Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 24, 1956, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON)
I MDFORIvTRIBUNI
Every Li m bo.fc.ern oregoa
Keaaj The A1'jii i'ribun''
Published Daily Except Saturday by
MlDFUHO PRINTING CO
3T7-29 North f iiSt Phone2-g;l
ROBERT W RUHL. Editor
HERB GREY Advertising Manager
GERALD LATHAM Business Manager
ERIC ALLEN JR. Mnaemn Editor
EARL H ADAMS City Editor
HARRY CHIP MAN Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEWETT Sports Editor
OLIVE SI ARCHER Society Editor
DALE ERICKSON Circulation Mgr
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second class matter at
Medford Oregon under Ad ot
March 3. 1897
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
R Mail In Advance Per CODV 10c.
Daily and Sunday One veai $12.00
Dily and Sunday Si month 6.50
Daily and Sunday Three mos 350
Sunday Only-One vear $3.50
By Carrier In Advance Medtord
Ashland Central Point Eajele Point
Jacksonville Gold Hill Phoenix.
Shady Cove Roaue Hiver. Talent.
on I nn mnlm ro-jtM'
Daily and Sunday --One year $15 00
Daily and Sunday -One montn ia
Carrier and Dealers 5c per copy
All rerma Cash in Advance
Official Paper l the City of Medford
Official Paper oi JiCKSon tnum?
t Un
I tIE
United Prcsa Fuir Leased Wire
MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU
OF CIHCULAliUfl
Advertising Representative.
WEST-HOI. LIDAY COMPANY INC
Oflices in New York Chicago De
troit San Francisco Los Ancele
Seattle Portland St Louia Atlanta
Vancouver BC
NATIONAL EDITORIAL
I ASSOAUON
U W
1J1UMJ.
NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS
ASSOCIATION
Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and
40 years ago.
Z 10 YEARS AGO
- Aug. 24. 1946
j (It was Saturday)
- Federal Communications com-
mission grants Mail Tribune re-
quest for a permit to construct
S a standard broadcasting station.
t From Arthur Perry's Ye
r Smudge Pot column: Three more
Z weeks until the adolescents mo-
bilize again for mastering the
three R's.
T 20 YEARS AGO
S Aug. 24. 1936
J (It was Monday)
C Porter Taylor, market speclal-
1st, explains government plan of
fruit subsidies at meeting of the
5 Rogue River Valley Traffic as-
Z sociation.
Former President Herbert C.
2 Hoover and his wife entrained
5 bere last night for the south.
.
J 30 YEARS AGO
5 Aug. 24. 1926
X (It was Tuesday)
; At this season of the year
2 poultrymen are very much in-
S terested in culling their laying
S in order to keep only profitable
S hens through the period of high-
er priced eggs the coming win-
t ter.
Ed O'Hara starts worm farm,
it is announced today.
40 YEARS AGO
Aug. 24. 1916
(It was Thursday)
Hottest weather of the year
prevails over the northwest
the first heat wave since June
18.
Representatives of the Griz
zlies, Mr. and Mrs. Bunce, Ros
coe Johnson, Miss Hurd and Mr.
Noreen, motor to Crater lake.
What's the Answer?
" Can You Get 4 of the 7?
- Copr. 1955 Editorial Research
Report
1 1. The average U.S. factory
; worker earns in overtime about
I $3, $8, $13, or 518 a week?
t 2. The Cape Cod Canal con-
nects Cape Cod Bay with Nan
- tu ket Sound, the Atlantic
- Ocean, Long Island Sound, Buz-
zard's Bay, or Narragansett Bay?
3. Martha was the first name
; of the wife of Washington and
; which other outstanding Presi
7 dent?
4. Largest city in the South is
Atlanta, Houston, Miami, New
i Orleans or Richmond?
5. "A nation of shopkeepers"
- was what Napoleon called the
" Americans, British, French, Ital-
ians, Prussians, Swedes, or
Swiss?
X 6. It's wise to have your ton
7 sils taken out even if they're not
7 diseased; right or wrong?
; 7. The Order of Ahepa is a
7 group of Americans of Irish, Ital
; ian, Greek. Jewish, Hawaiian, or
7 Japanese descent?
- 1. About $8 (first half of 1956).
-2. Bunard's Bay. 3. Jefferson.
:4. Houston. 5. British. 6. Wrong.
1 7. Greek.
OLDSTERS WELCOME
; Portland, Ind. (U.PJ Octo
7 genarians can attend the Jay
: County Fair free this year.
- Passes are being issued to people
80 years of age and older for all
th fair's events.
MAIL TRIBUNE
Took a Long Time
It took a long, long time, but it finally is here:
Start of construction on the Talent project.
We have discoursed too frequently on the impor
tance of the project to need to say much of anything
further along those lines.
RUT it is interesting to look back over the long his
tory of the project, which had its origin many
years before the proposal ever reached its present
form. It goes back to the visions of ample irrigation
water for the valley held by some of the first settlers.
The first large-scale attempts at irrigation were
made nearly 60 years ago by local people, who banded
together to form the first "water companies," which
later were to become irrigation district, formed under
state law as units of local government.
Still later, as the problem of financing big irriga
tion works outgrew the capacity of the locality, the
federal government was called upon to lend its re
sources. IN the 1940s, there were intensive surveys and inves
A tigations conducted by the bureau of reclamation
with an eye to over-all, multi-purpose development of
the entire Rogue basin. As they developed into the
shape of a specific proposal, an old controversy began
to flare anew. As the bureau's report on the Rogue
Basin Preject stated : .
A conflict has existed in the Rogue River Basin virtu
ally ever since settlement began between development of
water resources for irrigation, power and flood control on
the one hand, and preservation of natural scenic beauty
and of fish and wildlife resources, on the other hand. The
conflict has been intensified as a result of recent, large
increases in population and industry . . . There is no easy
solution to the conflict . . .
... A special public hearing was held by the bureau at
Medford on June 8 and 9, 1948 ... to determine the senti
ment of the residents of the Rogue River Basin and other
interested parties as to whether the major emphasis in
development of the basin should be directed toward pres
ervation of scenic and recreational resources or toward an
economically sound development of irrigation, power and
flood control.
THERE was bitterness at the hearing as the two
forces clashed. But the advocates of economic de
velopment won out, and "Plan A," one of two alterna
tive proposals for development, was recommended
by the hearings officers.
But the fight was not ended, and was waged not
only in the valley itself, but in the state and national
capitals. It focused principally on the proposed high
aam across the Kogue river at Lewis creek. '
Because of the opposition, the overall Rogue Bas
in project has never been put into effect. But, as the
result of a compromise between the opposing fac
tions, agreement was reached on one phase of the
proposal the Talent project.
m
AS a result of that agreement, the valley was able
to present a united front in seeking construction
of the $20 million plan. It has none of the character
istics to which the "Plan A" opponents objected, and
has decided benefits for almost all phases of the ec
onomy of the region.
In recent years we have watched the progress of
the proposal, from completion of studies, to a detailed
bureau of reclamation report, to checks by the bureau
of the budget, to its final inclusion in the administra
tion's public works budget (not without some partisan
jockeying on both sides of the aisle), to authorization
by congress, to the first year's construction appropria
tion of $2,400,000 at the last session of congress.
The final step approval of a partial repayment
contract by Talent Irrigation district landowners
was given in the 111 to 11 vote at an election Wed
nesday. Construction, which will take four of five years
to complete, will begin next week. E.A.
At Their Best
(The following comprises excerpts from an editorial
published on this page two years ago this week. It applies
just as much this week as it did then.)
At the urging of two city-bred youngsters we drop
ped in on the 4-H and FFA fair at the fairgrounds. To
be entirely honest about it, the visit was somewhat
reluctant.
Well sir, darned if we weren't as interested as we
could be, once we got there and saw what was going
on.
THE intense interest of the young participants, the
loving care which they lavished on their animals,
the anxious but determined expressions on their faces
as they led their beasts into the judging ring; all
these were well the lady in the party called it
"inspiring," and she's probably not far from wrong.
The youngsters went up and down the aisles, dis
covering new miracles of the animal world until we
had to calm them down.
THOMAS Jefferson was convinced that the future
of the United States depended upon its retaining
its agrarianism that the qualities of the farmer are
the qualities which make a nation great and stable.
After watching the farm youngsters of Jackson county
perform, we're about ready to agree.
These qualities of hard work, study, application,
self-reliance, are readily developed on a farm, and
they are channeled and applied through the 4-H and
FFA programs. The annual fair is the culmination of
a full year of this work. And it shows it.
VOU might not get starry-eyed over beef cattle, or
cackling chickens, or bleating sheep, or grunting
pigs.
But you ought to let your own kids drag you to the
fair. Here's where you can watch America's ereatest
crop, her growing youngsters, at their best. E.A. I
Friday August 24, 1958
Today and
By Walter
CHICAGO AND
SAN FRANCISCO
The biggest difference between
the two conventions is that at
the Democratic the issue of par
ty control was
fought out and
settled after
the delegates
reached Chica
go; at the Re
publican the
basic issue has
been settled
long in ad
vance. Walter Uppmann Chicago was
in fact an open convention, not
so much because of the Kefauver
Kennedy contest but because of
the Truman-Stevenson contest.
This was a genuine struggle for
the leadership of the party ma
chinery, and though the outcome
was decisive, it was decided by
the delgates and not by the na
tional managers at the central
headquarters of the party. The
plank on civil rights and the
choice of the vice president were
aspects of the basic issue of party
control.
At Chicago there was a strug
gle and there was negotiation
and there was compromise, and
although they did not take place
on the floor of the convention in
full public view, they were suf
ficiently in view through the ex
cellent work of the television re
porters, to leave no doubt that
the convention was in fact trans
acting business.
SAN FRANCISCO, on the other
hand, is a meeting to ratify
and to celebrate decisions al
ready taken under the manage
ment of the chairman of the Na
tional Committee, Mr. Hall, and
the central headquarters com
mand of the party. The Repub
licans, like the Democrats, have
had to meet the fundamental
issue of party control. They have
had it to deal with even before
the President's heart attack in
September, 1955, during the
long months when he was refus
International Events
Forecast by Babson
By ROGER W. BABSON
Babson Park, Mass. Readers
are naturally interested in what
I think may cause the next stock
decline. I have
heretofore dis
cussed the do
mestic politi-
c a 1 situation,
which could be
very much up
set by f r e s l-
dent Eisen
hower's physi
cal condition;
notcr w Babion also the fact
that many purchasers on install
ments are getting physically and
mentally tired wth "keeping up
with Lizzie." Therefore, this
week I will confine . myself to
the international situation.
I think that the Russian lead
ers, who are primarily interested
in holding their own jobs, be
lieve that they now have a bet
ter chance of spreading Commu
nism through diplomacy than
through threatened violence.
The first step in such a campaign
was the discrediting of Stalin.
The second step has been apolo
gizing to Tito for various things
they have done. The real reason
for their change is that Commu
nism is contrary to human na
ture. These Russian leaders now
believe it must be brought about
slowly and cannnot be" forced.
The real conflict will be be
tween the East and the West.
The Russian leaders are trying
to consolidate the eastern half
of the world including China, In
dia, and the East Indies, and for
get Europe and North and South
America. .
This situation has been care
fully discussed behind closed
doors in Senate Committee
rooms. These select committees
have been told things that the
public do not yet know. The
White House and our leading
statesmen are correct in follow
ing this policy until they find
the answer; then it will be told
to the people.
This news could greatly affect
general business. Certainly our
several hundred thousand sol
diers Jn Europe could be with
drawn .and defense appropria
tions would be reduced. This
would harm some industries and
localities, while other industries
would be helped.
To summarize my thoughts, I
herewith give ten brief fore
casts.
(1) Both political parties will
make an effort to keep this in
side information secret until
after Nov. 8 of this year.
(2) Our European allies are
quietly being adjusted to this
change in our policy. This can be
done, even in the case of Great
Britain, because the people of
those countries do not expect to
have all the inside confidential
information.
(3) Ordinarily, official state
ments by Russia would receive
considerable attention. Due to
the present admission by the
Russian government of Stalin's
treachery, butchery, and dis
honesty, the capitals of other
countries will now be skeptical
Tomorrow
Lippmann
ing to say whether he would run
again.
When the President was strick
en, the whole future of the party
was in doubt. It was at this time
that Mr. Hall, who is obviously
a strong man who knows his own
mind, took cammand, decreed
that Eisenhower and Nixon must
run again, put the President
under pressure to agree to run
again, and put the party under
pressure to accept Nixon again.
The whole power of the na
tional party organization was
mobilized by Mr. Hall to prevent
any serious challenge to Nixon's
renomination. The President,
though he has shown faint signs
of regretting that the conven
tion has nothing to do, has not
objected seriously to Mr. Hall's
steamroller. As a result, the con
vention had nothing to do but
listen to ghost-written speeches
and to watch a stage-managed
show, and to vote yes.
TITHAT is coming out of San
' ' Francisco is a party stand
which at the level of the key
note speech, the platform, the
official declarations and prom,
ises and pledges, is complete and
unadulterated Eisenhower. But
at the level of party control, at
the operating level in managing
and administering the party for
the coming years, the Eisen
hower Republicans have only a
voice and nothing like leader
ship and control.
The critical point of leadership
and control has not been the
presidency. It has been the vice
presidency. This is not only be
cause of Gen. Eisenhower's age
and his health but because by
temperament and political con
viction he takes no very active
role in the direction and com
mand of the party. From the
point of view of the professional
politician, looking ahead to the
next four years, the key posi
tion is the vice presidency, and
they have used the steamroUer
to flatten out the opposition to
their man.
(C) 1956, New York Herald
Tribune. Inc.
i of all Russian political announce-
ments
(4) I sometimes think that
only a great world religious
movement could save the day for
aU concerned. I see no sign of
such a movement at the present
time. More people are attending
churches, but what we hear
seems to go in one ear and out
the other. Too many churches
are becoming high-grade social
organizations rather than teach
ing us to be willing to sacrifice
for other families and nations.
(5) By 1965, Germany may
again attempt a local European
war to control Europe and lib
erate the Russian satellites.
(6) The fear of the atomic
bomb and especially of the H
bomb may bring us to our knees.
This fear is already having its
results. Another factor in' the
situation is the "guided missile,"
which . could entirely change
warfare. The guided missile,
however, has not yet been made
accurate enough to endanger us.
HST Trip Helpful
(7) President Truman's trip
abroad will be helpful to the sit
uation. This also applies to all
student exchanges and to the
great tourists who travel this
summer from the U.S. and other
countries.
(8) I see no reason why we
should have much decline in the
stock market during 1956, pro
vided some very unexpected seri
ous event does not occur.
(9) I certainly do not look for
World War III for many years,
because the people of the United
States are in no mood to enter
such.
(10) The conservative and
patriotic program for each
reader is to keep up retail pur
chases, continue present adver
tising, and gradually get out of
debt.
Congressional
Quiz
(Copyright, 195
Congressional Quarterly)
Q Another of Congress
thumbs-down actions that will be
heard about in the campaign oc
curerd on a bill to give federal
aid to schools. Under the bill, the
federal government would have:
(a) raised teachers' salaries; (b)
helped build new schools; c)
contributed to school operating
expenses.
A (b). The bill authorized
$1.6 billion worth of federal
grants over a four-year period
for local school construction.
HYPNOTISM
Has been successfully used In
mwcular rheumatism, constipa
Hen, menstrual disturbances
migraine headache, insomnia,
stuttering, etc For information
regarding Hypnotism see
W. L. WHELDEN
336 S. Riverside, Medford, Ore.
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
San Francisco I don't know
exactly why, but as a Republi
can I felt better after the open
ing session out at the Cow Pal
ace Monday.
Not only did I feel better as
a Republican. I felt better as a
citizen who hopes sincerely that
our country may be so fortunate
as to have four more years of
the kind of government we have
had during the past three years
ana a bait.
T1HE Democrats put on a great
A SHOW at Chicago. As a show,
it had everything drama, sus
pense, conflict. Its principals
were great actors. As truly great
actors, they created the illusion
of the forces of light, as repre
sented by the Democrats, fight
ing bravely against the forces
of darkness, as typified by the
wicked Republicans.
Technically, it was a ereat
performance and when it was
over and the curtain went nnwn
I'll have to confess to an uneasy
reeling that maybe the kind of
honest, sincere, best-interests-of-everybodv
kind of Government
President Eisenhower has pro
vided isn t the kind of govern
ment the modern world wants.
JITAYBE we WANT the kind
of government that was so
badly portrayed there on the
Convention Hall stage at Chi
cago party-conscious govern
ment, class - conscious govern
ment, dramatic and exciting gov
ernment in which New-Deal-Fair-
Deal Democrats in shining ar
mor raise a new dragon every
day and slay a new dragon
every day.
That s what a show staged by
truly great actors can do to one.
T SUPPOSE that if we are to
A keep our feet on the ground
in this campaign that is begin
ning we must remember that the
Democrats are ATTACKING and
the Republicans are defending.
The attack is always more
dramatic than the defense. At
Gettysburg it wasn't the Fed
erals, standing grimly behind
their breastworks, that caught
the eye and caused the heart
to beat so wildly. It was Pickett
and his Confederates charging
up the hill in attack.
At Balaklava it wasn't the
defenders ranged along the hills
bordering the Valley of Death
that-lived in song and story
and legend. It was the CHARGE
of the Light Brigade.
AND so it has been all down
through history. It is the
ATTACK that excites and thrills.
The defense is just plain, grim,
hold your fire till you see the
whites of their eyes business.
It isn't until it is all over that
the defense comes in for its
share of the glory. It was that
way, we must remember, in the
Battle of the Bulge in which
Ike was the commander-in-chief
of the defending forces that
turned back the attackers and
won a great victory.
A NYWAY. I felt murh mnr
hopeful after the session out
at the Cow Palace Monday.
The- defending Republicans
stood their ground, calmly and
firmly. They gave back as good
as their attackers had sent. Sen,
Bill Knowland of California
(who has become a great and
forceful speaker) told his hear
ers not only those there in the
Cow Palace but those glued to
their radio and TV sets in their
homes all over the country
that in his 48 years the Republi
cans have been in power for 20
years and the Democrats have
held the reins for 28 years and
these 28 years have seen ALL
OF OUR WARS IN THE PAST
HALF CENTURY.
That, he said, backs up the
Republican slogan of peace in
our time.
GOV. Arthur Langlie of Wash
ington, keynoting for the
GOP in sharp contrast to sil
ver-tongued Governor Clement
of Tennesseee hit the Demo
crats for leaving us a stagger
ing national debt, a greatly re
duced value of the dollar, a
colossal bureaucracy and vasUy
increased taxes.
After 3V4 years, he said, the
Eisenhower administration has
balanced the budget and the
American people are now back
on their feet and better housed.
better fed and BETTER PAID
than any people in the world."
That, he added, backs up the
Republican slogan of prosperity.
ALL in all, the SHOW at San
Francisco's Cow Palace
doesn't equal the show at Chi
cago's Convention Hall, but it
has solid overtones of common
sense and sound, practical wis
dom. 2 31
PORK
SAUSAGE
29
35
Lb.
Matter of Fact By Jo and Stewart Alsop
NIXON PLUS AND MINUS
San Francisco Besides leav
ing a wide assortment of unheal
ed scars, the comedy that ended
with the tri
umph a nt re
nomination of
Vice President
Richard Nixon
wiU also influ
ence the char
acter of the
campaign that
is now open
ing. n.u: tt
old Stassen's consolation prize,
so to speak that he concen
trated the thinking of the Re
publican high command on the
problem of Dick Nixon, and
thus produced the decision that
this year Nixon must wage what
is usually call
ed "a high lev
el campaign."
Nixon's in
stinct to thrust
for the political
jugular, which
has earned him
such hatred
from the Dem
ocrats, is now
Stewart &isop to be sternly
repressed. Instead, Nixon will
make a strenuous effort to con
vey a new image of himself as
an elevated statesman.
Nixon himself has in effect an
nounced this significant decision,
in the statement he has made
here to many delegates that the
Republicans have something bet
ter to offer this year than mere
"abuse and villification of the op
position." One may wonder
whether the decision will hold,
if the campaign ever seems to be
going badly and the President
still feels unable to take the
stump himself. Meanwhile, how
ever, the very fact that this kind
of a decision has been conscious
ly taken about Nixon makes the
character of this remarkable man
more than ever interesting to try
to analyze.
TT is easy enough to see why
Nixon is so heartily disliked by
almost all Democrats, many inde
pendents and even some Republi
cans. These are times when
America likes its politicians not
to look like politicians. Nixon
is a politician in every bone and
fibre of his body. Up to now,
moreover, he has always been
the kind of politician who struck
direct for his opponent's jugular,
with ruthless single-mindedness.
And this instinct for the jugular,
'though highly effective, is not
exacUy attractive.
There is no need to argue
about whether or not the Vice
President really suggested that
the Democrats were the party of
treason, in order to prove that
he sometimes pays very little at
tention to the Marquis of Queens
berry rules. It is enough to note
that he held and publicly pro
claimed the view that the na
tional interest demanded armed
intervention in the Indochina
crisis. Yet in that summer of
1954, after the President had
over-ruled him, every campaign
speech of Nixon's contained the
boast that the Republicans had
"saved" the country from war
in Indochina.
This sort of thing has inevit
ably left a bad taste with those
who have happened to notice it
But the vital point to note about
Nixon is that this sort of thing
by no means tells the entire
Nixon story.
"INE part of the story that must
v also be told concerns his
quite exceptional capacity to
grow as a man. He has come very
far since the day when he enter
ed politics by answering a' news
paper advertisement placed by a
group of rich California Republi
cans, inviting applications from
young war veterans who might
wish to run for the Congressional
seat of Jerry Voorhees. Clearly,
he saw politics then as a sort of
jungle, in which advancement
was the prize, and the prize was
won by the simple rule of dog
eat dog by any means available.
He has long since ceased to see
politics that way, as was proven,
curiously enough by the same
Indochina crisis already cited.
Nixon's view of the national in
terest may have been right or
wrong at that time. But it re
quired courage and a real and
disinterested care for the na
tional interest to advocate any
thing so profoundly disagreeable
as armed intervention, as Nixon
stouUy did until the President
gave his opposite decision.
Courage, indeed, is one of Nix
on's conspicuous qualities. An
other is his ability to face bard
EAST SIXTH ST.
BEEF
ROAST
PURE
LARD, 2 lbs.
29'
Lb.
facts, instead of shoving them
under the rug; and still another
is his willingness to deal with
hard facts when that is neces
sary, even if the price and risk
are considerable. And as the fore
going implies, yet another con
spicuous Nixon quality is a
strong, inquiring, absorptive and
analytical intelligence.
A LTOGETHER, a few other re
cent recruits to American
politics have brought such en
viable equipment to the game.
The only real question about Nix
on is whether he will finally
learn that American politics is
properly called a game simply
because it has certain rules,
which may be safely broken on
the country courthouse level but
cannot be broken on the national
level. A national leader who has
not learned that lesson is clearly
a dangerous man.
But as Nixon has grown so vis
ibly already, there is no reason
to suppose he cannot learn a les
son which Dwight D. Eisenhower
so effectively teaches. The decis
ion that had been taken concern
ing his own campaigning this
year a decision in which Nixon
himself naturally had a leading
voice in itself suggests that the
lesson has come home to him.
Altogether, the further evolu
tion of Dick Nixon will be sin
gularly worth watching.
(c) 1956.
New York Herald Tribune, Inc.
THOSE MIDDLEMEN1
Lincoln, Neb. (U.PJ The av
erage price of a pound loaf of
white bread to city consumers
was 70 per cent more in 1955
than in 1946. During the same
period, the price farmers re
ceived for wheat and other bread
ingredients averaged only 20 per
cent higher.
KoKo Says:
Start School
IN
Smart 'n Sturdy
SHOES
by EDWARDS
Sizes 614 fo 8
Sizes 8 'i to 12
$6.30
S7.50
Boys'
Met Toe,
Crepe Sole
Oxford
Sizes 12'i to 4 $8.50
Girls'
" ir lLm White Bock
. . Oxford
Sizes 12Vi to 4 .
.$8.50
Sizes 6Vf to 8 ..$6.50
Sizes 8'2 to 12 $7.50
Sizes 12'2 to 4 $8.50
SPECIAL SIZE
4V4 to 6 $8.9S
JOHNSTON
& STEWART
JUNIOR BOOT SHOP
Central at Main, Medford
We Guarantee Our Fit!
PICNIC
HAMS
39 Lb.
Military
Widths
I to I
Widths , ;
a to c Niiiir
5Sj Xmi t Brown
I V- -I'vrsW One Strap
I 0ord
Widths
A to D