Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 06, 1947, Page 4, Image 4

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    Editor
t'niMtn as rood timn snsitss U poitotnc. ot
SUBSCRIPTION flATSSt
By mail
B mall
Today's Roundup
By MALCOLM EPLEY
HIS little masthead bloody but unbowed,
Junior Herald and News passed from the
scene of local Journalistic effort Saturday, and
today is replaced by nis Dig
brother, the full-sized Herald
and News, complete with ad
vertising. We say "full-siied" with
qualifications, however. While
full-sized pages have returned,
the paper shortage continues
and will preclude fat editions
of the daily paper for some
time to come. Even with the
sacrifice of revenue-producing
advertising for fortnight, wo
were unable to buna up rpt.rv
enough paper reserve to return t",tI
to unlimited operations.
As time went on with Junior, and more dis
interested people came to his defense, we cam
to take pride in the little fellow. We learned
some things, which are probably more interest
ing to the trade than to the general public.
One of them was that we found it better to.
display our news boldly, keeping Junior lively
instead of deadening him with small-type head
lines and apologetic treatment.
That, along with more generous use of color
than is possible in full-sized editions, helped to
make Junior sparkle. When he bowed out, he
had obviously made mtfriy friends among the
early skeptics. We will remember him with
fondness.
South Of Tht Border
IT would be pleasant to move the Tulelake
area into Oregon. It's a great country, it's
tributary to Klamath Falls and part of an eco
nomic and geographic unit that transcends the
state line.
But that state line does exist, and we regret
fully call it to the attention of our big friend,
the Oregonian of Portland, today.
Twice in Sunday's edition, the Oregonian
mentioned the Tulelake wildlife refuge "in
Oregon" in connection with the band of starlings
which have been discovered there. The Tule
lake wildlife refuge is in California not far in
California, but nevertheless south of the border.
The offense is a minor one, and the Oregon
ian can be excused for it. It is not often and
only by accident that Oregonians commit geo
graphic thievery of the sort that has moved
Crater lake into California on several occasions.
News Behind The News
By PAUL MALLON .
WASHINGTON, Jan. 6 Newsmen, seeing
the republicans organizing smoothly for
their first domination of congress in 16 years,
(aid to themselves the old steamroller was work
ing again. Yet it was not like that. The re
publicans simply have a traditional way of
closeting their differences behind closed doors
.and then emerging in unanimity, while the
democrat stage their disputes among them
selves in the open, keeping up a constant din.
Thus Ohio's Rep. Brown withdrew to give In
diana's Halleck a clear road to the speakership,
knowing defeat was inevitable. " Thus also, the
republican senatorial crowd agreed first who
wanted what jobs in private and then came to
their meeting with a slate which could be op
posed by only one republican senator and in
cidentally he changed his mind next day. Then
another senator broke loose with a public argu
ment. But when only one senator decides to
battle the other 50 republicans, the result is
Prohibition Of Union
Dispute Strikes Asked
(Continued From Page One)
the public debt. To what end,
he recommended that congress
continue for 12 months the spe
cial wartime taxes such as
those on telephone bills, furs,
luggage, liquor, etc. now due to
expire July 1.
Major Points
Other major points in his mes
sage: 1. Veterans. Except for minor
adjustments, the "program of
benefits for veterans is now com
plete." 2. Foreign affairs. The Unit
ed States will continue to stick
to a policy of upholding prin
ciples of international justice. It
will not "retreat to isolationism"
nor sacrifice vital principles to
gain peace treaty settlements.
3. Military affairs. The Unit
ed States proposes to remain
strong until a "system of collec
tive security under the United
Nations" has been established.
Then it will be willing to lead in
collective disarmament.
The president withheld speci
fic recommendations on continu
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bound to be about the same as a Russian elec
tion. The majority leaders really settled their af
fairs on a basis of common justice and party
welfare privately, and therefore did not require
a steamroller. Brown, for Instance, was not
generally wanted because his selection would
put too much Taft or Ohio influence up front
in both houses. The senate republicans brought
in only one new sub-senatorial man, an active
veterans' affairs veteran from Illinois to be
sergeant at arms, Edward F. McOinuis. The
democratic Cook county political conveyor belt
machine had once caused McGtnnis to be fired
as a ballot officer in the South Pacific during
the presidential campaign simply because he
was too actively republican, so the republicans
say. His selection they considered to be a
measure ot retributive justice although they
chose rather wisely a veteran and a good Curley
Brooks republican from the midwest. So it
went.
a
Purely Political
THE Bilbo affair was also purely political.
The republican decision to fight the Missis
sippi senator was about as natural on the in
side as a decision might have been to restore
. the Lincoln memorial after Jim Farley had
chipped it away. The unfortunate part from
the republican standpoint was that the Ellender
committee hearings in Jackson furnished rather
questionable grounds for action on a race basis.
Bilbo's stand on that issue was proved NOT to
be unique. Much of Mississippi had done the
same things he did in this respect. These things
were not unpopular. Republican action on the
race ground would have brought up an em
barrassing question of opposing a state rather
than an individual. Technically the republicans
would have been in a losing legal game there,
especially as the people of Mississippi had
elected Bilbo, knowing very well what he was
doing, as everyone .did.
This last fact clouded also the war contract
investigation conducted by another committee
in which the republicans found sounder ground.
They thought they made out a case of using
office for personal gain what with contractors
furnishing him an island and then a lake to
put it in, and then on it an elegant dream
house No. 2. While this may not be unique,
it is unpopular and possibly illegal. It furnished
a better legal excuse.
But in a general way the voters of Mississippi
knew even about this before electing Bilbo. He
was charged with receiving $25,000 during the
primary and made the response on the stump
which he later offered on the witness stand
(namely that he spent the money for another
candidate who lost.) The voters did not know
such details, however, as the fact that he kept
the money under a pillow in a pocketbook in
a hotel room and did no bookkeeping which
could prove anything, for instance, anything like
the money being sticky.
Tread Carefully
YET, in general, the basic evidence came out
before the voting was done and therefore,
the republicans were limited by the realization
that they had to tread carefully. This is the
inside reason why the committee report made
no recommendations about disposing of Bilbo;
also why the republicans changed decision once
or twice as to what to do about the matter.
The laws and rules of the senate are all pri
marily geared to protect state rights of choice
in an election.
President Truman prepared himself to meet
coming opposition more directly letting his
good friend George Allen go from the RFC
chairmanship before the republicans could get
around to investigating it, allowing his housing
administrator to quit with the result no one
person could be held directly responsible for
that failure, ending many war powers before
congress did, etc. His strategy was plainly to
give the republicans as little as possible to shoot
at, and to make what was left seem to be old
and changed since.
In such a political atmosphere, new times
take hold, a fresh electoral verdict is starting
toward enactment a two party government be
gins to function, a new congress opened for
business.
ItlLCULU EFLET
Msnagtn Editor
month M M
I jsar MM
ing the draft or establishing uni
versal training until studies on
these topics have been finished.
- 4. Agriculture. The next two
years must be used to maintain
and develop markets for farm
production so that the country
will not fail to meet problems of
surpluses such as followed the
First World War.
5. Housing. An "aggressive"
program to encourage home con
struction is essential. Congress
should enact "comprehensive"
housing legislation which would
permit improved housing in
rural areas and the building,
over a 4-year period, of 500,000
units of public low-rental hous
ing. 6. Health. Mr. Truman asked
a broad national health program
which would assure "adequate
medical care to all who need it,"
financed by its beneficiaries.
7. Prices. It is up to industry
to "hold the line on existing
prices" and even make cuts
when profits justify that. It is
up to labor not to press for un
justified wage increases" that
will force the price level up. It
is up to government to encour
age high production which leads
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Gerahwin Maeie
Evening- Concert
Glenn Hardy, News MBS
Mel Ventners Pict. MBS
Lei's Dance
Henry J, Taylor MBS
News Roundup A Concert
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KFLW testers
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Home Town Newa
World Newa Summary
Muaic of Manhattan
Your Navy Recruiter
Tha Three Suna
Malcolm Epley
Klamath Tbealra Guide
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Sign Off
to good wages, new price and
reasonable profits.
8. Natural resources. The pro
gram of developing America's
great river systems should be
"pushed with full vigor."
9. Monopoly. Anti-trust laws
will be enforced vigorously. This
must be supplemented by "posi
tive measures of aid to new en
terprises." Decentralization of
industry needs "special atten
tion." 10. Atomic energy. Mr. Tru
man called again for effective in
ternational control, voicing a
"fervent hope" that military sig
nificance of atomic power will
decline steadily o it may be
turned into a peacetime "bless
ing for all nations."
11. International relief. New
legislation is needed to bring in
to the United States more of the
"thousands of homeless and suf
fering refugees of all faiths."
12. International trade. Amer
ica must continue to strive for a
trade system as free as possible
from obstructions.
13. Civil riffhts Tfppnmmem.
dations will be made later on
tightening up the laws to pro
tect civil rights of citizens.
TUESDAY P. M., JAN. 7
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SIDE GLANCES
VU&s V jjfi
tO. ISST VI DM Nmt mC 1. at
"It's another one of those spells. Mom I'm too sick to
go to school and not sick enough to stay in btd! Do you
think a little coasting would pep me up?"
The World
Today
Br DeWITT MaeKENZIE
AP Foreign Affairs Analyst
Your columnist took the occa
sion in last Saturday's article to
emphasize that after all we do
live in "one world" and that the
interests of each nation are in
terlocked with those of all other
countries.
We return to this thought to
day to remedy an oversight. It
must be admitted that when I
spoke of an interdependent
globe I didn't have in mind our
relations to the frozen wastes of
Antarctica. Week-end develop
ments, however, direct our - at
tention to the highly important
fact that an International race is
devolping to stake claims around
the south pole.
Having just got out of bed
after a session of flu, we plead
guilty to regarding -Antarctica
with a hostile eye at this writ
ing. The National Geographic so
ciety reminds us that "explorers
have found it cruel ana rugged,
colder than the arctic, and swept
by pounding gales and snow
storms." and that "Antarctica as
a whole is higher above the sea
than any other continent, prob
ably averaging 8000 feet in alti
tude.". X.:, I " t
Mineral Resources
Still, the National Geographic
also reminds us that scientists
believe Antarctica holds mineral
resources valuable to mankind.
Indications are that a million
years ago this polar region had
a climate favoring vegetation
such as the United States now
has. Beneath the ice-cap may lie
vast wealth. Antarctica's area is
estimated at some 5,250,000
square miles. (The area of con
tinental u. s. is aooui j.uuu.uuu.j
With America's big expedi
tion under Rear Admiral Rich
ard E. Byrd well on its way to
Antarctica, Argentina now has
started one. Australia is said to
be planning to dispatch an ex
pedition to further her claim to
some 2,500.000 square miles of
territory. These four nations,
however, are by no means the
only ones interested. Besides
them are Norway, Japan,
Britain, Russia, France, Belgium
and Germany.
In short, here we have the
makings of a terrific squabble.
Washington officials yester
day disclosed that the United
States plans to claim a big share
of the Antarctic continent, and
the strategy for clinging to It
will be considered upon Admiral
Byrd's return.
A suggestion that the whole
issue of conflicting claims be
turned over to the international
court or be placed under the
Jurisdiction M the United Na
tions has been advanced in
several quarters, but has been
considered only in a general
way. Washington officials say
the proposals will be taken up in
conferences during the coming
spring.
Tulelake Man Held
On Driving Charge
John Kimbrel, 23-year-old
Tulelake farm laborer, was ar
rested by state police near Mer
rill early Sunday night and
charged with driving while un
der the influence of intoxicating
liquor. Kimbrel was lodged in
the Merrill city jail and was to
appear in justice court Monday.
Officers said that Kimbrel was
weaving from side to side on the
highway and narrowly missed
hitting a tree before he was
stopped.
' City Delivery Service. Phone
S417.
ITCIIIIIGtWfort
!: RELIEVED
fikllfuHr hteojAing valuable mertWrail
Insredienta in an oily base: fnUmt
int IMr bnfiiol tlton bland
Ittalaoa Ointment has a 50 yesur
record for eurpelainf relief of itrnlni
aasd burning la many skin brltatioae.
rlie
4a
Saaytoaw. rji? SaasaTl,
.I.Md
RESIHDlB-T,,,,,T
OAT. OF.
Navy Keeps
Fleet Ready
SAN FRANCISCO. Jan. 8 iVI
The navy estimates that it could
activate its 1047-ship west coast
"moth ball" fleet in one month
if necessary.
"We are putting the ships to
bed, but we are putting them to
bed in such a condition that they
can jump out, ready to go, if aiui
when the war alarm sounds
again," a navy spokesman suit!.
Of the 750 ships already In
activated, the navy is covering
237 with an air-tight plastic coal
to preserve them. These vessels,
the navy said, are fully equipped.
The 'largest west coast reserve
is 430 vessels at Astoria, Ore.
San Divgo is second with 376.
The San Francisco bay area has
98. All ships have security
watches, the navy reported,
Babies' Hospital
Burns, None Hurt
NEWARK, N. J.. Jan. 8 ("
Forty-six babies who were hur
riedly evacuated by student
nurses from the second and third
floors ot the Babies hospital
when a fire started in a first
floor room early this morning,
were back in their cribs today.
Miss Vera Floyd, superinten
dent of nurses, said none of the
infants suffered "any apparent
injuries.
Firemen ' were investigating
the cause of the blaze.
Lake Shrine Club
President Named
LAKEVIEW, Ore., Jan. 8
Harvey Armes was elected pres
ident the local Shrine club at
a meeting of the organization
here Thursday evening. He suc
ceeds E. G. Favell, who has been
president since the club was or
ganized about a year ago. Other
officers named were John Blair,
vice president, and E. J. Moca
bee, secretary-treasurer.
A crippled child from the
Lakeview area is expected to
leave for the Shrine hospital in
Portland on January 0, her
treatment aided by the funds
from the Shrine club.
Plans are under way here for
a Shrine benefit dance in the
near future, funds to be turned
over to the Shrine hospital for
the benefit of crippled children.
RAIL BLAMED
CRIVITZ, Wis., Jan. tf Ml A
broken rail was blamed today
for the derailment of the Mil
waukee railroad's Copper Coun
try Limited early yesterday
which injured 25 persons, only
one of them seriously.
quioldy mited and
protect!1 with Mm
miuu Relieve, itch
ing, ttiag ol minor
kin irritation;
ease baby'a diaper
rash. Coata little.
MEXSANA
SOOTH I NO
MIDICATIO POWDER
let At Last
ForYourCouglt
' Oreomulslon relieves promptly be
cause it foes right to the seat of the
trouble to help loosen and expol
term laden phlegm, and aid nature
to soothe and heal raw, tender, In
flamed bronchial mucous mem
branes. Tell your druggist to sell you
bottle of Creomulslon with the un
derstanding you must like tbe way It
gulckly allays the cough or you are
have your money back.
CREOMULSION
for Couthi, Chitt Coldi, Bronchitis
83
LsW'id
33335
fmm
ml
Lakeview City
Council Meets
LAKEVIEW, Ore., Jan. 6
First meeting of the new year
for the Lakeview city council
will be held January 7 with
Mayor Lylo North making his
committee appointments.
J. C, Boyle, Medford, vice
president In charge ot operations
for the California Oregon Power
company, will be present to ex
plain the company's future plnns.
He will be- accompanied by H.
P. Bosworth, 1 malinger ot the
company's Klamath district.
Several new faces will bo seen
in the council linoup, with
Charles Slrleby and Merle Alger
taking over their new duties.
Alger served as councilman
about 10 years ago, but this is
Strleby's first time on the city
governing body. Holdover coun
cilman is Harry Anthuny, while
the fourth member. Shelby
Bailey, was re-elected 111 the No
vember election.
The balunco of the counclf Is
composed of Recorder O. C.
Gibbs. City Attorney T. R. Conn.
Treasurer Larry Fitzgerald, and
City Engineer Walt Sandqulst.
Storms Hit
Aleutians
ANCHORAGE. Alaska, Jan. 8
(Vi Altiskn military installation
unci personnel were said by
army headquarters today to have
escaped mnleriiil damaite and in
jury in the two gales which
struck the AUutlu:i island chain
over the week-end.
, Unofficial reports are being
checked, however, that a plane
hud been wrecked on the ground
lit Amchitka, near the end of the
island group, and that several
persona had lost their lives in
the Hooper bay area, 300 miles
below Nome.
Icy, snow bearing gales
snapped power lines In the Nome
area and left the community in
a half-hour blackout, but major
damage such as was caused bv
storms earlier this winter was
prevented by Ice floes which
stretched far out into the Bering
sea.
The entire chain was buffeted
by winds of gate velocity twice
during a 2-4-hour period. The
second storm, which swent in
from the southwest late Satur
day, was expected to hit Norton
sound, south of the Nome penin
sula, last night.
Death Takes
Bekins Founder 1 s
SEATTLE, Jan. 8 UP) Daniel
Bekins, 06-year-old founder of
the widespread Bekins Moving
and Storage company, died Sat
urday -of a heart attack in a Co
quille. Ore., hotel room, mem
bers of the family announced
here. Survivors include t h e
widow and five sons, including
Glenn and Bruce Bekins of Port
land. LiiiRoroDioT . roor srscivf.isT
, Or. Kenneth S. Garvin
100,1 Surgery - ani OrtbopsOtss
McATEE CLINIC
Itt S. Ilh St. Mono till
FROM BABIES ON UP-
TIIE QUINTUPLETS
CHEST GOLDS
Th Quintuplet have always relied on
Munterntf fur roughs and anra throat of
tight aching cheat cold. MuittrnU In
alantly atarta to brine wonderful lone
laming rlifl It helps hrvak up painful
surface congeal ion. too. J ust rub on chest,
throat and bsck.
In $ Slrtngthi: Chlld'i Mild MusUrole
for average baby's skin. Regular and
Kxtra Strength lor grown-ups. .
msmm
REMODELING SALE
MEN'S - WOMEN'S - CHILDREN'S
MMISF
CI IDDICDC $- 7
.li irri
About 600
WOMEN'S
SHOES
AAodol Shoe
717 Main
HIRAI.D N ")'. Kltaialk rails, Oro.
Boyle's Column
Airforce Vet
Readjustment Is Possible
By HAL BOYLE
HARTS-OHD, Conn., Jan. 6 (V)
Jay Zoamer Jr., says he Is (living
up "whlto elephants" and sot
lllntf down.
Jay Is a 28-year-old former
lieutenant colonel in the air
corps who won a Congressional
Medal of Honor early In the
Southwest Pacific campnlgn. He
piloted his crippled B-17 homo
from an Important photographic
reconnaissance and mapping
mission after personally knock
ing down one of five Japanese
fighters) destroyed by his plane's
guns from t force of 20 attack
ers. "I think I'm pretty well ad
justed," said the ex-offlcer, a
quiet young man with graying
hair who now Is an aeronautical
fiower plant engineer with the
ratt and Whitney Aircraft cor
poration. The bullet wounds in both his
arms and legs have healed, and
the limp and stiffness are going
out of his left knee, pulped by a
shell-burst. Only a few of Ills
fellow workers know that the
neat small rosette in his lapel
signifies the nation's highest
award for battle valor, and Ihey
had to do a lot of nuking.
Steamer wants to forget every
thing about the war except the
friendships made in those days
of "the closest comradeship I
ever knew before or since."
"When we used to lie In our
tents In the Pacific with the
mosqultotM feeding on us," ho
said, "I thought that when I got
home I would get me a boat, an
airplane of my own, a house of
my own all tho play toys you
can't havo In the army,"
Operations
Zeamer kept on thinking of
those things while doctors whit
tled at his knee in three opera
tions and after he was back in
Massachusetts Institute of Tech
nology studying to be an aero
nautical engineer. Then he got
hie job and set about tlnl-ig the
things he had dreamed of.
"I didn't think I was restless
the way a lot of the fellows feel
after coming back," he said, "but
I guess I was, I got mixed up In
all kinds pf things. I almost
made a down payment on an
apartment house. Boy. am I glad
I didn't! That would have been
craiy situation to get into.
"I sank 12000 In a speedboat
and lost the engine coming back
in a storm from my first trip.
Grove To Be Opened
' YOUR OBAVE Christ is to
raise back to life all who are
in the grave. The saved, He is
to raise up to glory and later
He Is to raise the lost for Judg
ment. Two resurrections the
saved and the lost.
PROVED HI POWER The
third day after His crucifixion
and burial, Christ proved His
power to raise you up out of
the grave. He Himself came
forth from among -the dead, the
Victor over death and the
grave. The next forty days He
proved Himself by many a sign
and miracle to be Christ Him
self, whom they had crucified.
FIRST RESURRECTION
May you be there. In that great
hour, Christ Is to descend from
heaven with a shout and the
dead In Christ will rise first.
Afterward, we of His who are
alive will be caught up, togeth
er with them, Into the clouds,
to meet the Lord. And so shall
we ever be with the Lord.
GOD NAMES TERMS Be
lieve God, that He counts your
sins blotted out by the blood of
Christ, His only-born Son. Cod
proved His love for us In that
while we were yet sinners,
Christ died for us. Believe Ood
and He gives you life from that
Instant. You pass from eternal
death into eternal life. Believe
and know yourself saved.
Whether you have feelings or
not. life begins for you then
and there. Now is the dsy of
salvation.
S. W. McChesney Rd., Port-
land-l-Ore. This space paid for
by a Portland lumber dealer,
H A
ii.i l
Poirs
MnxnaT, Jaa. , list, aoo oas
Proves That
Now I'm roiitly to sell It ta
somebody else ami lul them have
the vxpeimo, 1 guess that's a res
adjustment. I've got that out
of my aystom, Hut I'd always
wauled thut bout.
"I ordered a big fitiicy aulo
mobile. 1 Ihiiuglit I might as
well havo R fling. Hut 1 had a
dim ice to buy a sumHer car and
took it. 1 wiiii lucky there, too,
"I finally tlccldcd inont of the
things 1 lluiuglit I'd wanted were)
just white elephants. I've seen a
lot of veterans gut In loo dm-p
buying things llicy eally didn't
need,
"I'm willing to drop moat
things now."
White Elsphants
Zeamer is feeling again the
urge "to do more flying," lint
thinks he has got any other
"post-war restlessness" out of hie
system.
"Yes. I think I'm adjusted." he
said seriously, "but 1 don't know,
I might cut loose any lime now
and break my leg Ice. skating.
I'd like to learn to ski. too."
Jay thinks tho gallon of blood
he ItMt in the combiit flight that
won It I in his Mediil (if Honor was
a sinull prlii) to piiy for the
philosophic principle the rximrl
ence taught tilin:
"I learned that there Is always
a waythat you ran do anvlliing
If you set your mind l It anil
work hnrd enough for It."
If all Vftcnins were like '
Zramrr, the rrhiibllllution psy
chiatrists could all take a pro
longed vacation.
New Year 1947
By EARL WHITLOCK
What a year this promises to
be! I think perliups future his
torians win rerer lo u
ilia
Year of Groat I
Oppurtuuittes.
The greatest ' I
..r...i.,.n.... i
Initial in all t
the world
.... A. M
ready to bring
us all the ma
terlal wants we
know of. The
trentest organ- Earl W hillock
ir.atlon for the establishment of
world-wide peare on earth is
functioning lamrly, at times,
to be sure, and hesitantly and
with much dispute and with a
world of ininrcrisury kibitzing
from outsiders. But it is func
tioning! What heights may we not .
reach this year!
MayDe we will not attain tha
degree of Industrial production
that we desire. Maybe some of
our wants will have to go un
satisfied a little longer. And
maybe the world peace plana
will remain uncertain, ir those
"ifs" materialize we shall have
ourselves to blame, not an un
kind fate. At least we have tha
opportunity. And isn't that all
that good Americans can ask?
Opportunity! It we are half as
competent as we have been
telling the world we are, that
should be enough to make 1947
a Happy New Year for every
body. January 13. 1947, Mr. Whit,
lock of the Earl Whitlock Fu
neral Home, will comment on
"A Timely Topic."
SEWING MACHINE
REPAIRING
Sistrt, narsnl4 Work
(All MkM)
B .. sens bis fffset free rallmatee
Sewing Machine Service
Veur In4eennt llvaler
Phsas ST II S3IS .. Wat
PRICE
W is-J
. M'jyi
Values to $10.95
Grouped to sell at
77
Stfoire
Phena 7113