Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 07, 1952, Image 9

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    Local and
' Troop To Mt The Ladies
Mounted troop will have their
regular business meeting at the
clubhouse, at 8 p. m. Tuesday,
July 8.
Surgtry Patient William
Lentz, district manager lor
Beneficial Hospital plan, is a
surgery patient at Sacred Heart
hospital.
Vacation Ends Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Prentice, 517 Newtown,
returned Monday from a week's
vacation to Portland and Cen-
tralia. Wash.
Meet at Courthouse Elta
Duel Hubbs tent, Daughters of
Union Veterans of the Civil War,
will meet at the Courthouse
auditorium, at 2 p.m., Tuesday,
July 8.
Rharsal Called The Eve
Prentice Accordion band will
have a special rehearsal at 7
p.m. Monday, July 7, at the
studio 517 Newtown street. The
band will practice for their part
in the parade and afternoon
program in the Lily show at
Brookings, Ore., Sunday, July
13.
Mling Cancalad The Jack
son county Disabled American
Veterans chapter and auxiliary
meeting scheduled for Tuesday,
July 8 has been canceled. Mrs.
Warren Godard, 524 North Riv
erside avenue, auxiliary com
mander, has called an executive
meeting to be held at her home
at 8 p. m. Tuesday, July 8.
.
Completes School J. Rich
ard Zimmers, Yn. SA, has com
pleted Navy yeoman school at
San Diego, Calif., and is visiting
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. R.
Zimmers, 524 Fairmount street.
He has been assigned to the
USS Zelima at Oakland, Calif.
Zimmers was graduated from
Medford high school in 1950
and enlisted in the Navy in De
cember 1951.
Plan Exhibit Mrs.' Leah
Allen, Portland, will give a wea
ving demonstration and exhibit
hand-woven materials at a
meeting set for Wednesday, May
9, at Girls Community club. The
sponsoring group is Rogue Val
ley Handweavers' guild. The ex
hibition will open at 7 p.m. and
a meeting with the weaving
demonstration will be at 8 p.m.
Anyone interested in waving is
lnvitd to attnd.
DRIVE 1 13
theatre
ENDS TONIGHT
Wf TYtONf fk ANN f MKHAil
Power-BlythRennie
JorgetYou
Technicolor mmmmmmm
PLUS
NEWS - CARTOONS
Gates Open 7:00 it Show, Dusk
99 Vrr. JSrvm
Speciaivy
announcement
to our
customers!
Our store will be dosed all day -Tuesday
July 8th, in preparation
for Medford's greatest
Watch for our ad in tomorrow's paper!
Buster Brown Shoe Store
15 South Central Fluhrer Building
Personal
Swimming Parry Sat Mem
bers of Howard 4-H club will
bold a swimming party and pot
luck supper at 6 p. m. Tuesday,
July 8 at Hawthorne Park.
Emergency Appendectomy
F. S. Janosky, Jacksonville,
was taken to Osteopathic hospi
tal for an emergency appendect
omy Sunday morning, hospital
attendants reported.. Two other
surgery patients Monday were
Mrs. Bill H. Blood, 345 North
Bartlett street, and Gilbert
Craft, 1165 Woodrow lane:
On Way Home Sgt. Walter
K. Snook, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Snook, Central Point, is
on his way home after serving
11 months in Korea with the
First Marine Division. Sergeant
Snook enlisted in the Marine
Corps in February, 1951, and
has served in a weapons com
pany and later in HQ company.
Firemen Open Room Fire
men were caled to open a room
in which the three-year-old
daughter of Mrs. M. J. Penning
ton, 430 North Grape street, had
been accidently locked, at 4 p.
m. Sunday, the fire department
reported. They placed a ladder
to a window, and gained en
trance to the room to open the
door.
Army Promotion Promot
ed to corporal recently while
serving with the 25th Infantry
Division in eastern Korea was
Angel S. Chevaz, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Angel Chavez, 2 Clark
street, Medford, Ore. Corporal
Chavez is now on leave after
spending 10 months in Korea.
A wireman in the 35th Infantry
regiment s 1st Battalion Head
quarters, Corporal Chavez en
tered the Army in April, 1951,
after attending Medford high
school.
Infantry Man Graduates
Sgt. Harold A. Kingery, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Kingery, Eagle
Point, Ore., graduated recently
from the 45th Infantry division's
replacement training school in
Korea, an Army press release
stated. An 81-mm. mortarman in
Company H of the 179th Regi
mental Combat team, Sgt. King
ery entered the Army in Oct
ober, 1950. The school is to or
ientate new arrivals on their
Korea assignments, and re
train veterans for new positions
in their units.
Hospital Patients Two-year
old Joyce Mosby, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Mosby, Ea
gle Point, was a medical patient
at Sacred Heart hospital, Mon
day, hospital attendants report
ed. Other medical patients were
Heltzle Edmondson, Canyon
ville, Ore.; Mrs. Edward Mc
Cray, 57 Summit avenue, and
returning for further treatment
was 7-year-old Coleen , Barr,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fran
cis Barr, 48 North Orange
street. A surgery patient was
Robert Schott, 139 White Oak
street.
Marine Promoted James
M. Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. A. Smith, Gold Hill, was
promoted July 3 to staff ser
geant in the U. S. Marine Corps,
a military. press release report
ed. Sergeant Smith will return
home August 1, after serving
four years in the Marines. Upon
completion of his training
course, he was detailed with
duty on the USS Sarasota which
spent seven months in the Pan
ama Canal Zone. Since last Sep
tember Sergeant Smith has been
assigned to the Embarkation
section of Headquarters battal
ion, Second Marine division,
Camp Lejeune, N. C.
WEATHER
By United Press
North California: Fair Mon
day and Tuesday.
1
llorthwesiern Dams
Money Cut in Bill
Stalled in Congress
Washington (U.R) A $584,-
061,600 bill to finance river and
harbor improvement and flood
control projects during this fis
cal year was snagged in Con
press Monday in a dispute over
appropriations for a dam in
Georgia and South Carolina.
The bill, reported out by the
Senate-House conferees had in
cluded funds for seven projects
in( the Pacific northwest before
Sen. Burnet R. Maybank (D
S.C.) insisted that the bill be re
turned to the conference com
mittee. Threatening a filibuster,
Maybank and Sen. Olin D. John
ston, another South Carolina
lawmaker, succeeded in forcing
Senate rejection of the bill and
sent it back to committee for the
third time.
Northwest Sums Cut
Here are the amounts author
ized for Pacific Northwest pro
jects in the stalled bill, compar
ed with amounts originally
budgeted:
Dams in Oregon: The Dalles
$20,000,000, down from $37,-
500,000; McNary $63,000,000,
down, from $66,000,000; Lookout
Point $16,625,000, down from
$17,250,000; Detroit $10,350,
000, down from $10,700,000;
Willamette river bank protec
tion $400,000, the same
amount budgeted.
Dams in Washington: Chief
Joseplv $15,000,000, down from
$25,000,000; Ice Harbor no
funds authorized though $5,000,
000 had been budgeted for this
new project.
Albeni Falls, Ida. $7,000,000,
down from $8,100,000.
Obituary
ELVIN C. SURIG
Funeral services for Elvin C.
Surig, who died Friday at Camp
White, , will be held in Conger-
Morris chapel Tuesday at 1 pjn.,
with Chaplain Henry. W. Ander
son officiating. The remains will
be sent to Bellingham, Wash.,
for final interment.
Mr. Surig was born Oct. 26,
1893, in Colville, Wash. He
served in the U. S. Navy during
World War I from December
12, 1917,'to September 10, 1919.
He is survived by two broth
ers and two sisters, in Washing
ton.
SAMPLES INFANT
Graveside services for the in
fant daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Forrest Samples, Central Point,
who died Sunday, will be held
Tuesday at 1:45 p.m., in Siskiyou
Memorial park, with the Rev.
Shelvy Anglemeyer officiating.
In addition to the parents, the
baby is survived by a brother,
Dennis; and grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles L. Smith, Med
ford. ALEXANDER NICHOLSON
Alexander Nicholson, 79, of
815 North Central avenue, died
yesterday in a local hospital.
Conger-Morris funeral home is
in charge of funeral arrange
ments.
MAY KELLOGG GREEN
Funeral services for Mrs. May
Kellogg Green, 75, who died Sat
urday after a prolonged illness,
will be held at Perl funeral
home at 2 p.m. Tuesday.
The Rev. George R. V. Bolster,
rector of Saint Mark's Episcopal
church, will officiate. Interment
will be in Siskiyou Memorial
park.
Mrs. Green was born at Gol-
dendale, Wash., May 6, 1887.
She has been a Medford resident
for 52 years, living with her sis
ter, Mrs. Nettie B. Antle, 127
North Ivy street, in recent years
Other survivors include a broth
er, E. V. Kellogg, Medford; a sis
ter, Mrs. Charles Stacy, Los An
geles, Calif., and several neph
ews and nieces. :
CECIL M. MC DONALD
Cecil Miles McDonald, 52,
died suddenly from a heart ail
ment at his home Sunday. He
has lived in Medford for three
years at route 1, box 311 A.
Funeral services will be held
at Zion Lutheran church, Fourth
street and Oakdale avenue, at 2
p.m. Wednesday,' with the Rev
G. Herbert Hillerman officiat
ing. Perl funeral home is in
charge of arrangements.
Mr. McDonald was born at
Inkstcr, N. D., June 15, 1900. He
and Mrs. McDonald lived in
Portland before moving here
He was president -of the local
barbers' association and a mem
ber of Zion Lutheran church and
Palestine Masonic lodge in Port
land.
He is survived by his wife,
Katherine; two daughters, Mary
lin Mae, Medford, and Mrs.
Harriett Anderson, Cour d 'Alene,
Idaho; three sons, James Orval
Kenneth and Omar; two step
daughters, Mr. Anne Gilbert,
Medford, and Mrs. ' Jeanette
Christensen, Portland; his moth
er, Mrs. Ethyl McDonald, Aene
as, Wash., two brothers, Irwin,
Okinawa, and Nelson, Aeneas,
Wash.; two sisters, Mrs. Pete
Carder, Tacoma. and Mrs. Marie
Yoder, North Dakota; and 13
grandchildren.
Among the permanent exhibits
in the exhibition hall -of the Li
brary of Congress at Washington,
D. C. is a collection of flutes
L' PACE GIRL Pat Priest, 15, of
f girl for the second time at the
She holds some of the state banners. Pat is the daughter of Mrs.
Roy Priest, Republican national commitjeewoman from Utah.
Glimmer of Hope In
Peace Negotiations
In Red Prisoner Hint
By HOMER JENKS
United Press Corespondent
There is a glimmer of hope in
the long-deadlocked Korean
truce negotiations.
The Communists for the first
time have hinted they are willing
to compromise on the sole is
sue blocking an armistice
whether Korean and Chinese
war prisoners must be returned
to the Reds against their will.
The Reds dropped a hint of
compromise last Thursday.
Then, reluctant to commit them
selves further in public, they
asked for secret sessions to dis
cuss it further. That looked as
though they might be in a bar
gaining mood, and the United
Nations consented.
Confer In Secrecy
For four days now, the two
sides have been conferring un
der a pledge of secrecy in the
big tent beside a dusty road at
Panmunjom.
Nothing has leaked out on how
the negotiations are going, but
it is clear they have reached a
crucial stage. The outcome will
determine whether there is to
be an armistice within the next
few weeks or months more of
swapped insults and frustrating
debate.
Only the paragraph relating
to repatriation of war prisoners
remains to be settled in the armi
stice argreement. The other 62
paragraphs already have been
agreed upon.
Bitter Debate
That one paragraph No. 51
in the truce pact has been the
subject of bitter debate ever
since last December 22.
It was on that date the U. N.'s
Red Adm. Ruthven E. Libby first
served notice on the Communists
that the Allies would not force
prisoners to go back to the Red
side against their will. And the
U. N. has stuck to this position
ever since.
The Communists from the be
ginning have demanded that all
prisoners be repatriated, at the
point of bayonets if necessary.
They stuck to it until last Thurs
day. Then they began hedging.
They submitted a proposal
which chief U. N. delegate Maj.
Daily Weather Report
FORECAST
Medford and vicinity: Fair and
warm and continued dry through
Tuesday. Low tonight 53. High Tues
day 95-100.
Western OreEon: Sunny ' through
Tuesday. Low tonight 48-58. High
Tuesday 8a-95 in interior, 65-75 on
coast.
LOCAL DATA
Temperature a year ago today:
mgnest J9; Lowest 50.
Total monthly precipitation, none.
Deficiency for the month .12 inch.
Total precipitation since September
1. 1951. 21.43 inches.
Excess for the season 4.95 inches.
Relative humidity 4:30 p.m. yester
day 23: 4:30 a.m. today 82.
Observations Taken At 4:30 A.M.,
124 Meridian Time
Hi eh Low Free.
noise
Boston
Chicago
Denver
Eureka
Havre
Klamath Falls
Los Angeles
meaiora
New York
Omaha
Phoenix
Portland
Reno
Eugene
Salt Lake
San Francisco
Seattle .. 74
Spokane 73
Washington, D.C. - 89
Yakima 79
Tomorrow
Sunrise 4:43 a.m. Sunset 7:48 p.m.
Only municipally owned light
house in the world chartered by
a national government is the
miniature lighthouse of San
Francisco's Yacht harbor.
ALUMINUM AWNINGS
& WINDOW SCREENS
Lest a lifetime Fret Estimates
Home Owners Specialties
.Phone 7231 Ashland er
Medford 3-3484
7R AS
91 71
94 72
82 45 .72
61 S3
62 440
79 53
AO 57
1 91 70
100 66 1.17
104 77
. 82 48
91 51
82 51
87 59
73 54
52
50
73
43
Salt Lake City, U., wffl be a page
Republican convention in Chicago.
Gen. William K. Harrison cau
tiously said "may be important
and may not be."
Another Allied spokesman said
the proposal was "loaded with
gimmicks."
The text was not announced,
but the. proposal seemed to boil
down to this:
Proposal Outlined
"Let's compile new lists of
prisoners, grouping them by na
tionality. Then we're willing to
let all prisoners listed as South
Koreans who joined our Army
and then were captured by you
choose whether to stay on the
Allied side or return to us.
"But all other prisoners, be
they North Koreans, Chinese or
United Nations, must be return
ed to their respective sides."
This marked the first time the
Reds have accepted even a lim
ited conception of voluntary re
patriation, but it didn't go any
where near far enough to sat
isfy the U. N.'s demand that all
prisoners be given the right to
refuse to go home.
Wall Street
New . York (U.R) Republican
antics at their Chicago conven
tion Monday detracted interest
from the stock market. Transac
tions fell off to their lowest level
since June 17t
Wall Streeters, remembering
their poor guess in 1948, didn't
try to predict the outcome of the
convention. They read the dis
patches with apparent interest,
however and remained aloof
from the market.
The main body of stocks held
in a fractional area. Steels ig
nored an unsettled strike enter
ing its sixth week and held
steady. Motors were steady to
easier. Rails were mostly lower.
Dow-Jones closing stock av
erages: 30 industrials 274.20 off
0.75; 20 railroads 101.44 off 0.92;
15 utilities 49.72 unchanged; 65
stocks 105.71 off 0.44.
Sales Monday approximated
1,080,000 shares compared with
1,150,000 shares traded Thurs
day.. Today's closing prices on se
lected stocks:
American T & T i53
Anaconda 45
Chrysler 77
Curtiss Wright 8V2
General Electric 63
General Motors
Montgomery Ward 64
Penn. R. R 20 Va
Penney, J. C 70Vi
Radio : 26 V4
Southern Co 14
Southern Pacific 83
S. Oil of Calif 60y8
Texas . Gulf Sulphur 113
Transamerica 25
United Aircraft 32
U. S. Rubber 26V
U. S. Steel 39
Youngstown ........1 46
KEEP OREGON GREEN
MEDFORD
HOTEL
BREAKFAST - LUNCH
DINNERS
7 A.M. to 2 P.M.
5:30 to 9 P.M.
Bring the Children
They Are Always Welcome
FREE PARKING
Monday, July 7, 1952
Oregon Delegation
At Chicago Ready
For Fight For Ike
Chicago (U.R) Oregon's
full 18-man, Eisenhower-pledged
delegation to the Republican Na
tional convention was on the
convention floor in International
Amphitheater here Monday,
ready to "go down the line" for
the general.
State Sen. Howard C. Belton,
Canby, a member of the dele
gation, said "we will stay with
the general until released by
him."
Most, if not all, of the dele
gation were expecjed to support
a motion by Sen. Henry Cabot
Lodge, Jr., Eisenhower's floor
manager, to prohibit contested
delegates from voting on the
seating of other contested dele
gates. The delegation met Sunday
to map out convention voting
plans after a breakfast meet
ing attended by Sen. Robert A.
Taft. t
State Sen. William E. Walsh,
Coos Bay, a member of the cru
cial Credentials committee of
the convention, told the delega
tion the tactics employed by
Taft forces in voting most of
the contested delegates to Taft,
have, in his opinion, gained del
egates for Eisenhower.
Walsh said "this experience
on contests from the South con
vinces me more than ever that
in Oregon we have the soundest
election system."
Other members of the dele
gation said they were more en
thusiastic than ever over their
state's primary election system
of binding delegates to the
choice of the voters.
BIRTHS
STEELE To Mr. and Mrs.
John, 107 Genessee street, Med
ford, July 6, 1952, a girl, 8V
lbs., at Osteopathic hospital.
ALSUP To Mr. and Mrs.
Keith, Ideal court, Medford, July
7, 1952, a boy, 7 lbs. at Com
munity hospital.
GREEN To Mr. and Mrs.
William, 135 Tripp street, Med
ford, July 7, 1952, a girl, 6 lbs.,
at Community hospital.
Livestock
PorUand (U.P.I Cattle 600: mar.
ket uneven; four loads good and
choice fed steers S33.50-34.50: few
good steers $32.50; commercial grass
steers S28; part load good and choice
fed heifers 532-33: load commercial
and good grass heifers $30; utility
commercial cows $19-20; canners and
cutters $15.50-18: few utility and
commercial bulls $26-28.
Calves 100: market active, steady;
good and choice vealers $32-34; utility
and commercial grades S2U-JU.
Hogs 650; market active: choice jno
1 and 2 butchers $22.75-23.50: heavier
and lighter weights $20.50-22: choice
350-550 10. sows sib.ou-iti; lew good
feeder pigs $21.
Sheep 1000; good to prime spring
lambs mostly $25.50; one large lot Mt.
Adams, Wash., lambs $26: few good
$76-77 lb. feeder pigs $21.75; odd good
slaughter ewes $6-7.
San Francisco (U.P.) Cattle 400:
commercial slaughter steers $27.50;
canner and cutter cows 514-17.50;
commercial and good bulls $24-20.
Calves 50; no early sales.
Hoes 200: choice No. 1 and 2 butch
ers S22.75; choice sows over 400 lbs..
$15.50-16.
bheep 4a00; no early sales.
Portland Produce
Portland (U.P.) Prices were un
changed to one cent lower for eggs
on the Portland wholesale dairy mar
ket Monday.
Butter: To retailers aa grade
prints 77c lb.; cartons 78c: A prints
77c; cartons .78c; B prints 74c lb.
Eggs: To retailers Grade AA large
62c doz.; A large 56-57c doz.; AA me
dium 57c doz.; A medium 5o-5bc doz.:
A smalls. 34-36c doz.: cartons 3c addi
tional.
Cheese: To retailers A grade Ched
dar, Oregon single, 47-5 lc lb.: 5-lb.
loaves 52-55c: premium brands to
58 'ic for single wheels and 61 'be for
5-lb. loaves; processed American
chese, 5-lb. loaves 46 ','2-47 lie.
harm Market
First mid-Columbia district toma
toes were S3.25-3.50 a 18-20 lb. flat
on the East Side Farmers' market
Monday; Freewater tomatoes were
S5.50-6 for 25 lb. lugs of No. 1 grade:
first mid-Columbia sweet corn was
mostly $3.50 a 5-dozen ear crate;
Yakima Tilton and Ryland variety
apricots sold at $2 25-2.75 a 30-lb.
pear box; Transparent apples from
Yakima and Maryhill sold at $3-3.50
a 35-lb. box: first Boardman potatoes
went at around $6-6.25 a hundred
weight.
MIGHTIEST
OF
MOTION
PICTURES!
CECIL B-DEMlLLE'S
Coming Holly
A A AAA' A AAA
As We Live
PATIENCE. TACT ARE
NEEDED WITH ELDERLY
When people reach old age,
they need special handling. You
cannot treat them as you would
a younger person because their
mental makeup is not that of a
younger person. This is the prob
lem that is bothering this young
woman.
Q. My mother is a nervous,
high - strung woman. When
ever my sister comes to tee her
there is a heated argument. I
admit our mother is usually
wrong but my sister, even
when she saw our mother was
becoming upset and losing
control of herself, wouldn't
;, slop, even when my Mother
told her to. I can't seem to
make my sister understand
that she tho'uld end the argu
ments when she sees our mo
ther getting so upset. My
sister always has to have the
last word. Am I right in say
ing that we should have pa
tience with her?"
A. Everyone who comes in
contact with your mother or any
elderly person should have pa
tience. It takes
more than that
to handle
them proper
ly. You must
have tact, un
d e r standing,
and a high de
gree of kind
ness. As people
begin to go
downhill phys
Dr. Hurlock
ically, as they invariably do with
advancing age, they go down hill
mentally too." Their ability to
reason, to remember, and to be
logical in their" thinking de
teriorates. Under such conditions, you
really cannot argue with them.
You must let them call black
white, if they want to do so. And
under no circumstances should
you contradict them and try to
prove that white is white. This
will only upset them and when
they are upset, their thinking
becomes even more muddled
than before.
Try to persuade your sister
that she is being both unkind
and unfair when she engages in
an argument with your mother.
Her contacts should be a source
of pleasure to the old lady.
When she is arguing with a
younger person, your sister can
have the last word if that is im
portant to her and if it gives
her satisfaction. But with a per
son your mother's age, it is a dif
ferent story. Try to convince her
that if she cannot -stop argu
ments, the kindest thing she
Long-Time Resident
Of Valley Dies Friday
Ashland Mrs. T. L. Powell,
a long-time Rogue valley resi
dent, died here Friday after an
illness of more than five years.
Mrs. Powell was born in Cali
fornia but has lived most of her
life in Ashland. She was mar
ried in 1895 to Thaddeus L.
Powell, Jacksonville.
Survivors include her hus
band; two daughters, Mrs. Hazel
Gunter and Mrs. Ethel Clary,
both of Ashland; nine grandchil
dren, and seven great grandchil
dren. Services will be conducted
Tuesday at the Litwiller funeral
chapel. Interment will be at
Mountain View cemetery.
IN COOL
COMFORT
on UNITED AIR LINES
Northbound Mainlinera leavo at
7:10 A.M., 10:45 A.NL
and 4:40 P.M.
PORTLAND . . 2'4 hrs.
SEATTLE .... 37i hrs.
Southbound Mainlinera loevo at
10:05 A.M. end 5:25 P.m.
SAN FRANCISCO 3 hrs.
LOS ANGELES . SV4 hrs.
Airport Torminal. Call 2-7111
er an authorized travol ogont.
Alti LINES
ONI Or THf SCHfDUUD
AIKUNIS OF THf V. 5.
1
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE NINE
By ELIZABETH HURLOCK, PH.D.
could do would to give up her
visits to your mother. As things
now stand, her visits bring more
harm than good.
If yotl have a personal prob
lem, write Elizabeth Hurlock in
care of this newspaper.
Features Corp.)
(Copyright 1952, General
UK
PHONE
2-6424
ENDS TOMORROW!
RONALO
REAGAN
FRANK
10VEJ0Y J?
Now!
m ENDS TOMORROW!
I
ENDS TONIGHT!
"My Greatest Performonce!" IM
sum. . .
aiFTOH WcBB
lit m at
MYUU L0Y
JEANNE
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21 or
PLUS
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A Free Dish To
EVERY LADY
Gates Open at 6:30
Show at 8:15 '
t
ASHLAND
Gene Kelly
y Donald O'Conner
ri .DEBSIE RtTNULMS
in
Singing in .
The Rain"
TTI
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COREY Hp .
TTFYTT!) today
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