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Pampa Daily News from Pampa, Texas • Page 6

Publication:
Pampa Daily Newsi
Location:
Pampa, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

6 THE PAMPA DAILY NEWS MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1960 52ttd Year The War Goes On It isn't that tyranny first Curs In rural Areas. Rather, we fancy that tyranny is apt to be recognized in rural areas before itrbanltes are aware of its dreau fit! implication. Always it seems thai Issues become clear-cut Where there are wide open spaces, and the wind blows free, and one's vis- Ion Is not prellmtted by roofs and chimneys and walls of brick. And so, on the frozen farm land near Fort Wayne, Indiana, the other day, a band of farmers met as their sturdy forebears had met before, to confront the dread vis age of tyranny and thus to Hze mail's ageless battle against the wiles of the authorities. Ethan Stangla'nd'8 tractor was the reason for the meeting.

Stangland is a nigged Booster farmer who, the government claims, over- planted his wheat allotment In 1S54 by some 16 acres. Stangland has fought that opinion, refused to pay his fine, refused to pay Interest on the fine, refused to pay penalties on the fine. The government seized his tractor; he got it back thru a court order; the government seized it again. Last week, the federal marshal was on hand to sell the tractor at public auction In an effort to get together the money which the government alleges Stangland owes for the crime of overplanting wheat on his own acres. Farmers from all around the midwest came grimly to the scene of the auction.

Most of them carried signs. In bold letters these Ideas were shoved into the wind as it whipped across stubbled fields and kept coat collars tightly buttoned. "Thou Shalf Not "The ASC is "Get Rid of the Wheat "Is This America or Russia?" The federal marshal was touchy and openly sneered at the tightlipped but quiet men of toil. Finally, he softened and donned that worn out-alibi of the evil doer since the days of Ashurbanipal. "I've got a job to do.

Their fight Is with Congress, not with me." But the farmers were unimpressed. "He may be a nice guy," said one of them, a former school teacher, "but how can he be a party to this?" finally, the bidding opened. No one bid. The deadline neared. There were ft few half-hearted fers.

Five minutes before the legal termination of the auction Farmer,) Glen.Leiter of Laotto, Indiana, $6SO. It was the winning bid. Better Jobs Thui Haw Can Inflatlin Stopped With have been reporting suggestions made by "Economic News" published by the American Institute Economic Research on the need (6 stop inflation and the best way to do ik with the least harm. The last articie ended by stating that fnonettzation of Government debt and monetitati.on of private long-term debt should end; that "accompanying the liquidation of excessive holdings of investments, the cdmmer- He turned over the money to the marshal. Then he turned the tractor over to Ethan Stanglarid and the sale was finished.

Letter's money would be used to pay the Stangland fine. And the interest and the penalties for his heinous offense. You see, Stangland la a criminal. Made such by the federal Agri culture Department. Every man's hand Is supposed to be turned against the criminal.

But Stangland Is a criminal, ndt because he did anything wrong, but because a lot of Congressmen and government bureaucrats and officials for many years have been doing many evil things. Stangland Is the victim of that evil. He planted 18 acres man according to some bureaucrat's Ideas of what Is "too much" and what "just right." When the sale was over, Stang- and admitted that he was thru. Bankrupt. Even tho he had the tractor back again, the machine Itself could not suffice to make ilm productive again.

Stangland ma already lived his best years. He's not a young buck just start- ng out In life. He's a dignified and mature oldster who has been buffeted by time and weather for more than sixty years. But as Stangland was admitting hat he was "thru," other farmers were indicating that they were not. Stanley Yankus went thru the same procedure and fought the wheat police.

And lost. And now he's In Australia. John Donaldson of New London is getting ready to fight. Elsa Mumma of Pennsylvania fought them. She lost.

Evetts Haley, down Texas way, fought them. He lost. Battles are being fought all across America. But the big one, the war of free men against oppression and tyranny, goes right on. One day these little people, these farmers, these ranchers.

one day they'll win. Wrongs And Rights Joseph E. Finley of the Public Affairs Institute has authored a pamphlet entitled "Understanding the 1959 Labor 1 of violence, coercion, fraud, deceit, lying and cheating to get members, to collect dues, and to bring pressure on employers. The The pamphlet Is very staunchly unlon 8 actually not voluntary pro-union. It is entirely possible incept In a very loose sense.

Es that management, Intent ti giving the unions the same kind of treatment they have been receiving from unions for these many years, will brush off Finlcy's with a gesture of contempt. We would not blame them if they did. We can certainly say that the unions have brought the 1959 labor law upon themselves by virtue of their high handed actions. And If the restrictions they now face make it tough on them, we can only say that the restrictions of the Wagner Act and the Taft-Hartley Act, both of which are modified by the 1959 measure, made things plenty tough for man- agenient before 1959, But we must admit, after hnv- Ing made this extensive explanation, that Finley has made some telling points. And if we ran remove his pro union sympathies we can discern In his pamphlet a fine service to better understanding between labor and management.

The first bone of contention which Finley produces is his claim that the 1959 law compels unions to turn in financial reports to 1he government, thus impinging: upon the free decisions of a "voluntary" organization. Finley sees in this a new departure for government. He is wrong on this and on the concept of a union as a "voluntary" organization. In ai'tual fact, all business and industry are voluntary sentlally, it Is a military storm- trooper type of agency, living by force and violence on the fringes of special laws passed to protect It. The 1959 law, In so far as financial reports are concerned, no longer protects the union and makes it a privileged agency.

It now is subject to the same rules as business and industry in this regard. But two wrongs do not make one right. The government was in error when it began to demand financial reports from business. The government is wrong again! in the present Instance. The cure for the problem would have benn to put union and business on the same footing, not by laws to hamstring the union, but by a removal of laws which already had hamstrung business.

Many of the other portions of the 1959 law deal with government intervention in union affairs, compelling election safeguards', full disclosure of union affairs to membership, the holding of office in a union subject to all conditions accompanying a trust officer. Finley correctly points out that if these moves are made inside a union, what is to prevent an extension of the same principal to apply inside a church a social group or some other private and voluntary organization? Once more Finley reveals that he is pro union for he cannot seem to grasp the nature of the in a far more realistic sense than i agency he upholds. Even so, his any labor union. Yet all business, 1 point is well-taken. Governments industry have long since been! are wont to expand, to grow cost- compelled to turn in financial re-jly and cumbersome.

And tha 1959 ports. We agree with the criticism! law is certainly an aid to govern- which says that this is a disservice ment in this respect. to any private organization. We can only point out again that we add that this is a disservice what the unions are now getting lhis reason (short-term automatically self- liquidating) loans and (hat "in the absence of more inflation and to some extent forced by gradual deflation, prices generally would decline. Thus, industries In the United States gradually could restore their competitive positions at home and Then the magazine continues: "The success of the procedure outlined above will depend on various related developments including the following: "1.

The Federal Government should spend much less than it collects in taxes and should ify reduce iU debt by a substantial amount each year. This would result in: An immediate strengthening of confidence in securities issued by the Government with a resulting better market for such securities. Long term financing.at lower Interest rates would be possible, and the savings in annual interest charges, which, Id, be substantial, could be used to' retire more debt. (The Nation's ex-' perience under somewhat similar circumstances after the Civil War demonstrated what may to accomplished.) Government deficits to be financed by the commercial banks would be a thing of the past. The better market for Government securities would facilitate demonetizing the debt previously monetized by the commercial banks, because institutional and other investors would more eagerly buy such securities from the banks.

"2. In order to lessen Government spending as well as to terminate an experiment that has been disastrous and costly, the spending of billions to put more farm products in storage should end. (How this might be done will be discussed in a later issue of Economic News.) "3. All proposed Government spending should be arranged in its relative priority and should be compared with the priorities for funds that might be better used in the hands of individuals and businesses for economic growth. "4.

During gradual deflation with prices gradually declining, wage and salary earners should expect an increased standard of living to result from a decreasing cost of living rather than from rising wages. Some segments of the labor force probably would have to accept moderate reductions in wage rates if they wished to remain employed. If labor and mangement would agree on formulas for such wage reductions where necessary, much strife advantageous to neither group nor the general public might be avoided. "Many readers may be surprised to learn that we confidently believe the Nation's economic growth would be increased under the conditions indicated above. Such was the Nation's experience during the period from 1873 to 1892.

In spite of, or perhaps in part because of, a 50 per cent decline in prices during those years, the industrial growth of the United States was increasing at the highest and best sustained rate of gain, ever reached. In any event, we should not expect a decline in prices during the next decade as great as the 50 per cent decline from 1875 to 1892, Recent trends of gold production in the newer rich mifs of South Africa suggest that tha stimulation of gold mining attributable to decreasing costs would be followed by a great increase in' gold output with a resulting tendency for the general decline in prices to lessen and finally cease as new gold entered the Nation's monetary system. Consequently, a decline in prices to pre-World War II levels seems highly improbable even if the deflation (cancellation of inflationary purchasing media) were rapid. "By the end of a decade st most, and perhaps earlier, sound money credit conditions and a more healthy economy could be restored. This statement The Allen-Scott Report ROBERT g.

ALLEN PAUL SCOTT HOUSE TV-RADIO PROBEKA 'DIG TO DODGE 'PAYOLA' EXPLOSION IN OWN RANKS WASHINGTON The House TV- radio Investigators are gingerly ducking a "payola" incident right in their own ranks. After, a series of private discussions the nine probers decided to put up their own money for a portrait of Representative Oren Harris chairman, instead of accepting it as a gift from the transportation industry. The four-by-three foot oil painting of Harris now hangs in the hearing room of the House Interstate Foreign Commerce Committee, parent body of the "payola" Investigation. The picture was unveiled last week while the prob- ers were worriedly deliberating the explosive question of who was Ui pay for it. Last year, before the "payola" scandals erupted, the full 33-mem- her Interstate Foreign Commerce Committee decided to accept the offer of the transportation industry to commission an artist to paint a portrait of Chairman Harris.

It is an old custom of congressional committees to maintain a gallery of their chairmen, usually oil portraits. In most instances these paintings are paid for by having the committeemen share the cost. But in this instance, a railroad lobbyist who had proposed the transportation Industry's gift of a picture of Harris, was authorized to make all the'arrangements, including raising the funds for it. None of the committeemen thought any more about the matter until the "payola" scandals exploded. Then doubts arose over the propriety of accepting the Harris portrait.

Several of the Investigators raised this question with other members of the Interstate Foreign Commerce Committee. They agreed that under the circumstances, the privately-financeJ Harris painting would create a furore if word of its "payola" back ground leaked out. With this support, the probers raised the issue in their own group. After much soul searching, the decision was reached to recommend to the full committee that the which business and industry have from this piece of legislation, they lived with for many a year. have long earned by their abuse We aie Actually witnessing here the truism when individuals Likewise, we point out that busi-iof all tha rules of society, their do not control themselves, govern- ness and industry ARE truly voj-; flouting- of law and public decency.

monls will be asked to control untary, whereas unions rustoni-j Nonetheless, we are sorry to see' 1 Union bosses have not con- use every conceivable kind'the enlargement of government for'trolled themselves. They have brought great hardship and distress to the entire economy. But government extension into the field of labor relations is NOT a cure. We are very much afraid that there will be much reason to deplore the 1959 law in time, though many people are relishing $ampa Sally Nswe YOUR FREEDOM NEWSPAPER believe that freedom is a gift from God and not a political i the new restrictions with the same yrant from tne government, freedom is not license. It must be consit-' avidity that was displayed in ent with the truths expressed in such great moral guides the Golden! France during the days of terror Rule, Tha Ten Commandments and the Declaration of Independence.

vengance. And the ladies came newspaper dedicated to promoting and preserving YOUR government became an instrument of vengenance. And the ladies came and knitted dresses sweaters freedom well our own. For oniy when man is free to control and ae produces. he develop to his utmost capabilities.

SUBSCRIPTION as the heads rolled off. But in the end the blood lust turned upon itself. It is that in the labor management -aturdsy "The i Held, ss4 history of the French Daily Pwifpa. Texaj. MO 4-2625 decline of if a.bout to clfM el studios both in Florida, and GOOD CONDUCT RULES A new "code of ethics" for all feder al employes from cabinet mem bers to day laborers, is being proposed by the House Anti Trust Investigating Committee.

Representative Emanuel Celler N.Y.), chairman, will present this new set of good-conduct rules at hearings his Committee Is starting to tighten the laws dealing with "conflict-of-interest" and "influence peddling" in the government. Major provisions of the proposed new "code of ethics" are: "Lifetime disqualification for breaches of confidence in matters formerly worked on by employes who leave the government. 'Administrative penalties, Including discharge, for employes who engage In unethical conduct. Barring: former government employes from representing clients before government agencies if they violated the 'code of ethics' while employed by the government. "Disqualification for contracts and grants of those who engage In unethical conduct in dealing with the government.

"Prohibit government employes from pressing; claims against the U.S. while employed by the government. 'Prohibit federal personnel from transacting business for the v- ernment with business concerns with which they had been connected in the past," Speaker Sam Rayburn Tex.) and House Democratic Leader John McCormack, are strongly supporting: such legislation. They have told Celler they will "back him to the hilt" in putting it through the House In time for the Senate to act on it at this session. Whether that can be done remains to be appears doubtful.

The Senate hasn't even begun committee consideration of this question i and so far there has been no'indication that anything is contemplated on that, SUCH IS FAME Robert Kennedy, former chief counsel of the Senate rackets investigating com mittee and younger brother of Senator John Kennedy, Democratic presidential candidate, is about to each to pay the $750 painting. i become the subject of caustic par- assess themselves $25 wl angllnfrJ The Republican cost ot me 1U conv At first several members balked at that. But after last week's widely-headlined testimony of disc- jockey Doodling, this oppogtion hurriedly evaporated. The Harris painting Is definitely being paid for by the members of mittee ai-a issuing' a report a p- ping "Bobby" for his handling of last year's probe of the United Auto Workers, which fizzled out. To counter this blast, the Democratic committeemen are going to issue a statement warmly praising I m.

Meanwhile, young Kennedy caatlgal c- the House Interstate Foreign about uncork Commerce Committee. I booh tQ bft The artist Ijoul. Frewid. member of the faculty of Stetson epublican me mber. of the University, DeLand, Fla.

He has is not the expression of visionary hopes but is fully warranted by earlier experience of the United States. Moreover, the 'miracle' ol Germany's industrial recovery and subsequent growth since World War II, which is attributable largely to the restoration of more nearly free markets and sound currency based on gold, should convince any qualified observer that the economic 'medicine' the United States used in the, decades following the Civil War effective today as it ever was, even In a nation where the industrial plant and equipment had been destroyed in substantial part by wartime bombing. "But perhaps the most important result that could follow in the longer run a better opportunity for our Nation to correct lopg-existing maladjustments that thwarted our efforts to progress toward the ultimate goals of a freely competitive (and there- fqrt perfectly cooperative) society wit)) equality Representative Graham Barden (D. N.C.), chairman of the House Labor Committee, who has announced he is quitting Congress this year, has told House leaders he will support a bill to increase the minimum wage from $1 to $1.15 if no additional employes included in the law. approval Is a big boost for the long-stymied legislation to a i the minimum wage, as he has op posed that in the past and has been in a strategic position to block action.

House TV-rat dio investigators are quietly i ging into the concerns that con duct polls on the popularity of broadcasted shows and perform ers. The committee has employed the American Statistical Association to make a preliminary study of these polls. The probers have numerous complaints questioning the accuracy and reliability of these ratings. Looking Sideways IT PAYS TO RfAB THE CLASSIFIED ADS NWV6SK yaw evtf hear of Gordon, gift with thU glasses wfW filings on such TV shows Jack Pm and the like? The only turn you fflay havft Identified hcf ll she IS the 6ftty TV pilchwofflafi wftO has the to wear glasses whtlft wofkifl! her pitch in front of you. others doll themselves up like nothing human, gets out gives her glasses hitch and goes 16 work.

It somehow seemed to fne that girl with this kind of candor must have secret, as well. She has, she is the voice you hear when you hear Ingrid Sten, Odile Vefsois, Nadjt Tiller, even Eckbefg, speak English in foreign films. If anybody dreamed up an award to the actress having the most films playing at once, sha would receive it without ment. She has had as Many as 11 pictures on or adjacent Broadway at the same tima-by voice, in two years, by count, has dubbed her, English-speaking voice into 32 films of foreign origin. "I'm pretty sure," she said at a party the other evening, "that TV watchers, screeching with impatience to get away from my selling voice, rush to movie theaters and there, by golly, without even knowing it, they are hearing me all over again.

All of this is fine pay for me but it is not what fascinates me: what fascinates me is the extraordinary technique of dubbing other voices into foreign films. You would think could see, by the shape of a star's mouth while she is speaking, that the words they hear do not fit shape of the mouth they are looking at. The easy ones for mt were the French and Spanish jobs. But made in West Germany not long ago and cur- The Doctor Says by EDWIN P. JORDAN, M.D.

Hardening of the arteries ta everybody's problem. Until recently, arteriosclerosis was linked with death and taxes as something no one could avoid. Now we solid reasons for softening this defeatist attitude. The fight against arteriosclerosis is primarily up to the individual. For effective discharge of this responsibility, each of us must clearly understand what is to be done, why it is to be how it Is to be done.

I'll try to explain what the arterial system is, how it functions, what causes its walls to become hardened, and what you can do to prevent or lessen arteriosclero- tic damage. To begin with, the arteries form a continuous system of branching tubes that carry blood from the heart to every organ, tissue and cell of the body. Some arteries, like the aorta, are almost as big around garden hose. Others are so small they can only be seen under a microscope. But, whether large or tiny, each has a circular wall that contains countless elastic fibers.

Every time blood Is pumped out of your heart, the force of the advancing stream causes your arteries to expand. Prove this by feeling the In the wrist vessel at the basa of your thumb. With each beat, elastic fibers In the wall are stretched just as you'd stretch a rubber band. After the pulse beat, these fibers snap back just as a stretched band does after you release it. The first sign of arterial trouble is a loss of zip by these elastic fibres.

Like an old rubber band, they don't seem able to snap back after they've been stretched. Next thing you know, they start to fray, like a worn fiddle string when it is being tightened. Then comes the moment when they're stretched. once too often and trouble really starts, After a certain number of fibers break, the arterial wall loses its power to expand and forcibly contract with each beat of the heart. It's no longer "live." Instead of "giving" to the force of the oncoming blood column and adding its zip to hurry it along its way to hungry tissues, it behaves like a strip or rigid pipe in a plumbing system.

With each pulse it shivers and shakes. Perhaps with (he idea of cushioning the damaged vessel, nature begins to deposit a buttery material in the inelastic wall. Then, to firm up the fatty deposit, lime salts are introduced. Soon the resultant mixture assumes a shell like character with the formation of what are called arteriosclerotic plaques. As the hardening wall thickens, the hole through the tube narrows.

Now the heart has to pump harder and at i higher pressure to force blood to the tissues. Soon a lime encrusted plaque comes to the inner surface of the hardened vessel. Perhaps a particularly violent heartbeat scrapes it off, leaving a raw surface. On this scrape, blood clots just as it does on your skin under similar circumstances. But there's this difference: The skin clot falls off once it has served its purpose.

Not within the closed vessel where the clot forms 9 plug. If the plug Is in an artery that feejls the brain, tht patient may suffer 9 stroke. If it in vessel that feeds heart muscle, the victim I coronary thrombosis, closure or occlusion. If it's in terminal vessel like that ol 3 toe, the curved tissue may shrivel and Un i dj? Hankerings Visit To Paris Is Best Check On Aging by HENR? Paris and racing eats. There's a connection, between them.

teach provides a foolproof way for a man to check on what the passing of, years has done to him. Occasional visits to Paris, in fact, are better than a birth certificate in keeping check on one's birth date. You go the first time as a young man and your notebook Is loaded with addresses of all-night joints, where the best music Is to be heard, where the liveliest girls are to be seen dancing, and other such vital facts. On your second visit, a few years later, your address book lists comfortable, moderate-priced hotels, the names of good restaurants, the address of a recommended barber, and the natne of a tailor who'll cut clothes American style. rently a New York success, was tough.

My present job, to which I have to get early tomorrow which Is why I'm getting out of this party In the next ten minutes, Is the toughest of all. I'm speaking English for the leading woman in a Russian picture, 'The Idiot'. We're doing it at Titra Studios here and we had to have formal permission from the Soviet government before it could be done. The problem Is that most Russian women sound lusty and deep. If the ones in this film are typical I wonder how they ever find a soprano for a musical chorus.

They sound like basso coal miners. I had to drop my voice more than an octave to keep the sound commensurate with others In the cast." What about French movies? "The problem there Is to be high and flighty in sound," she said, "which Isn't too tough for me, but then, like as not, I'll have a job the next day doing a sultry-voiced doll in an Italian movie; you know, the deep, insinuating bit for the cozy love scenes in the tavern hallway, and I have constantly to remember to keep it down. The worst week I ever had was when I patched up some dubbing in a an Italian, a Mexican and a German film, all within three days," plus some work on a Russian documentary on the fourth and fifth days. My throat felt like sandpaper. "What some people don't seem to realize is that levels of voice go with the characters ihcy see.

It would be ridiculous to have a sexy French girl, all in lacy dress and swinging her gloves in the moonlight while a swain poured out his heart, suddenly say In deep, deep English: "Sure, Artie, I know." Or to have Russian woman, pushing a 10 ton tractor, speak like a chorus kid from Madrid in English. The Italian girls are the exacting ones. You can't assign a thin, fine voice to a girl all bosom and low-cut blouse. You have to have some weight in it, some authority." Do technicians have much to do with it? "Yes, they do. They have an extraordinary ear for the slightest departure from what is natural In level and sound.

They also can control to some extent by using knobs and modifying devices. My voice was edged downward by these devices when, for the Russian thing, I got down just about as deep as I can go. It is difficult, but fun. And I can wear glasses or Bermuda shorts or anything, since no one ever sees me on the films. They just hear me." then come your third, fou and fifth visits.

never recognize notebook The years have their work. A stranger could ra? It and come within six monthstl guessing the correct number candles on your birthday ea.ke.ii Gone are the all-night Vanished are the jazz was looking at mine the night and could not help breathe a sigh and I sure it was one of relief. On the first page, In letters, was the name and ftddr of an American dentist Vho, 1 1 been told, was fast, feasonat and would get up In the mid of the night to repair a crown. His name and address studded with big stars. On page -2, also In block lett 1 and star-studded, was the nami an opitcal company that wo" make 'glasses In a hurry.

Ri alongside It, looking like a se cipher, was the prescription for reading glasses. On the following pages addresses where silk ties could bought at good prices, a rella sightseeing company, the name a guide for the Louvre and sallies, the locations of well-stocl second-hand book stores, the na of a store specillzing In Engl language paperbacks, and Important of all, the name, addr and telephone number of an glish-speaklng doctor In case miseries that come with ye struck in the middle'of the I found out about race cars a visit to an old friend, Bill: and his new $3,000,000 Da Beach International Speedway couldn't wait to take a whirl round the asphalt ov with its high-banked turns a straight-a-ways. I recalled a rid had taken at Indianapolis, In I thirties, when I was young and and my cerebellum was still ing. I had loved the ride, with En Triplet! driving. I could have go a full five hundred miles.

One lap was more than for me at.the.Daytona Speedw When Bilhgflt. Dei model to H8 I closed my prayed, and grow feathers. I was so" chicken by second turn.that I.would have be! made welcqnie sit any poultry fajf and been given an outside per! with a view, right alongside a Bv' Orpington, I longed to be back in my oV car, safely parked In front of a er, or standing atill waiting forj light to change. What would haj been fun twenty years ago wj agony Iwlth a capital When we came to a stop, Bj asked me how I had liked It. "Boys will be boys," I lai thinking of the youngsters wl drive the track for a living, "but Is no way to achieve the rank senior citizen.

I've been reading a lot abo Dr. Milton Eisenhower's Iravc and reports on Venezuela, Panarr and Cuba and studying the r. sulta that came after them, makes you think. Sometimes Afilt has so much up his sleeve that you wonder where he puts hi shoulders, JACK MQFFIT European Country Answer to Previous ACROSS I Mountains in France 8 Fruit of this country 9 Former coin of France 12 Male flirt 13 Fish Tropical IB 17 Ibsen character Id Diplomat 19 Bird Ireland 83 Unit of energy 34 Kind of natter 17 28 Guide Ascendf Opposed 88 Edit 91 Observed DOWN ISong 3 Yearn Color 4 River or this country 5 Greek letter 6 Pillaged 7 Arm bone 8 Middle 8 Reeled 10 French river uwaraH Mtrin liGSH EIHOfi gjHH K3HG!) an 16 Fence overpasses 80 French city 22 Destroys 24 Crumbly soil 25 Region 28 28 Sarah (Bib,) SO Bewildered 33 Circe 35 Sold Product of France 43 Harvest! 45 48 History, 47 Ring 48 Struck SO Soft 5J direction! 89PU0 38 Den 99 Glance over 41 Period of time 42IndUn weight Electrical Witt pseudonym BVv.

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About Pampa Daily News Archive

Pages Available:
191,180
Years Available:
1930-1977