not the mean one. ...
ware demdid call h m expensive disease to diagnose Make lt . point to te Yes Notre Dame is mighty-
Dod and treat - wife she looks pretty even if but lt would be mihty foolish
, , . . .... Psychosomatic illness is pro- it isn't true. ever to trot out on a gridiron
Bricker later got a Dig hand j.j f , ut o with a- oro team liko tht. rio,r.
in Rotterdam when he remark-
?T. .
he had a special reason
llni hr.e,H V
v folks came from Hoi-
for "feeling
m- n1l-B mma Ion TJnl-
Unfortunately, however, this
.. . .. '
good will didn t cop the same
headlines as the sensational
Thomas technique of how not to
win friends abroad.
NOTE When the s e n a t e
group left Rotterdam, the city
chimes played "Yankee Doo-
die." Alabama's Sparkman
would have preferred Dixie, but
Miomnil aa nloaenil n Vila nnrlh.
em colleagues.
up muscles wnnout Knowing it.
There was only one thing The tightened muscles squeeze
white-haired Senator Bricker, various nerves, producing se
aged 56, wanted to forget about vere headaches, oains in the re
Sweden a certain cigarette gion of the heart, stomach and
girl in Stockholm. elsewhere.
After dinner one night, the About a third of all skin
girl stopped at the table where diseases treated by dermatolo
Bricker and four senate collea- gjsts are produced by blood ves
gues were seated. seis in the skin reacting to
"1 11 buy a cigar for my fa- anxiety or worry.
mer, announceo. o-year-oia
Democrat Allen Frear of Dela-
ic, ,.UUU...B mwaiu
vrJ.u fl Y vaX"1 '
father?" Bricker asked the girl.
L01:.
lady, without hesitating a mom
ent
NAVY FLOUTS JOHNSON -
The last official document, sign
ed bv outcoinir Admiral DenfelH. To avoid psychosomatic ill-
is a final slap at Secretary of
Defense Johnson.-
4 1- ,V. 1 . w , 1
At la mic annual acuuiv Ul IIIB
chief of naval operations to the
secretary of the navy, just off
the press. And by releasing it.
the navy violated the spirit of
- GO - ROUND
Proved Labor
Be Dignified
Johnson's order against separate
annual reports by the three ser
vices. Last June the navy objected
to the order on the ground that
congress was entitled to a sepa
rate report from each service,
but the secretary of defense, af
ter considering all arguments,
stuck to his guns. He issued his
order on August' 1 in a private
memo to the army, navy and air
force.
"In the light of all the circum-
stances," Johnson wrote, "I have
decided that there should be one
annual report for the national
miHtary establishment."
Despite this, the navy defied
Johnson's order, and issued its
biuium icyuii anyway.
ineoreticaiiy,
order'bylddresslng
Jonnsons
the report to the secretary
nf navy. But when a represen-
1atlYe ot thls col"n took a -
into Secretary of the Navy
Matthews for comment, he was
"HUUerSasiea.
"What's this?" he asked. "I
haven't seen that. Here, let me.
look at it"
Thl rLr ..D.
port on Your. Navy. Mr. Secre
The Lustron bubble, is about
to explode.
.. K ike. a worth-
u'CtV" l" imve me " '
"""""H snortage overnignt by
m " Pacing prefabricated
homes' nat.urnet! int0 a ni8ht-
mare. Millions in RFC loans
"ave Deen Poured into Lustron,
but only a trickle ot ready-made
"-. . . U .
come out.
Now congress has turneo on
lhe heat and Lustron is begin-
ninS to tPPle-
First P" out will be Tru-
man's cousin, Merl Young, for-
mer RFC examiner, whose wife
also one of President Tru-
man's private secretaries. In
spite of these ties, Young hasn't
begged for favors for Lustron,
has kept out of the lobbying end
of the business. He is handing
in his resignation effective De
cember 1.
(Copymnt i.
Let 'er Buck, Buck'
Newberry, Mich., Nov. 22 (U.R) Herman Smith turned
cowboy when his single rifle shot, failed to down an eight
point buck.
Smith jumped on. the wounded animal's back, bulldogged
It to the ground, and finished off his came with a hunting
knife.
.
Worries, Troubles of Daily Life
Held Cause of
"Psychosomatic illness, one of
tinman floch is hoiV tn is ae
together," says Dr. John A. Schindler In The Reader's Dieest for
pus ne'w growthi but
rus or a new growth, but by
the wo.fis tb, of
daily living. And it is not a
.. ...... .
Just thinl!'.he is si'k"11The
naine nf thl inmmnn lllnnae
'
afe as sV"e a? !bose of any
ln,er- ana mougn iney are Das-
,ta"' ""miiunai "inr eucti is
Physical as acut finger,
Most disagreeable emotions
produce muscle tightness. Dr.
Schindler says.
T vm. nra anam, amn . bcm
or worried, you are tightening
Each time certain individuals
become upset or irritated, serum
I. a-l,lallv ,miPP7(.rf thrnnirh thA
wal1 0 the bl00d vessel and Into
,,, .
P-nd P skin su.
face where it becomes scaly
and itchy, and the patient has
a neurodermatitis.
ness. cultivate cheerfulness in
your attitude toward life and
vui fnlln. man Tr Cnhlnillaw
...wi, " u..ii.wi;k
urges.
Don't analyze your feelings
all the time, looking for trouble.
Learn to like your work, If
BY GUILD
Wizard of odds
WHEN A CUILD DIES
FROM POISONING ITS
ALMOST 3 TO 1 THE: CAUSE
IS LYE KEROSENE IS
SECOND BIGGEST K1LLEP.
bgs I
POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER
Professional Football Separates
TUa Upn Frfim
I IYICII I IUIII
iNew IOrK lf
of the toP professional football teams?
That has been a favorite topic this season with a number of
pigskin historians of the sports pages.
impressed by the record'of 36 games without a loss rung up
by the Ramb
lers, a numtapr
opined that the
fighting Irish
could beat manv
nlnv fnr - navl
teams. And
some even have
crawled clear
out on the limh
rT TJ
" ' , J 't
"
ore the best pro elevens.
1 am n0 naer oi tanned porn
"" "
Frank Leahy s boys in green car,
tnhm (hn riAiralanri Rrnumc I'll
- """" y:
b? 8lad to eat without benefit
? gravy the football they do
" lth;' An,d that.ls one prop.0.-
sltl0n 1 ?n t muid ending with
a preposition. ...
Ino su1 s I wsteW
Notre Dame tar North Carolina s
Tarheels, 42 to 6, and Cleveland
Browns retain the leadership of
tne Ail-American conference by
blanking the New York Yankees
31 to 0. ,
xiiey were games uiai Demon-
strated the best in amateur foot-
ball and the best in professional
Half of Illness
a thousand different ailments this
nnmmnn si f K a nthai QQQ nn.
" dn. , er
Droblem DeeMn hn t
ft iheiTuft tWnklnt rl
Tt th6n qU" thinkmg about
Dnvll
lUlAL
Bal Boris
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rS FRiDAr THE I5TH UNLUCKYrl
NO ITS TO 5 LUOflEI? THAM
OTHER FRIDAV3 BECAUSE
PEOPLE ACE MO!?E CAREFUL-
ODDS ARE 7 TO 1 THAT
YOUR -SUNGLASSES OONT
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UIC
By HAL BOYLE
-Could undefeated Notre .Dame knock off one
football. And the only possible
conclusion an innocent bystand
er could draw was: Notre Dame
and the Cleveland Browns don't
belong on the same gridiron any
more than a Jake LaMotta haa
any business in the same ring
.Tna T.nnie
I In their classes both teama
play nearly perfect football, but
they aren't in the same class.
Frank Leahy can employ the
discipline of the old college try
if his boys don't play their
hearts out, they're yanked. But
coach Paul Brown of Cleveland,
just as much a perfectionist as
Leahyi has the added discipiina
. , ... .
oi tne aonar. wis men Know 11
they don.t win tney wont ea1
next yearat least not with tn8
Browns.
His team doesn,t me dj
most things well. It does every,
,hj we There . speclalsi
for ey j
u r, And
rj M
. ,
v ,
" . asy to foretell what
i-i" ,..c
ever took on the Browns. The
Ramblers were held to a one-
luutiiuyvvu lie tu uie nan uy a
fast - charging North Carolina
line that mussed up the South
Bend backfield. But in the sec
ond half the Notre Dame reserve
power wore down the Tarheel
forward wall. It wasn't until
then that Quarterback Bobby
Williams could get his passes
clicking.
Against Cleveland, Notre
Dame would find the situation
Dame would fin
No amateur
no matter how
strong or talented, could stand
up against the Browns. Their
forward wall features heftles
like Forrest Grigg, a 280-pound
tackle about as impregnable as
an elePhant.
land Browns. For professional
lana Browns- ror professional
footbaI1 "cPBratea the men fron
boys, and there is no way
fnr tha k.e u.
for the boys to bridge the gap.
and take an option to buy!
. .
HOTEL"
Ph 7Rf.01
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