o
TOXTR MEDFOHD (OREGON)
MedfordHtribuhi
"Sveryon in Southern Oregon
Read The Mali Tribune" h
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ERIC ALLEN JR Maa?mg Editor
KARL H ADAMS Cit Editor
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DALE ERTCKSON, Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Entered aa second claaa ma.tter at
Medford Oregon under Act oi
March 3. 1897
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Flight o'.Time
Medford a ad Jackson County
History Irora the files of The
Mall Tribune 10. 20, 30, 40
and SO years ago.
10 YEARS AGO '
Mot. 19. 1946 (Tuesday)
Mediord and Ashland Toist-
masters hold Joint meeting to
discuss topics of local and na
tional interest.
' From Arthur Pefiry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: A large
Ilec of geese Went over last
night going south, again beat
ing the valley orchardists to it.
2S YEARS XQO J
Not. 19. 1S36 IThunHxl '
Subscriptions to the 1938-37
Community - Chest total $13,-
409.13; budget Is $15,000.
Jackson County Chamber of
Commerce appeal to reduce sur
plus turkey stocks through im
mediate lncfeased consumption
brings results. ,
30 YEARS AGO
Not. 19, 1926 (Friday)
The Gates and Lydiard Econ
omy Groceteria observes sixth
anniversary.
- fivajigcusvii; meetings Ml'iai-
ent progressing satisfactorily, of-
40 YEARS AGO ' '
Not. 19. 1916 (Sunday)
' An address on the big brother
movement will be delivered
Tuesday at the Elks tempi.
Color folder turned out for
Rogue River Fruit and Produce
association advertising Rogue
river apples making favorable
Impression. 0 -
What's the Answtr?
Can Too Get 4 f the 7?
COpr. 1955 editorial Research
Report .
1. President Eisenhower's ilei
tis operation was about 3V4, 6,
8, 11 or 13V4 months after his
heart attack?
2. Seats on' ths N.Y. Stock Ex
change have been selling recent
ly for mar or less than $100,-
000? -' -
3. Prior to the present Israel-
tgypt war the U.. had or
hadn't been giving direct mili
tary aid to Israel?
s 4. The senior class of a typical
hijfr scftcol has a higher or low
er average of intelligence than
the wholej population or about
. ttie same?
5. U.S. automotive operators
average bout, (a) 5.000, (b)
8,000, (c) 11,000 or (d) 14,000
miles a yeaf?
6. The Bay "Scout movement
originaied in the U.S.; right or
wrong? "
7. U.S. winters are gradually
getting warmer or colder, or are
staying about the same?
The answers:., 1. 81 'a moaiht
later. 2. -Somewhat less. 3. Had
not. 4. Higher. 5. 8,000. 6.
Wrong: in England. 7. Warmer,
says the U.S. Weather Bureau.
Dr. McNeal to Give
Thanksgiving Address
Ashland lU.PJ Dr. Roy
McNeal. professor of geography,
will give the address for the
Southern Oregon college Thanks
giving assembly Wednesday,
Nov. 21. The SOC band and
choir will make their first ap
pearances of the school year on
the program.
A special rehearsal of the
band will be held Tuesday eve
ning to complete preparations
for the apperance. Glen Matth
ews, director, announced that a
second section of band will be
opened next term for those stu
dents who are unable to partici
pate at the present time because
of time conflicts.
MAIL TRIBUNl
Parking vs. Walking
Medford is not the only city with a parking problem.
Others in Oregon which have similar situations,
and which haven't yet taken any decisive steps to
solve them, include Portland, Albany and Pendleton.
Suggestions have run the gamut from city-owned
and operated parking lots
cided against) to rigid enforcement of time limits on
parking in metered spaces,
feeders.
A NOTHER suggestion
other day one which is so eminently practical
that it probably wouldn't work, human nature being
1 i "j rrl , . . . . . .
wnai it is. ine suggestion, as revealed in a letter to
the mayor and printed by the Pendleton East Oregon
ian, follows:
"One cure for the parking problem is to start a walking
campaign among the people up to 60 who work downtown.
Say anyone living within 10 blocks of Main street must
walk to and from work unless physically disabled. Nearly
everyone eats his lunch downtown or takes a lunch.
"This action would give them fresh air and exercise and
help them get rid of some of the surplus fat and they won't
have to take so much laxative. I know some people who
ride four or five blocks, park their cars and walk two blocks
to work.
"I feel sorry for the young people nowadays. They ought
to carry chickens under their arms to do their breathing
for them ..."
When it comes right down to it, we ARE lazy these
days, aren't we? E.A.
More A bout Insurance
Some time apO. we nnhlished in this snaw anmd
comments on New York's
aunuy insurance law.
Since then, a friend of
mess nas Deen assisting our education by giving us
the reasons why insurance men generally are opposed
to a compulsory law.
It is, he declares, governmental invasion of a field
which should be free to seek its own solutions. It also
acts as a deterrent to those who otherwise would buy
insurance in excess of the legal minimums thus re
ducing their protection.
THE industry, he said, prefers to approach the prob
lem through voluntary measures.
One is an increased emphasis on highway safety
a most laudable objective, certainly.
' Another is a new type of coverage. If Driver "A"
is injured in an accident with Driver "B" which is
B's" fault, and if B has no liability insurance nor other
resources and A gets a judgment against him, this new
insurance will pay to A the amount of the judgment
against B.
'(Our friend convinced us that this insurance is a
good thing; so we bought some. But it still requires
Driver A to pay for protection for which Driver B
SHOULD be responsible).
C PEAKING of insurance and judgments, there has
been an increasing tendency in recent years to
ward larger judgments. Partly this is the result of a
generally increased cost of living.
But more and more it is the result nf riirips fpplino-
sorry for the injured party,
ment on tne tneory mat it is only the insurance com
pany" which will have to pay and that "they can
afford it."
The only thing wrong with this theory is that while
it is- indeed the insurance company which pays the
specific judgment, it is the policy holders in all com
panies who ultimately pay the bill.
For insurance premiums are based on costs, and if
judgments, on the average, increase, so will the pre
miums. Insurance companies, after all are not charit
able' institutions.
No one will argue that the injured party in a suit
should not receive adequate compensation. But in
ordinately high damage awards ultimatelv are reflect
ed in the premiums all of us
Dr. Sweeney
Twentv-two vears arm
- o uu uu
article about Br. Charles Sweenpv whn Hiprl lust woot
at the age of 87. A yellowed clipping of the article,
wmcn m turn was a reprint irom the Uregon Jour
nal. Was sent to US hv Mrs FT S nhiro-wiri nf thi'e n itv
Because of the wide affection and respect in which
Dr. Sweeney was held, the clipping, dated Oct. 10,
ivot, is oi interest, it ionows:
Dr. Charles Thomas Sweeney is treasurer of the Jackson
County Democratic Committee. He was born near Chilho
wee. Mo., Sept. 10, 1869. When 19 years old he entered the
Kansas City Medical college, now the medical department
of the University of Kansas. He graduated in medicine in
1891. In 1898 he did post-graduate work at St. Louis. In
1909 he moved to Great Falls, Mont., where he practiced.
Finding the winter rather severe, with his family he moved
to southern Oregon in 1910. Dr. Sweeney was married on
March 30, 1892, at Chilhowee, to Mary E. Cleland. They
have three children, Anna Grace, Edith May and Charles
T. Jr. He served as county coroner and health officer at
Cascade county, Montana, and in 1917 served in the Oregon
legislature. He has been a Mason more than 40 years, having
taken all degrees from Master Mason to the Shrine. For
more than 30 years he has been an officer in the Presby
terian church. He was made a fellow of the American Col
lege of Surgeons in October, 1931. He is a member of vari
ous medical societies from the county society up to the
American Medical association. He is a lifelong Democrat.
He owns two dairy ranches in Josephine and in Jackson
counties, stocked with thoroughbred Jerseys.
E.A.
Killer whales, among the
fiercest of all sea creatures, ac
tually ar edolphins. They hunt
in packs, swallowing small seals
and porpoises whole.
Monday, November 19, 19S8
(which Medford voters de
to get rid of the "meter-
was made in Pendleton the
new compulsory auto li-
ours in the insurance bus-
and voting a large judg
pay. E.A.
t.hp Mail Tn'Vmno r on
Green walnuts are a basic
source of vitamin C in Russia,
but ripe walnuts contain none
of the essential body-building
vitamin. s
No Immediate Purge in Russia
Seen, But Possibility Exists
(Editor's note: Kenneth
Brodney is a former United
Press manager in Moscow. He
witnessed t h, e changeover
from Stalinism to ths present
collective leadership. In the
following dispatch he analyzes
probable results inside the
Kremlin of the Soviet blood
bath in Hungary and the So
viet economic and political
penetration of the Middle
East.).
By KENNETH BRODNEY
Written For United Press
Indications now are that there
will not be an immediate purge
in the top Soviet leadership.
The major reason for a shake
up would be to try to recoup
some of the Russian prestige
shattered by the brutal crushing
of the Hungarian rebellion.
Where the prestige loss really
hurts most is in the Communist
parties of Western Europe,
which already are suffering
widespread defections as a re
sult. There is little doubt they are
now in for a period of major
convulsions, as more and more
once-staunch Stalinists brood
over the Hungarian catastrophe.
It is not merely the well-documented
brutality of the Red
army that is causing party cards
to be turned in from Italy to
England; it is the fact that the
Red army was necessary in Hun
gary at all.
Communism Fails
It is the clear demonstration
that Moscow's export brand of
Communsm failed completely,
after a solid decade, to provide
either a minimum standard of
physical existence or an even
barely tolerable society in which
human beings could live.
And since the mission of these
parties, particularly in France
and Italy, was to consumate
"united fronts" with Socialists
and centrists in order to drag
Western Europe into the neutral
ist corner, the Russians could
AlCff f r Of FQCt
THE SERGEANT'S JOB
Washington What is the na
ture of America's responsibility
as the history-appointed leader
of the Western
Alliance?
This ques
tion has been
posed, in an
acute form, by
the great and
dark events
which are now
unfolding. It is
being much de-
joseuu aisop bated in Wash
ington at the moment, rather un
comfortably in the higher circles
of the administration, and very
bitterly indeed among the repre
sentatives of our allies who have
to deal with the administration.
No doubt, it is presumptuous
for these reporters to try to de
fine America's
j world responsi-
bility. Yet it
(. I seems desira
ble to make a
stab at it, if
only because
sharply critical
analyses of the
a d m i n i s tra
tion's Mid die
Eastern policy
biewmn Aisop
have recently appeared in this
space. Criticism is meaningless
unless the standards of the criti
cism are clearly set out; and this,
therefore, is an attempt to do
just that.
The right way to gauge the
American world responsibility
or so it seems to us 4s to re
member the nature of a com
pany commander's responsibil
ity. In sum, the captain of an
infantry company in the line is
responsible for the welfare and
performance of his whole out
fit
HE MUST know the peculiari
tips nf all his men whether
this PFC has sore feet and that
Tech Sergeant tends towards de
lusions of grandeur. He must al
low for the sore feet and the
delusions of grandeur when he
is making his duty assignments
and laying out his plans. If his
company fails in battle, he can
not offer the excuse that one of
his platoon lieutenants was a
screwball. He gets the chief
credit for success and the chief
blame for failure.
Such is the inescapable bur
den, alas, of every leader in
every great struggle, and such it
has always been.
In the Western Alliance of
free nations, however, there is
no clear-cut chain of command,
such as there is in an infantry
company. This greatly compli
cates America's burden of world
leadership, for success can only
be won by persuasion and fore
sight and extra-special consider
ation of the special problems of
the less powerful allies.
THE fact thfet there is no chain
nf rnmmanH in nn spnp
means, however, that American
policy-makers are justified in
smugly blaming disasters that
overtake the Western Alliance
on the folly of our less powerful
allies. They may be foolish, but
it is still like the company cap
tain saying that his outfit was
routed because the platoon lieu
decide they must make some
gesture of contrition.
Such a gesture could take the
form of the Kremlin's collective
leadership publicly taking a bath
by ousting and disavowing some
of its members.
Molotov Heads List
Probably at the head of any
such list of scapegoats would be
Vyacheslav M. Molotov. He is
publicly identified as a "hard
line" old Stalinist and has all
ready been degraded and de
moted from his job as foreign
minister to appease Tito. His
complete denunciation could be
presented as the final end of
Today and
By Walter
THE SOVIET VOLUNTEERS
The President's statement
about Russian "volunteers" in
Egypt cannot fairly or reason
ably be lnter-
preted as an
attempt to
avoid Ameri
can responsi
bility and to
pass the buck
to the United
Nations. There
are no doubt
men in Wash
in g t o n who
Waiter iwomxan
would like to do just that. But
it could not be done in this case
even if we wanted to do it. For
if the U.N. allows a force of
Russian volunteers to be organ
ized in Egypt and Syria, it will
be a disastrous blow to the
United States. But it would be a
fatal blow to the United Nations.
So we must read the Presi
dent's statement as a call upon
the United Nations to seize the
problem which has been brought
into the open by Egyptian and
Russian declarations about vol-
By Joe and Stewart Alsop
tenant was a screwball. It
amounts to a flat rejection of the
leadership burden that history
has placed upon this country,
with the remorseles command:
"Carry that burden well, you
Americans, or go down with it to
ruin."
It is wrong in another sense,
also, for the task of policy-makers
in all countries is to foresee
the reactions and guard against
the follies of policy - makers in
other countries whose decisions
may affect the national interest.
And by this test, too, American
dealings with the Middle East
ern crisis have been sadly at
fault.
For what has happened? A
great crisis was precipitated
when Egypt's President Nasser
brusquely nationalized the Suez
canal, as his answer to Secretary
of State John Foster Dulles'
brusque rejection of the Aswan
dam scheme.
Nasser got away with it and
so became the unchallenged
leader of the other Middle East
ern nations. This meant a men
ace of eventual extinction for
little Israel.
IfOR Britain and France, the
consequences of a Nasser tri
umph were almost equally mor
tal, in view of their economic
dependence on Middle Eastern
resources. Through the two oth
er leading Western allies, as well
as because of our connection
with Israel, our own vital inter
ests were also at stake, although
less directly. j
In these circumstances, how
ever, our policy seemed to be
mainly designed to get by some
how, from conference to fruit
less conference, without doing
anything uncomfortably contro
versial or decisive to solve the
problem. .
But this was not a leader's pol
icy, it was not even a practical
policy, since leaving the prob
lem unsolved quite foreseeably
insured an eventual resort to
desperate measures by the Is
raelis, if not by the British and
French as well.
Precisely this result finally en
sued. TJESIDES joining the Israelis
in doing something desper
ate, moreover, the British and
French did it in a very foolish
way. Yet once again, the first
task of the leaders was not to
reprove or recriminate or pun
ish. As with a company captain
when his platoon lieutenants
make a serious mistake in bat
tle, the leader's first task was to
make the best of a bad business.
And much better could certainly
have been made of this bad busi
nes than all but surrendering the
whole Middle East to the influ
ence and power of the Soviets.
Blaming allies is both human
and consoling. But when things
go badly, the true world leader
must first of all examine his
own conduct, to see whether his
leadership responsibility has
been duly, wisely and coura
geusly discharged, and to see
how he can do better. Surely this
is not expecting too much great
ness of America.
(C) 195S
New York Herald Tribune Inc.
Stalinsim and his own "evil in
fluence." And if the Kremlin should de
cide on this method of trying to
rehabilitate itself in the eyes - f
the world and its former sympa
thizers, but felt firing Molotov
were not enough, Nikita Khrush
chev himself might be forced
out, as the actual perpetrator of
the disastrous Hungarian policy.
Georgi Malenkov, identified
in both Russian minds and
abroad as an exponent of a
"softer" policy and of a sub
stantially higher standard .of
living, might be brought back
to the top.
Tomorrow
Lippmann
unteers. What would be the posi
tion of the U.N. if, after demand
ing Russian withdrawal from
Hungary and British and French
withdrawal from Egypt, it al
lowed a Russian army to enter
Egypt and Syria? The President
is entitled to say that he Is go
ing to work through the U.N.
because he has a right to insist
that the issue is one which the
U.N. cannot evade.
TT goes without saying that the
trained military personnel
that Nasser and the Soviet gov
ernment have been talking about
are not in any true sense of the
word volunteers. They could not
be recruited, equipped, and
transplanted to Egypt except by
the Soviet government. It is in
conceivable that the Soviet gov
ernment would not have the
final say as to how, where, and
when they were to be used.
There can be no doubt that, once
established in the Middle East,
this Russian force would have
the power to make and to un
make the Arab governments, and
thus to dominate the whole
region.
The question is not one which
can be disposed of by resolutions
which do no more than to ex
press an opinion. The question
is whether, Great Britain and
France having withdrawn from
Egypt, the U.N. will permit Rus
sia to enter Egypt.
rpHE latest reports available as
this is written suggest that
both in Cairo and in Moscow
there is a disposition not to
plunge ahead with the volun
teer business. The President's
first warning must surely have
had something to. do with this.
Moreover, as the withdrawal of
the Anglo-French forces is as
sured, there is no reason which
the Soviet government can pub
licly avow to justify the send
ing in of its own so-called volun
teers. This is a very considerable
gain. But we have no right to
suppose that the Soviet govern
ment is, therefore, giving up
the idea of creating a Soviet mili
tary force in the heart of the
Middle East. There is much
credible evidence, uncovered
through the capture of Egyptian
documents and an examination
of the captured Russian muni
tions in Egypt, to indicate a
strong probability that a Rus
sian military base is being pre
pared. The evidence indicates
that military supplies have been
shipped into Egypt to await the
later arrival of the volunteers,
that is to say of the Soviet per
sonnel. TOR the moment it may be
that the occasion has passed
when the Soviet governmeht will
move a great mass of volunteers
into Egypt. But the world must
reckon with the probability that
such personnel will be coming,
nevertheless, coming quietly and
in small numbers over a period
of time.
This means that the United
Nations police force has a long
tour of duty ahead of it. It will
have to do more than to super
vise the British, French and
Israeli withdrawal. It will have
to do more than to deal with
the Arab -Israeli border prob
lems.
There is a great vacuum of
power in the Middle East which
was created by the original with
drawal of the British from Suez
in 1954. Nasser has tried to fill
that vacuum. But Nasser's Egypt
is not a great power, and Nasser's
role in the history of the Middle
East has not been to create the
Pan-Arab empire he talks about.
His role has been to open the
door of the Middle East to the
Russian empire.
Copyright 1956 New York
Herald Tribune Inc.
Coldwater, Mich. (U.R) Ed
Butters of Coldwater has buf
faloes for sale. He wants to get
rid of his buffalo herd so he
can devote full time to his rein
deer. Butters bought the ances
tors of his present buffalo herd
several years ago from the gov
ernment. The reindeer are props
for his annual masquerade as
Santa Claus.
ttt m Best Far liu 100 Tablets tie
In The Day's
Here's the latest move on the
international chessboard:
Russia proposes that the whole
disarmament question, including
OUTLAWING NUCLEAR WEA
PONS, be taken up at a new
"summit" conference of the
U.S., Britain, France, India and
the Soviet Union.
The Russians say such a. con
ference would consider Presi
dent Eisenhower's open skies in
spection plan and Soviet pro
posals for- DESTROYING
STOCKPILES of hydrogen and
atomic bombs and for ending
nuclear bomb tests.
TN WASHINGTON, the White
House declines comment until
it receives the official text of the
Russian proposal. News Secre
tary James Hagerty says:
"All we have before us now is
news reports. The text has hot
yet reached Washington. As
soon as the complete text is re
ceived it will be carefully
studied."
rpHAT IS to say:
Before we commit ourselves
one way or the other we are go
ing to read all the fine print.
That's a sound idea.
In these propositions that
look too good to be true the
catches are usually to be found
down in the fine print at the
bottom.
WHAT TO DO? .
" Let's go highbrow for a mo
ment, c o
Euripides, in his Iphigenia in
Reservists Screened
In Military Letter
Washington (U.R) .Note to
reservists: If you receive a letter
from the military or Selective
Service inquiring as to your
"availability" for recall to ac
tive duty, don't get nervous. It's
just part of a "routine 'scresn
ing process."
The armed services and Se
lective Service want to be sure
that a reservist would be ready
and available in event of a na
tional emergency. Ths govern
ment agencies are not thinking
In terms of calling up veterans
because of the Middle East crisis.
In recent weeks, the military
seryices the. Army and. Marine
corps particularly have been
sending out letters to their re
servists asking whether and how
soon they could get back in uni
form if ordered.
In addition, local Selective
Service boards for the past five
months have been sending letters
to standby reservists asking a
similar question.
WHAT GOES UP
Batavia, N.Y. (U.RJ Irving
Gilman, 16-year-old drum major
for the St. Joseph's Drum Corps
of Batavia, flipped his baton up
ward during a fire department
carnival parade and got the sur
prise of his life. The metal baton
remained up in the air, fused
to a 5,000-volt power line sus
pended across the street. It caus
ed a 90-minute blackout.
LEGAL NOTICES
TO ALL LAND OWNERS. ASSESS
MENT PAYERS OR OTHER INTER
ESTED PARTIES IN GOLD HILL JR
RIGATION DISTRICT: .
Notice is hereby given that the
Board of Directors of Gold Hilt Irrl -gation
District, did. at the regulai
meeting thereof held on the 7th da
of November 1956. by resolution
thereof, make a computation and as
sessment of the amounts of mone
necessary to be raised by the district
for the year 1957 for district purposes,
and its bond and interest payments.
and did determine the number of irri- ,
gable acres owned by each land ownef
or assessment payer in me aisinci. I
and the proportionate assessments to I
be charged against each such tract: l
and said assessment roll is available
and open for examinaUon and inspec- 1
tion bv all interested parties at the
office of the President of Gold Hill
Irrigation District.
Notice is further given that the
Board of Directors of said district will .
at the hour of 1:00 o'clock p.m.. on
tne in aay oi uecemoer 195B. sit at
the People's Realty Office on Highway 1
io. 99. tioia rim. uregon. as a Board
of Equalization to review and correct I
the assessment roll so creDared and 1
will hear and determine any objec
tions Dy any interested oersons to the
said assessments and apportionment I
thereof, and any other matter or mat- I
ters connected therewith that may
come before them. .
BY ORDER of the Board of Dlrec- "
tors of Gold Hill Irrigation District.
dated November 7. 1956.
GOLD HILL IRRIGATION DISTRICT j
By Bertha Coy Ross. Secretary.
FUNERAL .
SERVICES o
o
In Every Price Range
Since 1908
PERL
Funeral
Home
Phone 2-6675
o
News y
u O
Frank Jenkins
Tauris, uses this line: Put not
t!!y faith in any Greek." Virgil,
in his Aeneiad, Sauses Aeyas Q
say: "I ofear the Greeks, even
when bearing gifts." o
A WAY (BACK before even
Herodotus ha3 sorted writ
ing history a tie so (gemote
that its events have to come
down to us by word-of-mouth
tradition Greece d Troy oc
cupied about theme place in
the little world of then that is
occupied in the bigger world of
today by the United States and
Russia. Wtlile the rest of the
world looked on, they fought
each other with weapons and
kidtied each other with strata
gems. O
The Greeks WON BY TRICK
ERY. The trick that did the bus
iness was the Trojan Horse
which we don't need to go into
detail about here, because every
body either knows tgfe Tfojan
Horse story or ougltt to.
rpHIS IS the foint:
The Greeks destroyed the Tro
jans by a trick. 9 The Russian)
will destroy us in the same way
if they cam That is why?we musP
read all the fine print io all tie
proposals that bat up to, usi
They'd like nothing -tetterO
than to trick us into destroying C
all otir nuclear weapons id
then blow us to Kinfdom Gm
with atom and hydrogen bosibs0
o-
TT S TOO bad. v.3
But that's the. way it tt,
-O
At 90 Beart Sdfio
GEO. N. TAYLOR o
Yes, Sarah, tli wife of Abra
O
ham was 90 and far beyond the
age of child-bearing. "Abraham,
her h u s b-s d
was 100 a'
r
dead so far as
becoming a A- O
ther laayo do
Yet GM pronV
cised theai a son
and Abra-OBm
believed t h t
what -God had
pro m ied, fe
would do. ASH O
so in due lime,
Isaac the son was bornr Se,
Romas 4:19-21. q O
And you? Have Abrahamll)
faith and so be bom again. Be
lieve that the blood of Chri
Cleared all sin from you,r,-j5flge4)
At that God gives you eterMl o
life. Then- grow up. Daijy
Bible and Prayer, growXip. i
This message sponsored by $
Scappoe family. adv coJ
oiily29
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