Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, March 24, 1952, Page 1, Image 1

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    VITAL
Mi
That service makes soli surveys.
M
hi
n il In U (he flrnl of a ser
if o urllt'ir liluillin
little-known phaie of farming
una ranching aollvlly In this
area, Uir nail ronervtlon dis
trict, KU. Note.)
Ily IIALK HCAKtlROUOH
Ona of the least undoralood but
most vitally Important agricultural
development ol recent year and
lino thut doesn't subsist bv govern
liirnl liiindoul In the growth of Ilia
holl conservation district by which
liirinorn nnd rancher are uhlo to
put some piirpnuo and direction to
their individual work at Improv
ing their lund. i
Three . auch districts ' exist In
Klamath County, on of them pret
ty far along In development and
the other two atlll young and strug
U ling to get along, .
The strongest and of course the
oldest, In the I.angell Valley aoll
conservation district which was
created In 1041, auperlmpoaed on
what waa then a rather remote
and poor section' of the county. 11
ha the Jump of several yeara of
experience and pioneering on the
other two, the Poe Valley dlnlrlct
which wan aet up In IMS and the
Klnmnth district which wan formed
In 1IM0.
The Lnngell Valley dlnlrlct by
recent action IncrouKcd IU size to
where It In now bigger In area
Uian aom countlea In Oregon and
In coming yearn It will be a focel
point for the attention of resource
conservationists In the Went. It
has been selected m Oregon's pilot
district for experimentation and
by whatever means are necessary
and feasible the lands within the
district; to determine and better
might be formed around the atate.
appointed by the state Committee.
The balance of power, then. Is
directly vested In the district It
self, not In any outside agency.
words, the district can command
pay for Its work.
Formation of a district also Is rel
range surveys and the Ilka aelen.
atively easy. Any 25 or more land
owners or owners of 70 per cent
of the property within the territory
proposed as a district can petition
the stat Boll Conservation Com
mittee asking that a district be
created, A publlo hearing Is held
on the subject and then an - elec
This state Committee la com
tlflo studies that the individual
rancher probably wouldn't ', be
trained or qualified to do for him
self, to determine the. capability
of the aoll and practices which
can raise those capabilities. The
service works out baslo farm plana
which ranchers can use to gulda
themselves In cultivating the re
sources of the land.
Any landowner In a soil conser
vation district may request the
Soil Conservation Service for auch
a study and baslo plan for his
place. Whether he uses It is up
to him. , - ,
the capacity 01 encn acre 01 land,
whether It be for crop raising,
pasture, grazing, timber or what
ever use,
Boll conservation districts exist
In all states, Hawaii, Alaska and
Puerto Rico governed by local law.
The laws and setups differ from
state to state.
Here In Oregon the Legislature
enacted a soil conservation dlnlrlct
law back in 1038, Its provisions
are simple:
The law sets up an agency of
the state, a Boll Conservation Com
mittee, with the function of gen
as a political subdivision, tne
posed of five persons, three of
them designated by law. They are
(1) the director of the state agri
cultural experiment station; (2)
newly created soli conservation
district can enter Into agreements
or contracts, own and mortgage
proof of what can be done to Im
prove both publlo . and private
scientific effort.
What la a aoll conservation dis
trict? It Is a legal entity, just like a
municipal corporation, a school
district or an Irrlgutlon district,
with powers similar to those of
other municipal corporations ex
cept that It doesn't have the au
thority to levy taxes.
file purpose of a soil conserva
tion district la to try to Improve
li
property, borrow money, lurnun
farming and engineering equip
ment and do practically all the
things that, say, an Irrigation dis
trict or a school district can do,
except that It can't levy a tax.
But In lieu of that authority, the
the vice director of the state ex
tension service; and (3) the state
engineer. The other two Commit
teemen are farmers appointed by
the Governor.
Tile state doesn't furnish any
tion, wnn only property owners
within the proposed district eligible
to vote. If a majority of them sanc
tion the proposal, a district la cre
ated within pre-determlned boun
money. Neither does the federal
law will allow a district to receive
gifts and to require contributions
of money or services from those
persons who are receiving or are
to receive Its benefits. In other
government, although It does fur
daries and It's in business.
Property owners within the dis
trict elect three of their number
nish technical assistance through
the federal Boll Conservation Serv
ice, a branch of the Department
eral supervision of districts that
as auaervlsors and two more are
oi Agriculture.
SOIL
CONSEBVATON
DSTBCTS
T
In Tiro-
Will
Ily FRANK JENKINB
Prom Portland:
"A holdup mull was cuplurrd In
live minutes here Sunday night be
i'iuim) he tried to escape by driving
his car the wrong way on a one
way Htrcct The robber
wan inii'Hurd bv two pnlicumeli,
who ovnrtook lilm and forced him
to the curb. He gut out of the cur,
handed over 1123 and a loaded
uulomutlc, nnd snid: 'Okay. I'm
Hie one you want'."
I can understand the poor Kuy's
befuddled mood. Thill's what It
does to you when you got caught
itolng the wrong way In one of
ihene one-way street grids.
At leant, It's one benefit of the
"yntem I'd never llioimh of. Maybe
It will eventually snip the cops
t hane-robber type ol crime In our
unc-Wuy-strcct lowns.
I'm intrigued with this dlnpatch
from Midway, Alabama:
"You'll look a lung time before
finding another hoonegow like the
Midway Jail. It's on wheels, sits In
a Negro woman's front yard and
puts Its occupants up for public
Inspection.
"The tail, which resembles en
animal cage more than It dors a
lockup. Is a discarded convict wag
on, Since any passorby can ace
who's in It. the Inmates usually
are sublect to quite a bit of ridi
cule from persons on the outside.
"Mldwav folks find It satisfactory
though, VERY FKW OF THEM
EVER CET LOCKED UP."
It's the ssme Idea, you see. as
the STOCKS which our Pilgrim
forbears used as deterrents of eer-
tnln tvnes of crime. I've never
been sure It wasn't a mistake to
do away with the slocks, and thla
Alabama adaptation of the ays-
tern more or less confirms my
itvnlenl nnllnn '
In these modern daya. It doesn't
matter so much what vou do. What
really matters la OETTTNO
CAUOHT AT IT. When you get put
In the stocks and exhibited in tne
nubile snuare or clapped In an
exaggerated monkey cage like the
cllv lull In Midway, Alabama,
whore everybody- 1n town , can
rnme by and kid the'llfe out of
you. IT MEANS BOMETruriui
I'm not aurprlseri that relatively
few people ever eel locked up In
Midway. Tf I lived there. I'D
WALK THR STRAIGHT AND
NARROW PATH!'
Another thmieht. Pn vnii reckon
neople who OFT CAUOHT AT IT
trv to kern their names out of the
nsner In Mldwav? With a system
live theirs, It wouldn't make much
dlf'erenre.
Prlvie memo to mvself! Write
the Mldwsv editor and see what
his experience has been.
Tils Mldwav tall Mr Is so 'm
hie In its 'upftnmenlnli. n LAN
TASTIC IN ITS POSaiBIMTTER
ef hrlnglnir shout "renter reneet
fnr low. that I can't seem to leave
the i.torv without squeezing It com
pletely rtry.
The dimatch roes on:
"No claims have been rnarte
shout the e(I being even remotely
enenne.proof.
"Not so loni ago, elehl nersons
ont thrown In It to cn'ibllsh some
thln In the wv nf a tenanev
record. Seven rt them nrnmntlv
rlnned nut the floor "vt evnpeil.
The ejghth WA" TOO FAi. He
got stuck ap1 couldn't iret ntil."
Th nnor fnl m"n! He's the butt
of all the Jokes. He keeps outgrow-
(Continued on Tags 4.)
A CHANGE OF SPOTS is in store for the marquee taken down Saturday by workmen from
above the sidewalk at the Pine Tree theater. The metal structure that has carried names
of many motion pictures since it was put in 1022 will go to Bly to be used on a theater
there. The. building being remodeled for a store and office buildings was put up by Hart
Brothers, Sacramento, with Howard Pen-in as the architect. It has been used consistently
as a theater with the same name. Present owners are T. B. Watters, Dr. Ralph W.
Stearns and Charles L. Moore. '
Farmers Worried Over Late Spring And
Heavy Runoff; Field Planting Delayed
But Hopes Held! or Good Late Yield
Herald wm'RtWs
KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, MONDAY, MARCH 24, 1852 Telephone (111
No. 2113
bsfi C
!il
(Die
Actress Kidnaped, Beaten
By Thugs; Held Prisoner
In Luxurious Home By Men
HOLLYWOOD Actress Anne
Sterling was beaten up and kid
naped early Monday by four thugs
she said held her captive in a
luxurious home lor an hour and a
halt.
Later she lapsed Into uncon-
sclounnesH.
Sheriff's deputy Bert Keenan
said that Miss Sterling had been
beaten and bruised from her eve-
brows to her toenails."
The actress told him that she
recently received a telephone
threat. Afraid to stay alone, she
(olliW
Third Child
Survives
Snow Storm
Dead Buried
As Tornado
Area Mourns
rarm honor v
Everyday eltlaens don't have
too much to lose te wet, uncom
fortable weather, bat farmers do
and they're bealnnlnc to worry
about II. ,
Bprlnr Is aeveral weeks late al
ready tthooch technically It began
last Thuradayl. and Ihere'a so
much runoff water and leftovers
from heavy winter anowa that the
farmers can't get Into the fields
to beiln Dreoarlnr the war., for
planting.
Bo far this stream year (which
began Oct. 1) a total of 14.09 Inches
of water has been precipitated in
rain end snow. The normal pre
cipitation at this time ol year is
less than 10 inches.
County Agent C. A. Henderson
takes an optlmlsUe view of the
situation:
Weather
FORECAST Klamath Falls and
vicinity and Northern California:
Overcast and occasional rain Mon
day through Tuesday. High SO, low
37.
High Temp yesterday 47
Low last night 37
I'reclp March 23 ... 0
Since Oct. 1 . .... 14.09
Normal for period 9.05
Same period last year HM
I Additional Weather on Page 41
; ti 1 If f iff
AWii)i':!&aiiii
1
SHOOTING THE BREEZE this morning were Gary Coats
(left) of 410 Tory and Larry McNab from the Chelsea
Addition. '
He aaVa 'late fjlanllnss barring
frosts auita often produce higher
yields.
nut in other phases of farming
and ranching things are little
difficult.
J. D. Vertrees, livestock and
poultry specialist In the County
Agent's office, reported lambing
miserable and uncomfortable and
there has been some loss in calving
because of weather conditions, s
CALVES HURT
He said calve Buffered' from
pneumonia, and some froie to
deslh shortly after being dropped.
Lambing percentages, however,
are high, Vertrees said. Poultry
are suffering some, too, he added,
since weather like thla Is hard on
brooding.
Early pasture nlantlncs are helno-
held up, ground preparations are
yet to begin and fertiliser applies-
Four KF Men
On Draft List
Four men from Klnmnth County,
one a native of Ireland not vet
naturalised, are scheduled to leave
here April 8 for lnduotlon Into the
armed foces April 9 at Portland.
iney are Qeorge Wilbur Small-
wood, 3G, of Oold Creek. Mont.:
Jnmcs Lawrence Schulze, 24, Bly;
Jeremiah McAuliiie. 34, Baldwin
Hotel, Klamath Falls: and David
Charles Vincent, 20, 22S E. Main.
mcauuiic. in this country about
two years and taking preliminary
steps toward naturalisation, said
he wants to go Into military serv
ice, the selective Service office re
ported. Some weeks ago two un
naturalized Irishmen In Lake Coun
ty refused to- be drafted, citing
provisions In a friendship treaty
between the united States and Ire
land.
Five Rescued
In Boat Upset
PORTLAND Ml Five Portland-
ers were rescued from the Willam
ette River after their boat capsized
in tne wash oi an ocean-going
freighter Saturday.
Nenrbv fishermon In small bonts
pulled members of the P. J. Tor
mey family to safety. Barbara
Chancy, 21, still was missing, how
ever. Tormey dove back toward
Ure boat, floating upside down, He
broke out a cabin window, and
pulled Miss Chaney to safety.
The Tormevs were disconsolate
over the fact that their dog. who
hsd been with them 14 years, could
not be found.
It was 45 minutes later, when
the boat was being towed to shore,
still upside down, thst they thought
they heard a scratching noise In
side the boat. Another window was
broken out, nnd out came the dog,
wot but lively. An air pocket Inside
the submerged boat apparently had
saved the nnlmnl.
ROADS CLEAR
Salem Wl Pavement was bare
on all Oregon highways Monday as
warm rains washed all the packed
snow off of the mountain passes,
the Oregon Highway commission
reported.
tlon have yet to be made, Ver
trees noiea. m general, tarming is
Just plain behind schedule.
A year ago, he noted, dusting
operations were underway at this
ume on ciover root weevu. ims
year there is still clover under
snow.
All bugs and Insects, Vertrees
said, are dormant at present and
aren't causing any damage. He
added that clover can pull out ol
the weather slump awfully fast,
and probably will.
Early pasture and grazing areas
are behind In spring development,
too. Crested wheatgrassea were Just
coming out of the snow this week
end. SEED READIED
Henderson said there were a
number of farmers preparing seed
In the cellars for spud planting.
but little work could be done In
the fields. He said that by this
time usually farmers are ready
ing ditches, headgates and other
ouisiae equipment (or expected
heavy spring use. Farmers haven't
oeen aoie to oo mat yet, either,
to any extent.
"There's nothing In sight that Is
damaging." Henderson said, "and
tho soil moisture will be excellent
once we do start planting."
He noted that larmers who were
originally planning to plant winter
wheat hove changed their minds
and are thinking In terms of spring
wheat planting now, as soon as
they can get the soil.
Henderson said the long winter
had depleted and erased almost all
the' old haystacks In the countv.
and many farmers were now feed
ing concentrates an expensive
proposition.
Atom Plant
Threatened
By Blaze
TRAIL. B.C. Wl Disaster by
fire threatened one of Canada's
atomic energy operations for 45
minutes Sunday night.
Firemen Quickly brought under
control a 'fire In the transformer
room or the hydrogen section of s
I chemical plant at nearby Warlield
no w uMuriner was ae&mjyea out
ne one was rvrt.
- Officials or consolidated Minim
and Smelting company, bicirei
lead-zinc chemicals producer In the
worm saio, an investigation is
planned.
The chemical plant Is part of the
company's huge operation' in this
area. Some heavily-guarded plants
in me aisirict proauce neavy water
for atomic energy.
There was no Indication whether
the plant hit by fire Is one of those
engaged In the production of heavy
waier.
If the fire had licked into the
hydrogen action, the resulting blast
might nave oadly crippled Cans
da's atomic energy program.
The fir in the transformer
knocked out telephone and tele
graph communications over a wide
area. Circuits as far away as Nel
son, 50 miles to the northeast, were
affected.
At the same time, a tremendous
power surge brightened lights
throughout Trail, a city of 15,000
about 400 miles east of Vancouver.
Warlield Is a mile from, the center
of the city.
Ho reason for the power surge
couia oe given
went to the apartment of a friend,
Ann Jackson.
In the vestibule of Miss Jackson's
apartment house, the actress con
tinued, "four men grabbed- me,
took me to the underground ga
rage and beat me. . . And kicked
me They also slugged me
with some kind of blunt Instru
ment."
She said they then drove her to
luxurious house near the Kimset
Strip and beat her again "even
more viciously."
bne said one of the men told
her they were doing it to teach her
lesson.
Miss Sterling said she flnallv
managed to escape, but didn't say
how.
Later, when she i heinr n.
amlned by Dr. Henrv W. Enhraim
she became unconscious and was
rushed to a hospital.
Miss Sterling and a former room
mate fashion designer Yolanda
Elliott, recently opposed each other
in court in a dispute over a fur
sioie.
Miss Elliott wan acnnlttsri nf
charges that she stole the fur piece
iviu miss owning wnue they
lived In an apartment together.
ouusequenuy, miss Elliott sued
Miss Sterling for $100300 dam
ages, charging malicious prosecu
tion. This suit is still pending.
Planes Bomb
Cows With Hay
ELKO, Nev. W Big Air Force
planes from four states were to
oomo ' tne snowy ranges of Ne
vada Monday with hay for starving
uuiuc. a new siorm temporarily
grounded the operation Sunday.
C-54S at Oreat Falls, Mont.,'
C-124S at McChord Field, Wash.,
and a C-83 at Denver were alerted
to augment hnylilt cargo planes
irom nanuicon neia, north of San
Francisco.
In contrast to Saturday's success
in air-dropping 18 tons of baled
nay to cattle isolated in remote
areas, only one crew -got through
Sunday's new blizzard. It dumped
hny In the Ruby Valley east of
Elko.
Eight ranchers In Elko County
have called for air-drops to some
7,000 cattle. Some 82 other cattle
owners were relying on 25 Army
bulldozers from Ogden. Utah, to
clear lanes through the snow to
190,000 menaced stock.
Saturday, and Sunday, these bull
dozers and a rotary plow cleared
approximately 100 miles of roads
In the critical Northeastern Neva
da area. Another 600 miles remain
to be cleared. The ground work
was expected to continue nil week.
It was hoped the aerial opera
tion could be concluded Tuesday.
The costly rescue work Is being'
financed by a $100,000 allotment
of President Turman, He declared
the sector a disaster area.
The aerial phase was hazardous
at times. Cargo planes were forced
to worm their way between canyon
walls to drop the bales near the
starving herds. .. -. .'
VTC Allotment
For Work OK
Weyerhaeuser Timber Companys
Kiamatn rails orancn has been
awarded a $174,000 material al
lowance for expansion work In the
second quarter, according to. an
Associated Press dispatch from
Washington this morning.
The allotment was one of. sev
eral announced late yesterday by
the National Production Admini
stration. The allotments totaled 29
million dollars.
Hugh Campbell, Weyerhaeuser
assistant manager here, said today
the firm had not yet been officially
notified of the allotment. He said
the firm had several applications
pe-.dlng before the NPA and that
he did not know what particular
Job the $174,000 allotment covered.
. It is posible the allotment' covers
a portion of the work on the new
hardboard plant Weyerhaeuser has
announced win oe built here.
Appeal Pleads
DP Admittance
KEY WEST, Fla'. Wl President
Truman asked Congress Monday
to open immigration gates to admit
auo.oou additional Europeans dur
ing the next three years.
Many escaped "victims of Com'
munist tvranny" would be included.
This -request highlighted a 4,900
word, three-point program drafted
at the little wnue House asking
Congress to:
"(1) Provide aid for the un
fortunate victims of oppression who
are escaping from communist tyr
annv behind the Iron Curtain.
"(2) Continue our participation
in the International effort now be
ing made to assist in the migration
and resettlement throughout the
world of a substantial number of
persons from the overpopulated
areas of Western Europe.
"(3) Authorize additional Immi
gration into this country, on a lim
ited basis, to aid in alleviating the
problems created by Communist
tyranny and overpopulation in
Western Europe."
Finnegan Gets
Jail, Fine
ST. LOUIS IB James P. Finne
gan. personal friend of President
Truman, was sentenced Monday to
two years In prison and fined
$10,000 for misconduct as internal
revenue collector here.
He was convicted on two mis
conduct charges by a federal court
jury Marcn la.
Federal Judge Rubey M. Hulen
imposed, sentence after denying
motion for a new trial.
The 51-year-old ex-collector was
sentenced to two years on each of
two charges, but the terms are to
oe served concurrently.
His attorneys previously had an
nounced they planned to appeal the
case In the event their motion for a
new trial was denied.
Finnegan was released under
$5,000 bond pending a motion for
an appeal.
The heavy-set Finnegan was
tense, his face flushed, as he stood
before Judge Hulen.
Only a few mlnuts before the
Judge had sharply criticized Finne
gan as a public ouiciai wno vio
lated his trust.
LAKEWOOD. Wis. Two
five-year old youngsters perished
in the wlnterbound wilderness' of
the Nicolet National Forest after
becoming lost in a storm, but a
third child was found alive Mon
day, huddled with her dead com
panions in an abandoned outhouse.
Little Mary Ann Church 3. was
found alive at 10 a.m. by two
searchers snowshoeing through
the heavy new snow, and rushed
to Dr. J. F. Dougherty at Sluing
oy sneriti s oiticers.
Dr. Dougherty said she recov
ered consciousness, drank a little
milk and greeted her mother, then
was sent to Oconto Memorial Hos
pital where her condition is fair
Sheriff Joseph Foral said that
searchers at first thought "a spark
oi ine was leit in tne otner two
children, but they were pronounced
dead by Clarence McMahon, assist
ant coroner of Oconto County.
The dead were Mary Ann's sis
ter catny, and their cousin, Stev
en Kennedy, both five.
Sheriff - Foral s office said the
three were, found huddling in an
outdoor toilet on the- grounds of
a closed: resort in the wlnterbound
Forest. '
The three 'youngsters were- min
ing since mid-aftemoon Saturday.
no nave oeen sougru, oy rranareas
oi spawsooe-oorne searcners. v.
' The children, two of them five
and the other three, wandered
trom their home on the forest's
edge to watch a porcupine Just as
a snowstorm started. There has
been no trace of them since.
The early spring storm, lashed
(Continued on Page 4.)
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. M) The
living worked grimly at burying
and rebuilding Monday in six tornado-torn,
flood-afflicted southern
states in which 235 died and' 1,100
were hurt.
In small, partly-wrecked church.
es throughout the region Sunday
half-dazed people clustered for fu
neral services sometimes for
whole families.
The normal sabbath still of .mail
towns was broken often by the rau
cous chugging of bulldozers labor
ing at me aeons, tne rattle ef
trucks and the clumping of boards"
being piled.
Survivors of the disastrous week
end picked at what was left of
tneir homes searching for some'
thing salvable, often under the
Idle gaze of hundreds of sight
seers who jammed the stricken
areas. ' .
DEATH TOLL ,
At last count, ami it dk at hw
Incomplete and often time. inc
curate, the death toll stood a Ar
kansas, 131; Tennessee, 64; Mis
sissippi, 11; Kenucky, 8: Missouri.
it), and Alabama. 5.
Arkansas alone rennrtrf vn' In
jured and 1.425 families, thousand
homeless affected by the ten-ibis
winds. . " .-.
In basemenU of ' ehnreh..
schools and armories Salvation Ar
my and Red Cross workers
struggled manfully to feed, house
ana ciotne tnose left desolate. -
An accurate estimate of damam
was impossible but It was expect
ed to reach into the tens of mil
Hons of dollars.
HOSPITALS FULL
In hospitals doctors and nurses.
eyes red-rimmed from lack of
sleep, worked to near exhaustion
to aid the Injured. Hospital capa
city was strainea to tne breaking
point.
Arkansas Gov. McMath, an-
pealed directly to President Till
man tor funds to help the state
rehabilitate itself. .
tie also wanted the President
for his quick action in ordering
federal agencies to- make a quick
check of the damage in all the
stricken ; areas to , ascertain the
need. ' ; -
Near Lexington, Tenn;, Sunday
they burled a family of six, lift
ed from their homes and hurled
300 yards to death.
The bodies of Mr. and Mrs! Ge'
(Continued on Page 4.)
Fund Drives
Forum Topic
Tonight's "Build the Basin" for
um bids to be one of the most In
teresting yet held in the public
service series sponsored by the
Herald and News and its radio
station. KFLW.
Topic for tonight's forum, which
goes on the air at 8:30. is: "Are
we having too many fund drives
and It so, what can we do about
it?"
The six-member panel selected
to tackle this important question
Is comprised of:
Mrs.- Herbert Graham, Klamath
Falls housewife and church wom
an; Q. Roderick Durham, Salem,
executive secretary of the Oregon
Chest:- Dr. Frank Trotman, mayor
of Merrill: Ernest Taylor, treas
urer and office manager of the
Palmerton Lumber Company; Boo
Perkins, Medo-land Creamery sale
man -who has taken an active in
terest in the fund drive problem:
and Lynn Roycroft, president of
the Klamath County- Community
Chest.
As usual, . a special telephone
crew of six persons will be on
hand at the Herald and News to
handle questions and comments
from the listening audience.
Stockman To
Tour US Bases
WASHINGTON I Rep. Stock
man (R.-Ore.) left Monday for a
month-Ions Inspection of military
installations in tne near ana rar
East.
Chairman Cannon (D-Mo.) of the
House Appropriations Committee
told a reporter he had asked Stock
man to obtain "special Informa
tion the committee wants on aev
eral spots." He did not elaborate.
Stockman's office said he would
visit Japan, Korea, the Philippine
islands and uie mut-mast.
The Oregonlan, who has an
nounced he will not seek reelec
tion this fall, was described by
Cannon as the "only member of
the committee with the time to
undertake the trip."
G. RODERICK DURHAM BOB PERKINS
ERNEST TAYLOR
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MRS. HERBERT GRAHAM
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