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Journal and Courier from Lafayette, Indiana • 4

Location:
Lafayette, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

14 By Jimmy Hatlo Journal and Courier Dorothy Dix Says: J1 iifi II IK 4011 Telephones MOll Xi it SUPREME REPORT VICTORY VARIETIES PRESENTS are A Double Headliner THREE TOP BILLING VARIETY ACTS 2 SHOWS 2 $120 Each Tax Paid AIl Seats Reserved' or Roth Performances at': GOOD SEATS STILL AVAILABLE OR BOTH SHOWS A I sHtea ilium i HHl til 11 VE GADS' HOW lAEte BOTH RXISHED the capital to If he cannot invest in ex 'O be taxed an earned $4500 ian they did come from Wolcott Navy Man Home rom China WOLCOTT Jan Lloyd A Safford USNM Is at home on a 60 day leave visiting his mother Mrs Beulah Safford and relatives at Reynolds He spent the past MEMBER or THS 48SOCIATED PRESS BntrS as second class matter at' ths postotfice at Lafayette Ind under the act of March 1 1373 SPECIAL MEETING MONDAY JANUARY 12th 8:00 PM NELSON SISTERS Trapexe Artists Guest Editorial $40 Per Vote Plan (Indianapolis Star) President $40 a vote tax plan is purely political It is also both unfair and Inflationary He asks Congress to give $40 exemptions to all taxpayers re gardless of income This means that a man now paying $40in taxes gets a 100 per cent de crease The man paying $400 In taxes gets a 10 per cent 'decrease And the man paying $4000 in taxes gets a 1 per cent decrease Is this fair? Right now the $4000 taxpayer is paying about 25 per cent of his income in taxes A 1 per cent re duction will hardly affect him The $40 taxpayer pays only 5 per cent of his income in taxes A 100 per cent reduction will wipe him com pletely off the tax rolls It ought to be obvious to anyone who stud ies these figured that the only fair way to reduce taxes is an across the board percentage cut as Harold Stassen recommended Wednesday and as the present GOP tax reduction bill pro poses Aside from the purposes of rais ing revenue ederal taxes should be aimed at creating the conditions that produce a stable and produc tive economy Mr tax plan' would do just the re verse It has all the vices of tax reduction and none of its virtues It would floiir over $3000000000 In to the pockets and give nothing to those who could invert capital in the new production that we must have to offset the in crease in the money supply Mr Truman himself said that corporations should spend $50000 000000 In capital expansion and new productive facilities Yet his tax plan would cut present cor poration profits in half It would also pfovlde no relief for the mid dle and high tax bracket investor who would have to provide addi tional capital by loaning it to in dustry Where will this $50000 000000 come from? 1 On top of that Mr Truman re fuses to decrease the size of his budget He even asks for the cre ation of new government agencies and public works programs If Congress reduces the budget by the sama amount as It reduces taxes that would merely mean that individuals would be spend ing the money instead the gov ernment It would not be inflation ary But Mr Truman's way retains full government spending and adds $3000000000 to the money supply! This is highly inflationary Obviously Congress including most Democrats will not vote for such a plan But the fact that Mr Truman presents it shows that his blustering talk about controlling Inflation is politics and nothing else While he talks Inflation con trol out of one side of his mouth he advocates inflationary measures out of the other All eyes require more and more Illumination as they grow older oecause they admit an ever de creasing percentage if available light HOOSIER STABILITY Approximately 1100 Indiana families quali fied for Centennial arm certificates at Purdue university agricultural confer ence In order to win this recognition land now owned must have been in possession of the same family 100 years or more Some 400 more additional families registered after the jdeadllne and It is expected still more will be revealed before next conference The project of ascertaining and recognizingHoosier centennial farm families is sponsored 'by the Indiana Historical society in co oper ation with the university The number of centennial families testifies to the stability and high quality of Hoosier farmers Ancestors of the present residents and owners came to Indiana to find and make a home themselves They had the quali ties which dared brave a wilderness and its hardships build a home clear the ground and settle down The Indiana of today is the result of their sacrifices their work and their vision We can be proud of what we have today largely because of these pioneers arm folk have traditionally been the back bone of the nation and of our social and po litical structure The bulk of the first settlers were farmers Our life was built on and around them They provided our proud her itage of today As already mentioned the sturdiness of these people is attested by the large number Of centennial families in the state ifteen such families qualified from Tippecanoe coun ty there are likely more Among the families registering the oldest land entered went back to 1789 in Clark county it is still in the same family Another noteworthy example is pro vided in Warren county where 600 acres of land was entered by the Rhode family over "100 years ago the same 600 acres remain in the same family today This is the type of stability and sturdiness Which has made America and which provide a strong bulwark against all alien Ideologies It is gratifying to know that we have this steadying influence in our midst IGHTING INLATION While seeking restoration of extraordinary Wartime powers and casting about for new ones in order to combat inflation the admin istratlon might well explore how much anti inflationary effect' co'uldbe exerted by undoing some of the things that have been and are being done It mhy be? as pointed out in a Survey by the Guaranty Trust company of New York that insufficient attention has been given to numerous phases of governmental policy that tend to intensify the upward pressure on prices In the field of fiscal policy for instance? it is cited that the federal government while opposing any reduction in total tax revenues on the ground that It would be Inflationary is spending money at the rate of $37 billion annually which is greatly in excess of any previous peace time period Proposals outlined in the State of the Union message would run this figure up to an estimated $50 billion Inflationary government spending also makes for inflationary prices While expressing concern ovei the expansionf bank credit the government itself is ex panding its credits As of last March 31 governmental agencies had approximately $78 billion of loans outstanding an increase of nearly one fourth in a year On the other hand all banks of tjie nation had loans oift tanding last June 30 of less than $384 billion which was an increase of approximately 20 per cent in a year part of the latter consist ing of real estate loans guaranteed by govern ment agencies It is also contended that raising of reserve requirements to former levels would prove helpful The authority to alter the purchasing price of gold and the federal silver purchase reserve are also considered potentially dangerous Another factor in high prices Is government buying for foreign aid It is essential that buying In the future be done with more regard to its effects bn domestic prices than has sometimes been shown in the past Too it must be pointed out again that the labor policy has been a powerful factor contributing to inflationary pressures It cannot be denied that the strong moral influence of the government exerted in state ments findings and by other means has been almost exclusively on the side of higher labor costa GAUTIERS BRICKLAYERS World's Greatest Dog Act wra im saw watvim wTsjtswS of in Attica ATTICA Jan 10 Members of the Attica Chamber of Commerce enjoyed a turkey dinner at Harrison Hills Cotmtry club Thursday evening when they met for the annual election of officers Ed Robson the retiring president presiding Officers chosen who take office at once are: Crigler president Irwin vice president Young sec retary Virgil Johnson treasurer Howard Miller Blume and Ed directors for two years1 Mr and Mirs 'Charles Clawson in celebration of their 15th wed ding anniversary which was Jan 7 entertained a few friends at cards at their home refreshments being served LIONS DINNER Attica Lions club will hold a dinner meeting at 7 o'clock Mon day evening at Harrison Hills Country club after which the members will go in a body to the club A marriage license was granted to Miss Lucille Buster daugh ter of Mrs Louvina Buster and James Cunningham all of At tica Cunningham is a son of Earl Cunningham of Lafayette POETESS HONORED Mrs Phillips local poetess who writes under the name of Rose Myra Phillips has received an invitation from the Chevy Chase group of writers to attend a tea Jan 17 at Cresent Place Washington honoring wives of members of the diplomatic corps The invitation came person ally from Mrs Wilson Rockwell well known journalist Mr and Mrs loyd Pogue are the parents of a son William Michael born by Caesarean sec tion1 Jan 8 Mrs Pogue is a daughter of Mr and Mrs John A WllliamsAof ranklin Mr and Mrs Bill Kenis of Milwaukee Wls announce the birth of a son Kenton Albert Jan 7 Mrs Kerns the former Elna Albert is one of the twin daugh ters of Mr and Mrs Walter Al bert axfd Mr Kerns Is a' son of Mrs Harley Wallace The interior walls of the Attica jail have been repainted A marriage license has been issued at Williamsport to Miss Betty Tinder daughter of Mrs Retha Tinder of Attica and Clar ence DeZarn son of Mrs Maggie DeZam of Williamsport Mr and Mrs Russell Robin son are in Chicago Oulbache chapter AR is sponsoring four girls in the state and national Good Citizenship contest The girls members of the Senior class were selected by vote of the senior classes and teachers in their respective schools for ability in leadership dependabil ity scholarship and patriotism The four contestants are Miss Nova Jean Cheak Attica Miss Lola May Hayman Newton Miss Lois Workley Williamsport and Miss Joan Potter West Lebanon Roy Harrison and Glen Mrs Clara Belle Harrison in Harrison have been appointed ex ecutors of the will of their mother Mrs Clara Belle Harrison in ountain Circuit court Polio ilm to Be bhown at rowler OWLER Jan An infantile paralysis 'program will feature a meeting of the club of owler Monday afternoon at the home of Mrs Mendenhall Miss Betty Mallnka executive sec retary of the Indiana oundation for Infantile Paralysis will show a film on the subject Mrs Edgar Williams will give a review of the book On a Limb" by Louise Baker and Mrs Ellis Christen will give a resume of the book Polio by Noreen Linduska Mr and Mrs Shirley Gunnels went to Chicago Thursday to en ter St hospital for surgery Elmer Kopka and family of Union township left Thursday for Phoenix Ariz to spend two months for Mrs health Patricia Jo is the name given the daughter born to Mr and Mrs Richard Turner Jr at St Elizabeth hospital Tuesday Guests of Mr and Mr? Joe Mason were Mr and Mrs Ike Paris of Nanysa Ida A Bourke of Windsor Mo Mrs Margie Hughes of Hoopston Ill and Miss Iva Clute of Wellington HL Mrs Celissa Dowell is spending several days with her daughter Mrs Gregory Bower and familyT The combined meeting of the 1948 extension school of agronomy and soil conservation and the 1948 annual meeting of the Prairie Soil Conservation district was 'attended by 156 persons riday the court room of the Benton county court house WEDDING EB 7 Mr pnd Mrs Orville Durflinger owler announce the engage ment approaching marriage of their daughter Miss Rosemary THAT IN LAW WAR THE INTERNECINE war between mothers in law and daughters in law still goes on at high speed with neither side asking for nor giving quarter or showing the slightest indi cation of running up the white flag Yet it is doubtful if both of the World Wars put together have caused as much misery and broken as many hearts as It ha Tt is a curious and a terrible war that has Deen ought' and is still fought by women over the bodies of the men they love and for whose sole possession they are strug gling and to gain their ends they ruthlessly break up homes half orphan little children and wreck the happiness of ths very ones over whom they are battling If these women were merciless savages who gloated over the torture of a sister woman we could understand their conduct but such Is not ths case They are noble Christian women overflowing with pity and tenderness and sympathy for all the human race except such as are united to them by the in law tie and with whom they have to live Of course miracles do happen and there are authentic instances rare' though they be In which mothers in law and daughters in law and even Old maid sisters in law do live to gether In peace and harmony But generally speaking when Johnny brings home his bride the fight is on for Mom is determined not to let any little chit of a girl run her house and the little chit of a girl is equally determined not let any bld woman put anything over on her UTILE HOPES No man ftot a hopeless optimist or feeble minded would ever take a young wife to live with hie female relatives without expecting her tp he clawed to pieces and no mother could listen tn her know it all bride tell how SHE made lemon pies without hoping she would choke on her first bite Probably the Pentagon Building would cramp the style of the average mother in law and daughter in law if they attempted to live together so the wise thing for a young couple to do is to put off the wedding until they can have their own small shack in which they can have their little brawls without any moth er in law putting in her two worth and where they have to listen to advice from any outsider Statistics show that mothers in law are re sponsible for more divorces than any other one thing but in reality the daughters in law are just as guilty as are their husbands' mothers Their common crimes are that neither will use the slightest diplomacy in dealing the other and that they are both eaten up with jealousy And neither one of them will stop their feuding to save the happiness of the man who is the son of one and the husband of the other and whose very soul they are tearing to tatters Such a pity it for mothers and wives not to make friends with their in laws or it can be sqch a beautiful relationship when it flowers in love and kindness Thrice blessed are they whose in laws were the best wedding present they received when they got married DEAR DOROTHY DIX: I Intend to give my sweetheart an engagement ring within the next few weeks Should I ask her parent permission to do so? She is a 17 year old high school student who will graduate in June I am 22 and have steady employment after serving three years in the Seabees and I have known her since she was 15 years xHd We intend to wait two years until she is 19 before we marry In the meantime we both work and put azide for the future? Are our plans sensible? EX SEABEE ANSWER: Eminently sensible as plans and I only hope that you will have the cour age to them Into Execution Instead of rushing into a hoy and girl marriage The two years' between 17 and 19swlll be the guar antee of la happy and successful marriage if you spend them in getting really acquainted with each other and finding out if what you feel for each other is mature love or just a chlldlshvfancy If more young people would make their engagement a preview as it were of marriage It would save a lot of bitter regrets I think it Is the fashion nowadays for young men to ask their fiancees fathers for permission to give their sweethearts engage ment rings But I think it was a very lovely custom and it is a pity it has been abolished It is a gesture of respect to the father that he is sure to appreciate Now oh Sale Over the Counter at Decker's andTicket Office in Lower Lobby of Ball of Musics Purdue University 1 "I REE BURMA In far off Burma the Union Jack is to be replaced with a new flag the Burmese banner Blylng over the buildings of Rangoon it will proclaim the independence Of this story book land of pagodas rice gardens and jewels The British are withdrawing all but enough peoplS to maintain training missions The Burmese 1 constituent assembly will meet Immediately after the new flag is hoisted Nearly 15 mil lion people are Involved in this change 'of government But whether or not the Burmese will benefit from their greatly desired severance from Britain is a question Palestine seems to many outsiders to have fared better under the calm and equable British mandate than it is doing how India certainly 16 having plenty of trou bles reedom is wonderful and farbe it from any American to suggest that any out side rule could be' better But responsibility for peace and ability to maintain it inside the borders are called for along with It year In Shanghai? China and has reported to the Great Lakes Train ing Center for reassignment Mr and Mrs Richard Evans re turned to their home at Danville after a visit with his parents Mrn and Mrs Clarence Evans Melvin Crafton and family were guests of Mrs parents Mr and Mrs Earl Brown at Bris tol and Mr parents qt Shelbyville Mrs Max Hanna and son visited her sister Mrs red Wascher in Belvidere Ill Mr Hanna joined them later and returned home with them Mrs William Cowgill visited her sister Mrs James Henry and fam ily at Oswego HL Robert Heater and family of Both Bend were guesta of his parents Mr and Mrs Guy Heater and Other friends Mr and Mrs Kingsley Allen ofl( Watseka Hl were guesta of Mr and Mrs William Allen Mr and Mh Robert Jewett of Lafayette were dinner guesta of her brother rank Seifert and Mrs Seifert Mr and Mrs? John Miller of Chi cago were overnight guesta of red Wilson and family poil June to rancis Jerald Rausch gon of Mrs Anna Rausch owler R3 The wedding will take place at 11:45 a eb 7 at Gilboa Ev church near Remington A co operative dinner reception and shower was enjoyed at the home of Mr and Mrs Orville Dur flinger and daughter Rosemary owler In honor bf Byron Carter and hls bride of Crawfords ville Others from there were Mr and Mrs Glenn Carter Mr and Mrs Will Carter Mr and Mrs Harvey Alvey Mr and Mrs Lawrence Vanice and Mrs Emma Linderman Mr and Mrs Clarence Alvey of New Ross Pius Unger and family Darold Whaley and family Harold Williams and fam ily Brook and others Miss Laura Budreau and Mr' and Mrs Delphus Brouillette ac companied Mrs Arlelgh Brouil lette to the home in Ari zona for a visit IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE Mn' Mall lUbacrtDtlon rataa Indian and Iroquofa County Illinois: On year 1500 six month 53401 thrsa month 5175: one month 75c Daltverad by carrier 15o per week Mali rate all other states: One year 5700: els months 5500: three a nths 5300: one month 0135 All mail oaboortD na are narablo In advance with order NOTICE Subscribed wishing addresses changed Bust give old as well as new address By CHARLES DRISCOLL NEW This is the day' for a look at the mail and such stacks of it have accumu lated that there should be no lack of material Let us see what the customers are thinking riend Geofge Reynolds New Bedford Mass chief enemy of typographical errors reports by postcard from many points of the compass and sometimes he even have a com pass He has been sailing the Caribbean which Is as good as any sea this weather Richard Moulton headquarters detachment West Point whose1 full address and identifica tion would fill the rest of this column asks whether pirates really buried treasure and then killed the men who did the labor in burying Of course they did They were practical operators They had the treasure by murder and other unlawful means said they should they risks prosecution by reason of survival of the only other persons who knew where the loot was hurled Among the readers kind enough to inform me that Dallas Lake is not close to Dallas Texas is Mrs' Carl Swank (and Isn that a swank name?) of Ashley Ind The lake Is in Indiana and around it cluster many uni mer homes Wolcottville is 34 miles from Wayne Many other Interesting facts Mrs Swank Includes in her green letter Mrs Carrie Bowman Wayne adds the Information that the lake has 800 acres of water and is 100 feet deep in spots 1 In school we were taught that Lee surrendered to Grant at Appomattox Court House ya Robert riend of Narrows Va writes that there is no such place I scent a Yankee plot here Mavbe Lee never surrendered at all Dillie Wilev Howe of San Diego was struck by a car Dean of that town tells me Duryea Longmeadow Mass saya that the first gasoline automobile built by Charles Duryea In J892 used a nhaeton bodv bought for $70 from Smith Carriage Works and originally had a whipsocket later removed to Mrs Maude Kennedy York Springs Pa for an understanding message aobut the loss of dog friends Ray Jones fihoals Ind has put into uSe an idea that ought to catch on She makes up a box of Indiana plants and acorns? with a bit of soil In cellophane to send to customer who are homesick for Indiana I received many holiday greeting cards so illegibly signed that I tell who sent them A nice one signed with something that looks like May and Van or Marv and Jean 8 En comes from a place ending in Lndbut the rest of the postmark is out Too bad Yes and one of the nicest cards posted in New York came carefully addressed without any indication as to who the sender might be May Stafford Hilburn Jefferson Citv Mo: No I did not originate the idea of the riend ship "Train nor even approve iL was Drew idea Hrry Trftnm the hairtrimmer of Winona Minn even gets tele grams to reserve chairs for customers accord ing to his booster Baldwin who sells lumber A Cosmopolitan renrint of Odd article of Giving Your Heart to a Dog to Tear" is sent by Mrs Charles Cousins Worcester Mass still good reading I a LtAYfiTTE JOURNAL AND COURIER RAY AND NARDO "The ItnpressionairetP i ti VI TWO STARS STAGE SCREEN AND RADIO BOB BURNS JERRY COLONNA "The Arkansas Traveler "Mustachioed Vocal Caricaturist" puis years How can the Individual fin invMt in exnandlner inausti save? H6w can corporations' nnndlno' industries if they are increased amount because thev 000000 more In profits in 1947 rrnAA fVica in I1 competition with the compul sory levy of taxes and appeal to purchase vol IrtvHtMAAW SOW untary dvuuo of this extraordinary high level of profits corporations can well afford to carry a larger sliare of the tax load at this time But as tax Is a cost of operations It is usually added to price as any other cost is In a word the consumer pays this Increase Worse still the small enterprise which cannot engage in major economies and therefore has to provide some other reason for attracting customers will he driven out of business In fact under Ms proposal it will be pre ferable for the small business man to sell his business to 4 larger enterprise and to take a capital gain which involves a lower tax than the corporate income tax That practice has already resulted in unwise mergers of busi nesses that is unwise from a national point no matter how gainful to 'the individual The president proposes special adjustments for small corporations but he offers no pro gram because such discrimination cannot be worked out He throws that one into the lap of Congress which cannot find a way of doing what the president can find rto way of doimt word the president ia mixed up hie dares not accent Congressman tax program without admitting that Congress un derstands taxes better than the treasury does Or Is it true that these nronosals cme from his corns of comorals in the White House and not from the treasury? At anv rate the president has not' done any clear thinking on th subiect' He himself said: "One of the most powerful anti inflationary in our economy todav is the excess or government revenues over The slmplOBt solution is to cut do wn tfoVern menrTBVefltfts it? PerhanA itwould be wiser to cut government expenditures as well It would hex best of all to let the citizen keep a large Jshareof hls eariftngs so that he does not become a cog In an economic machine to repeat Mr words NOW THEY'RE LMNS IN THE Cny CACKLEBERRlES AKE LIKE THE CROWN JEWELS MILK IS QUART ANO All Members Urged to Be Present LOYAL ORDER MOOSE 1529 Do It Every Time When thev were on IKE ARM THE COW WAS 6NING 5 GALLONS A tw THE HENS WERE BREAKING RECORDS an THE KIDS HATED A MILK AND A WOULDzA CLYDE McCOYand His Orchestra 4 nJ Saturday11111 January 40 1948 By GEORGE SOKOLSKY TRUMAN AND TAX'fcS The president's speech on taxes Is an amaz ing conglomeration of Inconsistencies Perhaps it is not all hls fault Perhaps he has a con glomeration of inconsistent advisers Also he faces an election year during which hie ad visers: must be Janus headed watching the Republicans on the right and Wallace on the left It is tough going or Instance he said: do not believe that men exist merely to strengthen the state or to be cogs in an eco nomic machine We do believe that govern ments are created to serve the people and that economic systems exist to minister to their wants That is a satisfactory statement of our form of government and of the capitalistic system in economics But if capitalism is to survive it necessary that the individual must keep enough of his earnings to provide a rising standard bf living for his family and to be able accumulate a surplus over expenditures to invest In the' Industry of the country Ip a word the essence of capitalism requires that the individual not only earn enough to keep privately owned businesses going by his pur chases but that he save enough to invest in the capital structure That being so why does Truman insist that the wartime income tax on the individual remain in force except for a sop of $40 for the payer and each of his dependents an Ar bitrary amount to be offset by rising prices inevitable In his proposal to increase corporate taxes? And why $40? Hovr was that figure reached by what mathematical or psycho logical process? Why is $40 better than $50 or $60 or $35? 1' Mr Truman proposes: At least $50000000000 should be in vested by industry to improve and expand our productive facilities over the next few HALL OMUSIC THS JOURNAL POUNDED U2 THZ COURIER POUNDED 1531 H3DNRT MARSHALL JR Publisher Out of the Past 10 YEARS AGO TODAY (la the Journal and Courier) Mr and Mrs John Walker who leaving at the end of this week for residence in Indianapolis were guests of honor at a dinner party at the new home of Mr and Mrs Herbert Graves in Hills and Dales given by members of the bridge club to which Mrs Graves and Mrs Walker belong Mrs John Relfers and Mrs Howard A Decker departed for a three visit with the daughter Miss Edna Reifers and friends lit Pomona Calif Thomas King was Installed as president of the John Purdue Junior I Lodge No 5 Other officers included Claude oster deputy ruler Jack Zahn recorder William Oley accountant Eugene Gordon warden and Lawrence Davis librarian 25 YEARSlGO TODAY (in the Journal and Courier) A valuable deposit of marl used for fertilizer and in the manufacture of Portland cement has been found on the farm of John lelsCh hauer a mile southwest of Mulberry Seifert bf Mulberry brought samples to Pur due "Tuesday to be examined by State Chemist Proulx Burglars visited the McCarthy hat store 414 Main Tuesday night but a hasty inventory revealed no loss A lock drawer was pried loose and carried away The drawer contained some Insurance policies and oil stock purchased by Mr McCarthy several years ago A total of 780 electrical inspections were riiade during 1922 by Carl Bauer city elec trician accordnlg to hls annual report Prac tically all of these were in homes where electric lights were Installed to replace gas' and other methods of lighting 50 YEARS AGO TODAY (Tn ths Zofayetts Bully Courier) Wl Walters of Battle Ground who from time to time assists Dr Nicely left today for Chicago to resume his Studies in the Chicago college of dental surgery The new Methodist church at Delphi was dedicated yesterday the event being a most important one for that thriving town Elab orate exercises were held and a number of prominent church people from various parts of the state participated The post of the A will be' Installed at the evening It will be known as the John Pumel liost When Cdunty Treasurer Henry A Miller re tired from office there passed from his cus tody to that of Mr Baugh a Sum over $154089 This large sum is the amounts that are due from the treasurer for the various funds and represented all the unexpended moneys in his possession TIME STUDY i 5 i (Arkansas Gasette) S' The scientist who said a day on earth was only four hours long thousands of years ago makes dt sound like the unions have been losing ground MRSlRT wifwn a OUR RIED E66S And remind me to talk no MXl ABOUT MXIR HOUSEHOLD EXPENSES TONKSHT Ths Associated Pns is entitled sxcluslrsl to the uss lor rsnublieation of all ths local nows printed la tbts nowspapar as well as all Al nows dlapatcboa MEMBXR AUDIT BUREAU OT CIRCULATION dl WRNr 1 RS rr 321 These jDaysh Head W0 IIIIIIIIL.

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Pages Available:
1,422,076
Years Available:
1850-2024