Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1953)
PAGE SIX FRANK JENKINS Sdltor Entered as second class nutter at the post office ol Klamath FalU, On., en August 30, 1M under act ot Congreu, Marco 8, 1879 ( . MEMBER! OP THE ASSOCIATED FBESS The Associated Press li entitled exclusively to the use lor publication ol ail the local newa printed In this newspaper at well as all AP news. , SUBSCRIPTION BATES MAIL . I month t 1.36 .1 month I l.M ",j month : 6.60 - I montbi 1 1.10 ' r" i . $11.00 1 year BILLBOARD ' Bf BILL JENKINS Soliloquy on - Sunday- depart ment: There something to be said about this Idea o( earning a living by writing. You mav never make a million dollars, although OBS did as a pen weilder, but you have got a lot ol advantages that the aver age white collar stiff hasn't. Bo maybe half, the men you went to school with are now prospering in the lumber, finance, retail and legal businesses and professions, you have the edge over 'em in a way of life . They have to go to an office every day at nine and work until lunch. At least they have to until they've made their first million or so. They have to keep appointments and wear neckties and all the other things that society demands. But you take your writer. He may have an office and he may be sup posed to keep hours, but most of em donl. If ne wants to iaae leu during the day he can always use as an excuse the two magic catch words "research" and "thinking." Those "two phrases alone get you out of almost any scrape you may tun into with the head office. You can write where you please. It you happen to be a newspaper scribe you face a deadline (or your copy, but outside that vou can write It anywhere you wish. At the office, at home, on a bus, a boat or a plane or on a raft In the middle of. the lake If you please. This, for Instance, Is being labor iously hammered out on the front lawn (facing West), the old and travel-worn portable perched pre cariously on an empty packing ease (Vat 69) while I perch equally precariously on that folding chair I was having so much trouble with the other day. And far from having tY wear the so-called suitable clothes-1 am simply attired In a pair of trunks and a coat of sweat. And fortified by the knowledge that by. combining oiv tun worship with a bit of typing I ani assuring my self of an additional couple of hours sleep in the morning. Ah life, what could be sweeter. For those about to launch out Into a career I would advise a close look at this writing business. A few drawbacks, like being under paid, developing ulcers from dead KLAMATH FALLS CongratU latlons to the Herald and News for initiating a movement long overdue, and perfectly timed to the cries and struggles of the captive peoples and the gallant stand of Syngman Rhee, If any phrase, thought or part of such can be gleaned herein UBed in any way to weave a simple, strik ing declaration of policy, you are welcome, and more power to you. Surely America, born. Nurtured and frown to greatness In free dom, owes debt to humanity not to France, for Lafayette did not have the blessing of his king and court, who would have acted only in self Interest anyway. But appeasement, the secret poi son of the age, has so shackled our once bold, clean coumge that scarcely a move dare be made against entrenched evil. The de mand for safety, selfish Interests, corruption, clamoring minorities and a spate of secondary principles have been allowed to outrank free domthe mightiest ot them all. Consider the shabby measures, the makeshifts of policy, the base and trivial considerations1 that have moved our leaders these last twenty years, while freedom and justice principles as much great er than they as the sun Is great er than a candle has languished In neglect. We cannot Indefinitely endure the present strain ol sDreadlns our wealth and our armies over half the earth, maintaining an arms race with a treacherous, un. principled enemy, while we wail In bemused uncertainty for anoth er Pearl Harbor. The good heart ot humanity bleeds for enslaved peoples any' where, and in all times and climes. To give aid and comfort to their hopes and struggles is no more than this nation owes to mankind for Its birthright. However, we have drilled so far down the primrose path, it is doubtful if a mere policy will be ot any practical use. At the first objection; the first hint ot criti. clsro, we shall probably rush mad ly hither and thither to placate, policy or no. We are the heirs of a tragic drift from the hard and rugged road our fathers trod. America Is formed in the grand style, for adventure and high principle not for the timid and querulous ways ef the aged and carping. Look up America! Look up and recognize your historic destiny. Look at the fountain ol your strength, and do not deny It it Is freedoml Honor and worship it wherever It grows or strives to grow; It Is your guiding star. The W. Wayne Martin ARMSTRONG PABCO LINOLEUM Colors ond Patterns for oil rooms GUARANTEED to PLEASE - Terms to your neodi Phone 8370 . 1945 South 6th Street TELLING THE EDITOR BILL JENKINS Managing Editor BI CABBIES lines and having to worship a clock, It's a pretty good racket. I think I'll stay with it awhile whether I want to or not. it's a cinch I couldn't be anything else. The mere act of making change for a bus fare leaves me In a cold sweat, gibbering in confusion and trembling in terror, so obviously I wouldn't be a shining success as a clerk. And my basic mathemat ics never got past the third grade. And I flunked that, too, so the world of high finance Is beyond my grasp. As I write this I'm star ing out over my corn field la 20 by 20 foot plot) "which is probably the only cornfield in this part of the region planted in the sheltering shade of a grove of pines, bordered with a rock wall and fertilised with a mixture of Oromore and a liquid fish compound that is supposed to be just the ticket for petunias. But even at that, and not even counting the feeding stand for the bluejays that Juts over1 a corner of the patch, I don't see any great suc cess for the youngest Jenkins as a farmer. (If beer cans would sprout I'd make Johnny Appleseed look like a piker, but I guess that'll have to wait for a bit, at least until science catches up with a few things first.) I tried to fix a leak in the roof of the car and only succeeded in getting chewing gum all. over the upholstery so I guess I better not apply for work at a garage. Unless it would be as a car washer, I'm pretty good at that If the car isn't too dirty. ' ' And since -I can't even keep up my simple check stubs the banking world is not for me. In fact, a couple of banks have offered to pay me a sizeable amount If I'll promise never to write another check just pay cash. (Quite a few other people would be Just as happy If I'd do that, too). So I cuess I'm doomed for a life among the words, tenses and split infinitives lor tne rest oi my na tural days. If such Is gonna be the case I guess maybe I'd better sit down with some good book on the use of the English language and find out what a split Infinitive is. I never have known. captive peoples are not your bur den, America! They are your last, best hope; a hope that through them you may regain your once clear view. Generous and unselfish at the core of your being, the 'cries and wrlthlngs of the captive peo ples may yet regain for you your long lost nobility! . , The united 'States believes that only free men may find th9 full growth and glory for wnich Cod created them: that, therefor, all peoples should be free to choose their government, their leaders. their religion and their works, to assemble as tney wish " and to read, write and speak as they choose, save only proved and harmful deceits. The faith of the United Btates is pledged to give aid and com fort to any people openly fighting ana aying lor tneir freedom; first inrougn legal, and accustomed means; second by tacit consent to persons and groups willing to go eyono we scope ol government and, at the last, by military force If need be. In pursuance of which Dolicv. the lives, the honor and the might oi tne people of the Unites 8tates are dedicated, so long as their nation endure. Gomer Caseman 1W S. 6th St. OUR PUPPY We had him Just a day or so 'Twaj such a little while. And everything he did was cute No one could help but smile. His chubby little body, On his wobbly little pins, His twtnkly eyes and stubby nose, Brought forth a lot of grins. His little bark was sharp and clear. Each day he'd stand and wait And wagging madly his bobbed off tall. He'd meet us at the gale. But someone saw our puppy And wanted a puppy, too. There are lota ot babv dogs around But only ours would do. So now we miss the happy bark Of the cheerful little cuss. Please find a dog that's all your own And bring ours back to us. Rill Chamber 3340 Altamont Dr. (Written about "Puddles,' Australian Shepherd) a male IT'S THE LOG CABIN AND EVERY NIGHT of the week ! DINING DANCING STEAKS Music By CHICKEN WILBUa!d5TILES ' SEAFOOD' WARD HILLERICH Banquet Rooms For Private Parties Appropriate For Every Occasion They'll Do It Every DBDP-lNS SXAy AO STAY TILL VOU SEND OUT FOR EXTRA RUB 60 .VOU C4M IMVITE TWEM TO CHOW"" CS)-FTER VOU STOCK UP WITH ENOUGH PERISHABLES TO FEED Ati r?MyTHEr4 THEY DECIDE TO SHOVE OFF- 4? HAL BOYLE KEW YORK Wl The ordinary newspaperman rarely looks for, expects, or needs public sympathy. But at this moment I need a shoulder to cry on and, If you've got two, I'll weep on both of them. I'll tell you what breaks more newspapermen's hearts than peo ple who won't talk and that Is typewriters that won't work. - In war or peace It Is typewriters. I hate typewriters. I don't suppose anybody in the whole 'world hates typewriters more than I do or for more reasons. The public thinks all a newspa perman has to do is to learn what has happened, and then tell it. That Is really all he does nave to do. But to get the news back home where they can print it he has to use a typewriter, a telephone or a cable. If any war reporter or foreign correspondent told the full story of the heartbreaks that had come to him through his faith in the tele phone, cable, or wireless well, I don't think any honest newspaper reader or radio listener could stand the strain on his sympathy. He would have to break down and weep out of general good will. Aft er all, In wartime they don't as sign chaplains to the newspaper corns but they probobly will the next time. There was the period In Nor mandy in 1944 when news sent by the usual means Just seemed to make an echo and get nowhere. So in desperation some U. S. Sig nal Corps pigeons, quickly tested for carrying power rather than loyalty,' were freighted with news bulletins and picture negatives and thrown In the general direction of London and New York. You know where the ringleader pigeons showed up? In Berlin. The Oerman newspapers bad a field day printing the Allied news bul etlns and photographs. That must be why the official feed ration of Army messenger pigeons recently was listed as "se cret." Probably In 1944 some spy was slipping sauerkraut to them on the sly, and naturally when they were turned loose they .wing ed toward Germany, the base of supply. Presumably, the secret ration today Is grits. A U.S. Army pi geon, loosed anywhere in the world, will head first for Rich mond, Va., and If unfavorable winds sweep him off his course, he win veer lowaia vriesiuii, o.w., sroundlng himself If necessary. Now, never mind that pigeon and his refueling problem, which, so far as I know. Is still officially a feathered mystery, let's get back to typewriters. The first and only fair typewrit er I ever met was one I used in 1934 in The Columbia, (Mo.) Tri. bune, put there bv The Associated Press. The ribbon had never been changed since the early part of the century, but It never, broke. To write a story on It you had to get up early when you felt strong, and kick at the keys with both feet. It had an advantage for the management In that at the end of the day none of the series ot reporters who inherited It ever bad the muscle-power to use It to ask for a raiso. I have heard since that Jake Hamel, the managing editor, leas. ed it during the )ast war, powered it with an airplane motor and rent ed It as a tractor. But I'll bet it is now back at work again, chronic ling the exploits of the University of Missouri athletic teams with the same old ribbon. There never was a typewriter like that old covered wagon. You couldn't break it with a sledgehan mer. But never since then have II had a typewriter that you could even start to till out anv expense ac. count upon but what It would col lapse. Vacofion Bible School JULY 13-24 9:30-1 1 e.m. Men. thru Fit. CHURCH OF CHRIST 1774 Arthur St. Ph. MU0 TONIGHT HERALD AND1 NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON Time i.m. f 6RETri4rOU 60 TO THE DB.-KTOE'S TUG, LIST .4100 TWEKrTV nnLLABS FLERD-6ET 3 WS LEAVES r60T EvWTHlrJ - DOWN AHO TWHK rr One brand new one I drowned trying to land in French Morocco . I borrowed another from the Army. I nursed, begged, pleaded. pampered that typewriter until I got to Shanghai in 1945 and gave it to a nckanaw man for a two block ride and I hope It Is happy. He couldn't be If he kept it. Along tne way I bought or re quisitioned by moonlight at, least nan dozen other typewriters. You think a typewriter Is a 'ma chine? It is a wife, a child, a cousin any relative with 12 dis eases that cannot help vou when you need htm but demands your loyalty. The keys stick... the rib bon won't move... it does move, but it doubles and won't print... and always, always, when you have an important story. And meanwhile you have forgotten how w write oy nand. I know how to end thu wnr In Korea or anywhere else. Let me go there with 1,000 typewriters, and try to use them. As they full apart, throw them to the enemy. Then attack. No enemy powr In the world could Tfit itn Monro aii of 1,000 messed-Up typewriters In who 10 uciena itself. , COLUMBIA, Mo. I)'' ' i; Mr. Hal Boyle v . The Associated Press -New York, N. Y; Dear Hal: , About that old typewriter that you and Charlie Grummieh and Huel Warren and a lot of other young guys used to punish. It's gone high hat,-It's moved Into a deal which you and I probably will never achieve the Business Of fice. Where , they take in money and pay it out you know. When your piece came over the wire today It stirred my curiosity. I started looking for the old mill. I could remember it used to hang on the side of the old AP desk, and finally fell off. I could remem ber we had a strange little gal on the women's desk who Hked those funny letters on It it wrote all caps and who.used It awhile. But today it wasn't anywhere in sight. ji course not. ine Business Man ager vou remember M n .loit had cabbaged onto IL He explains that he traded the little gal on the women's desk out of It because she couian t remember that it had a figure 1 on It and she always came out with L949 Instead of 1949. So he had It cleaned and polished and installed in that big desk of his with a sate and secure place w put a typewriter away the kind ot a desk you and I'd lust dream about. To answer your question ne put a new- rtooon In and he writes about dollars and rents on it, instead of about farm cops and football like you and Grummclh used to do. . "And." he says, "you can tell Hal Boyle he can't have it back He owes us a storage bill on ft that neither he nor the AP would ever be able to pay." So, old pal, there you have It. The old mill Is doing better than the likes of you and me and it looks like it's gone forever. But the best of luck to you any way. Jake Hamel Rick Casares, the University of Florida's hard-charging fullback, made the All-Southeastern Confer ence second teams in both toot ball and basketball in 1953. U Millionth Celebration VERN Cascade Home Furnishing 124 No. 4th By Jimmy Hatlo rWTre TABLE 6ET4K5RE UvHO'Ouewn OUie jut" f-r AVeS.JitCOBUS-HUKW UK VvaULOrfr ft TBAUMT. OP A MAUXSf Ku , viirY yisasi-yri ' ,- I V - WE'RE CM OUR WAY, The Doctor Says By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M. D. Mrs. c., in a recent letter, raises an Interesting question which I Imagine has' troubled many mothers. She says, "I am hesi tant In having my eight-month-old baby vaccinated - ( ainst small pox, thinking It too young for this. My pediatrician advises, however, that no harm will come of it, What is your opinion?" . . I agree emphatically with the pediatrician. Here is why:' For several hundred years smallpox was a scourge of man kind throughout, most of the world. At one Mme It was more common then measles. During the 18th century nearly everyone con tracted smallpox before reaching maturity.. More than one-half mil lion persons died every, year, and during that century alone 60,000. 000 persons were lost as a result of smallpox. Smallpox now Is fortunately rare In civilized countries. The fight against this horrible disease took a new turn In 1718 when Lady Marty Wortley Montagu Introduced Into England the practice of. In oculation. , i , . 1 This simply Involved taking material from a pock or pustule of . a person suffering with the disease and scratching it on the skin of a person (usually a child) This produced the disease in the Inoculated person, but It was usual ly less severe and caused less scarring than if the disease had been caught in the usual way. The great discovery- came about 1196 when' Edward Jenner, a country practitioner and son of a clergyman in oioustersnire, England, made his famous ex periment on a boy, James Phlpps. Jenner noticed that the milk maids of the district In which he lived did not seem to get smallpox even when almost all others in the community came down with the disease. He pondered this fact, ob servini that most of the milk maids had small scars on their hands as a result ot'i a mild dt sease, called cowpox, present on the udders of cows. Finally, on' a farm close to his home there was an out break of cowpox. One of the milkmaids. Sarah Nehlnes, was infected and, with pus taken from a. nustule on her nana, jenner Inoculated James Phlpps. This boy developed the usual changes bon the sxin wnicn are cnarac- torlsttc cjf what we now call vac- C111UL1U11. , Six weeks later Jenner lnocu Iated young Phlpps with pus from a patient with smallpox and sat down to wait anxiously. The vaccination "took" and later the bov nroved resistant to smallpox, It was in this way that modern vaccination was born. , Since Jenner's classic experi ment, vaccination has proved its umrth thousands of times and has prevented millions ot deaths. It is the only -real safeguard we have against this terrifying dis ease: original vaccination at' six months of age or even earlier is advised. SLICK TRICK To cut. canned pineapple, when the recipe calls for half slices or smaller sections, drain on tne syrup, then Insert a knife In the center and cut slices easily In the can.. fits any make refrigerator OWENS' J Phone 836S Economic Outlook for Log Industry n West iouna (Eds. note: The following Is toe first f five release! concern ing the present and future ef the lumber Industry In the racUjo Northwest. The articles were prepared by Walter J. DeLcog. chief of the Weyerhaeuser Tim ber Company's public relations department, and were presented before the Klamath Falls Ro tary Club last week.) By WALTER J. DeLONG Today, the economlo future of the world seems to be the great question mark. The ecnomlc fu ture of our own country Is a much- discussed subject. People are ask ing, "What effect would a Korean peace have upon our economy?" . Whether a. nation shifts, from war to peace or peace to war, the stock market usually declines upon either event. This is not a re action to peace or war it is a barometer of the people's cautious reaction to the prospect of a great change. This uncertainty has un doubtedly been intensified by the philosophy long held in Wash ington and long preached by some self-appointed political economists that prosperity is -made by gov ernment spending and that if peace stops the war spending, tne prosperity will collapse. . Those who -'ret over- reduced government spending, Ignore the fact that less government spend lng makes possible a lesser tax burden. The government will spend less money on goods useless for anything except destruction; and the citizens the taxpayers will have more money to spend for economically useful goods or investment in new plants and new equipment, What people want today Is an economy of reasonably full and steady employment. The big public fear Is one of boom and bust and unemployment. It Is not too much to say that our Ameri can business system will stand or fall on. Its ability to provide full and steady employment. ' , . ' This is . industry's number one problem. It means good planning to level out the peaks "and the valleys of production and unem ploymentand It means restraint ana reiusai to become panicked into wholesale lay-offs and into reducing inventories, in anticipation et a depression which we thus neip to create. It means aggres sive selling and lower, prices -possibly on a narrower marcln but with the over-all probability of an uiureaae oi value in, our dollar. : The economic stability of the na. tion depends greatly upon four wings: . First Material resources. Second Individual Initiative and freedom of action. Third Ability of labor and man agement to work together. Fourth Honest, efficient and economically sound government. Now let's look Bt niift nf mi, v... terlal or natural-resources our jorest lands. Until a few years ago there was no economic Incentive to grow timber or even to conserve u umoer we did have. On. cnuM purchase more stumptge when ever needed at less than thei cost of growing it and Without the risx irom lire, disease or tae..i It is easy to condemn much more difficult to understand the conditions that influenced logging and lumbering methods a few years ago. The lumbermen were not alone in wasting our forests. Farmers cleared away thousands Of acres lor purposes then con sidered . more productive. Many thousands of acres of forest lands were cleared and burned In the building of roads and railroads. City and town sites were cleared ana burned olf. All this, to make way for' civilization. Acres and acres of new growth on cut-over lands were burned and re-burned for grazing lands. The public per- mitted millions ot acres to burn because it wasn't considered worth while to spend the necessary mon ey to prevent or suppress forest fires. But now this attitude has changed. Today, the basic law of supply and' demand, as functioning be tween timber supply and the de mand for products from woods, is the primary motivation of "forest management" or "tree farming." A sincere effort is being made by many private owners ot forest lands to put their lands on a perma- During EMIL'S TUESDAY SURPRISE Peaches r Crate Best Foods Mayonnaise pint MD Tissue Treats' Party Crackers 10 rolls Box Cut from Fed. Graded "Good" Beef Round Steak ,b ment production basis . , Un.": L.o" Wash. Great progress has been made to the Y-Z .n ...... i-ndav there are some 4300 private tree farms to thlrly-tlve states, wiui " around 28,000,000 acres under the tree larm program. i nvu farminiir - u lom-range program. In the Douglas fir re gion it takes from 80 to 100 years to grow a, tree to commercial sawlog size. In the pine area, from 100 to 138 years. But forests will reproduce themselves it given chance. ..' . , '. ! Forests are of lime vaiue w m until hai-vented. We hear a great deal about consevatlon of uur forests; . While forests are a natural resource, they must oe sinti!irAllv harvested to be a public asset. It Is not by conserv ing our forests that we will meet the problem of forest depletion. It is proper management ol our In dustrial forest lands and whole crop' utilization from these lands that Is all important. Th. Hau nf chean. eaailv acces sible, high grade stumpage in the west nas gone. Today, owners of sawmuis, puip m i th. wnnH ronverslon nulla mm 7 . facilities realize fully that produc tive forest acreage under their control and management Is the h )nno-.t.rm assurance ot ade quate raw material supply and protection oi plant investment. , - i . fmm natural re sources on a national basis Is ap proximately 65 per cent from re newable resources such as agri culture, forests, fishing, water power and water supply , . . and about 35 per cent from non-renewable resources such as mining, pe troleum, etc. . (To Be Continued) ' Early Lebanon Vote Pro-West BEIRUT, Lebanon !h Pro-Western nationalists and moderate in dependents made the-, strongest showing in returns toaay from tne first round of Lebanon's parliamen tary elections. Fourteen of the 21 deputies chosen in the voting yes terday were members of the old parliament. - Balloting for the' 44-seat, one house legislature was in Beirut and Mount' Lebanon. The remaining 33 deputies will be picked In other sections on the following two Sun days. With the otficlal count complete In all but 2 ot the 31 electorates, the National Bloc seated 4 of :, candidates nominated. Three of four independents t- rsed by the bloc also won seats. . The Progressive Socialist party, which has bitterly denounced West ern defense plans for the Middle East and charged American med dling in the elections, won only 1 of 6 seats It sought. The solitary winner was party leader namai Jublatt. I this auestiom I em one ef these recent June brides, end among the wedding ,. gifts my husband and I received was en expensive Oriental, rug valued at $2000. The ntf ef eur furnlihtngs ere rather inex pensive by comparison. Should wa mantles this rug (pacifically, and ill value, whan applying far fire Insurance? ' On any iniuranca problem, consult Jtwuf. Thomas INSURANCE th It Maia Phone 45 . Local ' Strawberries Crate Del Monte TOMATO Juke 46-oi. Giant Site TIDE Blua Bonnet Margarii Picnic Pock Blue Bonnet ine 3 for icnic Pack Beef Hearts and Tongues lb. SUPER MARKET T JERRY OAK mm mrwnAY. JULY 13, 1953 -, Telling The Editor OUTTENBERO, N.J. I wonder lr you might have a spot In your paper such as "Letters to the Editor", "Voice of. the People,' "Notes of Interest," A Question and Answer Column, or something similar whereby I may contact your readers. I would like to appeal to your readers in the pursuit of - ray hobbv.' You see, I am a collector of old Reach or Spalding Baseball Guides. These are annua baseball record nooks wnicn were pub. Halted yearly between 1816 and 1941 and are now out of print, I am having difficulty In com pleting my set and I believe that there may be some of these copies In the hands of your subscribers who are no longer Interested in them 'and which they may with, to dispose of. There must be in numerable copies Just lying in the way around the house or gathering dust on the bookshelves of your readers. I will gladjy reimburse them and would apprelcate it very mcuh 1' they would write to me if thuv have anv to' offer. Hoolne that there is an element of Interest and unusual novelty in hobbv . and that at the same time your readers might find It to tneir oenetit. aiso, i am 'Most sincerely, ' William Fuckuer - ' ' 83 - 88th Street Cardinal Lashes Htmii iiHtueiii MTT.AW Ttalv LP) TMefnnu Cardinal Schuster Saturday de cried the "new paganism of the flesh" that makes itself more and more manifest during the summer season.' Writing In L'ltalla. Roman Ci. tholio newspaper of the Archdio cese of Milan, the frequently, out spoken Cardinal said the summer's heat should not be an excuse lor nudism on beaches and In moun tains.. -. 'When the Impudence ot nudism becomes common,'' he said, "It is at the cost of public morality, as experience has shown." ' The Cardinal told priests of his archdiocese to tell their pariahon. ers to dress appropriately and to warn them that if tney ere-not properly aressea' nicy win ue de nied admittance to church and de nied the sacraments. . ( Phi CarifYf t Klftfcii with THERMADOR tfi Minnn hi'r.iit fecfrc fcijrjt pertanaiiiaa caavaniane...Tar caaa lint la a kitchen pleased Hk Ifcsf moor. Cookinj top and aya-ltwt ana can kt located tor fewer ilept ae peifetsy of aaniied work flaw, Cvt em Meaty... Theritador h perl at Ike kaiic kittk.n etalgs-.-Sialoleu fleet aa funciionai deiiga accoal aay nun... oka cleanino aaiv. vinos roriaPMarice... ivory eoom footvra far skillful Irouklo-h-eo coaklef .. fart flva-raspa heat control, heavily le Med autoaatlc oven and the cool, does dependability you get only wllk etaciricirp, $$Tk$rmudtrat. I.WKerxs KlUMA irspV ejWG(sB These prices effective . Tuesday ONLY 9th and PINE No phone calls, PLEASE .1 f