FOIfRHEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Wednesday. Nonmbti 7. 1938
TIveryone In Southern Oregon
fteaea The Mail Trajune" -
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March 3. 1837
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Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the Hies of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, .30, 40
and SO years ago.
New Thinking Needed
Medford has had several annexation "fights" in
tne past rew years, borne of them ended in enlarging
u,c yw, m suiiie, tebiuents 01 tne areas rejected the
aiijicAdLluII.
It is likely that there will be more, for the problems
are getting more rather than less serious.
But the problem in Medford is not isolated. It is
oeing repeated throughout the entire state.
Ana it is tne result of a situation which has been
aeveioping ior more than 50 years slowly at first,
put witn speed since the start of World War II and
us tremendous influx of population into Oregon.
.
QXE of the most thoughtful appraisals of this situ
ation we have seen is the summary of tentative
findings and recommendations of th.p T.p on q1 stive
" ' , , . T 1 .
vumimuee on L,ocai government, issued recently.
(It would be thought-provokiner reading for nnv.
one interested in the subject. Copies can be obtained
11.0m me committee, which has an office in Room
btate Capitol building, Salem.)
The nine-page report, which goes into detail on
some of the problems being faced, concludes with
mis paragraph :
"The committee is convinced that the urban area
problems of the state are highly complex and very serious.
It believes that the recommendations contained in this
report are both realistic and practical. However, it recog
nizes m all due humility that the mere adoption of a
legislative program cannot easily rectify a situation which
has been developing for more than 50 years. If Oregon
is to take full advantage of its growth potential the coopera
- tion support, and interest of local government officials,
of busines and civic organizations and of all its citizens
will be needed."
O
10 YEARS AGO
Not. 7. 1946 (Thursday)
Progress of the bureau of
O reclamation suivay for, the.Rogue
q River valley reported at Rogue
0 Valley Irrigation association
r meeting.
q from Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Put column: A fog set
O tied over the highways and by
O0 ways early taday. !t-gave a num
a btr of autofsts pause after they
nit something. 0
O
q 20 TEARS AGO
Nov. 7, 1 936 (Saturday)
Howard Leclerc, window dec
orator and salesman, appointed
(Jiisplay promotion manager at'
tne loggey, according William
F. Isaacs.
Hundreds of southern 6regori
women visit Burelsons new en-(-Jmrged
duwnstairs store to take
advantage o opening specials.
30 YEARS AGO
Not. 7. 192 (Sunday)
Dr. Thomas E. Green, director
cf "the speaking service of the
American National lied Cross,
speaks in Medford.
Aiir.iiI state conventign of
county assessors in Oregon
OFUna in Medford.
O
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40 YEARS AGO
Not. 7. 1916 (Tuesday)-
President Wilson .will carry
Jackson county by a majority of
approximately 1,250 votes and
G Haxrli Weatherford by "350.
The I'nited States is in the
grip of a coal famine, created
Cy railroads to boosting prices.
0 YEARS AGO
Not. 7. 1906 (Wednesday) "
Prnlessor A. W. Fredrickson,
president of North Park college.
inicago, visits in MecTford.
Ceorge A. Emory, who repre
sents :lhe Vanderbiit railroads in
(fortland.; visiting in Medford.
What's Hie Answer?
o Can Too Oet 1 of the 7.?"
r, O Copr. 195J Editorial Research
IN ARRIVING at its recommendations, the committee
V,lI ia v.,ui: l - . .
"uu " puuiic Hearings (one ot tiiem in Medford),
; heard testimony from more than 200 persons, many of
.them representing groups or organizations, conducted
, detailed studies of public services and controls in
eight urban areas (again one of them was Medford),
and conducted special research studies on annexa
tion, county government and state-local relation
ships. It was assisted by advisory committees appointed
by the Association of Oregon Counties, League of
Oregon Cities, Oregon Health Officers Association
and the Professional Engineers of Oregon.
It makes seven recommpndati
changes in state legislation. They can be summed up
with accuracy by saying that Oregon is fast outgrow
ing her traditional nattern of 1
, i Sv.viium,iii, anu
uiau cuuie new approacnes are needed.
jyjEDFORD and its environs furnish an almost
perfect example of the type of problems with
which the committee deals.
Its first recommendation was to allow annexation
to be accomplished, with the
differential for up to 10 years be permitted newlv-
annexed areas not in need of the full range of city
services. (Thus one area could come in to the city
xDr purposes of obtaining fire protection,' say, but
not be taxed for police protection). As the number
of services needed increased, so would the percentage
of the tax burden imposed on the atinp-Prl m-pn
Other recommendations include the foi-mat inn nf
i-ounty service districts, and the Pvtprcinn
rule" for counties, so they can set up a locally-approv-
cu lunii ui uuumy government more flexible and
more powerful than the histnnV
i , -.v.xj i-'v-niin, v-uuiiLv
xui purposes otner tnan roads and bridges
encourage, and in some cases require, planning and
zoning; require centralized reporting on the finances
of the many special districts in the state, and a final
recommendation to facilitate city control of public
transit companies.
.
fHE committee had other recommendations not
so much for specific legislation as fnr an
, , . . - ' Mi UUULUUll
tn TIOH Thinl'inn- .Km.l- i-U 1.1 i , x
u.nmuiS auuut uie piouiems involved.
They suggested the formation of urban area coun
cils to study and discuss problems as they arise, and
to seek solutions; an improved and liberalized
program of state loans to areas needing public health
facilities and unable to afford them under present
limitations; provision for arbitration in disputed an
nexation or incorporation .questions; and creation
ot metropolitan" eovemmpntnl unite 1
c- ". lU ocivc icu tic
r lif I'nor i, -P.. : i-
New Turn in Russian Foreign
Policy Shows Hand of Molofov
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
It looks as if Vyacheslav M.
Molotov is now directing Soviet
Russia's foreign policy.
Russian moves in both the
Hungarian and
Middle Eastern
situations are
r e m i n i scent
of the days
when the grim
faced Molotov
and his master
Josef Stalin
were running
things in Mos-
Charles Mccano COW.
They represent an abrupt de
parture from the soft policy
which the Communist party
leaders Khrushchev and Bulga
nin sponsored after Stalin's
death in 1953.
Molotov strongly opposed this
policy from the start. And from
the Russian Communist view
point events have proved him
right.
Molotov was Stalin's man for
many years. Every evil thing
"in aiaiin am, Molotov had a
part in. Molotov remained
Stalinist" in his thinking after
tne master died.
World Shocked
The world has been shocker!
by the brutal Russian suppres
sion of the Hungarian revolt
That is the way it would have
been done in the days when Sta-
Communications
Ltter9 tO th Prittnr . k
the name and address ot the writer
although under certain circum
stances the use ot a pen name or
initial for Di.hl.rji.nl, i.
.h-ri I1'. ""J1 T"b"ne reserve,
the right to edit a lott.r.
ee to clarification and condensa
tion Letters submitted for publica
tion must not exceed 400 words
llin and Molotov were teamed
up.
The belligerent communica
tions on the Middle Eastern sit
uation, addressed to President
Eisenhower, British Foreign Sec
retary Anthony Eden and
French Premier Guy Mollet bore
the signature of Bulganin. But
they were throwbacks to Stalin's
time.
Nobody has ever accused Mol
otov of being soft. His very
name is hard "Hammer." His
real name is Scriabin. He adODt-
ed the "Molotov" as an alias in
Czarist days when it was the
custom of revolutionists to adopt
false names.
Molotov's face is hard. His
mouth, under his mustache, is
hard-set. His manner is cold.
Molotov was among the intel
lectual's who engineered the
Bolshevik coup of 1917 in the
name of Russian workers and
peasants.
Molotov, now 66, was 27 then,
and already a comer. His cold
personality did not make him
many friends. Both Lenin and
Stalin used to speak of him and
to him sneeringly as a born
clerk. But he had smart brains.
And like Lenin and Stalin he
was ruthless.
I Molotov was premier, with
Stalin as general secretary of the
Communist party, when millions
ot ttussian farmers were delib
erately starved to death or sent
to slave labor camps in the
s.
Premier During Puraes
Molotov was premier during
me years ot the terrible purges
wiien minions of men and worn
en who had been loyal Commu
msts were executed or enslaved
so that Stalin could consolidate
his dictatorial power.
Stalin took over the prime
ministry in 1939 and Molotov
oecame foreign minister. It was
Molotov who signed the treach
erous treaty with the German
Nazis which smoothed the way
for Hitler to launch World
war II.
It was Molotov, relieved from
his duties as foreign minister
and put in charge of Soviet Far
Eastern policy in 1949, who pre
parer! tne way for the Commu
nist invasion of South Korea
Molotov was brought back to
tne loreign ministry after Sta
lin s death, then replaced last
June.
People said then that Molotov
vas through. It looks as if they
spoKe loo soon.
Bipolar Thaw
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Wilson Ponders Ike's
Pe rsonal Triumph,
But Loss of Congress
By LYLE C. WILSON
United Press Correspondent
Washington ;U.PJ How did
Ike do it?
It was no surprise to pollsters
and political experts that he
won. What did surprise them
was the wav
he buried
Adlai Steven
son under a
landslide.
Great issues
were supposed
to be running
against Mr.
Eisenh o w e r.
Farm states
L" 1 uuii were sup
posed to be in rebellion. The
leadership of the newly merged
AFL-CIO advised 15 million
members to turn Mr. Eisen
hower out of the White House.
The President was warned that
renomination of his young
friend, Richard M. Rixon, for
vice president would peril the
tne ticket s chances. Moreover,
the Republican party had be
come a minority party, second
in vital registration to the
Democrats.
But then the guns began to
boom abroad. Political strage
gists, seeking to discover how a
single man can lick a party, will
look overseas for some of the
answer.
Peace and prosperity was the
campaign package offered by
the Republicans to Am
1. Negro schdol children from
falchTp to wh$nt a,'eaS n0t J'et fT incorporation.
CD
Northern schools 'when entered
there?
2. Stwenson four years ago
ri better in Texas or Pennsyl
vania? i. In1 wliat country is the na-
tional parliament .called the
cO Sejm?
4. About (a) 10, (b), 25, (c) 40-,
or (d) 55 per cent of all new car
O purchases are made fully "for
cash including tra"de-in)?
G 5. Present Supreme Court has
more Democratic or Republican
justices?
6. The United Mine Workers
union is inside or outside the
new Ar'L-CIO? .
7. A morganatic marriage is
or isn't one outside of legal
wedlock? . .
The answers 1. Do aj rule.
2. Had a higher percentage of
rom in Pennsylvania. 3. Poland.
4. About 40 Mr cent. S Mnr
Democratic. 6. 'Outside. 7. Iw't?
!': with a spoiise of lower so
q cial standing. Q
'tight To Woik' Bill
Defevted in Washington
O Seattle---,UR.4 Initiative 198,
the so-called 'right fo work"
measure, went down to an over
whelming defeat yesterday after
organized labor waged its mast
gexteiksive and expensive cam-
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Also Church Deacons
To the Editor: Sure is interest
ing as an audience, watching
the play of events across the
great world stage, proving as it
does that men are mostly just
boys grown tall. "Hey you," says
Johnny B. "Whyn't you let the
Jude kid play his boats in our
canal? Cause I don't like
him," replies Nasse 'Gyp. "He's
guun too big for his britches."
'But listen here," says Johnny
B., "Didn't Frenchy dig it for
us?" "Yeah," says Nasse 'Gyp,
"but ain't it in mv backyard'"
"So what?" replies Johnny B.
"Didn't all of us help some and
agree that all of us could play
m it?" "Yeah, but them's just
words an' I was little then. I
sot muscles now an' I ain't afraid
to iignt any or all of you." "Ho
ho. answers Johnny B., Frenchy
n.c uuue rvia. so we use
somethin' besides words." So
they proceed to smash Nasse
Gyp's airfields and sink boats
in the little canal so nobody can
Play in it and everyone is mad
and sad and worried, including
the audience.
Speaking grass-roots way, Eng-
.".u ouu r ranee could do no
different and stay world powers
and sovereign nations in the
Suez canal trouble. They let Hit
ler march into the Rhine valley
and continued appeasement till
audience and all were in the big
bath of blood and tears and
misery.
The Reds have been shoot in t Suez Cana!-
our planes down from ocean toiMideast Aided Ike
ocean and the only reply we've
made is strong notes of protest
sorry and strange tribute (in
cluding the Reds' grinning con
tempt) to the lost lives of brave
men who manned the planes on
peaceful missions. A lone. Ion?
way indeed from .Inhr. r,i
-ones time when he sailed cannon-equipped
wind-jammers to
the Barbary Coast and with a
gnm promise of a few round
shots got their respect anH ,
stop to raiding of our high-seas
commerce.
It might be possible to have
continued peace here on earth
providing there were enough
Jesus Christs to teach and, shall
we say, enforce the golden rule
and ten commandments. But alas
and alack, we have nature's grim
law, survival of the fittest
includes all flora and fauna, we
featherless bipeds as a professor
lj . 'ermea tne genus homo
History teaches and proves that
no people ever existed as a going
, ''dl n a program
of wishful thinking and appease
ment, also males who hide be
hind the title of church deacon
F. J. Clifford,
1211 West Main st ,
Medford, Ore.
this second term draws tn a
close.
But he thanked the voters and
accepted the proferred job Tues
day night in good spirits, if sol
emnly. He was introduced to a
xtepublic victory throng here by
his running mate. Vice Presi
dent Nixon. Much of the Demo
cratic campaign was based on
warnings that Mr. Eisenhower's
inability to succeed himself al
most automatically would nro-
ject Nixon into the party leader
ship by 1960 and gain for him in
that year the Republican Presi
dential nomination.
Kefauver Hard To Stop
That sequence of events
seems likely. Adlai E- Steven
son, now a two time loser, prob
ably is dead politically. Sen.
Estes Kefauver, the Democratic
vice presidential nominee, how
ever, was projected to new and
more substantial national prom
inence in this campaign. He will
be a hard man to stoD in 1960
if he goes out again for the
Democratic preidential nomina
tion, which he probably will do.
Leadership of the Democratic
party, however, now is up for
grabs. Kefauver has won a
choice position for grabbing.
But there is a party elder from
whom much is likely to be
heard and little of it favorable
to Kefauver .The elder states
man is Harry S. Truman of
Missouri.
What he said, of Stevenson in
nicago was this:
voters. But in the closins riavs ."'nlcago was lms: 1 n t think
of the campaien. the Mirfrile I .e
the campaign
tast caught fire. The United
States' two most powerful al
lies joined in an armed police
action to regain control cf the
-.n .I,." XT 1 ,
Middle I ,. -nuvemuer eiec-
Hh committee faced, frankly and honestly, a
multiplicity of problems, and came up with some
good suggestions. They are still, of course, only sug
gestions, and will require enactment bv the legislature
before they can be placed in effect
-iiu uae Knows wnat chano-ps win ha rv,.i k,.
they become law, but it is safe to say that the com
mittee has made an excellent and PTlfnilVHO-inrr cforf
on state:level action to solve the many problems of
the "fringes and "sub-suburban" areas
The committee also is seeking reaction to the
proposals before the legislature meets, and has
set four more public hearings, each at 7:30 p.m., in
Salem, Nov. lo: Portland Nov. 16, Bend Nov. 19. and
oseuuig jnov. zv, to present the findings and to seek 5 h and killed our chii-
miormect public guidance regarding them Klenl pet eocker spaniel dg-
. . . . & ll-em- This happened on West .lar-ksnn
JT Will be noted that each of these recommendations ffl
otnn.es at u-ne or more nrnh Pitis whih hn-n kon leven have the courtesv tn str,n
or are being, thrashed out in the Medford area ' land aid' r to te" the cr
?lCr? f th.e "d stctuere of Seand of Sft
""" 'C1U"-C W jom it on tne part of some fringe
areas and because of the limited powers of the county
they have caused resentment and confusion.
The committee encourages annexation. But if its
recommendations are followed bv the lemslshn-P
t even m part some new channels will be opened up
To a Thoughtless Person
To the Editor: What is be
coming of the people who live in
this town of ours? Esnppiallv
when a person driving a green
station wagon last Saturday at
XUStOarV.
V
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tensive ana expensive cam- f t, L , ., UFU
ig in, Washington's political f 01 ,in,e oenetit of those areas still faced bv
now-
lady who asked if she could help
us. It makes us wonder what
this person would have done if
it was a small child he had hit
instead of a helpless dog. But
with the will of Gpd I know this
person will pay someday for this
thoughtless thing he has done.
Jack C. Wolgamott
821 Oak st.
Medford, Ore.
ii must remain largely a mat
ter of the politicians' belief and
judgment that the Middle East
ruckus added some millions of
votes to Mr. Eisenhower's tntal
While the guns blazed, the Re
publican campaign package was
suDstantially reassembled. It
now contained: Peace, prosper
ity and Ike.
And Ike! That made a differ
ence- With the possibility that
the United States could shortly
be in another war, the voters
picked up their eotion on Mr.
Eisenhower for another term as
president and commander-in-chief.
,
The phrase "police action" as
used by Prime Minister Sir An
thony Eden to describe the Anglo-French
invasion of Egypt
startled Americans who remem
bered the beginnings of the
bloody police action in Korea.
The Israeli-EsvDtian conflict
had on the United States politi
cal campaign almost the imDact
of a raid across American
borders.
Congress Undecided
Mr. Eisenhower might wish
that this triumph had been less
personal and more party. It has
not matched FDR's political
blitzes in which remote candi
dates down to the county level
were swept into office on a tide
of Roosevelt votes. The contest
for control of the new Congress
remains undecided. It is likely
that the voters have elected a di
vided government Democratic
Congress and Republican Presi-
aent.
The voters have not so divid
ed government since 1848 when
Zachary Taylor, Whig, was
elected president and Democrats
won control of House and Sen
ate. Republcians in 1876 and
Democrats in 1884 elected a
president but lost one house of
congress or the other.
And, for all of his personal
triumph in Tuesday's voting,
Mr. Eisenhower is the first so-
called lame-duck president. He
is forbidden by the Constitution
to take another term. This cer
tainty that his political future
lies behind him mav somewhat
hazard his party influence as
Since Stevenson discovered
the middle of the road approach
to the White House jammed
Tuesday with impassable Re
publican traffic, Mr. Truman
will carry on with his campaign
to Keep nis party moving stead
ily to the left.
Three Months Seen
Needed To Clear "
Suez of Obstacles
London (U.R) Shippine ex
perts said today it will take at
least three months -to cle'ai the
Suez Canal of sunken ships and
omer obstacles and reoptjn the
vital waterway to shipping.
At least -nine shins are known
to block the narrow channel f
the 101-mile canal linking tle
Mediterranean and Red seas. The
Ferdan Bridge near Ismailia also
is wrecked.
According tfl latest renorts
four ships have been sunk at
r-ort baid on the northern end,
two near Ismailia at the mirlway
point, and three st Port Suez,
the southern entrance.
Difficult Operation
Experts said the salvage oper
ations will be one of the most
difficult in modern history.' Tlie J
said "blitz" tactics must be ruled
out because of the narrowness of
the canal.
An Anglo-French headquarters
communique Tuesday said sal
vage work started at the north
ern entrance. The admiralty said
frogmen were flown into the
Port Said area to help in the task
of clearing the entrance to the
canal. Heavy dredges have been
towed into position at PortSiid.
Civilian experts also are ex
pected to be called in to help in
the massive operations.
experts said the job of reopen
ing the canal probably will be
launched from both ends, wjth
the salvage crews and dredges
progressing from block ship to.'
oiock snip.
Shipping lines serving ports
east of Suez already are reshap
ing meir sailing schedules for the
months ahead.
-e-O
anng
Leading in Nepda
Reno (U.R) Despite an Ei
senhower landslide. evaHa
elected a Democrat to repine a
nepuDiicwi in CKigress and was
we!i on the way to reelecting
Doanocratic Sen. Alan Bible.
Bible, serv-int out the unex
pired term of fte late Sen Pat
McCarrn, held a steadily grow
ing lead over Republican Rep.
Clifton Young. n .
c9 s
The latter, who basedfTiis cam
paign nainly upon all out sup
cort of Mr. Eisenhower
aheaaflintil late returns (jroured
in trom heavilj) gemocratic
Southern Nevada.
Former Rp. Walter S. Bar
ing, ouV.ed Igom Ne-ada's lone
House at by Young 1952,
was finally successful in his
third try to regain iiat post.
With aboutoS5 nerucent of the
.ballots cougted07iereOwere the
standings: 0
President: EisettY,Ar. 42 Rl.V
Stevenson, 29,362; Senator:
Bibfe, 37,493; Young, 35.580;
congressman: Bariafe, -7,382;
Horton, 33,872. n
In 8ther statewide Jialloting,
Nevaria irnt
second time in two years aV
strong effort by labor iftiions to
repeal the stated soclfecl rig!
to work at. O q
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Russia Offers Troops
To United Nations
Moscow KU.PH-Defense Min
ister Marshal Georgi Zhukov to
day offered Soviet Armed forces
to the United Nations to help in
the "liquidation" of Anglo
French aggression against
Egypt.
The Soviet Union, Zhukov
said, is "prepared. in accordance
with a U.N. decision, to take a
real part with her armed forces
Zhukov's offer was made in a
speech to thousands of Soviet
troops and citizens massed in
Moscow's Red Square to cele-
Drate the 39th anniversary of ; "
the Octnhpr rpvnlntlnn I
The ambassadors of the United
States, Britain, France and oth
er of the Western NATO nations
boycotted the ceremonies.
Schrunk Holds Good
Margin Over Peterson
Portland U.R Portland
voters gave Terry Schrunk a
healthy margin over intfumbent
Fred Peterson in their hot race
for mayor of the state's lareest
city yesterday.
Schrunk, who finished in,
front of Peterson in the May
primary, had a comfortable
margin in their runoff.
"It looks like Mr. Schrunk. is
me winner," Peterson said.
PorUanders turned down a
series of special measures, one
of which would have added flu
oride to the city's water, supply
and another which would have
repealed the ban on pinball ma
chines. A split Exposition
Recreation center was defeated.
Italy Fascislslall
Volunteer Bafflions
o n
Milan, Ital.UgVU.O The neo
Fasciit Italfan Social MoveifenJ)
called0 today for formation of
"volunteer battalions" to (light
Russian forces in Hungary.
Gen. Aldo farchgse, provin
cial secretary, told United Press
that more thn 100 g,oung siu
dente and workers enlistedSis
volunteegs. Signs wei plas
tered on Milan street corners in
viting oyouths "to takg, ayns
agajnst the Russian forces
slaughtering the who?e Hungar
ian people." o
ONLY 39
Shopping Days
Til Christmas!
3-sgr3akro
High FM?
pfionograpb c
ih.L
Stevenson's Plans
Said Indefinte
Chicago U.R) A reporter
asked Adlai Stevenson last night
whether he had any thoughts
about making a third try for
the White House in 1960.
"I'm a candidate for bed,"
Stevenson replied.
He said he planned to get
seven hours sleep, and then
spend some time at his down
town law office catching up on
paper work today. Stevenson
hopes to take a vacation, but
has no definite plans.
Aides said they didn't know
what Stevenson would turn to
now But most guessed he would
get into some field of public
service, like education, rather
than his profession, law.
STRATTON REELECTED
Chicago :U.P., Gov.. William
G. Stratton won reelection to
day as Illinois governor despite
a $1.5 million theft scandal in
the stJe auditor's office.
Hey Santa!
Asleep at the
Switch?
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Don't get caught napping
while Big Christmas
Bills Pile Up! For
CHRISTMAS
CASH .
SEE
a ma or nmnr. mwet
PACIFIC
IMDUSTRIAl"
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16 S. Central Ph. 3-5308
The SYMPHONETTE
Two 6" x 9" oval bass plus 5"
high frequency apeaker 6 watt
amplifier precision automatic,
multi-spee intermix -hanger '
diamond stylus ac&stical gen
uine naTiogany, ogk or cherry
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$nstso
o
Mo a navpx
Hlgri-f.cfaritty ponographs
In mahogany
Complete with id
PURUCKER
PIANO HOUS
Southern Oregn't Oldest;-
and Finest Music Store
111 JM. Cer?tra
one 2-572
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