TWO HERALD AND MEWS
SERVICE SEES
GAIN IN LAND
WASHINGTON,, Aug. 15 (f)
Production ot uregon lann couiu
Jio mutcrially Improved with
10,101 man-years 01 wum, mj.
iho agriculture department's soi
...H-nnuatlnn MAI-l, I l-A
(A man-year of work Is the
estlmato of what one man can
do in a year).
Since 53,398,000 acres of Ore
gon'5 61,663,000 acres are for
i. ...... ila arnnc mnn
ca; dim W " 1 fl " " - " '
years should be devoted to those
lands, me service saia. v-unuui
of dune and beach erosion on
iho state's shorelands would be
aided by planting 3,000,000
shrubs ana pianis a ou man
........
JtCBi JVU. .....
The state Is credited with
3,004,000 acres of prime farm
' ' ing land, 1,561,000 acres suitable
for occasional cultivation and
3,012,000 acres usable only for
wild life land that is rough,
swampy or otherwise unsuitable
for grazing or forestry.
Largest proposed improve
ments, in acres include: contour
planting, 1,936,000; crop residue
management, 2,086,000; crop ro
tation, l.Bio.uuu; aeierrea grat
ing, 8,548,000; fertilizing graz
ing land, 1,544,000; proper stock-u-iit
a rano nfin- rntntinn crazing.
lO.isi'.OOO; salting of grazing
lanas, r,ova,uuu; seeuiug ituigc:
and pastures, 2,174,000; harvest
of woodlands, 3,000,000; preven
tion of grazing damage, 3,000,
000; fire protection, 8,000,000;
reorganization of fields, 2,868,
000. Many of the recommended im
provements, such as reorganiza
tion of fields, require no addi
tional manpower.
Klgmathites Stage
Greatest Jubilee
In Town's History
(Continued From Page One)
buildings with open doors and
many people attended services to
offer heartfelt thanks to God
that the most terrible conflict
the world has ever had was at
last over. Almost every other
business house was closed.
Two victory dances were held,
and the armory and Danceland
were bulging at the sides from
an overflow crowd of servicemen
and their wives or girls.
The city was littered with
paper and the debris of thous
ands who jammed the streets to
proclaim the victory.
About midnight the streets
cleared with the exception of a
few late revelers, but Klamath
Falls had celebrated in tradi
tional style.
Oregonians planned to attend
prayer services and patriotic
meetings today after the hilar
ious celebration last night. Gov
ernor an sneu proclaimed to
day and tomorrow legal holidays
and called upon the people of
Oregon to devote their prayers
and thoughts toward building a
prosperous peacetime world.
Asking all churches to open
their doors, Snell urged that "re
joicing De tempered with com
passion and prayer.
OBITUARY
MARK EUGENE EDWARD MECUM
Mark Ellffene Edurarrt Mmim a
dent of Williamson River. Ore., for the
past two years, passed away at Klam
ath Agency, Ore., on Monday, August
13, 1945. at 1:50 p. m. He was a native
ui ounaon, ure ana was agea as years,
8 months at the time of his passing. He
ii survived by his father. Mark Me cum,
Bandon, Ore.; a daughter, Nona Jean
Ward; a son, Gerald Edwin Mecum, of
Myrtle Point. Ore.: and two grand
children. The remains Will be forward
ed to Bandon, Ore., where funeral serv
ices ana interment Will De held. Ward s
Klamath Funeral Home, 02S High, in
FUNERALS
MAHV TANF rni.mriri t.
Funeral services for the late Mary
Jane Colwell of Merrill, Ore., who passed
away In this city on Tuesday. August
14, 1945, following a brief illness will
be held in the First Presbyterian church
i urc- " rnaay, August n,
1045. at a n. m , utth th n..r n t
Fergurson, pastor, officiating. Commit
ment services and Interment family plot
in IOOF cemetery, Merrill, Ore. Ar-
iMUKKmemx are unaer tne direction of
the Earl Whitlock Funeral Home of this
mj. ciiDiiua hi c invnea.
MIL AND henry imniinv
Funeral servlcei for the late Miland
Henry Hobson who paised away in this
City on Sunday, August 12, 1945. fol
LT!nF n lne" of one month, will be
held In the phanfll nt tha rri ukiti..i.
Funeral Home, Pine at Sixth, on Thun-
ux, ia. B( a p. m,, with
tiie service in cnarge ot Mrt, C. M,
rimms. Commitment SftrvfcKi anrf in.
terment Linkviila cemetery. Friends are
Classltied Ads Bring Results,
riiifiiiiiiinilUMaMti .
Uaa (bis .modcin vapor m.ihod '
..... ..... prompt rth.f (,om
tilt ip.smi of Bronchial Asthma.
Eaay to uae . . .
CAUTION-tsf.;,rf,y,..,
Give
Your Feet An
Ice-Mint Treat
Cat Happr. Coollnt Raliti For
Burning Callouwa Put Sprinf in Your Step
Don't groin about tired, bnrnlnl fed.
Don't moan about abllouaoa. Gat buajr And
live them an lca-Mlilt trat. Ktel tho com
fortlng-, soothing coolness of Ic-MInt driv
In, out Aery burning . . . aching tii-.dn.aa.
Hub le.-MInt over Uioso ugly hard old
eorns and callouses, as dlroeud. Sea now
whlta. crcam.llke. medlelnal Ioe-MInt h.lps
sofun them up, Get foot happy tudajr U(
lci-Ulnl way, At U druggiiu.
PRODUCTION
Wednesday, Aug. IS. 19S
Ashes Blanket
Coast Fire Site
FOREST GROVE, Aug. 15 M)
An 18-inih blanket ot ashes rov
ers tho part of Forest Grove's
watershed blackened by the giant
northwest Oregon forest fire,
Health officials were studying
the problem of the ashes, expect
ed to wash into the water supply
once fall rains start.. Estimates
of the amount of the city's water
shed destroyed by fire ranged up
to 33 per cent.
KF
TO OPEN THURSDAY
(Continued from Pace One)
well as Wednesday. Big Lakes
has announced that its saw
mill night shift will start
Thursday night and the day shift
and box factory will go to work
Friday morning.
Otherwise, retail stores will
follow the recommendation of
the Retail Trades committee of
the chamber of commerce and
remain closed both days.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 15 (1ft
The White House today retract
ed a statement that this day and
tomorrow are legal holidays and
explained that President Tru
man merely intended to excuse
government employes for this
period.
Press secretary (Jnarles u.
Ross said that last night's state
ment which held the import of
creating two legal holidays for
purposes of overtime pay was
issued In error. Koss said in a
statement:
"Today is not V-J Day nor is
tomorrow. As the president
stated yesterday the proclama
tion of V-J Day must wait upon
the formal signing of the sur
render terms by Japan' there
fore the executive order does
not apply in any way to August
15 and 16. August 15 and 16
are not intended to be legal holi
days. The president merely ex-
c u s e d government employes
from work on those two days.
"The executive order will be
applicable on V-J Day when it
is proclaimed. Before that date
uie secretary of labor will issue
a clarifying statement as to its
effect."
Government Sets
Goals For Industry
(Continued From Page One)
released from the army within
12 to 18 months.
All men 25 years and older
were maae draft-proof.
tteps were lateen to insure
veterans the first cracK at Jobs
py preierence. -
The navy cancelled S8.ou0.00u
in war contracts.-. .
The army is expected to can
cel more billions. m
Congress was called back into
session September 5 to consider
higher unemployment pay, low
er taxes, and other home front
measures.
The whole process was sum
marized by Mr. Truman last
flight when he stood on the
White House porch and said:
"The emergency is as great as
it was on' December 7, 1941."
The one word uppermost in
people's minds today was "jobs."
Manpower controls were re
moved because the manpower
commission has suddenly stop
ped trying to find people for
jobs. Tjow it must find jobs for
people.
From now on, government
permission won't be needed to
leave a job. Factories can hire
as many workers as they please.
The compulsory 48-hour week is
aeaa.
"Jobs" are the hie ouestinn In.
volved in the expected release of
Deiween 3,uuo,0O0 and 5,500,000
from the army within the next
year or year-and-a-half.
Today, Brig. Gen. F r a n k T.
Hines, just before stepping out
as veterans administrator in fa
vor ot uen. Omar Bradlev. an.
nounced that "Dreferenrte in -inh
referrals is assured veterans of
woria war 11."
He said a committee composed
of himself. Draft Director Lewis
a. nersney and Manpower Com
missioner Paul V MfTMiilf Mnon
imo"sIy agreed that when the
pj7rrj7Y7r?rri
Poor Digestion?
Headachy? an
Sour or Upset?
Tired-Listless?
Do you feel hoadachy and upaet due lo
poorly digested food? To feel cheerful
and happy again your food must be
OlgeaUd properly
Each day, Nature must produce about
two pint of vital digestive Julca to
help digest your food. If Nature foils,
your food may remain undigested
leaving you headachy and Irritable.
Thorefore, you must increase the flow
of thla digcstlva Juice, Carttr'a Liltla
;Llver Pilla increaso thla flow quickly
often In as little aa 80 minutes. And,
you're on the road to feeling better.
Don t depend on artificial aids to
counteract indigestion when CarUr'i
Little Liver I'illa aid digestion after Na
ture'o own order. Take Carter'a Little
Livar Pilla as directed, gat loom tt ny
drugstore, Only 25C
the pain or ifc T'i
your money back. Fmjl
10c,50cor$1.00 I it
at all drug counters y
INDIANAPOLIS
SINKS AFTER
MB HIT
(Continued From Page) One) '
Hundreds more plunged into the
sea without life preservers or
rafts, so that dentn quickly be
gan to pick them up.
Ten officers and 305 enlisted
men lived through the torture.
Capt. Charles Butler MeVay,
III, Washington, D. C, told
much of the slory of the tragedy,
in a calm, undrnmntic voice, A
raft saved him, And Lt. Cmdr.
Lewis L. Haynos, senior doctor
(wife, , three sons, Fairfield,
Conn.) described tho plight of
the swimmers.
Clad in his pajamn top, McVay
ran to the chart house and told
the navigator, Cmdr, John Hop
kins Janney, Baltimore, Md.
now listed as missing; "For
uod s sake make certain contact
reports get out. , Say we have
been torpedoed. Our position
sucn ana such, we are sinking
rapidly and need immediate as
sistance." Engines Stopped
The captain ordered all en
gines stopped. Radiomen tried in
frantic desperation to click out
their appeal for help. It was no
use. There was no power.
Another officer tried vainly
three times to instruct the en
gine room to reverse the ship
she was going down by the head.
McVay pulled on some cloth
ing and returned hastily to the
bridge. Lt. K. C. Moore (home
town unavailable), damage con
trol officer, said. ''I don't think
we are going to last long: I think
we ought to abandon ship," but
Captain McVay said he respond
ed: "No, take another look."
Laated 15 Minutes
Then the ship's executive offi
cer, Cmdr. Joseph Flynn, Val
lejo, Calif., reported the cruiser
was filling fast, and the skipper
told him to pass the word:
"Abandon ship. ' Flynn also is
missing.
"I would set an outside limit
of 15 minutes, McVay related.
"That is quite a liberal figure
for the time before she disap
peared beneath the sea."
Long-Time Resident
Of Merrill Passes
Mary Jane Colwell, a resi
dent of Merrill, Oregon, for the
past 40 years, passed away at
the Hillside hospital August 14,
1945, at 1:15 a. m., following
an illness of three days. She
was a native of Little Shasta,
Calif., and at the time of her
death was aged 69 years, 11
months and 12 days.
Surviving are: her husband,
John Colwell; two sons, John
Kenneth and Leonard Glendon
Colwell, all o f Merrill; one
sister, Mrs. Frank Graybael,
Merrill;;.two brothers, Ed Pope
of. Montague, .... Calif., LeRoy
Pope of Millviile, Calif.; one
grandchild. The remains rest
at the Earl Whitlock funeral
home, Pine at Sixth.
WRA Sees Early
Alien Transfer
PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. 15 (1ft
A war relocation authority offi
cial' predicted today that Japa
nese timid aDout leaving reloca
tion camps would now move
quickly back to normal civilian
Ufe.
Clyde W. Linville, WRA head
here, said transfer of alien and
Nisei evacuees might enable the
WRA to. wind up its work be
fore December 31, the scheduled
liquidation date.
U. S, employment service fills
orders for jobs, "any qualified
veteran shall be given priority
over all non-veterans."
Arrangements will be made in
all U. S. employment offices to
accomplish this.
Cancelling of $6,000,000,000
of navy contracts also puts the
emphasis on "jobs."
The action will put an unde
termined number of people out
of work not only at the plants
holding the contracts but at
other plants (subcontractors)
making parts for those plants.
-IdMH!
Mai, Pallr Opens l:0-:
I Starts
Thurs
Pallr
4 wi
' Aaj
Fighting
j, Guardsman f
IfVj WIUARD PARKER ' ANITA LOUISE JANIS CARTER ff
JOHN 10DER EDGAR KUCHAWAN '
Jap Balloon Attack
Lands 200 Bombs
On West Coast
(Continued From Page One)
Pedro, Calif. Then the first
bomb-carrying balloon cume
down near Knllspoll, Mont., De
cember 11, 1844,
Authorities quickly Imposed
secrecy on balloon landings. In
vestigation showed the balloons
were ,13-fool, hydrogen-tilled
bags made ot five layers ot paraf
fined rice paper; that they
traveled at around 80,000 feet
with prevailing Pacific winds,
comiiitt from Japan in three and
a half to four and a halt days,
at BO to 120 miles an hour. Kach
earned rive bombs, four inccn
diaries and a HH-pounri Trunnion
tatlon-type anti-personnel bomb
C o m b a tting the balloons
quickly became an important de
fense project, under (ho army's
western defense command. The
army and navy set up Joint oper
ations centers, from which
planes were dispatched to shoot
down tho balloons. Compara
tively few were destroyed by
planes, however. Cooperation of
state and local authorities was
enlisted, and the military sta
tioned "recovery teams" which
pursued and disposed of bal
loons when sighting reports
were received. Recovered bal-
loons were sent to aoro-logleal
laboratories at Anacostla. D. C,
where they were studied.
Authorities found design of
the balloons, and the automatic
ballast-dropping device intended
to keep, it aloft until it reached
this country, were so good some
suspected they were of German
origin. But the Japanese work
manship was sloppy, and the
equipment frequently failed to
function properly a factor
which helped make tho attacks
unsuccessful. About half the
bombs dronned or were dragged
off before balloons were found.
peak last March and dropped to
a mere dribble the last two
months but authorities attribute
this to the fact summer winds
are unfavorable for sending gas
bags from Japan.
After the Oregon deaths, the
war and navy departments re
laxed the balloon secrecy suffi
ciently to warn of the danger,
but restriction on number and
place of landings continued. Of
ficial records contain instances
of close escapes from injury in
other cases emphasizing the
need for caution by persons find
ing still unexploded bombs.
Near MoxeevClty, Wash., a
sheepherder found a fallen bal
loon with live bombs, dragged it
behind his automobile and kept
it in a building two weeks before
authorities learned of the inci
dent.
A small boy in Washington
state found an anti-personnel
bomb, which looked to him like
a toy airplane. He wound the
"propellor" the arming device
in the nose until it was within
one-sixteenth of an inch of ex
ploding the bomb.
The Jad was pretty disappoint
ed when his plaything was re
moved, but not more so than the
Indian children near Wapato,
Wash., who found part of a pa
per balloon and used it to make
a beautiful tepee in their back
yard. They were crushed when
officers snatched it away.
Numerals on recovered bal
loon parts ranged from low fig
ures first to as high as 15,980
on those found recently.
Whether this indicates that
many balloons were produced,
authorities don't know but it
may. Incidentally, the Japanese
used English numerals because
numbering in Nipponese charac
ters would take too much space.
Kiwanis Club The usual
weekly meeting of the Kiwanis
club will be held Thursday noon.
Speaker will be Capt. Lowell T.
Coggeshall of the Marine Bar
racks. Eating Problema Klamath
people who eat out all the time
were limited to two or three
restaurants on V-J Day. The
Wl-ne-ma hotel coffee shop plans
to stay open until 8 or 9 p. m.,
unless they run out of food. The
grill at the Willard will be closed
until 3:30 p. m. when lt will open
for dinner hours.
Hani Norland Auto Insurance.
Phone . 6060,
rrrrn
hsaarfalBSBaVaaaaaBi
Opens J:o-e;(n I'honn 41)07
i f$m
7W001EN
TO BE RELEASED
12
(Continued From Pago One)
combat 'service and tha greatest
number of dependents.
"The navy plans to denuibll
lie some of its personnel almost
Immediately," Snyder said.
"Congress will decide," he
continued, "on peacetime draft
pulicies when tho cessation ot
hostilities is ducltirod.
This apparently meant after
V-J Day has been proclaimed
officially,
Trumm'i Stattmtnt
Mr, Truman s statement last
night made it clear that, pend
ing determination of when tho
draft will end, only men under
26 will be called up by auloctlvu
service.
Monthly draft calls already
have been trimmed from 110,000
to 50,000 men,
The army demobilization rale
was estimated by President Tru
man as he recommended the
draft adjustments which were
put into immediate effect last
night by selective service.
ururt Director lowii H.
Hershcy said the cut in tho call
means that most of tho mili
tary's needs can be mot with
youths turning 18.
Lstimatei
Selective service estimated
that approximately 100,000
youths turn 18 each month. Of
that group about 35,000 arc tak
en as 17-year-old volunteers
each month by the navy. And
of the remainder 85,000
about 25 per cent or 18,250,
will be deferred for physical de
ficiencies. Thus available for
draft under present plans would
be about 48,750.
2250 STILL IDLE
IN L0CJLSTIE8
(Continued From Pago One)
four major lumber mills here
and five logging camps.
The strike figure rocketed to
this number yesterday when the
Pelican Bay Lumber company
-was struck by CIO unionists.
There was no Indication today
that any agreements had been
reached between struck union
ists and company officials.
It was rumored here today
that the war labor board will
authorize a slight wage increase
for tho lumber industry because
of a cut back to a 40-hour week.
However, in the event of any
wage Increase, any mill on strike
will not benefit by the raise, ac
cording to the rumor.
Harvesters Needed
On Lane County Farms
EUGENE, Aug. 15 (41 Fifty
one acres of beans and 140 tons
of outsize culls will be lost on
Lane county farms unless harv
esters are obtained immediately,
the farm labor office said to
day. Many growers reported work
ing their fields themselves day
after day and all farmers said
the hired help situation was
desperate.
MONTHS
.hone 4.1 U 7 llox Office Open Itiat
rontinuou Show Thii Kngmtmn;
OPEN 0:40 WEKK DAYS
ENDS TONITE
IIS0
Directed by HENRY KING
Wrlller, ey UMAR TR0TTI
2Qi cwTunr.'oit aiCTUM y
-NtXl iUNUAf-
ROCKNG.wllkLought,rl
ROLLING , , , with Kbylhnil
Ill a""W
Peace Problem As
Great As War,
President Says
(Continued From Pago Olio)
Tokyo early today tlmt tho Jap
anese war minister, Korcehlku
Anaml, had killed himself to
"atone for his failure," There
was much speculation uniting
far eastern exports that Hlitihlto
would tibilk'utu and might ulsu
commit suicide,
.Mr, Truman announced the
surrender at a two-minute now,
conference, Ho released at tho
same tlnio the text of an accept
ance note which tho Japanese
government had ncnt to Wash
ing tun through neutral Switzer
land yesterday afternoon.
"I deem this reply a full ac
ceptance of the 1'utsdain decla
ration which siu-cKlcs the uncon
ditional surrender of Japan," Mr,
Truman said.
No Conditions
There wer iu conditions, al
though tho too had sought last
Friday to win guarantees that
the emperor would remain a
sovereign ruler,
Tho nation that set out at
Pearl Harbor to defeat America
and conquer tho Pacific and
lands beyond had caved in com
pletely, With tho president's an
nouncement enmu a flood of or
ders;
1. General MucArthtir was
designated formally as supreme
commander for tho ullied pow
ers the United States, Russia,
uritam niul China to accept the
lornim Japanese surrender,
2. Tho Japanr.su government
In a message sent through Swit
zerland, was ordered by Mr. Tru
man to stop hostilities on all
fronts and to send omluuriei to
MacArthur to urrange for the
surrender.
3. Allied armed forces were
ordered to suspend offensive ac
tion. 4. Today and tomorrow were
proclaimed by the president as
holidays, although V-J Day
awaits the formal surrender.
At Guam Admiral Chester W.
Nlmltz followed through with
an order to tho Pacific fleet and
othor forces under his command
to cease their attacks on the Jap
anese.
Caa Firing"
Admiral William F. Halsev ra
dioed the death-dealing pilots of
ins iniro iieei carrier piancs to
cease firing "but if you see any
er.omy planes In the air shoot
them down in friendly fashion."
At Manila MacArthur, who
had been building up an invasion
army that eventually would
have struck the death blow had
Japan not surrendered, declared
"I shall at once take steps to stop
hostilities and further blood
shed." But no steps taken anvwhere
could make up for tho losses of
lite and treasure already lost In
mankind's most frightful con
flict. The United States nlono could
count nearly 1,000.000 dead and
wounded and a money cost esti
mated at $300,000,000,000.
Numbtrlasa Casualties
The nations of tho world to
gether suffered Incalculable cas
ualties; some persons put the to
tal at more than 23.000.000
killed and wounded exclusive of
air raid and starvation losses
that never can bo known.
Only six minutes before sur
render announcement, the navy
released for publication later
last night the news that the
cruiser Indianapolis had been
torpedoed and sunk July 30 with
the loss ot 833 crew members,
If lf a "frozen"
need, advertise (or
in the classified.
article you
i used one
fijn
fjpgz.-$ m mm
m m muim m uu m
BOX OFFICE OPENS 6:45
LEAVE 38 SHIPS
PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. 15 (fl'l
Contractu for 35 vessels sched
tiled for consti'uellun at Henry J
Kaiser' three war-built Port-laud-Vancouver,
Wash,, ship
yards have been caneollml,
Kaiser spokesmen revealed to
day.
Tho cut-back leaves tho yards
which In four years have given
the Portland area Its biggest
bourn In history, only 3d ves
sels to be completed, most of
mom on me ways or now a
outdttlnu docks.
Cancelled me B escort ear
rleis and five t'4 tniimiioi'ls a
Vancouver, night A I'll trail
porta and nine victory cargo
ships at Oregon shipyard, and
five tankers ul Swan Island,
Yard spokesmen said workers.
would be relt-aaed gradually,
Kaiser yards now have about
tiu.000 men on the payroll from
a peak ot HO.uuo In IU43,
Heads Named For
Fish Commission
POim.AND, Aug. 15 (in
M. T. Hoy was formally named
assistant master fish warden yes
terday by Arnle J. Suomelu, new
fish warden, under a roorKiiuUa.
tinn of the stale fish commission.
Irvine French wus appointed
director of the department of
hatcheries and dsn culture, and
Hugh C. Mltt-holl was appointed
spec la l represent at I ve.
UlihliliHfl
NOW '"""tw
f k,i v "
NEW
Tonite
Two BIQ Hill
Week Days
compared with uus
half-beast, half
nan who enslaves
a girl in an asylum
of honor...!
i f m
EPAU." Or'
Celebration Free
Of Low Violations
City pollen reported Utile or
no disturbance during the hilar I.
mm victory celebration ,oro ant
night, Four people, were, n
rested for cirmikoiincm and mm
private mall boxes on 8. Sixth
and Homodiilo road were knock
cd over.
Outside of (his there were no
Miti'laiiN Infractions uf thu law.
No other acts of deliberate viind'.
allsm were reported and with
the exception of the terrific traf.
fie problem, police had a quiet
night.
SEATTLE. Aug. 1.1 MM-. Two
men were held for luvestlgallou
hero last night In connection
with the (aliil shmillng of Wall
er Hornai'd Foley Jr., 22, Chief
of County Detectives George II.
uonrer now.
Tho pair hnnl cated each other
when brought fact! to face, l.ohr
er said, but bntli ritmU'd commis
sion of the crimp. l,olm-r
said hn hud Inforitinllon
was paid the killer for the crime.
He Identified the two men ill
William Jennings Conner. 47.
and Edward K. Mitchell, 27, of
Tacomu, former army ulr (orccs
bomnartiier.
When tho pair was brought In-
7 ether, Lohror said, Cooper Itlen
Iflod Mitchell as n man with
whom he hud seen Foley leave
club Annual 0. Ml c hell hon
lnv't hnrlv wn fntmrl llih fnt.
siiltl the three left together, Ko
towing day bosldo a country
road.
Continuous Shows
Open 1 2 1 3 0
Ends Tonite
rMHrW m pffflwVV
aMM eieMLrttlftiA ftlwm
ARMM!
bMVtiful tkan .
BASS!
ADDED
Program Hp Ice
CHIPS & PUTT
toner!)
BEAU TIES
(Vomtty) '
NEWS
1 A dating titan
rk: ' V TI
) &maOB USEE C
Xll.