Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 September 1946 — Page 1
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Deep-Water A-Bomb Test Is Postponed ‘Opposition Believed Based on Fear v
* Baruch Plan Would Be Jeopardized: No New Date Set.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 7 today ordered an indefinite pos
bomb test scheduled for next spring. White House Press Secretary Charles G. Ross said the postponement did not mean a cancellation, but was more of a “sine die” delay—that is, that no new date has been set. |
Mr. Ross said President Truman made the decision on recommendation of the joint chiefs of staff, war and navy secretaries, and the President's commission to evaluate: the tests. (A Seripps-Howard newspapers dispatch asserted, however, that the army and navy had desired the President to allow them to continue - with preparations for the test. This dispatch said opposition came from atom scientists and United Nations enthusiasts, who thought the test would jeopardize the Baruch plan for world control of the atom bomb.) The. third atomic bomb test— test “Charley”—was to have been a deep underwater blast. No specific date had been set for it. It was to have taken place at
Bikini atoll, site of the two previous! rp. decree suspends normal pro- | from summer vacations, comforted by increased salaries, and ready to start the wheels of knowledge spinning in the heads of their students. Scanning the school board's files -on “instructors, Virgil Steinbaugh;
‘ atomic test explosions this summer, "$35 Million to Be Saved
A White House statement on the postponement said information obtained from the first two tests, together with records of the original experimental test in New Mexico and & study of the explosions in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, “will enable our scientific and military ex-
—perts- to*make a proper evaluation,
of the effects of this weapon.” The statement said the chiefs of staff “are extremely gratified” by the conduct and results of the first two atom bomb tests and consider the operation “an unqualified success.” “rmlid, : “The additional information of value expected to result frdm test ‘C’ is such that the joint chiefs of staff do not feel that complétion of this test in the near future is justifled,” the statement said. Mr. Ross said it was estimated that the third test explosion would cost $35 million. Mr. Ross said the postponement
was discussed at the weekly meet-|
ing of President Truman with his cabinet yesterday.
Paper Drive oa Opens Monday
Sept. Sept. 10 11-12
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/67%
re mowies)] VOLUME 57—NUMBER 155° « | .:
Joint |
«| tory.
we
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(U, P.).—President- Truman tponement of the third atomic |
| ———————————— |
CREEKS ORDER MILITARY LAW
Increasing Activity by Red ‘Bandits’ Blamed.
By ROBERT VERMILLION United Press Staff Correspondent ATHENS, Sept. 7.—The Greek|
government today clamped the | whole eountry under martial law,
|reimposing the drastic provisions of
| “extraordinary law” which had been | More than 54,000 youngsters he
irelaxed for last Sunday's referen- beat the tardy bell as school doors swing open Monday.
dum. | Waiting in the classrooms will
| visions of Greek law and enables| |the government to proceed under | | military powers to make arrests and | | maintain order. { | The degree, issued by the. cabinet, ! |provides. for special military courts to try alleged “bandits.” Prior to| the plebiscite it had been applied | only to northern. and central] Greece. :
AFL SAYS 2534 SHIPS TIED UP
| The decision was taken in a Union Permits Unloading of special meeting lasting two and a , half hours. Officially it resuited | Food Vessels. {from increased Communist activity | |
tak . By UNITED PRESS |in the country. Rising official con-| The nationwide shipping strike
_ Spitfire Downed -
leern over the possibility of an: {high school. started last Wednes-| fatisek-Tromi-the north contributed 3PPeared no negrer settlement W0-ig,y es hs {day : “4> For nearly 4000 of the total num-
{to the decision. day. g Acting Premier Stylianos Gonatas| The Sailors Union of the Pacific jr ihe -Unitey re oa ue and the Seafarers International cabine ion tha e downing o : ; |a Greek airforce Spitfire over Yu. | union. both: AP. of L, cine | goslavia yesterday was “the official | that 2534 ships were tied up. | expression of what we had seen in| New York tug boatmen were | advance — that Yugoslavs have!gcheduled to join the maritime Sluis Jeatnst x fre was) SKE this afternoon but agreed to afmed. He said the armament was continue operating food barges and {“for defense against Communist | railroad flats. {bands in the north.” The pilot, he] ‘Government hopes - for settling raid, was on a reconnaissance mis- [the shipping walkout rested in consion over northern Greece and ac-|ferences to be held at San Francisco cidentally entered Yugoslay terri-|today between Assistant. Secretary . {of Labor Phillip Hannah and Harry | (An official announcement in Bel- Lundeberg. president of the S.U.P} grade said the plane downed by the Mr. Hannah was instructed to ask Yugoslavs had been on a military Mr Lundeberg to call off-the strike reconnaissance mission. - It said the or to go to Washington to attempt pilot. had. been interned “until a settlement, Nis further steps are taken.”) Mr. Lundeberg said yesterday that : Mr. Hannah's mission would be fruitless. The only solution, he said, | would be for the wage stabilization board to reverse its decision disapproving pay increases of from $22.50 to $27.50 a month.
CONFESSES HOLDUP
Public Schools Will Open Doors to 54,000 Students
By JACK THOMPSON
»
“
ndianapolis
FORECAST: Partly cloudy, warm and humid today and tomorrow.
‘SATURDAY, SEPTEMB 2100 Teachers Spin Wheel of Knowledge Monday
“Would you please explain that camera?” five of the 125 new public school teachers ask a Times photbgrapher. Beginning Monday they will be on the answering end of 1001 such questions. young ladies are: (back row) Mrs. Claire M. Rollo and Mrs. Shirley Zeller; (front row) Nancy Beagley, Marian Consodine and Dorothy Jaggers. *
-
®
Entered as Second-Class Matter at PostofMos Indianapolis, Ind. Issued daily except Sunday
| = Ni mn
of.
ER 7, 1946
For
4 PRISONERS | CRASH FENCE AT STOCKADE
2 Captured, 2 Still at Large After Break From Ft. Harrison.
Posses today searched for two prisoners who crashed a 4-ton truck through a compound fence at the Pt. Harrison disciplinary barracks at 9 a. m. and escaped. _
Left to right the
re will roll out of bed and try to
be some 2100 teachers, refreshed
superintendent of schools, said: { “It appears that Indianapolis is] fairly well off in so far.as teach-/ ers are concerned. Luckily we've no| shortage here. Over the state, how- | ever, it's a different picture: There | still .aren’t enough licensed teachers.” Catholic parochial schools throu’ h-!
cui the Indianapolis arch-diocese!
also will open Monday. Various times have been designated for | opening of Catholic high schools and academies. However, all will be in session by Wednesday. Cathedral!
ber of children who will through school entrances Monday the perplexities of lessons and textbooks will unfold for the first time. Indoctrination of the 6-year-olds has always beén a problem. New! surroundings, strange faces, away! rom parents for the first time— it's enough to scare any child. i Aware of the fact that these beginners need time to adjust them- | selves to their new- setting, the!
(Continued on Page 2—Column 3)
ALLISON EXPANSION ANTICIPATED HER
E
Officials Still in Dark on Jet Transfer. |
Allison divisior. officials declared |
(today they have not been notified spokesmen said there would be little |
crowd | h
The men, both sentenced for desertion, are Richard O., Fiedler, 20, of Michigan, and Henry G. Mitchell, 22, of Kentucky. Two other prisoners who followed | the truck in a staff car were cap- | tured 10 minutes later on the post. ; Both vehicles were abandoned near the post.
TRY TO AVERT MEAT FAMINE
Beef, if Available, to Cost ; r curity prisoners, were working in
Less Than Now. |the auto compound at the time. {When they escaped, they were WASHINGTON, Sept. 7 (U. P.).—| wearing -brown -prisorers’ uniforms
The seriousness of the approaching with DB stamped on the jackets meat famine was emphasized today and trousers.
...| Pt. Harrison officials said they i 1 Porter, . . by the gisclosite tat. Pau 10 | Delieved the men were unarmed. OPA administrator, had flown 10 1, captured pair were Paul Gar-
Chicago and held a secret confer- ett, 23. of Oklahoma, and Albert ence with meat packers. |B. McCostlin of Alabama. . i | — In a penthouse atop the Morrison | : hotel yesterday, Mr. Porter _report-| SIX Escape Navy Stockade Ya GREAT LAKES, Ill, Sept. 7 (U. P.).—8ix prisoners escaped from the
edly asked the packers to co-operate in the OPA program and to exert| every effort to get meat to the na-| tion's dinner tables. Slaughter house employees were at Yeing pe on & by. the. thousands ciplinary authorities at the station » number of ca i £1 and announced. | a Ee pa
An OPA spokesman said prac-| tically all the feeder cattle already | have been marketed by feeders tak-|
OF WOMAN, 75, SHOT
prices while OPA controls—whic |East Side Man Is Wounded will be re-established Tuesday—| : were not in effect. By Father-in-Law. Two hopes for avoiding the famine were seen: | A 27-year-old East side man, ONE: OPA “estimated there were who had been sought by police for tens of thousands of pounds of meat the beating of an elderly woman] held in cold storage by operators earlier today, was shot about noon | who apparently intend to sell it at/by his father-in-law, at whose) plack market pricés when the home he had demanded entrance. | shortage becomes acute. William A. Howard, 54, of 1344 W. TWO: Agriculture department 35th st, told police his son-in-| officials were hopeful of an early |law, Lawrence Peterson, 27, of 402)
- ————pnd-to-a-bopder_ quarantine which! N, Wolcott st, came to his house |
has shut off American consumers in a drunken condition. { When he tried to break into the! ; { Howard home, the "father-in-law, Little Meet Next Week \fired a 22-caliber He. at Peterson, ; {wounding him in the right leg. Nevertheless, meat .industr TE en next door and asked {that police be called. {
from-mitlions of pounds of Mexican beef.
Indiana Police ‘Watch Roads
\
HOME
alia
PRICE FIVE CENTS
a x
“0
.
Kidnaper
_ | priority
"SUSPECT IN BEATING
Kidnaped. Child |
3, Kansas City, Mo., missing from her .home:
Madeline (Toby) Tobias,
CHALLENGE VA
BELIEVE MAD ISENROUTETO HOME IN OHIO
Girl, 3, Abducted From Her
Residence in Kansas City, Mo.
Indiana state police were alerted today to be on the lookout for Kansas City's “mad kidnaper” and her vice tim, 3-year-old Madeline Tobias. Belief that the kidnaper may be heading into Indiana was expressed after it was learned that she starte
‘ON GI SCHOOLS
Indiana U. Denies Accord With City.
The “dispute” between Butler university and Purdue and Indiana simmered into nothing’ today. A Veterans Administration statement that city high schools would be used to provide college facilitieg for 10,000 Purdue and I. U. student-
--veterans—was challenged by spokes-
men for the public schools and In- | diana university. After the VA had issued its state-
stockade at the Great Lakes navali,...; pytier officials protested the training station early today, dis-|..... saying that Butler had given to Marian coupty veterans.
Tigh schoal tes,
agreement was
G. I. educational program.
The two purported agreements
{heralded by VA, but apparently premature, “brought ‘Immediate criti=
|cism from Dr. M. O. Ross, Butler
university president. Room for All, Butler Says Butler having promised earlier to give priority to Marion county veterans and high school graduates, the Butler head criticized city school officials for making the announced agreements.
Dr. Ross said: Butler had facilities |
to accommodate all who might
Virgil Stinebaugh, city schools superintendent, corroborated the I. U. spokesman, adding that the “Purdue agreement is only a tentative one.” “We want to co-operate with the
“ An Indiafia university representative denied emphatically that any reached between |city school officials, the VA and the {university extension division for use tof Indianapolis high schools in the
MERIDIAN
~= | AT NEW PALESTINE
ny | The government began removing | air forces for the firm’s loeal plants. If meat were made available at 13 FBI Says 1 of 2 Brothers v |
{of a reported expansion of jet en- meat at neighborhood butcher shops Food Ships Unloaded rgine production ordered by the army! peginning next week.
st stores of perishable foods from| Army officers at Buffalo, N. Y. the new ceiling prices announced by
ines!
wool ather
1.00
fabjage,
eastnigal 6.95
onal inter
Sizes
5
Ne!
Waste paper is urgently needed to
make wallboard for houses. Here's how you can do your part in the city’s waste paper collection drive which begins Monday: Stack your dld magazines, newspapers, books and any other scrap paper around the house; bundle them in piles about 18 inches thick and tie them. Place the stacks on the curb in front of your home before 7:30 a. m. on the day of the collection in your area. See map for collection dates by areas. City trucks will make + pickups on dates indicated regardless of weather,
MISS ETHEL FESMIRE DROWNS IN GRAVEL PIT
The body of a woman found diowned in a gravel pit at E. 73d sf, and N. Keystone ave. today was identified as that of Miss Ethel Fesmire, 4415 College ave, Miss Fesmire had been missing from her home since Wednesday night. The body was discovered floating in the pit by Harold Castor, 6835 Crittendon 'st. A missing persons report had been turned into police headquarters. The description tallied and final identification was made by C. R. Rogers, Miss Fesmire's brother-in-law, with whom she lived.
“TIMES INDEX"
Held Admits Crime. | unions’ to allow unloading of many |
ST. JOSEPH, Mich.. Sept. 7 (U.| of the food-laden vessels tied up| P.) —Federal authorities said today |by the walkout. Robert D. Atterbury, 22, has con-
| | tables aboard-28 ships were saved Charles, {from possible spoilage when the robberies culminating in an $11,000 unions permitted longshoremen to holdup at New Palestine, Ind. work the vessels. Some of the food Robert was scheduled to be taken | will be sold, the rest stored in! to federal court at Grand Rapids | warehouses until the strike»ends. | for arraignment on a charge of| At the same time, the strike of armed robbery. Charles was seized 37,000 , New York * City. and New at Arbor, Mo., yesterday and Rob-| Jersey truck drivers forced susert was arrested at a farm near |pension of wholesale trading in Bangor, Mich., three days ago. |dairy products on the New York | A former peach-picker, Robert mercantile exchange * {told FBI agents he and his brother| At a conference today. Mayor stole a car at Cambridge City, Ind.,| O'Dwyer failed to break the dead-
20, executed a series of
bank last July 18. Charles recently | newed his threat to use policemen
Chillicothe, O., after a sentence for other essential supplies to
auto theft. York's 7,500,000 citizens
By FREDERICK OTHMAN Miss Washington (Jeanne CarlUnited Press Staff Correspondent ison) has an evening gown with a ATLANTIC CITY, Sept. 7.—A|white velvet bustle. To this ap-| beauty contest is one “if” afteripendage is attached. a bouquet] another. | which looks to me like spinach, Tonight comes the big moment, she sits down just once, a crisis is
if the boys can get the pigeons cut |inevitable.
ny, Sk
8
>
*
Beauty Pageant to End Tonight in Blaze Of Movie Offers, Rash of Broken Hearts
|exasperated over those pigeons. |More later, say L
the * Kenmore, N. Y. Chevrolet! plant will be moved here.
Some key personnel and equip-
About 500 workers are employed | there.
|its idled merchant ships, having disclosed yesterday that aviation! Opa yesterday, an agriculture de{won agreement from the striking engine manufacturing facilities at/ partinent official estimated that the!
annual food bill of an average family of three would be about $70 less than under the uncontrolled
In Baltimore alone, some $300,- ment of the Kenmore plant will be prices of recent weeks. fessed that he and his brother, |000 worth of meat and fresh vege- inyolved in the transfer, they added. ‘-Hogever, the new ceilings, effec-
tive Tuesday, will mean a $16.50 yearly boost for the same family
| He was taken to City hospital, VA and the universities,” the city | where his injuries were described | 5¢hool superintendent added. “But, a5 not seriolis. : the only conversation to date in the Earlier, police had been called to LU. case was whether we might be 1010 N. New Jersey st, where Peter-|2ble to provide these facilities. Of son was identified as the assailant course; we said we might be able to a 75-year-old woman. Police, | 40 So. if they were needed.”
Who Suid Ne slaved iron Shem +93 DEAD-AS BRITISH AIRLINER CRASHES
ters and filed a charge of assault! LONDON, Sept. 7 (U. P).—
land battery with intent. to kill - sep- Twenty-three persons were killed
|
| against Peterson,
| The wounded man's wife,
‘Whether increased employment at when compared with the ceilings of | arated from Peterson and living at|early today when a British South
the Allison plants here would de-| june 30, when. price controls lapsed. the Howard’ home, was not there! American
velop from the proposed transfer could not be determined. The transfer of facilities will be completed by Jan. 1, army officers added. The Kenmore plant, it was] believed, will revert to the govern-| ment and be sold. f
F.D. R. JR.'S CAR STOLEN | NEW YORK, Sept. 7 (U. P).—
and then robbed the New Palestine | lock in the trucking strike, and i®> Police searched today for a 1941 by the OPA are:
gray Buick sedan owned by Franklin
was released from federal prison atito man trucks to bring food and D. Roosevelt Jr, who reported the round New car was stolen from in front of the chuck roast, 38, and stew beef, 40.
21 club while he was having dinner!
————— eee |
They flew into the cavernous! auditorium last night, fluttered through the spotlights, gave an
exhibition of aerial acrobatics, and
tumes with the williés. If you were a cutie in a bathing]
Amusements . 12 Sandor Klein. -7|putterfly from her right shoulder|terfiy trouble. When she strolled actly. Aviation ..... 7|Labor........ T|plade, and if* Miss Washington.| down the runway in a topless eve-| The pigeon chasers at this writ-| Eddie Ash.... 6|Ruth Millett.. 7|D C., does not by mistake sit down. [ning gown her back was an expanse] ing were climbing the rafters with Book News 14 | Movies 12} If all these if's become Aan ac-|of pink, except for a three-inch|nets,' while the management was) Carnival ..... 8|Obituaries ... 9 complished fact by midnight Miss| butterfly of gold and diamonds|trying fo shush the beauties who Churches ,... 4|Radio .. ...., 13| America will be crowned—ta-ra-| clinging to her northwest corner. |Were sore at Miss Pennsylvania | sa Classified ... 9-11 Mrs. Roosevelt 7 hoom-te-ay—and the 25th annual A prettier insect never attached (Eleanor Kramer of Lebanon). Comics ...... 13 [Saga of Indiana 8|Atlantic City leg pageant will ‘end itself to a prettier back. Buf how| If she hadn't received an encore Crossword .... 9|Serial .... .. =~. 9lin a blaze of movie contracts, a did Miss Louisville. manage it? Pid | for her. singing of “My Hero,” the] Editorfals -.... 8[Sports ...... 6 rash of broken hearts, and a big she use glue? Or ‘was she a Yogi|opposition claimed, there wouldn't Forum ....... 8/In Washington 3 job for the sweeper-uppers of pea- suffering no pain when heér butterfly | have been so much applause and the Gardening ... 7 Weather Map. 2!jut shells. was séwn on? judges might not have handed her Don Hoover . 8 Joe Williams 6 som tly » | ? sin. a preliminary prize. © In Indpls... 3 Women's. .. 5. IF NOT well then, beauty lovers,” THE Chamber of Commerce is| Oats, retorted Miss Pennsylvania. Inside Indpls.. 7/World Affairs. 8 judge for yourselves: : ; :
ALL } : pi
Choice Cuts Raised Most
Not all meat prices were creased. The largest increases came on choice cuts. Veal cuts and
sausages were returned to June 30
ceilings. Lard prices were increased |
la cents. Cents-per-pound prices of various
meat cuts in Chicago as announced | _
BEEF-—Porterhouse steak, 54; rib
steak,
63; roast, 46
PORK-—Loin chops, 45; Canadian
bacon, 81; sliced bacon,. 46; spare ribs, 28; fatback, 20. LAMB-«-Loin chops, "T1; shoulder
chops, 53. leg of lamb, 53. Indianapolis prices are generally the same as those at Chicago. There will be variations among various types of stores.
POLLARD PLEADS NOT GUILTY Howard Pollard, 24, was returned
If [left the Jadies in the beach cos-|to the Indiana state. prison today
after entering -a plea of innocent to first-degree murder charges in
of the municipal auditorium, if Miss! The problems of Miss Louisville suit one size too small, how'd you | the “hands and foot” slaying of Louisville removes safely a diamond | (patricia Fenton) is different: But- | like to compete with pigeons? Ex- Leland Paul Miller; crippled Indian- |
apolis youth.
POET WRITES FIRST COLUMN—
® Barton Rees Pogue, Hoosier poet and philosopher, writes his first column .for The Times today. '
® Read how the Highway of Laughter leads to Friendship, the Town of Smiles. onPageT nn. \
ih 07
in-|
'WASHINGTD
A airways York airliner crashed immediately after taking two-year-old | off from Bathurst, West Africa.
when her husband was shot. The couple has a | boy. ar | HAVANA, Sept. 7 (U, P.) —~Seven
LOCAL TEMPERATURES persons were killed when a trans-
6am 7 10am. . 81 { port plane of the Inter-America Air Tam S70 11am . 83 Express crashed last night in Santa 8am . TL 12 (Noon) .. 85 Clara province, it. was announced Sa.m..... 8 86 today.
<
A Weekly. Sizeup by the Washington
| |
Staff of the Scripps-Howard Newspapers WASHINGTON, Sept. 7.—Democrats will offer cafe- | teria-like assortment of campaign orators in all-out effort | to retain.control of congress. State and county organizations can have their pick of any shade of speechmaking which fits their need—Ileftwing, right-wing, little business, big business, labor, farmer. Washington will become deserted city when administration big names take the stump. Mr. Truman is likely to make more than the two Speeches already promised. His fate two years hence is at stake. His appearances will be selected carefully; leaders in some states prefer that he stay away. bi vam Left-wingers like Secretary Wallace and Senator Pepper will be used only where it's safe. In C. I. O. strongholds, for example.
Democrats are backing away from leftist ties. Primary results, statements of Senator Mead and Jim Farley indicaf® Pinkos are less popular.
- (Continued on Page 3—Column 7)
- .? A
Su
ed for Columbus, O. over roads {that would take her through Ine
| diana.
Capt. Robert O'Neal at state po lice headquarters -broadcast the alarm at noon to all posts’ on reads that would take the kidnaper through the state. re
The 19-year-old girl said she had {come from Ohio after she had been | | hired" as nurse to the child early {this week by Mr. and Mrs. Philip In Kansas City, police and sheriff's deputies said today they “fear the worst” in the kidnaping by the maid” who may be insane.
Appeal to Newspapers
The parents appealed through tad newspapers and radio stations for
under the care of a doctor, For 36 hours the parents had ree {ceived no word of the missing child. | Police were “greatly concerned over the lack of information since Made line's disappearance.” The child disappeared from the home of her well-to-do parents st 5 p. m. Thursday after neighbors had seen her walkihg with the maid. The mald had given her name as Mary Louise King 19, | when the father hired héi four {days ago. But police sald it was | an alias.
‘Definitely Serious’
“It has definitely become serious.” said Lt. Lou ‘Wyatt of the police homicide division. “We have had joo word since a_truck driver called {saying he had given Madeline and the maid a ride to Odessa, 35 miles east of Kansas City, about 6 p. m. Thursday.” Lt. Charles Welch, head of the homicide division, said his infor mation indicated that the maid may have been a patient in a mental institution. “But we've had so many conflicting reports about the maid that we hardly know what to believe,” he said. The mald, dark complexioned, | five-feet-five inches tall and weigh« ing about 145 pounds, was hired by Mr. Tobias after she hitch-hiked a ride from him at a stop sign.
Away From Home
| The parents were away from thome until 8 p. m. Thursday night. {When they returned they found {both the maid and Madeline gone, Police and sheriff's deputies |searched highways between Kansas City and St. Louis. Sheriff J. A, Purdome and a special deputy flew [to ‘St. Louis to check bus and truck | terminals. Mrs: Tobias said the maid appare {ently had been devoted to Madeline {and had remarked that she wished {she had a child of her own. The parents sald she was a-|"‘happy-go-lucky sort of person” {who said she liked to roam abou {the country. 3
| -
|
Bedford Stone Suburban Home In Bridgeport School District
Lovely Cape Cod cottage one mile south of Bridgeport on Bridgeport road. -Convenient to bus transportation to [ndianapolis and to both Bridgeport and - Ben. Davis shopping centers and Ben Davis high school, Drive out to see it.
A quality home with large live ing room, fireplace of St. Meine ra Sandstone... Dinette has built-in china cabinet, lovely built-ins in kitchen. Twe bedrooms down snd wo bed« © rooms up, ample closet - space. Modernistic’ bath down, Toh basement, game room, furnace room and laundry room Good furnace, automatic water heater
corner
onfs >
erushed stone rr drive. Turn
tifully landsea Classification (phone. in today's~
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