MAIL TRIBUNE, M4Hr4, Or.
. Monday, Auf. 24, 1St
"Everyone is Southern Oreaoa
Readi The Mail Tribune"
Published Dil; except Saturday by
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83 North Ti St Ph SP 2-ll
ROBERT W HUHL. Editor
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Medior Oregon under Aet of
March 3 1897
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Flight 'o Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from tha files of The
Mail Tribuna 10, 20, 30, 40
and 50 years ago.
; 10 YEARS AGO
I Aug. 24, 1949 (Wednesday)
Z "The Taminff of the Shrew"
. rinse this year's Oregon
- Shakespeare festival season
z in Ashland tonight,
j Upper Applegate 4-H clubs
t hold their first community
fair as a warm-up for the
; county fair next month.
r 20 YEARS AGO
: Aug. 24, 1939 (Thursday)
- An electric storm crossing
Z southern Oregon sets nearly
Z 100 forest fires and drenches
r Ashland in rain.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
3 Smudge Pot" column (by El
- bert Bede): "The Elks' tom-
litter of kittens. His face was
as red as a Rogue River val
ley sunset during the forest
fire season."'
30 YEARS AGO .
. Aug. 24, 1929 (Saturday)
An orchardist - reformer
here renews Mediterranean
fruit fly agitation.
The Knights of Templar
plan a picnic in Ashland to
morrow. 40 YEARS AGO
' Aug. 241919 (Sunday)
The shortage of boats at
Crater Lake is to be corrected
by next season.
The DeMoss family is sched
uled to give a free concert in
Medford city park tonight,
and a record crowd is expect
ed. a
50 YEARS AGO
Aug. 24. 1909 (Tuasday)
Extension of the Pacific
and Eastern railroad is assur
ed as John Roberts Allen
purchases bonds to help clear
a legal tangle.
F. K. Deuel retires from the
Deuel and Kentner business
partnership to attend to his
orchard holdings.
.What's Your I.Q.?
I Nina ar tan correct is su parlor j
seven or eight is excellent; five et
six is good.
1. Is the Suez Canal a sea
level or lock canal?
2. What is the most famous
statue of a female figure?
3. Biologically, what have
bats and whales in common?
4. What is another name for
the white of an egg?
5. In which State is the
Willamette River?
6. Casein is an ingredient of
what animal secretion?
.7. Which President of the
United States lived to the
greatest age?
8. Is paraffin of animal,
vegetable, or mineral origin?
9. Would an innocuous re
mark be harmful, harmless,
caustic, or derogatory?
10. Who discovered the Pa
cific Ocean?
Answers: 1. Sea-la val. 2.
Tha Venus da Milo. 3. Both
are mammals. 4. Albumen. 5.
Oregon. 6. Milk. 7. John
Adams (died at 90). 8. Min
eral. 9. Harmless. 10. Balboa.
FILM PRODUCER DIES
Van Nuys, Calif. - (UPD -
Rosary was recited Sunday
night for film producer Cliff
Reid whose career spanned
successfully the transition
from silent movies to
"talkies." Reid, 60, died Satur
day at the. motion picture
country home in Hollywood.
' Its A Great Story
When the news came in of that horrible dis
aster at Roseburg most of us asked ourselves,
"What if it had happened in my town?"
Now, as we read of the efforts of the citizens
of Roseburg to rebuild their business district, to
rehabilitate those who do not have the means to
do it on their own, we wonder whether our town
would shake itself loose from the shock as rapidly
and with as great determination.
IT SHOULD be pointed out that the task of re
building is more difficult for Roseburg than it
would have been for many Oregon cities, and
thus the more remarkable.
Few communities in Oregon were harder hit
by the recession. Roseburg depends almost en
tirely upon wood products manufacturing and
no other segment of Oregon's economy was
harder hit by the recession. That was hard on
Roseburg. But it wasn't to be the last of Rose
burg's troubles.
As the community was coming out of the
recession it was revealed that the city's fiscal
Eosition was not at all what most of its citizens
ad thought. They were told that in order to hold
the line on taxes for municipal government re
serves had been tapped and tapped extensively.
It was decided that a municipal government pro
gram of austerity must be undertaken immedi
ately. It was necessary to reduce services. The
cinching up of belts has been going on in almost
every department of municipal government.
WE CITE this background because we think it
is an important part of the 'Roseburg story.
The results of that explosion would have been
the same in any city. But most cities would have
been in a healthier condition to prepare to rebuild
from the shambles.
We trust the story of the indomitable spirit of
Roseburg as she digs herself out of a disaster
unequaled in the history of Oregon will be w.ell
recorded. It is a great story. Pendleton East
Oregonian. '
The Plots In Cuba
While waiting for the excitement in Cuba
to die down it is worth while considering the
forces that make such upsets almost predictable.
Cuba can expect lots of things to happen in the
next few years, but what it cannot expect is a
calm, peaceful existence.
Trip VSnsif fact, of Cuban life todav is revolu
tion in the most profound sense of the word. This
is a complete overturn of the political, economic
and social structure of Cuba as it has existed. In
the process, Premier Fidel Castro and his young
followers inevitably create enemies.
FIRST, there are those
the Batista reerime
men allied to the government, soldiers and police.
m m m m 11 1 !l mm m s1 .
To these should be added tne lamines oi tne "war
criminals" executed by the Castro regime or who
are now in jail. The blood feud is a strong tradi
tion in Hispanic nations.
Seoondlv. revolutions
society and these become enemies big land-
. m 1 t 1
owners, property holders
cut, business men who suiter ironvtne dislocation
nf the flconoiriv and all those who fear and od-
pose revolution as such.
luenuiy revolution wim cummuiiisiii.
fF THESE enemies, only the former soldiers
and police would be armed and trained to
fight. They could win only by a military coup
d'etat or by assassination. The situation today
is completely different from that in General Ba
tista's time. He had an overwhelming majority of
the people against him, whereas Fidel Castro has
an overwhelming majority with him and in favor
of the revolution.
Nothing that has come out of Cuba indicates
that the young leader, who is just 33 years old,
has lost any strength. At the same time it is quite
disturbing to a nation to have an upset of this
sort. Evidently Premier Castro realizes this, for
he seems to be trying to make as complete a haul
of his enemies in one swoop as he possibly can.
New York Times. , i
Loss Of Life
The Roseburg explosion and the Montana
earthquake and slide were sensational events,
attended by some loss of life and large damage
to property.
But as of Wednesday Oregon's traffic death
roll numbered 294 persons for the year to date,
41 names having been added during August. Pre
sumably nearly all of these could have been
averted by greater caution on the part of driver
or pedestrian.
The dramatic and unusual events like the two
listed receive prominence, but the motor vehicle
remains the greatest- peacetime menace to life,
aside from illness. Pity is,.we could do something
about it. Oregon Statesman, Salem.
Highest Pass
The Klamath Falls
that Quartz Mountain
highest mountain pass
system. .Nope, lhe Diamond Lake cut-off pass,
at 5,920 feet, is highest.
the so-called Winnemucca - to - the - Sea road,
though, the 6,200 feet at Doherty slide will be
the highest. E.A.
who were connected with
the politicians, business
hurt certain classes of
wnose rents nave oeen
This last element would
Herald and News reports
pass, at 5,308 feet is the
on the Oregon highway
If the state takes over
Dennis the
' KUFF MUST REALLY LIKE YA.MK. WLSOM '
Matter of Fact
THE REAL ROCKEFELLER
STORY
Washington - A member of
Vice - President Richard M.
Nixon's political high com
mand has ad
miringly said
that the mar
riage of young
Steven Rocke
feller and
pretty Ann
Marie Ras
mussen, marks
the beginning
of the great
Jos-oh aisod contest lor
the Republican Presidential
nomination.
Although the charming
spectacle in Norway will cer
tainly not hurt Governor
Rockefeller's chances, the re
mark was off the point for a
special reason. The marriage
in fact has the distinction of
being the only, the single,
solitary and unique unplan
ned episode in the Rockefel
ler candidacy.
For the real Rockefeller
story is the story of the mass
i v e, meticulous, continuous
surveying, studying, and pre
planning that is Governor
Rockefeller's special behind-the-scene
political technique.
From the moment Rockefeller
began to consider making the
New York against Averell
Harriman, until election day,
the Governor ordered and
paid for - the incredible total
of 134 general and special
public opinion polls and ex
pert studies of other types.
A SIMILAR effort is now
on foot, in preparation for
the struggle for the Republi
can nomination. Officially,
this effort is still in-the first
stage, like the stage in New
York when Rockefeller was
merely trying to determine
whether he had a chance to
win against Harriman. But
he decided to make that race
on evidence showing the odds
were 60-40 against him. He
further quite obviously longs
to make the race against
Nixon. So one can conclude
he will do so, barring the
most unlikely accidents.
In reality, then, all the poll
taking and sounding out of
delegates and surveying of
local situations are not main
ly directed, any longer, to
wards finding out whether
the race should be made. The
main purpose now, one can
say with confidence, is to find
out how the race can best be
made and when it is wisest to
begin running in earnest.
On this crucial point of
timing, a significant change
of tendency is detectable in
the Rockefeller camp. Only a
few weeks ago it seemed high
ly likely that Gov. Rockefeller
would begin in October to
make speeches outside New
York state - which is his
equivalent of crossing the
Rubicorn. Now he has defin
itely decided not to do so be
Try and
4
-Si
-By BiNNETT CERF-
TWO PANTS manufacturers found themselves, by means
that defy description, in darkest Africa. The more nervous
of the two clutched his friend's arm and quavered, "Don't
look now, Morris, but isn t
that a tiger following me?"
"Tiger shmiger," shrugged
the other. "How would I
know? Am I a fur import
er? When Teddy Roosevelt was
campaigning in the West, a
delegation of prim ladies
urged him to come out openly
against a senatorial candidate
from Utah who was a power
in the Mormon Church. "La
dies," asserted TJt, "I prefer
a polygamist who does not
polyg to a monogomist who
does not xnonog."
T. R. never let a typed letter go out from his office during a
presidential "campaign without making a correction or adding a
postscript by hand. When his typist asked if she was doing some
thing wrong, Roosevelt assured her, "Not at all. But I've dis
covered people treasure a letter from the President more when
he's added something in his own handwriting."
0 195 b Bennett Ctrl. Distributed by King Features Syndicate,
Menace
Bv Joseph Alsop
fore Nov. 1. It is also quite
possible that the appearance
of final commitment will be
avoided for some time after
November.
rpHE PRESSURE of t h o s e
A- who want to come out
early for Rockefeller may
change this tendency to delay
commitment. Meanwhile the
cause of the tendency is in
teresting. According to a lead
ing member of the New York
Republican organization,
Rockefeller soundings have
shown that while a large ma
jority of potential delegates
may prefer Nixon, an even
larger majority hankers to be
with the winner. Hence it is
hoped they will choose Rocke
feller if he looks like a win
ner.
After the slight mis-step in
Puerto Rico, the mention of
public opinion polls now
causes a frost in the Rocke
feller camp. But it is stiU a
fact that one part of the
Rockefeller strategy is to rely
on the public opinion polls to
make the Vice-President look
like a loser. The inquiring
Dr. Gallup has belatedly pub
lished his astonishing July
vote, showing Sen. John F,
Kennedy taking 61 per cent
of the national vote, against
39 per cent for Nixon. Any
thing like a half-way repeti
tion of those dire figures will
obviously help Rockefeller.
Mean while, Rockefeller's
own peculiar campaigning
ability is relied on to make
the Governor look like a win
ner. The power to excite and
charm great crowds that he
so spectacularly showed in
New York is to be displayed
to the nation. Above all, it is
to be displayed in the pre-
convention primaries. And
among the primaries, appar
ently, this power is to be dis
played to the utmost in the
critical primary in Nixon's
own state of California.
SUCH, at any rate, is the
present expectation, based
on Rockefeller surveys which
show that the Vice-President
is actually weaker in his own
state than in most other
states. On this point, it must
be added, the Rockefeller
surveys are flatly contra
dieted by the most recent
Nixon surveys. But the dan
ger of Rockefeller ramping,
roaring, and baby-kissing his
way through California has
long been apparent to the
Vice-President. His greatest
single preoccupation for many
months has been uniting
around himself the fractured
California Republican organi
zation. If later Rockefeller surveys
confirm the Nixon surveys,
the Governor will of course
graciously concede California
to the Vice-President, "as a
sporting courtesy." But the
primaries and the polls are
still the main planned instru-
Stop Me
9-H
Foreign Notebook: Trouble in Formosa;
Ike's Discussions; British Missile Site
By WILLIAM J. FOX
From the foreign editor's
notebook:
Chinas Trad:
Nature may have done to
Nationalist China what
Communist guns could not do:
cause it griveous economic
trouble. Financial experts fear
that the recent spate of rain,
floods and earthquakes that
hit Formosa, will have done
enough damage to cause Na
tionalist China's trade to drop
sharply.
Ik's Trip:
British officials in London
are looking forward to
pleasant talks between Presi
dent Eisenhower and Prime
Minister Harold Macmillan in
the coming days. But they pre
dict heavy going for the
President when he meets in
Paris with French President
Charles de Gaulle. The British
feel that France's NATO "big
power" ambitions, her atomic
bomb test plans, the question
of Algeria and de Gaulle's
objections to Eisenhower
speaking for France when he
meets with Soviet Premier
Nikita Khrushchev all are
likely to cause difficulties.
Missile Site:
Intelligence sources in Ja
karta say the British have
carved out a huge missile
launching site in the jungles
of North Borneo. They point
out that the area is just a
Communications
Letters to the Editor must
bear (he name and address of
the writei although "nder cer
tain circumstances tne use of
pen name m initial for publica
tion is pe-missible The Mail
Tribune reserves the right to
edit all letters with an eye to
clarification and condensation
Letters submitted for publica
tion must not exceed po words
Parking Strips
To - the Editor: During our
'Make Medford Beautiful'
campaign, there is one thing
that has escaped everyone and
that is the care of the parking
strips.
Have you ever looked down
your street and seen lot after
lot of well kept green strips,
marred by a few that were
dry and unmowed?
Some people will keep their
yards green and then for no
apparent reason let their park
ing strips dry up and have
an unkempt appearance.
People often say "oh, they
are just renters, you can't ex
pect renters to keep a place
up the same as if they owned
it!"
And why not? Why, just be
cause a person rents should
he not have the pride and con
sideration for his neighbors to
do his share in making a more
attractive neighborhood?
If I had rental property I
would put in the contract that
the care of the parking strip
was included in the care of
the yard and they were ex
pected to keep it up.
If they did not, out they
would go!
It is a foregone conclusion
that if they did not take care
of one part of the property
they would not take proper
care of the rest.
The residential district is
not the only one remiss in
the care of the parking strips.
Take a look at the service
stations and small business
within two or three blocks of
the main part of town. They
are among the worst offend
ers. The parking strip belongs to
the city. It can, and should,
demand that this strip be kept
green and mowed or else ce
mented over.
It is these little things that
make the difference between
an outstanding city and an
ordinary one.
Think of the towns that
have a scarcity of water and
can't keep them pretty and
green!
Which would you rather do
step out of your car onto a
nice green strip or on to a
dried up one with weeds to
scratch your legs and ruin
your silk hose?
(Name on file)
Medford
Opposes Renaming
To the Editor: In the Mail
Tribune recently I read that
Sen. Neuberger has advocated
renaming . Green Peter Dam
and bestowing upon it the
name "Douglas McKay Dam."
I consider this a magnifi
cent gesture on the part of
the Senator but I cannot help
wondering if this would be
appreciated by the friends of
Mr. McKay.
In life Mr. McKay was an
avowed opponent of publicly
owned dams and powerplants,
etc., and would not have en
dorsed their construction and
operation as such, so it is very
doubtful if the conferring of
his name on such a project
would be an honor to his
name.
More recently I have read
ments of the Rockefeller can
didacy; and as of now, the
California primary is thought
of as the decisive instrument,
(c) 1959 New York Herald
Tribune Inc.
few miles north of the Equa
tor and one of the best snots
available for launching earth
satellites.
Reds in San Marino:
The Communists are ex
pected to launch an all-out,
do-or-die effort to win the
Sept. 13 general elections in
San Marino, the world's old
est republic tucked in the
mountains of northern Italy's
Adriatic coast. At stake are
the 60 seats of the grand and
Congress Clearing Decks for
Adjournment; 'Vital' Bills Pass
By FRANK ELEAZER
Washington -flJPD- Our law
makers are off on their an
nual headlong dash for ad-
jour n m e n t.
The aim is to
get out of
town before
Khrushc h e v
arrives.
A measure
naming the
"Pet a 1 u m a
river" in Cali
fornia, for ex-
Franb Eleazer ample, was
rushed through the Senate
and on to the White House.
This stream formerly was
known as "Petaluma creek"
but you know how it's been
raining some places.
The House passed and sent
to the Senate a bill to remove
the 10 per cent tax from Sen
Sen, the breath sweetener.
This may mollify closet drink
ers and others for whom Con
gress has steadfastly refused
to reduce the taxes on whis
key. One way or another, other
urgent measures also are be
ing cleared from the calen
dars. The hope is to adjourn
by Sept. 5. Many problems re
main and some members
dont think they will make it.
Resolutions Filed
There was unfortunate pub
licity earlier this year about
wives, sons, daughters and
other kinfolks on congression
al payrolls. To help clear the
decks for adjournment, the
House- Administration . com
mittee has taken care of the
resolutions offered to stop
this. They have been filed, in
case anybody ever wants to
see them again.
A bill to publicize the trav
el expense of junketing con
gressmen, which total about a
half million dollars a year.
also has been put in shape for
possible passage -some other
year.
Senators meantime have
acted to ease the pain of mak
ing public their payrolls, an
event set for sometime in the
fall. Fearing some of the
homefolks might not under
stand how a clerk or adminis
trative assistant could be
worth $16,300 a year, they
have authorized fancier titles,
each senator to make up his
own
House members have gear
ed for the recess by voting
themselves an extra $600 for
stationery, raising the annual
allowance per member from
$1,200 to $1,800. They also
voted to ease restrictions on
their free telephone and tele
graph service.
House Makes Announcement
One adjournment hurdle
was cleared when the House
announced to the world, for
the 15th time, that it opposes
admission of Red China to the
United Nations. The Senate
may act on this shortly.
In another move to clear
the air, Rep. Daniel J. Flood
of oppostion being voiced by
the young Democrats of Port
land to renaming the dam in
question "McKay Dam." To
this I heartily agree, but I
suspect for different reasons.
I am a proponent of
publicly owned dams and
power plants, in short all na
tural resources, and just as
firm in my belief as are my
opponents, but one must be
fair and realize that this ques
tion is highly controversial,
that both sides are equally
sure of their convictions and
can show facts and figures
supporting their convictions
but have no further proof,
that each side is sincere and
feel justified in their respec
tive positions.
In short, I would not feel
honored by having anything
named for me to which I had
been opposed, whether it be
named posthumous or other
wise, and I am sure the good
Senator would feel the same.
C. R. Burrill
122 Vilas Rd. W.
Central Point.
Worry of
FALSE TEETH
Slipping or Irritating?
Don't be embarrassed by loose false
teeth slipping, dropping or wobbling
when you eat. talk or laugh. Just
sprinkle a little FASTEETH on your
plates. This pleasant powder gives a
remarkable sense of added comfort
and security by holding plates more
firmly. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste
or feeling. It's alkaline (non-acid).
Get FASTEETH at any drug counter.
general council, the tiny na
tion's ruling body. The Reds
took 35 seats in the last elec
tion in 1955, but lost power
in a bloodless "civil war" in
1957.
Castro's Cuba:
One of the critical tests of
Cuban Premier Fidel Castro's
revolutionary agrarian re
form program may come next
month when the island re
public's sugar rnills close
down for the year. Tradi
(D-Pa.) announced that Con
gress, through the House Ap
propriations committee, has
reaffirmed its faith in govern
ment operation of the Panama
Line. '
The line runs cruise shiDS
between the Panama Canal
Zone and New York. Flood
In the Day's News
Br FRANK JENKINS
Cost of living note: i
The government reports i
that the cost of living rose !
fractionally in July to reach j
an ALL TIME HIGH.
It was the fourth straight
monthly increase in the con
sumer price index, which now
stands at 124.9 per cent of the
1947-1949 average at the end
of July.
That is to say:
It now costs $12.49 to buy
what $10 would buy in the
1947-1949 period.
TTIGHER prices are reported
by the government iri
NEARLY ALL AREAS of
consumer spending.
It adds:
"The ' increase, plus a de
cline in spendable earnings,
reduced consumer buying
power by approximately 1V4
per cent."
QUESTION:
What are "spendable"
earnings?
The answer:
Spendable earnings are
what you have left after pay
ing ' all your necessary and
unavoidable bills - INCLUD
ING TAXES. If you don't pay
your taxes, you'll find your
self in DEEP trouble.
AND- . '
TAXES are higher than
they were in the 1947-1949
period. That bites still deeper
into your buying power.
A NOTHER thought:
x- What government takes
out of your pocket in the
form of taxes YOU DON'T
HAVE LEFT TO SPEND. We
hear a lot of talk (especially
in political circles) about the
beneficial effeci of. govern
ment spending on our national
prosperity.
Did you ever stop to think
that what government reaches
into your pocket and takes
out in the form of taxes you
don't have left to spend for
yourself? It s all a question,
you see, of WHO DOES THE
SPENDING.
Which do you prefer - to
spend it yourself, or to have
the government spend it for
you?
AFTER telling about the
rising cost of living, this
morning's government report
adds:
"HOWEVER, more than a
million workers with con
tracts tied to the cost of liv
Reasonable Funerals
(Priced for Everyone)
FRANK PERL
FREE
Parking Space Adjacent
To Mortuary
FRIENDLY,
tionally, the thousands of
workers employed in these
mills remain out of jobs until
the time comes for next year's
planting. This waste of man
power has been one of Cas
tro's major targets and he
hopes through the agrarian
program to keep these people
productive on a year-round
basis by permitting them to
get away from reliance on a
one-crop economy such as the
cotton that used to plague the
U.S. South.
said putting the line under
private operators, as proposed
by a firm of consultants,
would be contrary to the na
tional interests. Among other
changes, a private operator
could start charging congress
men for their fares.
A big roadblock to early
adjournment is the peanut bill
passed by the House. It says
for purposes of acreage allot
ments peanuts that are boiled
aren't to be counted as pea
nuts. Amendment Thrown In
Southern sponsors thought
this measure had a straight
furrow ahead in the Senate.
But Sen. Kenneth B. Keating
(R-N.Y.) has thrown in an
amendment. It's a civil rights
bill he couldn't get out of
committee over strong south
ern opposition.
Under Senate rules amend-
mnts don't have to be ger
mane to the bill. Senators
hoping to . revise ' the rules
have postponed until January
their effort to change 'em.
Sen. Wayne L. Morse-CD-Ore.)
told the Senate indig
nantly a kindergarten couldn't
be run under present Senate
rules. Sen. Thomas H. Kuchel
(R-Calif .) replied that if Morse
and others get around to re
writing them, he hopes they'll
include one to say laws here
after have got to be written
in English. A change that rad
ical, of course, isn't likely.
Members look to the recess
as a chance to see how they
stand with the voters.
Sen. Stephen M. Young CD
Ohio) is one who has deter
mined for sure it's safe for
him to go home. He took a
poll in his state. It showed,
he announced, that the home
folks like Young, 368 to 4.
AUTHOR 1WES
Nantucket, Mass. - IDPD -Tiffany
Thayer, 57, author of
"Thirteen Men" and many
other books, died Sunday of a
heart attack while vacation
ing here. Thayer's books in
cluded "The Illustr ious
Corpse." "Call Her Savage,"
"The Greok" and "Three
Sheet."
ing will receive automatic
WAGE INCREASES. Gener
ally, these increases will
amount to about two cents an
hour." .
One more question:
Will these automatic wage
increases be gravy that the
worker who gets them can
eat? Or will they be eaten up
by the rising cost of living
before the worker gets them?
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tablets ntutraliis 3 times as much
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today for the fastest knows relief.
Hear your fav
orite hymns on
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Sunday, 10:35
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Ernie" Ford
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