PAGE EIGHT
MEDFORD MATE TltTBTJNE, MEDFORD. OREGON, SUNDAY. AUGUST 26, 1931.
Medpord Mail Tribune
"Evtryenc M Souttwa OrHM
Hum Uit Mill rrlfcww''
Oaily Csetpt ttlunlay
Published or
IEDKBD PB1MLNO CO.
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launtf Mood citM wtui tt Mtdfortf
Ortioo, under Ad of Hurt . UT.
IUBWHIPTION RAITS
Utllv. om rttr St.OU
Dtllf, ls month. .. t.tt
Dalit- Ana BUDtH. .. C0
Jicknmllle, Ontrtl Paint, rbotali, Tata. Gold
Hull, mm rear I-0"
DsJfy, ill moathi
nail oor month t60
All tirmi. ea to iditijo.
OffielU ptptr of tot Cltf of Mttfora.
Offldtl patxr of Jaeksoa County.
UEMBKH OIT Tilt ASSOCIATED PMESI
Hit AMlted eren t uelwltelr nUUM to
int UN i or piioiiHuun n u iiv-ci-MlUed
to It or otberirlH ertdiud to tnli ptptr
AU rlibU for puhUettioo of ipeeli otipaUb
oerclD v aUo rtamed.
MEM HE H OF ONITCli tKB0S
UEUBVH OV AUDIT BUREiO
Of CIRCULATIONS
Adwtlitnc Kpref)UUT
IL C. MWJEN8KN a COHPANT
Otnm tz Nn Tori, CbJeaco, Ottrott, Its
rrtnelMo It Angela tutUe PortUod.
MEMBER
Ye Smudge Pot
Br Arthur Pwtt-
- i. ... toured thr WOUld b
no summer, an. no longer scared as
th mercury tllrwa win
mark most of the past week.
Dr Russell Sherwood baa returned
from LA. where he haa been etudyln
. . . . n m .nrf is ore
ana WOTKing iw " .
pared to twist any HU or Urn. out of
the numan cnaasw.
-
Competition la eo keen In the elg
aretto business, that the purchaser
now geta hi package huaked. by a
machine that bltee off one corner,
but leave the cellophane Intact,
e
Tha fight for aupremacy at the
crossings continues fiercely between
Espee switch englnea and the Main
stem cyclonca. . Neither have acored
so far.
Peoria Bill Oatea haa purchased an
astronomical telescope, with which he
studies the heavens, jnia is a goou
Idea, but many hold it la pointed the
wrong direction, as far as the home
grown astronomer Is concerned. Mr.
dates can now describe Jupiter like
the youngrst Bob Hammond kid can
describe the Chicago world's fair.
A refuge from drouth stricken
Iowa was her Thurs. and Frl. with
a 1400 dog, and an auto he picked
up In Italy last winter.
Rain la needed. Farmers have de
cided not to pray for It, until after
they aes what the state fair at Balem.
Sept. 3-0. can do for them In the way
of molatur.
J. Curtis Bamea la back from Port
land, where he underwent medical
repairs, and la again In tin front
ranks of the battle, for mor of what
you hevu c got, and Ism of what you
don't want.
Several dastardly republican plots
ar being hatched, having for their
purpose the defeat of the democrats
at the polls in November. This Is
unthinkable.
"
Another vacant lot Is under sus
picion as a service station.
Chan Egan, the golfer, teed off from
the 60 yr. hole Tuea.
The pear crop la now at Its peak,
and It looks Ilk the growers would
make something besides a trip to
southern California neit wlnUr.
e
School will open Sept. 17, It appears
like tha football team would amount
to something, If all the 180-100
pound athletes get their spelling, and
ran keep from painting enemy barns.
A number of veterans of the Great
Fracas are up at Astoria, punishing
bass drums, orattng. and tearing the
mask from Communism.
. . .
The campaign In Jackson county
this fall promises to be lively, but
not serious enough to caus militant
ladles to quit doing their housework,
to elect the wrong men governor.
Pinto Colvlg of Hollywood, Calif.,
who drew the movie pictures of the
" little plga Is coming up to help his
Paw, Judge Colvlg celebrate his BOth
birthday soon.
The wrestling match Thure. eve
waa a magnet for a large audience,
desplt the torrldlty. The vllllans
lost as usual. On of the bald-headed
gladlatoia so Infuriated 8. Morris,
the Table Rock tiller, that he hopped
right up from his front row seat and
pointed a menacing finger at him.
The grlrrled grappler acted Ilk he
una terrified, causing Mr. Morris to
poke out his chest like a pigeon.
Wrestling demonstrates that the
head of a man la solidly attached,
end will not drop off unleaa whacked
cff.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 35 (API
Railroads were ordered today by the
railroad retirement bo&td to deduct
two per cent of the salary of every
empicji each month to provide funds
for pensioning old workers, beginning
nut February 1.
.Nil A,
Advice To Mothers
VE EDITOR feels highly complimented. A mother has asked
him for advice regarding
The son it seems, has genuine musical talent, and until he
reached the self-conscious age, was making fine progress on the
piano. But now he balks at music lessons. School is about to
begin, the football season will soon be starting, and to continue
any education along musical lines, the son regards as disgraceful
and "SISSY".
So he positively refuses. He wants to be a man's man, with
his shirt sleeves rolled up, his cords in proper disarray, and a
hard-boiled light in his left eye. He doesn't want to be any
long-haired music "perfessor,"
WHAT to dot Would ye sapient editor, advise a little hard
boiled technique on the part of "mommer", forcing the
lad to the musical fountain even though he refuses to drink?
Or would he advise leaving well enough alone, drop any forc
ing methods, and trust that when the "sissy" complex is out
grown as, of course, it will be, a natural musical tempera
ment will assert itself.
A NICE problem, and a very old one. "We understand the
attitudes of both parties in the controversy, and regard
them as perfectly natural ones. Of course "mommer" is right
and the boy isn't; but how can
is wrong t
That's the difficulty. Our
pline idea that, in all likelihood
give the lad an "anti-piano"
come.
But we wouldn't drop the
slowly and cautiously for the
be as "collegiate" as he wants to be, that is an inevitable phase
and will do no real harm. Don't force music on him, let him
discover music for himself.
For if he really has music in
will be the inevitable outcome.
he expects. For Shakespeare was not the only genius to discover
that "music soothes the savage breast."
T football rallies, the football hero comes first of course, but
whether in school of college the chap who can BANG the
piano in PROFESSIONAL style comes a close second. He is
always in demand. And when
the fraternity festivities begin,
The idea that the chap at the
hair, a Windsor tie, and be troubled with falling arches, is as
completely "out" in school and college circles; as the idea that
to play good football, a man must have a cauliflower car and
spit through his teeth.
That's really "kid" stuff.
catch onto it, if he is normally
normal course.
So Ye Editor's advice is "leave well enough alone." Let
nature take its course. Don't force the music motif, and above
all don't monkey with the tremelo stop.
Boys hate that sort of thing. Let the young man discover
the truth for HIMSELF, which ho is bound to do. Then in later
years he will not only find that
him in school, but it gave him and
pleasure and relaxation in later life. Something within himself
that was increasingly worth while, ns the years passed on.
The Situation Is Serious
FEDERAL forest service officials report that forest fires on
positive proof the fires were set
unable as yet to apprehend the
With the country side and forests as dry as they are, a forest
fire endangers not only property but human life. In one of
last night's fires a home and all its contents was barely saved
from complete destruction. This fire setting under such condi
tions, is a form of wanton vandalism that must bo stopped.
The only way to stop it, is
only in the cities but throughout
it, that the firebugs will find the
This can be done by cooperation with forest service officials,
on the part of the people, all
of information regarding suspicious characters roaming about
the woods, and of course the prompt reporting of fires the mo
ment they are discovered.
THE situation is really a CRITICAL one. Southern Oregon
haa Keen nvlr.rn.lv fnttiit,al !.... f t.. -.LU .: 1
.ui.uuni. 1UUB (SI, AJUb nilU UUUUUUEU
heat and drought, and no sign of a change in the weather, a
serious disaster can only bo prevented by eternal vigilance, and
full cooperation on the part of
forces.
So this is a word, to the people of this section of the state,
to be on their guard, and assist in every way they can, to run
these fire bugs out of the country, and save nut only our forests,
but the homes and lives of some of our own people from destruction.
Communications
How Taxra Can l I.onered
To tha Editor:
Again -e mit b mathematically
prerlae. Tax limitation or general tax
reduction being one and Ui a me
thing, meana that for every mill our
taxe are reduced a million dollars
must be raided from some other
source and of course that other
source la a general sales tax. The
assessM value of all property In the
state la one billion dollar, or there
abouts. If, as proposed by the tax
llmtut'.on measure, there could be
brought about a general tax reduc
tion of around IS mills It would nec
eaaltate, the raising In some other
manner of fifteen million dollars an.
nually. Since our retail sales are
around three hundred million it
would take a five per cent general
salea tax to offset the taxes lost to
the cities, count lea, state and school
district by the tax limitation meas
ure.
her musical son.
and durncd if he is going to be
ANYONE convince the boy he
answer is to drop the army disci
would ruin things completely
complex he might never over
music idea, though we would go
time being. Let the young man
him, and talent in addition, that
And it will come sooner than
the winter season starts in, and
he comes close to being top peg.
piano stool has to wear long
And the "kid" is the first to
bright and allowed to go his
being musically proficient helped
his friends, a great source of
by human hand, but have been
guilty parties.
to so arouse publio opinion, not
the country districts, against
going too tough to operate.
the people, the rrompt giving
the people, with the fire fighting
But a general aalea tax Is not a
fair and just tax and cannot be de
fended If the revenue derived from
it la used for general tax reduction.
It can be defended and la a fair and
Just tax when used for ahelter tax
exemption. Then the home owners of
the state get the full benefit from
the tax they pay. That la provided
home ownership la brought within
the reach of every family In the
state. There are three obstaclea In
the wa of home ownership uncer
tainty of employment, high taxea and
hlRh Interest rates. Uncertainty of
employment can only be removed by
federal legislation, providing employ
ment for all workers In government
enterprises. Shelter tax exemption,
however. I a matter for atate legis
lation. The M wl ford Chamber ot
Commerce haa sponsored a general
sales tax measure for ahelter tax
exemption that can be defended and
should be enacted, In thta measure
the home owner gets the full benefit
from the revenue derived from a gen
erst vales tax. The full amount dr
rived froui a eaiea tax being prorated
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, 51. D.
Signed letters pertaining to pertonai health and nyjteiw not to dis
eatve dlugnmla or treatment UI be amwerrd by Ur. Brady U a ttamped
telf -addressed envelop la encluaed. Let ten tliould be brief and wmteo in
tnk. Onlng to the large number ot lettcra received only a tew can be to
wered. No reply can b made to quertee not conforming to tnitructlona.
Addreas Dr. William Brady, 265 Kl Camlno, Beverly UUla, Cal.
WHAT TO DO
This column U strictly professional,
so we shall have no facetious com
ment if you please. Fact la, I've
been warned.
People expect a
physician to be
solemn or at
least dignified.
Borne persons
snore to beat the
band If they He
on their backs,
and cease snor
ing If they turn
onto their sides.
When one lies
supine the
tongue and the
soli palate, relaxed In sleep, tend to
fall back and cover the mouth of
the larynx. That produces a tre
mendous snore. But when one lies
on the side or more or less prone,
tongue and aoft palate tend to fall
away from the larnyx and so the
breathing la not obstructed.
While some Individuals snore only
In the supine, others continue all
through the night grinding out their
doleful music In any position except
perhaps Trendelenberg or knee-chest,
and it Is hard to get a sleeping per
son to assume or retain these fancy
positions. Some authorities argue that
the beat position for prevention of
snoring la vertical, at the end of a
short length of rope, but as I say,
doctor should strive to be earnest
at all times.
People who snore a great deal do
so for three main reasons. One
reason Is they have chronlcrhlnltls
or chronic pharyngitis and are so
dumb or so close that they Just won't
have the trouble properly treated by
the physician. People who snore are
actually dumb, thick-headed, dull
witted, that Is, If they are aware of
the Intolerable annoyance they give
others who have to sleep In the same
house with them, A smart Individual
who Is aware that he snores will lose
no time consulting his physician and
having the snore removed.
The second reason Is a studied 1
neglect of physical training. Snoring
back to the counties according to
the shelter value In the several coun
ties. Section S of the bill proposed
explains the exact method of giving
this credit:
"Section 5. The amount of tax
credit, the owner of a homestead
shall be allowed shall be based upon
the assessed value of the homestead
If the assessed value Is less than
$1500, and if the asessed value is
J1500 or more than 91500, then It
hall be baaed on the $1800 valuation.
The amount of credit the owner of
homestead shall receive shall be
arrived at In the following manner:
The tax receipt shall be made out
by the sheriff, as at the present time,
except there shall be added three
columns. In the first column shall
be set down the assessed value of
the homestead, if less than elOOO. If
$1500 or over, then the amount set.
down In this column shall be $1500.
In the second column shall be writ- j
ten, first, the amount of mlllege levy
for school purposes In the district
in which the homestead la located.!
which In no cae shall exceed twenty
mills: second, the mlllage levy for
the state general fund: third, the
amount In mills of any other tax
levies made by the county. In case
the sum total of the mlllage levy
set down In this column amounts
to more than forty mills then forty
mills only shall be used In comput
ing the credit. In the third column
shall be placed the amount of the
credit, found by multiplying the
amount of the assessed value of the
homestead set down in the first
column by the sum total of the mlll
age set down In the second column,
not exceeding forty rnllla-"
Since shelter value In tne state
Is only one-sixth of the total assessed
property value a two per cent sales
tax would make It possible to pro
vide for a forty mill tax credit on
shelter value.
If Interest In home ownership is
revived by removing the obstacles In
the way of home ownership business
generally will benefit. It la not so
much a matter of high taxea on In
come property but rather a lack of
business that now maxea income
property an unprofitable investment.
Pull time employment ox au worao
at a high minimum wage for com
mon labor would greatly Increase
purchasing power end Insure profits
to those owntrur income property.
Tax exemption on shelter value In
home and a low Interest rate ior
home development would place home
ownership within the reach of every
worker in our atate. Home owners In
our statae would support a general
salea tax for shelter tax exemption
since this measure would give them
six times the credit that a general
aalea tax would give the home owner
If levied for the purpose of general
tax reduction as waa proposed In the
measure submitted to the people by
the special session of the legisla
ture. J. C. BARNES.
I It Might be Worse!
(iirpunnsnea nv nrqurM ,
WHO WOULD BK
A COMMUNIST?
AROUE EVERY DAY,
PIVIDS EVERY DAY.
SQUABBUt EVERY DAY.
OVER DIVISION?
THINK IT OVER'
Farmers and
Fruitgrowers
Bank
!tepolt liiMired)
rttt I
ABOUT S.NORINO
people never walk when they can
possibly ride, nor do they ever climb
stairs If they can find a lift. At first
they avoid exercise because It seems
rather uncouth and unfashionable,
and, besides It Is so low to sweat.
Presently they avoid exercise be
cause they haven't the ambition to
do anything. This false view of life
gets them Into a flabby, soft con
dition, and that favors snoring. So
the cure in such cases Is adequate
dally exercise. Nothing Is better than
three to six miles of walking every
day.
The third and perhaps most com
mon cause of snoring Is oversize. Not
necessarily overweight, but oversize,
This Is due not so much to over
eating as to unbalanced diet. If you
are oversize send a stamped envelope
bearing your address and ask for free
monograph on Reduction, which tells
how to balance your diet physiology
lcally.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Buttermilk
Is there any or much or no Acid
ophilus bacillus In ordinary butter
milk? (A. L. A.)
Answer The souring of milk Is due
to the growth of the natural strain
of lactac acid bacllla which occur
In milk. I do not believe there Is any
advantage in using any special strain
of lactac acid bacilli. Ordinary but'
term Ilk will produce every wholesome
or remedial effect one can expect
from any artificially soured or fer
mented milk, In my opinion.
Wiseacres
School board forbids children skip
ping rope. They say it causes en
larged heart . . . (Mrs. J. D. P.)
Answer Nonsense. Rope skipping Is
fine sport and healthful exercise for
normal children. The school board
should, leave such questions to the
individual child's physician.
Ed. Note: Persons wishing to
communicate with Dr. Brady
should send letters direct to Ur.
William Brady. M. I).. 205 El Ca
mlno. Beverly II Ilia. Cat.
I
PORTLAND. Ore.. Aug. 25. (API
Decreasing supplies of butter con
tinued to be announced by the trade.
This applies equally to home central
Izer output and to out-state offer
ings In the trade. The centrallzer
output was again Increasing over the
shlpped-ln volume, although both
showed a decrease during the week.
Loss of out-state offerings was some
what greater than curtailment of lo
cal churning.
Somewhat of a flurry Is developing
In the butterfat market and In many
instances premiums were being freely
offered and paid over what the code
calla for. This suggested an Increas
ing demand.
t
Kirk Prather, candidate for the
Democratic nomination for governor
of Kansas, toured the state in an air
plane. 20c
Anytime
Children 10c
TODAY
AND
MONDAY
Continuous .Shown 1:30 to 11
Master of the Destinies
of Hundreds
ft
1
1
A I
. -..i.iw A-..-- -""8
u v ' 1
NEW YORK
DAY BY DAY
By O. O. Mclntyre
' NEW YORK, Aug. 25. An Imagin
ary visit to the old home town after
30 years: This place was always a lit
tle different. Not by ostentation. It
Just grew that
way. Five hun
dred French
dreamers founded
it. A public
quare cleared In
the turn of
Ohio river bend
and the rest like
Topsy "Just grow,
ed."
It haa the broad
1 trM-llneri streets,
:C: :?'4 houses Jutting
, ; ;:;':";::.:;';v;J the sidewalks and
steps running up
and down both sides like Versailles.
Or Barblzon. Even the very aged men
wear shoulder capes In evening chill.
No one at the depot sniggered at the
spate anyway. That must be the Mink
hotel corner.
Over a few blocks la Dog Ham men
tioned only In disapproving whispers,
Shuttered houses across the railroad
tracks. The Blazing Stump saloon
Grandma called the rouged damozels
"soiled doves." I should probably have
taken Tom Holmes' hack. But I'd like
to wander down Back street.
That atrabilious tumble-down Is
where we traded nickel novels with
the mulatto paramour or Pedro Joe,
the white-washer. Joe talked with
a foreign accent, played tunes on
peach leaves and exuded a strangling
frowst of raw whiskey and venom
ously strong tobacco. He also foretold
fortunes with spider webs.
Down a short way, Banker Henklng's
home with cupola, dark-trimmed li
brary and the town's first port co
chere. On the corner the forever un
finished residence of Mr. Langley, the
.Sewing Machine man who wore a flat
topped derby. It's always cool on Back
street, a circulating wind swirling
through the hollows of the erek. This
little two-storied brick In the next
block Is where The Only Girl lived.
The saggy hammock stretched to the
thin-barked birch In the ide yard.
That's where on moonlight nights I
gave "Over the Waves" thata on ,he
mandolin. Was I & cavalier?
Next the school house square with
Its high iron fence. And the depress
ing bell with Ita dolorous ding-dong.
How I hated It. Our valiant truant
officer. Incidentally and quite appro
priately, waa named Bratt. In the
squalid shack beyond, lived Mr. Can
terbury. Yell "Sardines I" and he'd
chase you until exhausted. We never
knew why. Over the sharp drop of
Academy Hill the ol' swimmln hole
with the fallen oak across It. Last
one In Is a blah, blah, blah. Yoo hoo.
Skinny, watch me floatl
Some subtle essayist Christopher
Morley Is my choice should beglam
our the old-time livery stable. The
dark, creaky stairs, the lamp chimney
blackened up one side and the de
lightfully mixed aromas of the har
ness room. McCormack's! On the
scales, outside Monk Welch, the host
ler, gave me my first slice of chewing
tobacco. It tasted licoricey. The world
wobbled In aqua-marine shimmer.
Gen House, of the Old Reliable Insur
ance Agency, led me trembling In ter
ror home. I told Grandma I had eat
en too many paw-paws.
No street not even Unter den Lin- j
den or Champs Elyseea will ever
compare to our Court. It was the cap!-
tal of Boyvllle when the world was
as the lawyer around
whom a city's vices and
virtues revolved
with BEBE
DANS ELS,
DORIS KENYON,
Revealing the private life, the
loves, the ambitions and the
burning confidence or a man
who tried to climb beyond his
reach.
ALSO
Strange A It Seems
Pictorial News
I J
Wa1fcaslalsiMliiifaiJiiiiiiiial
corduroyed and there seemed an ans
wer to everything. The frame cot
tage second from the corner was
home. Across the street lived Aaron
Frank, stock dealer who owned Star
light the black Arabian stallion. Also
his sisters Nettle and Rorle. Along
Court I learned to ride a bicycle no
hand, walk on my hands and flute
sadly like a Chicamougua bull frog.
In that Jerry-built coal shed I set
holding a candle the night long while
good dog Clay suffered the ripping
anguish of ground glass poisoning.
Poor, brave Clayl
BOYS DEFY DEATH
10 WE!
POTTSTOWN, Pa., Aug. 25. (AP)
A Reading company express train
ground to a stop, within 60 feet of
three boys lying with their heads on
the rails.
The boys Jumped up, thumbed
their ncses at the engineer and fled
but not quite fast enough.
It waa all a "Joke," Donald Rogers
15, Thomas Ibach 16, and Charles
James 14, told Squire Otto Moyer of
Royersford.
(Conllnueo irom Page One)
delicate position In his race for the
speakership. He happens to be chair
man of the congressional campaign
committee and is In a position to
favor democrats who would vote for
him for speaker. He will nd"t do it,
of course, but there may be some
trouble about it.
There has been a lot of Just and
unjust criticism on the Inside against
Byrns for taking the campaign Job
while he was floor leader. The secret
reason he took It was to keep a cer
tain democratic representative from
getting It. And It Is well he did. for
the man who would have received the
Job haa already been defeated In the
primaries.
Commerce Secretary Roper knows
how to hold press conferences. When
there was no news the other day, he
served watermelons.
The new dealers privately refer to
the Liberty league as being composed
of "two ex-democrats, two ex-repub-
llcans and an angel."
I Vs I
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ALWAYS AS
COOL
AS AN OCEAN BREEZE
Starting Today For 3 Big Days
Continuous Shows Today 1:45 P. M. to 11:00 P. M.
THE STAR: JOAN CRAWFORD
THE LEADING-MAN: FRANCHET TONE
THE DIRECTOR: CLARENCE BROWN
THE AUTHOR: VINA DELMAR
' THE RESULT: THE YEAR'S BEST PICTURE)
No one hut Inv.h f ' -j ' '
Jo.in could brine V " .'' J f" Jf '
so thrllllntiv nt V.f jP 1 1
Hie Ihe heroine of ... .7 ... , $ uf
Vina Delmar's fa.- ? -dr 1
rlnallur L 1 h e r t jr fct. . i " X lttjlsl ,
Mntntlne serial! , '""
SIMM III ISIISai,lsJSW
f. --iJMCTaft.VUsVtV 2H.'rttU21a'ielJ-
svr .1
ajsasMaiaaj
Flight o Time
(Medrord and Jackson County
History from the File ot The
.Mall Tribune of U and 10 Xtmn
'
TEN YKARS AGO TODAY
August 26, 1924
(It waa Wednesday
The Kentucky Ranger Quartet, af
ter "singing all summer at Crater
Lake park." returned to the blue grass
country.
Bad loans hit state school fund.
Chicago prosecutor brands Loeb
and Leopold, youthful thrill alayera
of a 14-year-old boy, "a couple of
college smart-alecks who slew for
gold, though they had plenty, and
seek to save their necks with the
plea they possess transitory manias."
Hottest weather of the year Is ex
perienced with mercury going to 10i
degrees. y
Two girls 14 and 18 yeads old
from a nearby town are detained by
the police for "wandering around at
2 a. m."
"Queen of County Fair'
proposed.
contest
TWENTY YEARS AOO TODAY
August 26. 1014
(It was Thursday)
Thunder and lightning storm sweeps
the valley and puts the electric ser
vice' out of commission for 15 min
utes. R. N. Foster and W. F. Qulsenbury
and families returned from an auto
trip to Klamath Falls.
Mrs. Dick Antle returns from a
two months' visit In Ohio.
Reginald H. Parsons of the Hill
crest orchards receives a letter from
Switzerland describing the war hard
ships there.
Ten million Russian soldiers march
ing on German frontier and kaiser
forces claim a victory on the western
front.
window glass We sell window
glass and will replace your broken
window reasonably, rrow bridge Can
met Works.
ALL DIMENSIONS
LARGE STOCKS
Big Pines
LUMBER CO.
PHONE 1
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