Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, March 31, 1955, Image 4

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    FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
MedpordJtribuxi
"tveryioa w auuuiern Oregon
Reads The Mail Tribune"
Published Daily Except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO.
37-29 North Fir St. Phone 2-6141
ROBERT W. RL'HL. Editor
H.hB GREY. Advertising Manager
E. C. FERGUSON. Managing Editor
ERIC ALLEN JR.. City Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN. Telegraoh Editor
RICHARD JEWETT. Sports Editor
OLIVE STARCHER. Society Editor
JACK JACKSON. Sundav Editor
GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second class matter at
Medford. Oregon, under Act of
March 3. 1897
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Daiy and Sunday One year $12.00
Daily and Sunday Six months 650
Daily and Sunday Three mos 3.50
Daily and Sunday One month 1.25
Sunday Only One year $3.50.
By Carrier In Advance Medford.
Ashland. Central Point. Eagle Point,
Jacksonville. Gold Hill. Phoenix,
Shady Cove. Rogue River. Talent,
and on motor routes:
Daily and Sunday One year 115 00
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Carrier and Dealers 5c per copy
All Terms Cash In Advance
Official Paper of the City ot Medford
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WEST-HOLL1DAY COMPANY. INC.
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troit. San Francisco. Los Angeles.
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NATIONAL EDITOIIAt
assocTatiIon
lO" NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS
ASSOCIATION
Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20. 30 and
10 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
March 31, 1945
(It was Sunday)
Jackson county men enlisting
in the Navy include Delbert
Clark, Herbert Gifford, Wayne
Dye, George Goolsby, John
"Wood, and Frank Hall.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: Moscow
hears Messrs. Hitler, Himmler,
and Mussolini plan to seek ref
uge in Japan.. This would serve
them right, but is a bit more
punishment than Japan has com
ing. 20 YEARS AGO
March 31, 1935
(It was Monday) ..
H. E. Armstrong and J. V.
Watson finish in tie for Medford
Elks club billiards championship
and slate playoff match.
Medford firemen give farewell
party for Fire Chief and Mrs.
Roy Elliott, who are leaving on
a six-weeks trip to the midwest.
30 YEARS AGO
March 31, 1925
(It was Wednesday)
Floyd C. Young, frost warning
expert, speaker at Medford Ki
wanis club banquet.
Peter Oard, ranger at Crater
Lcke National park, reports
snow depth is 18 feet at Crater
Lake rim and 11 feet at Annie
Spring.
40 YEARS AGO
March 31, 1915
(It was Wednesday)
Medford High school debate
team, composed of F. C. Purkey
pile, Hugo Lundberg and Earl
Hubbard, defeated by Bandon
high school in state meet being
conducted at Eugene.
From them Local and Person
al column: Earl Fisher of the
Gates garage has instituted a
new Ford service whereby an
auto is rented out by the hour
the same as a horse and buggy.
The owner furnishes everything
but a driver. By this means
people with auto driving incli
nations but with no machine can
be accommodated.
What's the Answer?
(Can You Get 4 of the 7?)
Copr. 1955. Editorial Research Report
1. The Soviet government
does or doesn't allow a U. S.
Catholic priest to hold religious
services in Moscow now?
2. Are there more women
members of the U. S. Congress
or of the British House of Com
mons, or the same number in
each?
3. Most of the 48 states do or
don't require tests for venereal
disease before issuing marriage
licenses?
4. St. Helena, where Napoleon
died in exile, is in the North
Atlantic, South Atlantic, Medi
terranean or Indian ocean?
5. Revenues from submerged
oil lands under the federal gov
ernment are earmarked for edu
cation in states; right or wrong?
6. Most first-class letters are
business or personal, or it i
about half and half?
7. The U.S. bought the Virgin
Islands from Napoleon of France
early in the 19th century; right
or wrong?
'.The Answers: . 1. Doesn'i. 2.
Several mors in Commons. 3.
Most do. 4. South Atlantic. 5.
Wrong. 6. Most are business.
7. Wrong, it was from Denmark
in the 20th century.
MAIL TRIBUNE
Is Morse a "Grasshopper"?
When it comes to calling Senator Morse names we
thought we had heard everything.
But the old reliable Oregonian comes up with
something new. It calls the senior Senator from Ore
gon a "grass-hopper."
That is, the former dean of the Oregon Law
School is as hard to pin down on any issue, as it is
to "catch a grasshopper in a thimble."
This is particularly true, says the Portland paper,
regarding the power issue. It seems that in an address
at The Dalles a few nights ago Senator Morse "patted
himself on the back" for his opposition to the con
struction of the Priest Rapids dam in the state of
Washington, when that was the only partnership
power proposal cleared by the congress at the last
session.
Ok, where is the inconsistency?
Senator Morse, 'we believe, has always opposed
the administration's partnership program of power
development. The fact that in spite of his opposition
the proposal was passed, hardly convicts him of in
consistency. Quite the reverse in fact. Nor does his
opposition to the Cougar and Green Peter dams.
They too are partnership proposals between the
government and the private power companies.
They may be as desirable as the Oregonian main
tains. Or they may not be. But to oppose them was
the only thing Senator Morse could do, consistent
with his opposition to any such arrangement, as a
proper solution of the power problem in the north
west. DUT our highly respected Portland contemporary
can't see this. ' It . claims in fact the senatorial
"grasshopper" doesn't stand still long enough for
even his "loyal supporters" to tell where he stands,
and what are his motivations.
Well, as stated this is surely something NEW,
as far as Senator Morse is concerned.
We have heard Senator Morse called all sorts of
things, but never before heard even his worst enemy
express any doubt as to WHERE he stands on the
power issue or any other important national issue,
ANYwhere or ANYtime.
In fact this quality of steadfastness and out
spoken frankness, has been one of the chief counts
against our senator and controversial representative
in the Upper House.
He has been too frank, and expressed his con
victions on all sorts of subjects too many times, to
suit most of his critics. And incidently some of his
friends. They have compla
doubt as to where he stood, but because of the lack
of any doubt, and the fact that they disagreed with
him' as he kept on stating with courage and clarity
just what his position was and is.
THE Mail Tribune has observed the characters and
careers of many representatives of this state, at
home and outside, and with the possible exception
of the late Governor Martin, there have been none
to even come close to Wayne Morse in the matter
of taking a definite stand on every issue of any
importance and in free argument meeting all-comers
who might agree or disagree with him.
'
THIS isn't, of course, to imply ihat he has always
uccii ngnu -uomg iiuuiau lie naa aiiu auimto lie
has made mistakes and been wrong. But he HAS
always faced the music whether it has been in har
mony with his convictions or against them, and ex
plained to his constituents exactly why he had come
to the conclusions he had reached.
We don't believe there is a voter in the state,
regardless of party who, having had any dealings
with Senator Morse in this direction, would deny the
truth of this statement.
They might disagree violently with the mans
political beliefs, but we can't believe there would
be any who would claim there was any doubt about
what those beliefs were and why, after they had
talked with him.
IN fact this quality has been the main source of
Senator Morse's strength, and also a source of
weakness, from the standpoint of votes and political
expediency. For the senior senator has been too eager
to lead with his chin at times when keeping a discreet
silence would have been far more desirable from "a
political standpoint.
However in this matter as in so many others
we can't have our cake and eat it too. We; can't
have a person in public office who not only has
strong convictions about what is best for his country,
but insists upon expressing and explaining them far
and wide and AT THE SAME TIME have a very
discreet, affable and diplomatic representative who
makes a strong point of shaking hands, smacking
the babies, and saying nothing of a controversial
nature if it can possibly be avoided.
We prefer the Morse type, as we have often
stated. Some of our readers don't as they have even
more often stated.
Which is all to be expected.
But we never did expect to hear the Oregonian
or any other opponent of the senior Senator, accuse
him of being the grasshopper type and an irrespon
sible and unpredictable grasshopper at that.
For that is so clearly what he ISN'T. R4W.R.
Silicon Crystals At New
Schenectady, N. Y. (U.R)
General Electric Company re
search scientists have reached a
new level, of perfection in the
production of pure silicon cryst
als, a material useful for transis
tors, those tiny electronic de
vices that can Be made to do the
work of vacuum tubes.
Silicon, as contained in com
Thursday, March 31, IS55
- ned not because of any
Perfection
mon sand, is one of the most
abundant elements. But in its
pure state it is a rare and in
valuable materkl. The GE scien
tists have learned to produce
sizeable amounts of the crystals
of near-perfect purity. They ex
pect it may perform better in
certain transistors than the
more common germanium.
Ellsworth Planning
Trip To District
Early During April
By CONGRESSMAN
HARRIS ELLSWORTH
Washington, D. C. Unless
there is a last minute change of
schedule, I expect to spend a few
days in Oregon the first week in
April. There is a rather im
portant reason under the head
ing of "official business" why I
need to spend a few days in
our Congressional District right
now. I have just learned from
the Chairman of the Flood Con
trol Subcommittee of the House
Committee on Public Works that
he will set my bill H.R. 4662 for
hearing here in Washington
along about May.1. That is the
bill which, if passed by Con
gress, would make it possible for
the construction of the Green
Peter and Cougar Flood Control
Dams to be started this year.
I hope to get together in Ore
gon with the Linn county and
Lane county Flood Control Com
mittees and make plans for tes
timony to be presented at the
hearing.
Interest In Bill
Those who work in the lum
bering, plywood and logging in
dustries have a special interest
in an appropriations bill recent
ly passed by the House. The bill
makes appropriations for the
"Department of the Interior and
Related Agencies" and provides
money for timber access roads
Matter of Fact
BA CUT
Saigon, Indo-China From
behind the slatted screen that
shaded th courtyard pavilion,
with the un
earthly, silent
suddenness of
the barefooted
he came
among us like
an apparition.
Silky black
hair falling be
low his shoul
d e r s framed
his still youth
ful, strangely
Joseph Aisop
intense face.
In his loose white cotton pajamas
he seemed improbably slender.
He spoke no word, but glided
with a cat's grace to a seat at
the table: and fixed thf nartv
with a burning, deep-eyed gaze.'
in mis prosaic modern world,
such an entrance ought to have
been ludicrous. But it was the
very opposite of ludicrous, and
this fact in itself is a good index
of the difficulty of the problem
here in Indo-China.
TROM the man who made this
entrance was no cheap phony.
He was Gen. Ba Cut, veteran of
a thousand guerrilla combats,
and newly made field comman
der of the 20,000 or more armed
men of the Hoa Hao sect, and
the most inveterate and daneer-
ous enemy of the shaky govern
ment that America has been
desperately propping up here in
South Viet Nam.
Three days earlier, Ba Cut and
the other sect leaders had sent
President Neo Dinh Di pm an
ultimatum. It read, in effect,
knuckle under or get out." And
it was backed up by the private
armies of the sects, which now
possess more real military power
than the demoralized and dis
organized Vietnamese national
army:
A small group of newspaper
men had therefore made their
way southwards, over roads
clogged with aimlessly menacing
military movements, to the Hoa
Hao headquarters 'at Caivon.
npHE religious chieftain of the
--Hoa Hao is the "Sainted Fa
ther" of the peasant mystic who
invented this debased form of
Budhism. But the Hoa Hao are
also a feudal-militarv organiza
tion, not only having their own
armies but also ruling their own
provinces. And Caivon is the
stronghold of the senior Hoa Hao
warlord, mustachioed, pot bel
lied old Gen. Tran Van Soai.
Here the old man lives in a
house of many pavilions, crowd
ed to the doors with smttoons.
Mother of Pearl inlaid furniture,
life sized tinted photographs and
other art objects. Shabby but
grim looking Hoa Hao soldiers
lounge, gossip, pick their noses
and polish their guns in the
courtyards, and poultry and live
stock wander in the dusty gar
dens. Such was the setting for the
rendezvous with Ba Cut, whose
wild, magnetic power has now
forced Tran Van Soai to accent
an elder statesman's role.
fFHE problem to be discussed
was simple enough. The
French had encouraged the sects,
and had even helned to nav thoir
private armies, as a useful form
oi competition for the Communist-led
Viet Minh. But on March
1, French pay for 'the Hoa Hao,
Cao Dai and other sect tmnns
was stopped. Meanwhile their
feudal power was also threat
ened by the reform program of
American backed President Ngo
Dinh Diem. And so the sects
united to bring Ngo Dinh Diem
lo terms.
In these circumstances with
all South Indo-China in disorder,
with Viet Minh infiltration
steadily increasing, with Ho Chi
Minh continually building up his
military power in the North, Ba
-ui ana iran van Soai solemnly
in both National Forest and O
& C areas. This means that more
timber will be opened up. Acces
sible timber areas have become
more and more limited until
more roads must be built or
many logging operations and
mills will shut down.
It is a pleasure to report that
the full budget request of $24,
000,000 for Forest Service access
roads was approved. This, by
the way, is about twice as much
as was appropriated for this pur
pose annually up to about three
years ago. Since then, and I hope
my constant agitation on the sub
ject has helped bring it about,
the amounts have been in
creased. This last bill, I believe,
carries the largest appropriation
yet approved in a regular bill.
The O & C Administration will
be able to spend $2,300,000 on
access roads also. The total of
the two items will mean a vastly
improved logging road situation
in our area during the next
fiscal year.
To go along with the access
road program is an increase of
$800,000 for the Forest Service
to use in making additional tim
ber sales. The Appropriations
Committee also restored a little
more than a million dollars for
the federal-state cooperative fire
control program which had been
reduced in the budget.
By Joseph Alsop
put forward a program that
might have made sense in the
13th century.
All Southern Indo-China was
to be divided up into a system of
huge dukedoms, one for the Hoa
Hao, one for the Cao Dai and so
on. Within their dukedoms, the
power of the sects was to be un
challenged. The national army
was largely to consist of the sum
of the sects armies. And above
the dukedoms there was to be an
impotent government and a pow
erless general staff in Saigon,
with Ngo Dinh Diem at the head
of the government if he liked to
stay on, to keep the always use
ful American dollars still flow
ing in.
Ba Cut was fiercely indignant
that this singular program did
not command American support.
The leaders of the sects were the
true anti-Communists, he in
sisted. Had not they driven the
Viet Minh from their provinces?
Were not they alone close enough
to the- simple people in the vil
lages to ward off the real dan
ger to stop the Communist in
filtration at the base which the
Ngo Diem government was hope
lessly unable to halt?
A CUT was not a stupid man.
One searched in vain for the
reason for the blindness that
would meet armed communism
with primitive feudalism, until
he related his personal history
at the vast dinner that was the
climax of the meeting.
He is only 30, the son of a
landless peasant, with no more
than four years education. At
17, he vowed to fight to the
death against French rule, and
cut off one joint of his index
finger to reinforce the vow.
At 21, when the View Minh
rising also beginning, he formed
the men of his village into a
local Hoa Hao guerrilla group.
Since then, through combat, his
following has grown, continuous
ly. And now he has vowed again,
never to cut his hair until he
has upset the Geneva treaty, de
feated the Viet Minh, and united
all of Indo-China.
At the climax of the recital,
he rose at his place and showed
his wounds the double 'wound
of the bullet through the throat
fired by one of his rivals of the
sects; the fearsome double
wound of a bullet through the
lungs from the French; the
wounds in head and leg from the
Viet Minh. His strange eyes
glowed fiercely, and one sudden
ly grasped the central fact about
the man, that egoism, supersti
tion and experience have com
bined to give him the conviction
of immunity to death and cer
tainty of victory.
IT WAS curious to find such
an echo from the Asian past as
a key figure in a crisis that may
well determine the fate of more
than one great nation. One
thought at once of the "Heaven
ly King," the leader of -the
Taiping rebellion, in China, who
also thought himself immune to
death and called himself "the
younger brother of Jesus Christ."
But with hardly more than
12 months left to glue something
together that can resist the Com
munist advance in South Viet
Nam, and with the job not even
well begun, this significant ir
ruption of the irrational was also
a little discouraging.
(Copyright, 1955,
New York Herald Tribune, Inc.)
WALTONS SEEK SUPPORT
Portland U.R) Portland chap
ter of the Izaak Walton league
today sent letters to state organ- j
izations and agencies seeking
support of its "Red Hat Day"
program. The hunting safety
campaign has already been en
dorsed by the state Izaak Wal
ton league, Oregon Wildlife fed
eration, the state game commis
sion, the U. S. forest service and
other groups, chapter president
Don Statler revealed.
!n The Day's
By FRANK JENKINS
In this space yesterday, I de
scribed the city of Phoenix, in
Arizona, which in a surprisingly
short space of time grew from a
village in a hot cactus desert
to a city of near-metropolitan
rank.
I'd like to talk today of Al
buquergue, in New Mexico,
which sits also in a wide, hot
desert and is also a city of near
metropolitan rank probably a
little larger than Phoenix.
TN THE backgrounds . and
the back country of these
cities, there are interesting sim
ilarities. There are also interest
ing contrasts. ...
For example: "
Phoenix rose to its present
rank in a relatively short space
of time as time goes here
in the dreamy Spanish South
west. It took Albuquerque,
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear
the name and address of the writer
although under certain circum
stances the use of a pen name or
initial for publication is permis
sible. The Mail Tribune reserves
the right to edit all letters with an
eye to clarification and condensa
tion Letters submitted for publica
tion must not exceed 400 words.
Why?
To the Editor: There is Chris
tianity, and then there is some
thing that passes for Christianity.
How can we say that Christianity
has failed when all we practice
is a very poor substitute?
Mrs. Margarete Tokar,
716 Vz West Main st.
Why Talk With the Devil?
To the Editor: The people have
been told for thousands of years
that they must serve either the
Lord or the Devil.
The rulers of Russia want noth
ing to do with religion, so they
must be of the Devil.
I understand Great Britain,
France and the U. S. are going to
try to arrange a meeting to sit
down and talk to the Devil.
I wonder where is Hell they
think they are going to get?
Anonymous,
Talent, Oregon.
A Question Is Asked
10 ine n,aitor: l nave a ques
tion to ask of Mr. Krauss in re
gard to his letter of March 27
Mr. Krauss how do you propose
that "law" will solve the deep
rooted evils in the heart of man?
Let me illustrate my question.
We read in the March 27 Trib
une, that a Negro Navy man met
with rebuffs from real estate
agents and residents of areas in
which his family attempted to
move. Let us suppose the "law"
could provide a, home for this
Negro in that hostile neighbor
hood. Could you honestly say
that this; "law" would , create
peace and understanding in the
hearts and minds of the individ
uals involved in this precarious
situation? "Law" may tempor
arily bind the evil, but will
never destroy it. A person that
has evil intentions will always
find loopholes to the most rigid
laws, history has proven that
time and time again.
True Christianity has never
yet failed. When I say Christian
ity, I'm not particularly referring
to "churchgoers." There are
thousands of churchgoers but
alas, too few real Christians! My
interpretation of a Christian, is
an individual who knows the
reality of God, and daily lives in
the conscious presence of God.
The fruits of such a Christianity
would.be a genuine love and
service to all mankind regardless
of race, color, or creed. That
kind of Christianity would solve
the problem of the Navy man,
and it would eventually remove
the evils that are inherent in
man.
"Law" will never remove hat
red, prejudice, jealousy, and the
love of self. Where the seed of
Godly love has taken root, it
eventually chokes out the weeds
of evil. Let us wait with patience
for the precious fruit of the
earth!
Mrs. Helga Mitchell,
Rt. 1, Box 7B,
Jacksonville, Ore.
5" WSW
; ?1
Frank Morgan
I (f. " A-
CHAPEL MORTUARY
Funeral Directors
PHONE 2-8030
MEDFORD
News
named for a Spanish duke and
still calling itself the "Duke
city," some three centuries to
make the grade. It was first
seen by white men when Coro
nado made his fabulous trek up
through here in search for the
mythical Seven Cities of Cibola,
whose streets were supposed to
be paved with gold.
It should be added that for the
first two and a half of its three
centuries Albuguergue slept in
the sun, growing very little for
the simple reason that it could
grow only as fast as food could
be provided for the babies that
were born.
TN THOSE primitive two and
- a half centuries of Albuquer
que's half Indian, half Spanish
past mass production of food
was unknown and in the dry
cycles when the Rio Grande ran
low transportation facilities were
not such as to make possible
the shipping in of food from
somewhere else.
So, in those tragic years of
drought, the babies starved
along with a lot of the elders.
That held the population down.
There are still dry years and
it certainly looks now like this
is going to be one of them. But
in the meantime the miracle of
modern transportation has come
to pass and Albuquerque SHIPS
IN its food from somewhere else.
t As a matter of fact, dry years
and wet years as wet years go
here in the desert make little
difference in Albuquerque's life,
because if it had to depend on
the food produced in its imme
diate vicinity about 98 per cent
of the population would die off.
Agriculture, other than cattle
grazing, plays only a microscop
ic part in Albuquerque's eco
nomy. In the economy . of Phoenix
agriculture looms large, and
will continue to do so. I'd say
that the future of Phoenix de
pends wholly upon the amount
of water that can be found
and CONSERVED to put
more acres of land.
on
WHAT DOES keep Albuquer-
T 1 que going? (Goodness knows,
it KEEPS GOING. Every time
you see it, it is bigger and busier
than it was before.)
I swear I don't know. I've
put that question to quite a
number of New Mexicans, and
they hesitate before answering.
Then they mention the military
posts that are so numerous in
the citys vicinity. They add a
word about the Atomic Energy
Commission, which spends a lot
of money in these parts, and
points out that Albuquerque is
the business capital of New Mex
ico and New Mexico is a big
state with a lot of raw resour
ces, including oil and gas.
After that, they speak with
enthusiasm of the future of
atomic energy. New Mexico,
they say, is a great future store
house of uranium, which is al
ready adding quite a little to the
state's wealth.
They don't seem to be much
worried about the water situa
tion which enters so GREATLY
into the future of the rest of the
Southwest. One reason may be
that New Mexico never has had
much water and so has learned
to get along without it
A NYWAY one finds no pessi-
mism in Albuquerque or,
for that matter, anywhere else
in New Mexico. They're all quite
sure their state has a great fu
ture, water or no water.
About their only use for water
is for drinking and bathing pur
poses. Green lawns are so scarce
that they practically "just
ain't." Agriculture isn't a ma
jor industry. Maybe, in building
an economy in which water
plays only a minor part, New
Mexico has been smarter than
the rest of the Southwest, in
which the water situation is a
growing worry.
Baker (U.PJ The State De
partment of Geology plans to in
stall a radioassay machine here
to take care of the unexpectedly
heavy demand for assays by
uranium prospectors, Director
Hollis Dole said today.
A 4
4
Harold Snodgrass
1 KING STREET
3
HIT ' 4 '.ff A
1
1
2LJ
Mayor of Lebanon
Back From Lebanon
Lebanon, Ore. (U.R) The
mayor of Lebanon, Ore., was
back at his desk today after a
rousing reception and parade
staged Wednesday to welcome
him back from a visit to the Re
public of Lebanon.1
Mayor Ralph Scroggins was
one of seven mayors of U.S.
cities similarly named who were
invited to be guests of the tiny
Republic.
Scroggins said he was award
ed the Gold Medal of Merit,
highest honor the country could
bestow. The visit ended official
ly March 15 but the mayor and
his wife visited Egypt, Rome,
Paris and London as guests of
the president of the Republic.
, Mayor Scroggins, who arrived .
at Portland airport 5'esterday
morning by plane from New
York, was given a rousing recep
tion by Lebanon residents, in
cluding a parade through city
streets.
Portland roses, a myrtlewood
gavel, state flag and examples of
Oregon painting were among the
gifts Scroggins presented to Leb
non officials. He brought back
handmade laces and other locally-produced
objects.
- Dead line Sunday Classified is at
noon Saturday; 1 a. m. Monday for
Monday; other days 5:30 previous day.
rAdrienne'sn
NOW you CAN
Dress Up For . . .
IN
See What Your
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Will Buyl
(Plus federal tax)
Squirrel Belly Stole
Squirrel Belly Cape
Marmot Stole
Kid Skin Cape
Baum Martin Scarf
4-Skin Mink Scarf
THE FUR YOU WANT AT A
PRICE YOU WANT TO PAY!
DONT MISS THIS FUR
EVENT ON NOW AT
Adri
nennes
214 E. Main - Phone 2-7169
00
TRIBUNE
mm
FOR RESULTS
Phone
2-6141