THE CAROLIH* TIME^
TRUTH UIWRIDUED- SAT^^iWiT,
—■- oj-*—' .
itionist Plan to Buy II fitiie 5aid Part
liovement to Sell Nafioniie fiiace Bias
integration was citcd by
MT this we»*k as another
' W * heavily-financpd pro
effort “to hold the Ne-
tubjection not only in the
,'but in the North as well.”
at annonneement by Gov.
ate T>«viis of Louisiana that his
YOfUC. — DiKclosure lhat| The NAACP then ctifrg«d\l6at
segregationists wilk pur-^ certain southern state ioyernineHti
^'Itoe on television stations; were in alliance with Whit4 Citl‘
nt the nation ttt blast, lens Councils in a $2 millioli
ganda campaign to wop NoirthW-
ners to segregation.
Wilkins in an addfeas befort
the Sacramento, Calif., tfAACP
branch declared; 1
“We know that the, LoUipi»n«
Lesislature appropriated llOOiOOO
for use 6fit Joint Committee, W6
WoiiM purchase television, know that the Mississippi
In the North to spread its ■ ture appropriated |2S0,000 'M tf»
no' racial segregation recall-1 State Sovereignty Comt!^8lpn.”
H|l Mk purchase two years aeo by; In October 1956, ihe Mi^isjuppi
l^i^iiimil lawmakers of a full paee State Sovereignty Conimlsilim
■jttiHliij nil 111 in a New York daily, brought twenty New. IfngUnd hews-'
fcrth what it called “ the' paper editors to the State far'M
«*4'’s IMwition on race relations.”] flying viSit “to see that segrega-,
advertisement was placed i tionworks and is a solution to the'
N.Y. Herald Tribune on Feb.i raSial problem.” The editotti were
by the Louisiana Joint flown down in Misslssjpp) Na^n*
failirfilivf Committee to Preserve, al Guard planes, wined and dlm^
atlon. I and soft-talked by white Missbttipt
flana. TIM New Bngliuid visitor!
had Uttlir or no opportunity to talk
^Miasltaippi Negro citizens.
',tn 'adtUHon, spokesman .for the
Mississippi ditiaN^ eouncits have
Mdressed audiraces in Des Moines,
Omaha and Chicago in the ihiddle
west, and iii N«w Jmey and other
Aortlheasterli ttites. An uncoiifirm
C(i report ^is that th« Mississinr
ie^Iat^«! ^9 vo^ed an annual
CMftrlb^ion of #^,000 td the
H^ite CKIzeils Councils.
tMfeMed now, by recent'Syprera
Court' 'rulings ^Voring pjntinuei*
inte^ati,on ^ -New Orieans^hools
Mir despPi'atc' 'white ; sujwemaci'-
clique tdrrounding Louisiana Gov
Jirlunie Davts will agaiii turn to
the Northern ptiUic for suppM-t.
iliis. time they are favorin
television over the newspai^rs as
the t>ei«uasive medium.^
MtL Nettle Jadobnr Grand
Daughter Ruler, DIes'iti Norfolk
NORFOLK, Va^The . de^th of I tfonR. Jacksoa was tbe secr
Mra. Nettie Carter Jackaon^^Gran^^i^ umwieis.yu a
Daughter Ruler of the (« ,y. Kelley ^#ard
W occurred on Tuesday nK^in^.
’-.S-
I
iselle magazine’s 1960 Martt Awaid wiikin^
Mt past year: (1) Patricia BaM, scli^i«ttll|
Ibscnthal, arcliaeologist; (4) RiiiMrtpfii pMm;
Sittan Greenburg, photographar; f7) ia#
desii^eri (9) Elaine May, crltTcj ci(9 |rtl|ihiMr«
YdRK. — Patricia Bath, a
Co|{ese freshman who has
j^bsqrbed in science sincc
is the youngest of to-
irtniKrs of a 1960 Merit
hacjuat turned eighteen,
thii eighteenth successive
were presented to ten
ivemen under thirty “who
SflMpldy distinguished them-
'Jti their fields and are ex-
to *chieve even greater
' according to Betsy Talbot
. Mademoiselle’s editor-in
jaag»^ Hvf Art CUtiaes44* on - a an vcntjons, the: jLchiev^pment Hall. Mr^ . Cynthia. Tapp^ Mrs
more, she decided io make archae-»taiost ’ekclftng antf origiiM new
ology her career,' lcuin>ed> field
techniques at the. Univerritj^
Arizonia, later dug fM remailMl. P^
Neandertl^al man in . lna«l.,^fo
1959, as assis^nt ciirator op
Id when she was chosen
fill in high school, to partic
a summ^ science training
at Hnrlem Hospital. There
\{t^ the effects of strepto-
% residue on bacteria. The re-
iiriHcatine that cane*r is a
fNi*rBl t"iirln('-Iown rather than
• '^Jrtt^hiii1*ting-up process, were
irth studies by another
Arnolfl Lentnek. and
iaM fall to the Fifth
limiiuitiona] Congress of Nutri-
Bfer york ha* opened up new
iMt-^t4Mitial!v fmitful avenues to
ijyjpMcrstanding and treatment
acliievem»»i’t nf the other
wwnen of th» yrar” (as
»r* featured in Januarv
otselle) ran«e from heqd-
iipgrftiruuioee in sports an*! the
arts t# s*?fial ac^omplish-
iti areh»^o"y nhofownphy,
*nnJn*iire. Thev ar":
a tw»’nty one-
Canadian. who has Im-
and fastest risin*!
Royal Ballet. When the
WHU Company (later the
came thrnOirtJ her
jViiiwiver on tixir In ISSI,
jh»y>yf«iHv ntj'liti'me'i for
*t«died for two vpars.
the tourin'* enmntij^v.
travels her Odellp-
.IR R>Mt T-aVe made a doen
4»ti »ll who saw i(. She
ROSICVTHAL. a
and field archae^'
cialircs in pre-
American riiltiirei.
to the Middle East
■tiunor year at Skid-
comer* to the art world by muse
uqas and^ inrivate coilectws. alike-
Boi» iji, Prpvjjdehc^k Rho4e bland,
sii^ studied at Pitew York's AiH^Stu-
dents Leag^i?.: sp^tv^l ^and. 19W
^wan| .^Qr hor-.brw>?e WW-sculp-
l^ef . first onemah
show jn 11^. She then tuitid t»
ji T#dic«l form of abi^^tion: caft-
vas afld stwl co»*tructlid^ that
“^eates a dhsturbiJig and?* eerie
poetry df soac^.” - ^
, JiJI^ iStJSS, who jae»igils Sim
■pie-clothes in «n urterifinS‘iaste
tbit has ho price tag*- ^be letoed
ter i*iif!fc^A8bsft^),inft ev6ti^
'il(' rijji#' imifc she' worked' fri |>u^-
i^atiottis for a ’desi^erand as
a fa&ion^co-or^nator. fo learp
how to Resign sportswear herself,
she went to its best iour*e, Italy;
watched, studied, practiced: .then
djd a.^ll^t^n for an Italian fab
ric desi^jnef i^at she ^oM tb Aineri-
ean stores, Fur f»o years she has
done , collections for J^r, M»t
.SnoVtiwear tl& jt *are'. Sei^rkable
at the Brooklyn Huseitm she piv
pared a much-prrfised’' ekhU^.
■‘Ancient Art of Ihfe AmerlcailR.”
The Ford Fouhifation aw^e£l h«r
a fellowship fn I960: enabling her
to maintain her owti dig bi thie.
south of Mexico. ^ *
ELIZABETH SEAt.. a ’SUgbtly
kooky twenty-six-J^tfar-oW EngUsh
Tirl who arrived in l?ew York this
research bccamc Patricia hocom> BtOTdwy s
■ftar. As Irma la Doucci Bie.
fre«ih-faced darUflto* PtgaUfc die
nipUei^ the hesrts of tK^ eritics.
Be^ttro her debut Here she was
frnia in T,ondon. When a broken
anMe enind an eariier dream af a
career in ballet, «he cut a lively
eanrr on a chorus lin*. Ten yea^.
aftor her first musical She Is ah
int'-rnational star who “can .act. . .
npn ein« . .. caij ^ante Tike a. ^irl-
” J - 1 ftjr*helr*stroi«i «W8e.«rf-iabrtc and
WH.MA RUDOLpH, who spnnt 1 ^ ^
ed her wav through the 1960.OIyW*J
nics to bkome not only t^e fiwtl HJUNS.M^Y, whirte rumihative
American woman «ver-tp vrin thrc^,! satire on eviry, speol€a'of human
"oH meHils b'lt the only track oir, folly is a marvel, yhen'rte tod
athlete of ettiler sex^to’earti
tHat many in Rome. Criroled. unt^
WflR !apv»n, sh* foolrwp h««ket-,
hall to ^«r*»ni*hte»i her liw il»i*Jia^'
a hish Rchooi s^r before’
it mnv olsin that she .was pi^Jn-
nr—tihlv goeedv nmner. N^ 'tft
A. t: I., plahpifm tp
she Veonn tip. itif, ii|t^r*i(tt ip
"rimilwl rhlMren. IWp *Sai»itv,'
fM^i^sw nnH fine snnrlsi|iaBiihi|i h^i
cpmed. h«’r worU-wide afl«ctlo^
anrt r«B«eet. j V* '
STTSAN GR5:BNRI|RG( irtio en-
ninr(>5 with swnsitlve. 4twassfoi|-
M" and wittv r.afm#ii';4he ,1|^U of
Chp voiin! today.' A wxliilite of
c-r-**! T.a"'r"nee> and ValeX^)*oo!
of F'ne Artvshe has-0|_usht thou.
!sndR of elusive ihqments fti Uff
m ATn»riran camjnHiei^ has fnl;
l/mHfjn ro jnn'-or a! lowed stndents 10 la»a^ festival*,
a fwan. Her Am»ref>n| rone on the read iHtti the 1>eats^
fall iwotnnted one crtie! Ah'«on'anhed the (m‘*rtfs in
“inhnrn ('race and land, dope addict# in slunis.. P»«ti
led him of Danilova in their pad*^ paintei% in coffee,-
hoiiues. Shnj»-ii.now in Africa,
fho*o»'r»nfiine wjljii'came: fur •
Paramount movie aflid topidamtallj^.
doubling for th* stap ill
shots. -li- ; j,'
LEE BONTBX::(»TifWlptrei!r('i*M
In conwdercd'tfr' bjS'liif the
'^r^mher 27th aher an ilhi^ of
several mmths.
Despite the severity of her ail-
rMent, Mrs. Jackson continued to
perform her duties almost to the
'lour of passing. The demise of the
eader of 100,000 fraternal wopen
leaves a great void in tbe ranks
>f the organization.
Mrs. Jackson was bom in Staten
Island and lived there all beir life.
She was an ardent organization
woman full of enthusiasm and pbs-
-nssed unusual qualities of leader-
ihin tt>at propelled her to the, top
in whatever group she belonged.
Her career in the Elks Started
”hen she helped organise and was
i charter memt»er of Raritan Tera-
ile No. 218 of Staten Island. She
served as Dt. Ruler. District Dep-
iifv, Senior Mother of Auhjrii JU-
' vcnile Class No. 54. FloaadaHSec-
retary of 'Raritan Temple No. 218,
Recording Secretary of Alpha Past
Hauehter Rulers Connell, Finaiv
ial Secretary ^>f Council, Chair-
■nan V Public Relations and State
Secretary.
She served as secrctory o*’the
^he Civil Liberties I^partm'ent un-
fer the late Brother J. Dalnius
'Heel* and was Vice Chairman to
Pil'rritnage to John Ifcrowh
V'nrkirtB closei* with Mrs.*
n-'T'fha MrKanlass, Orand Direct-
of Shrine neparmtent. She
a '•oPfidant and clofie awio-
Of the last G^and Exalted
RuJlr, J. Finlev Wilson and Bobt.
H. J^ohnson, Mrs. Buena K*lley
Beiry. Grand Daughter ^retary
tad Mrs. Pearl ^rown, Grand
Dipisht^r Treasurer. ,
. Upon fhfl Heath of Bli»abetn! R
'laf'ten in November 1961', Mrs;
.lacVsnj* cn'-fiee'ted t'' the position
of Grii"”^ Oa.n'ht''r Rukr ano ,Waf
re-elected each vear to this ptis^,
the highest in the largest Womttl’i
^twnal order in the country. '
Mrs. J^kson >yas praised aiid eS-
tefemed for the ImagihaUve 4'iiid
progressive innovations tnaie''dutr*
Ing her administratioh. U^der ihe
aegis^a history of the ort^ was is^
sued at the 90th annivijrsfeiy c^-
ihemol^tliig Mrt. Ertmn^V. Kelley,
th* founder first o^gahlaer,:
sewri new d^aitoents Wer«? ad
deidji, 9^ &ira«9 .^mptc ExtriVi^M
ia aiid Faslhtoh Show hpW ih lifew
YiJirk CKv inpaally. a musit
lar^ip fund was established, *5
gtilar program of assistartce H
war orphans iiiaugurafed,. i jRid-
wint«r conference' conduetcd ''lUitt’
special clasts for deputieit' ^d
Grand Assistants and their .^^s
catered but in various secH6nf"ht
thexrountry and at the annual
.ami hoiwree. to receive th&Emma
program Has become a regular
part:. of the annual conveiilion
When oultstariding women h^^
been honbred for their contrtbu
,‘j M April, 1960 Mrs Jacksm con-
iluctad the flrst European Travel
^our of the Daughters of Elks
guiding 18 women thru 12 coun
tries including Munich. Germany
where she spoke to millions of
Guropeans over the “Vice of Amer
ica” radio and in Rome. Italy
where she and the group were
received by Pope John XXXin,
Mrs. Jackson was an active
member of many organizations,
they include Life Membership in
the National Council of Negro Wo
men, Inc. where she was third
. vice president; the NAACP, Past
Matron of the Silver Queen Chap
ter No. 54 Order of Eastern Star,
Prince Hall Affiliation; a member
of St. Mary Court No. 13, Order of
Cyrene also Past Noble Governor
of the Household of Ruth. Mrs
Jackson has served as a member
of the Board of Directors of the
Family Service Board of the Sta
ten Islands. Salvation Army, of the
369th Army Infantry Auxiliary of
the New Yoirk City, gehabiliUtion
Qhairman for the Armfleld-Klt
trell Auxiliary of the American
Ix^on, Staten Island and was
member of the Marine Hospital
Council, one of the largest in the
country.
-O
Ohio TT^^sl^^d To
Pifnn Tajrs
ATHEN^sPhio — The NAACP
this week llit^d Ohio University
ct Athens to drop racial tags froin
ita. housing applications.
Ur. Jame^ ,|tv Levy, president of
t^e Assoeii^qiisOhio organization,
said the Ui|4Yi«sitys current hous
Ing policyi,^!;TO'’rlminates against
students ef certain racial and re
liglous protlpi."
■ He added that if the University’s
btiard of trltirtees reaffirmed the
present diWiminatory housing
pirilcy, the H[/UiCP will refer the
natter to the* State’s attornev gen
eir^l for a riJifV?.
MT. niLlfeAD BIBLE CLASS
f>LANS YEAR’S WORK
The Tru^ Seekers Class ot M*
Gilead Baow Church met at th
home of m. and Mrs. Isaiah Ross
if'l4(ft IWWWood street Friday
nlglit, Dec. 3Q.
P^s for tlii coming year were
drafted by fhie. class at the meet-
IrigV Members thei) exchanged gifts.
Following the iheetitig, the host
ess served a repast of cake and
coffee to the following members:
Mrs. Bettie Tuck, Mrs. Lula
McMiHah, Mrs. Annie Roberts
Mrs. Aems Hinton, Mrs. Mamie
Et);el Smith and Mrs. Salena Mill
er.' _ ■
Mrs. Rivers attended the meet
ing as a guest of the class.
AliOIIIID fAYEITEVILLE
By MRS. L. M. ROBERTS
On Mdttday night before CUirbt:
mas, the Coker Boarding home ms
the center of attraction. TTie ^e-
nih'g at the home was filled with
delightful moments for each pat
ient as members, ot the sisterhood
and brotherhood and pastor Rfev.
J. F. Matihe'ws of Plea«;ant Gr4ve
Disciple Church entertained Qie
home’s inmates. The Rev. Matthws
delivered a short sermon. GAts
were placed heneath the ChrisknMs
ing. The Rev. Matthews interpret
ed the birth of Christ as represen
tative of two love stories, one con
sisting of the- love story Involving
Mary and Jesus and the other
consisting of God’s love for errant
man.
Revi Matthews’ sermon subject
fpr Christmas day’s worship serv
ice was “'Fhou Shalt Cdl His
j^ame jesus’’ Music-for the serv
ice was rendered by the men’s
Iree for each patient and financial .qhotus. Rev. Matthews spoke on
CQBtrll^utions were made. ' "The Spirit and the Flesh’ at the
her partner -(not . husb’(M«d) Mike
tal comment: thiey; are’ tlie. funniest
.and deadliest cif TIjey met
and deadliest of *riuU. lljey met
at the UnlveMtii^^' 0*' Oiicago
where, in, an ijfnproyisatioMl thea
tre, 'they begjm their'^ea^tpmpora
neons deadpan play, wilh pJirases
and Ideas. In 1957 ther'eaime to
New Ybrk, obseurf _|bnd^ broke:
wfthin weeSis they, weye being
haiied locaU'y, then via-^WvUlcm
‘natio*>aHy. ’Hjeir opening on Broad-
wav last fall was'a lararing fuccess
HJCt.iEN JEAi? ROqERS, who as
a produeej- in .A, B. 6.-TeleVision’s
Special ProJeitiJ defraftment has
seen mtire of the world i'rf its more
violent moments !t^an "Sh# «ycr
ri'ckoncd. She left an instyuctor-
phip in political theory at Harvard
to ehtcr tcleyisfon because she
wanted a more a(kiv« lift. She has
•itice rtndned h^lets in Poland, Bo-
M^a a«d C«a»; ridden .iflephants
and walked yvlth Ganjdhi's' sniritual
successor In India; interviewed the
ICint! of Nepifl. ^nd Castro (not to
mention serving interprater
•t'Ji Washinflton new* conference);
jhfas just retiinied from Afiita and,
who kno^s, taay be ,the first ;wo-
^in 'd»7fhe mooE”^
Mrs.. I^ie Coker, who is a mem
ber of the Pleasant (kove sister
hood, is in charge of the homje,
-locatec( behihd Seeohd Baptist
Chui’cij'on the Old Wilmidgten
cpad.' She is dplni a commendable
Job with these. parents and would
welcome a meanin|ful visit.
It is this winter’s opinion that
we should always remember-those
who are less fortunate than we;
CANtM.gLICHT SIRVICG
A cand}elight service wap'held
at 1:30 p.m. bh Christmas eve at
Pleasant "tJrove Disciple Chwch.
Hie service featured cilrol linti-
five p.m. worship.
MUSICAL BANQUET
On Monday night after Christ
mas, the sisterhood of Pleasant
'G^ove entertained friends with a
musical bai^uet.
THAliK$ FROM REV
flUrrHEWS
The 4lev.*I^thew8 and his fam
ily expfes^ thanks^to Pleasant
-Grova mCR^!^ ana-friends for the
many Chriara^4 cards and gifts
received diimg the holiday sea
son and ex^f|i^ mdshes for a hap
py and proflllil^us New Year.
Symbol of victory for h«nptcK*d
husbands is this
lass staal sink with mpllarn can-'
ro^r d«sl*n — aasy to kaap elaan
and aasy to work at. Its manw-
facturao Karl Janten if Jlansan-
Thorsan Corp.j contends that up-
fi^lnf of hanpackad fiubbys lies
i>aMind today's ttraamlinad, la
bor-saving kitchan dasl#n —• in
cluding this sink. Ha couldn't
fraa himaalf from the kitchan
— so ha ravolutionizad tha kit
chen to maka his chores easier.
The Lflle Woman's Helper of Today Finds Many
Kitchen Gadgets TaM To Fit His Taste
The heil^cked husband U in rbr cording to tiie Jepsen theory. It
volt and his revolt is behind the;
>ig change in American- kitchrti
lesign.
So proclaims a leading expert
in kitchen eqwpment—Karl Jen-
n, president of Jcnsen-Thorsen
Jorp.-of Addison, 111., m’anuiactur-
■}r of stc^inless steel sinks. '
Jensen scoffs at the prevailing
theory that the space age gau^ts
in today’s kitchen were designed
‘0 relieve tbe little woman from
drudgery.
Men, the selfish beasts are still
' hinking only' of them8e>’’c>, af■
Tennessee Vote
Victiiiis Feted
MEMPHIS, Tenn.—James Firro-
ir, NAACP program director, rep
resented the . Association at a
Christmas party for more lth«»
1,000 beleaguer^ residents of Fay
ette and Haywood counties who,
were "Brought To BfenipTiis By
caravan for the event.
Farmer praised the Tennesseans
ind urged them to continue fhelit
fight for cpnstitutional rights. Ne-
woes are being persecuted in Hay
wood and Fayette counties for reg
istering to vote in the Nov. 8®
■leefions. .
The party was , organired Iw
■‘Crusading Anonymous,” a ^oup
of Washinglori, D; C , newspaper
nenplc with the aid of local NAAGP
officials.
To date, the NAACP national of
fice has sent more than S7.500
■^inoR -Tiilv 6 for shipments of focid
Histrihnted to the victims twice
monthlv bv the Memphis NAACl*,
The Momnhis NAACP unit has
!ilsn distrihiited additional truck
loads of clothing from NAACP
hran'^hes. other RToups and Indi-
dfviduals arross the country.
"Ushers
they are ioventtag labor-saving kit
chen davices, it is because they
are the ons most likly -to need
thein.
‘Wiia l^?i« wwnsn had already
raUimd ha^salf from drudgery
^ — by lying an apron on hubby.
AiH wMien tha males invadf the
J(l.tchaii, ift* Invtntions follow
ed — as a direct catult," Jen-
lah-Thorsan's prasldaiit daclaras.
"We have in-the-sink disposals,
electrtc canj openers, electric
timers for stoves, automatic ice-
cul^ makers, self-defrosting re
frigerators aW an kinds or mec-
haiMcal mixing marvels — to name
s f^‘— all because the mao of
the hauae was pressured by'his
wife.to empty- the garbage, cook,
do something about the ice and
generally spend time in the kit-
cHep. ’
“Mere man may be no match
for the female of the specics but
he does have a unique resource —
mcchihical genius — to make life
under her thun^b a little more plea
sant.”
Take the kitchen sink itself. For
many years, the sink was never
changed, even though its design
was something less than up to
date. But in the last 10 years, the
sink has gone modern.
"For years, housawJves put
round dishes in a squarti sink,
just tha way that grandmnthar
did, and bora Up grimly undar
tha obvious fact that tha muara
or rectangular sink encouraged
braakaga," Jencan points owf.
out.
“It wasn’t that whai wa
enough for grandma
enough for her. Rathe
being noiMnechanical,
any reason to yap attenti
sink — or anything clsfr j!
kitchen — in grandma’s da;
^andpa ruled the househo
an iron thumb. Todty,
washing dishes, and a proi^Ky ®**'
gineered sink Is a matter ex
treme Importance to theiij‘
/Uirtyt a pAon* •# htiut In M# »om» M*ft Tthphoil»-PI»nii»dt .
Glows
in the flork
/aPT-^l
Continued from page 3-B >
F^rst Calvary Junior choir. !
W. H. Tucker,, of Fisher Memo
rial Tabernacle, will make a brief
address prior to, Grady’s address,
and the Rev. A.| L. Thtimpson. .pas
tor of Firrt Calvary, will give re
marks following the speech.
Others who will take p^ on
Sunday’s program aore Louis Jones,
Loiiis Laster and Mrs.' Viola Bi^o-
die. ' ■'
tSFTi —Ancitnt Oraek brai^slat
of silavr bearing a small pendant
fifura of Pan playing an' in-
Centur'e* B, C., were fdund at
Oldla. in- South Russia.
RIGHT: — A pair of sllavr
its' n^f tiun |tMP?|j!aar>
ida of twIiiM ^Ifs Of'sli
er wire th«y terminate in two
lions .heads with #Ki)wlsltaly de-
sign«d fi^raa; caM^t THa Va*
. c^l«:*s ar^ attfibutM'to Greait
.artisans.
. ^
compajct be^uty...the nefw
Only half the size of a regular desk phone, beaudCul
littfc STAktrtiE* fiu almost anywhere. '
Slender and lig^t, it adds a modem fashion note to any
room. And its amazing PANEi.fSCEN'r*- (electiolumines-
ceiit) dial glows in the dark for easier dialing (and for less v
than M a year for electricity). Simply turn a tiny knob
and the dial glows bright enough toserveaaanight light.
(kMBCirhere in your home is a br^ht new place for •
light new SrARLrrs extension phone. CaU aur business
omce today and learn how Utde it costs to have one ot
your own. Available in five decorator colors. Remem* ^
bcr. the second phone cdsu far lesa thaa the first.
mBrnTEiEmnli
€
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