The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 16, 1923, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE WORFULTALRS | TOLDINRATR, __NEWS OF OUR. NEIGHBORS | Peter Watlfn, who wis seriously ( {| injured a sho? time ago when his car overturned wear Langhorne while | | Mr, Wallin was returnitg home from (hunting, is getting along hicely un- | der the care of Dr. Thelan at Wilton, or a PAGE SIX FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1923 | Ask Local Aid apaAeeaaall For Aerial Mail LUDEN'S ot Commerce in. preventing a 'e-MRM TV AMT TE a ag commendation by the Director of the = pe For the Trouble Zone YOUR NOSE AND THROAT sister, Mrs. Clarence Knudtsen at Fargo, Nov. 7, arriving at Driscoll on Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Olson will make their home on the M. J. Qlson fafm north of Sterling, . Olson will resume her -duttes as teacher of Christiania School No. 1. |U. S, budget for a discontinuance of appropriations for night flying ex- | periments of the U. 8, mail serviee {has been received from the Aerof- ‘autical Chamber of Commerce. It is |believed that should this bervice be devéloped Bismarck would be,son one of the first air mail route to the Pacific Coast. The-A. of C. has al ;80 received several. airplane pi jtures of Bismarck, taken by Lieut. Kenneth Garett when he was on a path finding trip through the North- a GIANTS SIGN _ NEW CATCHER: New York, Nov. 16—The New| York Giants made another move in | their re-construction campaign yes- terday when they signed Eddie Ain- smith, veteran catcher, who was a eee i John N. Hagani of North Da- kota Testifies Before I. C. * C. Representatives Bender Kruger departed last week for a visit among his relatives at Cohasset, Minn. William Miller of Arnold, visited | over the week-end at. the Richard | Borner’ home, ey heat 1 Kansas City, Nov. 16.— Testimony aris4-Wilma Graham of Wilton, vis- designed byscomplaining witnesses to | . e 7 show that farm eonditions in middle | ited. over ‘the week-end with her S Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Lien autoed to Tuttle on Wednesday and spent the day at shopping. fannie played most of Inst se | western states mecessitate _fieient [pode ctactaiee ui ipals OimmataeeNs raitan e ables ok he et as Tat rate reduction’ on grainy ered here | Henry Hubin expects to start a| Liew’ School No./1 spent ‘Thursday Poy Brockaya ee en usngency | sett qutore members of the Inter- |cream and produce station in town [and Friday at the county seat, LAWN. INSURANCE by Brooklyn as an emergency today before membe | tia a kugee THA. ; state Commerce Commission, Fertilize and protect your ly Knut Paulson, who has decided to end of the diamond year, A tel Pee piericaltural | fe, and Mrs, Arnold Rupp, Mr. and spend a winter on a warmer shore,|lawn from freezing out by D season will be Ainsmith’s wath ihe eee hearing by Mrs. Ludvick Feil and pete departed last week for the Pacific | coverin| ‘hee “Sab Brice 4 fifteenth in major league company. | . of | attended the lecture and moving yAc- | coast. nure. Roy fore snow He broke in with Washington in j Te and varatn BHAANe Higa j ture show last Saturday night which BC saeco | omes. ‘We are in a position 1919 und remained 9 seasons with + r g was given in Bismarck by Jame! . h judsaas of | the senators, going to Detroit in / | pictured women folk ofg'the farm | Dot ce, ‘They report a very in-|near Arena spent Wednes to take care of all orders iy even- 1919 and to the St. Louis Nationals ing at the George Carlson home. mm “1921, | | Pe working in the fields beside the men, | c Janta desperate effort to stave off | teresting entertainment. bankruptcy with framers’ gradually | De ene parses | as left here about two months ago for vantages “because of grim riven ay, | the west coast have arrived at their Hagan predicted, farmers will be Sea ie rane ane a tee: {flocking to the city in auch numbers |< visited emcpute at the, home: i d | that production would be decrease | of thele son, #aAl Ward ng family to such point that the Unibed! Baatss | 1 Gaiper, Wyo. for several ‘weeks. would become an importing nation. | a) Telling of his own. experiences’ In operating a 960-acre farm the wit- | Merete wis ast here ey ness said it was virtually clear of in- ihaoes for Monroe, Wash., some time ago has notified friends he has reach- e 6s i 16 but since that : ota de h He ee RAATMBen CEEteat put $8,000 {ed his destination and likes the west promptly. Wachter Transfer Co. Phone 62. 209 5th Street. Phone 453 for the Famous Wilton Screened Lump Lig- nite Coal at $4.75 per ‘ton delivered. Wash- burn Lignite Coal Co, ST. THOMAS | WINS HARD ONE! Ia, Nov. 15.—Quarter- ules’ dropkick from the 37 n the second period en- lege to defeat / Howard Brenden who spent sev- eral months in Canada arrived home and thinks North Dakota best of all. Howard Ward and Mrs, Ward-who J. W. Beyer and Christ Schoon re-| ceived a car load ofgcoal on Thirs- day and. were kept busy at the end of the week hauling it home. Dubuque back } yard | Mr. and Mrs. Tom Olson and Wal- ter Johnson autoed to Bismarck on 3 to 0. Friday, returning late that evening. ent Columbia's power- the first half, Houle Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Olson and little! back and booted the into it to hold on. . Wee : json ‘Dallas called at the L. B. Olson between the uprights. More bank failures have occufre ts s/ home on Friday. i made from a difficult | in thig state this year than in any | Mrs. J. F, Watkins, who teaches ‘ |year in history, the average of the | School near Lyman, was a week- past three weeks running almost one | ¢nd visitor at her home in Baldwin. a day, he said. i Mrs. Watkins only gets home a few Diversification was no solution of |times during her school term on ac- the farmes’s problem, he said, be- | Count of the distance to her work. cause the North Dakota farmer is in| no condition to change crops, even | | “Fey if climate and soil were adapted to it. Mr. Hagan estimated that a 10 ngle, Mme of the greatest ever | Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Nelson| seen here. spent Friday evening until Saturday | at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George} Carlson. “€ J Here is Ada Blackjack, the Eskimo woman who is the sole survivos Vilhjalmur Stefansson. She is shown with her son, Donald, whom she brought from Nome to Seattle for medical treatment. FARMER MUST . | Mr. and Mrs. George Shaffer and | son Leo of Steele were Sunday guests at the Frank Shafer home. Rupp and family visited with friends east of town Sunday. | Indians thoge pioneers who were, 1] |driving the spikes in the railroad] per cent reduction in freight rates ; Miss Ruth Rinelander, who has) Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Swanson, and | PAY NOTE FOR _ ities. being aid across the prairies,| would give him a reduction of 11-2) been teaching school near the Baum-| Mr, and Mrs. William Meyer autoed Sind /Bibsight into court the uis- | ‘half a century ago, and yet upon| cents a bushel, or $150 on his crop. eee farm south of town will eae) to Bismarck Saturday morning to/| pute which has been waged between LEAGUE BANK jticse very piains where then roamed| Cross-examined by railroad attor. [her second school a mile south of | attend the funeral of Mrs. E.G. Pat- the pair s' McTigue nearly lost —— 4 lthe buffalo and the Indians they|neys he admitted that his farm is | Arnold. Monday. On account of the | terson. his crown tn a fignt with Young (Continued from Page 1) ‘have now developed splendid farms|much larger than the average for j distance traveled, it has been found - Stribling, Georgia schoolboy at Col-|the bank and that the bank had jand builded beautiful homes. The| the state. \ pees to have two schools in.this dis-| Mr. and Mrs. Sivert Brenden had umbus, G ‘ paid for it $2,482.62, this amount) labors performed and the hardships | trict, but on adgount of the small their company on Sunday even- | number of pupils the full school term must be divided between them. of thejendured by these pioneers in puild- League Exchange then in the bark. |ing the commonwealth developed On Nov. 17 the overdraft was puid | sterling qualities of mind and heart and the $5,000 note was surrendered {and a rugged strength that will in- to F. B. Wood prior to its maturity. , sure a sound development of our in- The defendant later, about December | dustrial, economic, and politieal life 20, was called to Fargo und met|in the decades to come. The spirit Lemke and Wood, who toid lim his | of the Northwest is sound and when note for $5,000 was no longer needed | the storms now raging have quieted,| but that a note for $3,000 woulg suf- the people of the East will know that fice. Matthys gave the $3,000 note, |!" Wa part of the union are the eon: | receiving back the $5,000 note, he mi€ theories and political ideals) testified, according to the court rec- nder and more conducive to the ord: jhighest welfare of the republic! Within two days of the note’s ma- | that upon the plains of the great turity Wood took it to the Scandi- | Northwest. : navian-American bank, indorsed it| Against Soviet Russia and took himself a cashier's check! “Though our United States sena- McTigue filed in supreme court a| representing an ayerdraft suit to compel Jacobs to account for money received under a three year contract they entered into August 30, and under which the boxer was entitled to 70 per vent of the profits of his engagement in the ring, on the stage or elsewhere. McTigue charges that he was defrauded by Jacobs and also that the latter misrepresented their financial affairs to the State Athletic Commission, which at its recent hearing into the case, uphesw Jacobs’ claim that the contract was valid and advised the pair to settle their differences, Washburn Has. ing members of the J. M. Lein fam- ily. i : LABOR BODY TO Falling hair. Lifeless hair, Par- tél’ baldness. We guarantee, in writing, to correct it. The hair roots ean be revived, given new life. Sci- jence has discoveted new principles. The Van Ess Liquid Scalp Massage {combats that infected.sebum which clings to hair and destroys it. Patented applicator free with each bottle massages germ combating elements directly to hair roots. Re- sults are amazing. Ask-your drug- “\ gist for the Van Ess treatment and | the 90-day guarantee plan. ISSUE BOOK Vernon Satter, little son of Oscar pater Ses ... {Satter and wife, was hurt Thursday. Grand Forks, N. D., Nov. 16—The | afternoon while playing on the school 12th annual official year book of the | ground with the other children. The North Dakota Federation of Labor is | little fellow was struck in the eye now practically compiled, and ptob- | by a stick resulting in a bad bruise. ably will be sent to the printers this week and be ready for distribution | Mr. and Mrs. John Rinehart, who among members of the organization | live south of Bismarck were visitors thréughout the state about Dec, 16, |at the Arnold Rupp home Tuesday. according to Charles G. Johnson of | They came here on business pertain- Grand Forks, secretary-treasurer of | ing to the Hilken estate. the state federation, me | The book, larger than in forms years will include about 200 pages. Pupils in our local schools are looking forward to a weeks vacation beginning Monday, November 19, continuing until the next following Monday. morning. Teathers inave been called to: attend, ateachers’ in stitute, which will be held at Bi marck during that week.. Mr. and Mrs. B, F. Pasley enter- tained at Sunday dinner Mr. and Mrs. Roy Colton and sons, Clifford and George. Miss Esther Peterson who spent last week in Bismarck has returned Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Basson and “Distributéd by for $3,000, payable to him, and the | tors and a few others who pretend to! The subject matter will embrace a | home. fomily saled a the William Lauf . Many Games| :#*hier’s check was credited to the | for us would have you believe|'financial statement of the organiza- f — Cy albeit gai : Van Ess Laboratortes, Inc., y Publishers National Service Bureau | that our farmers favor a recognitiong tion and all other business transact-| John Risch has about completed Sdr, ind Adve! Ole Newland Mad ses * 28 EB. Kinzie St., Winston Harper Fisher Co. on December opinion recites. , 1919, the court's | of Soviet Russia, such is decidedly |not the case ‘and you may rest us- ‘sured that as long as the present jattitude of the Russian government ed during the year. It will also re- view the proceedings of the last state convention held in Grand Forks May threshing on his farm in Naughton township. Mr. Risch lived on the old Van Couch place. i Chicago, Ill. Minneapolis, Minn. / Washburn, N. D., The basketball schedule of Washburn high school is announced ‘as follows: their guests on Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Mode and family of ace Steele. December 7, Washburn vs. Cole | WEG 6-8, and give the history of the state ecember 7, Wa: 3. a] |eontinues to be antagonistic to the| federation during the last 12 years. || Martin Burgess of Riverview was i Harbor, there. OS CHIDES | home, church, and private property| Anather important part.of the pub- | looking after business matters afd sre aes on penis Ponconetad ae wae var Murds EAST FOR NOT ana disregards treaties and interna-|tieation will be a‘ directory of the visiting his farm: east of town the | snd Mrs, Ae a) Bears Mr. ake at Washburn, December 21, son t Washburn vs. Garri- here. HEEDING WEST tional obligations, our farmers will |not favor such recognition. The ifarmers of our state believe in the several ,assemblies over the state with the names and addresses of the latter part of the week, . and Mrs. A. G. Bassoxeand family. Hans Kluksdal, accompanied by State and local officers, PIONEER OF The many friends of Fred Middle- stead will be sorry to learn he was badly injured Fiday when was kick. January 11, Washburn vs. Garrison, at Washburn, January 18, Washburn vs. Under- wood there. i his younger brother Julius autoed to Wilton on Saturday and consulted Dr. Sandelien, * (Continued from Page 1) | Christian religiom and in the church, laugh at those who represent them.! which is the organized expression Personally, I hope Mr. Johnson will thereof, and our Russian settlers in ed by a horse on his farm northeast surprise you all and rep:fsent the’ North Dakota themselves are a reli- of town. ‘ i 23 Z January 25, Washburn ys. Wilton, | people of the Northwest iftelligently,! gious people and resent the attitude STATE DIES} tavancea ae Eee ween et penntibers aati tae eiyert, Brenden at Washburn, faithfully and well in the senate of of Lenine and Trotsky and their as- territory. Bane Eee cree | ceenily abd dat and Mrs- Melvin iden bruary 1, Mercer ys, Washburn, | the United States.” |sociates in the homeland. On this| Sheldon, N. D, Nov. 16—Funeral Menten spent Tuesday evening at the home at Washburn, After reviewing the rise of the subject, therefore, our senators do} services were held yesterday from! Ernest Bamgart visited &: ae of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Warne. February 8, Washburn vs. Wilton, | Nonpartisan league and its decline,| not express the sentiment of our] the Catholic chureh of Sheldon for|the home a Mr, and Mrs, * ei Mr. and“ Mrs, Frank Shaff 0 there. and asserting the clection figures | people and most North Dakotans de-/ John A. McCusker, 74, who settled in| Schultz in Burnt Grask fowhani ae Uiseadto Stable’ Tuesda m Ai a i \ February 15, Washburn vs. Turtle | showed the farmers had rejected the! plore the fact that during this years] Ransom county in 1878, and belicved Pe Nike dig ae pi a as Lake there. theories of radicals, the Governor| when agriculture is in distress and|¢5 be the oldest d espe: fe day. February 22, Washburn ys, Cole | declared that he was endeavoring to! when there has béén the greatest|in Ransom somtye ee ne apele Domes Sy ree CNM a at RE ct anteae ih Harbor at Washburn. jmake the state flour mill and simi-/need of the counsel and cooperation! Rey, Father Cahill officiated, Pall-| brother, Richard pone avy 2 ue Viscsiithis weneidce tretntcacnie. March 1, Washburn ys. Mercer, | lar institutions a success because it of every citizen who understands and] bearers were old friends none of ie wash ler and family pro Gah 2 there. was thé duty of the administration to| appreciates the problems and @if- on his way home from the coal mine. March 8, Washburn vs, Underwood, | at Washbura, l : ' ss 1 New York, ‘Nov. 16.—Principal|Sources of the state that have made! problems. ae : WILD ROSE \ football Games ‘eehdduloletox Naver, (1 present development and mvt to, “Sometime ago, the man who OW | peth pr rad tet a ae and Mrs, Sam Godding ‘ave I-# oD 5 storage charges at our Storage iWare- | er 17 in various sections of the|® great future, North Dakota, he, as our national leader, is laboring to i ard time party Saturda = Pai os a5 ' country follow: pe lisid, wow toviandte, inl cpeanines 1olessMiNleh ant dusehty tue lalth wttlne | annem mee of Wctienry, |¢vening for both. young and old./The . house, gorner of Main and-Ninth streets, —; | @ East some extent the ills of inflated fatm! people in him, wrote a book entitled: | x7 p.; Mrs, E, J. Freeman of New | Younger set will be amused by dane- TUE BERIEF Bi N. D. at 2:00 Amherst ys. Williams, at Williams-|land values. The bank failures he/‘Have Faith in Massachusetts.’ -I| Bogiand, N. D.; Mrs. N. M: Weber of | M8 8nd the older ones by card ismarck, 54 s0U p.m. on town, Mass. minimized by pointing out that know that you have faith in the! New England, N. D; Jobn McCusker | Playing. & 5 / i Army vs. Bethany, at West Point,|North Dakota has had one bank for! United States, and I believe that| o¢ Weyburn, Sask; and John R. —. - . N.Y. every 724 persons, while New York when you know the true facts about| Mocusker of Oaklend, Cal, Mrs,|a, the teachers ang pupils of school : Boston College ‘vs. Villanova, atjhad but one bank fér~ every 9,306}our state and its people you will] Elizabeth McCusker died April 3,|N° 1 enjoyed a trip to the creek Boston. persons, and that the aggregate eof| more fully appreciate the spirit ‘of | 4914, 7 *| last week. The day w: spent in Dartmouth vs. Coloy, at Hanover, Colgate vs. Syracuse, at Syracuse, N. Columbia vs. New York City, at| New York, be closings when wheat crops} and continued confidence in Notth rege + Mr. and Mrs. ‘Sam (Gooding enter- is Cornell vs. Johns Hopkins, at Ith-|brought scant returns. The bonded| Daiota.” < |/ Grand Forks, N;.D) Nov, 16—A | tained at their Kote Sunday, Mrs.! ene & aca, N.Y. . indebtedness of the state’ 4s small,| ~~’ — descr ae Habeas ed eae \®. HL gprowaeyal me He! on sand | Harvard vs. Brown, at Cambridge,|he said. Dep ies of the Lowden mm n ;wheat lomer ‘and Avis Carlisle, find Lile' | roe Mass. eda | Good Place to Tnvest Propose Perpetual marketing, received at headquarters | lian and Ellen Peterson. : sa it 4s MAD Perit State vs, Pennsylvania, at| “To those who may ‘be looking for ey of the North Dakota Wheat Growers : : ler PICSOLVE IT Philadelphia. : & chance to secure a rented farm on Light at Tomb Of | association, indicates that Mr. Steen | Mr, Peterson, ia staying. with his 15ST PISSOL West © Pittsburgh vs. Washington & Jef- ferson, at Pittsburgh. : Pririceton vs. Yale, at New Haven, New Brunswick, N. J Morgantown, W. Va. “Chicago vs. Ohio State, at Chicago. Tilinois vs. Mississippi Aggies, at ‘Urbana, Il. Micl a vs, Wisconsin, at Madi- 8. a > Grid Games_ | ——+ St. Louis, :at Middle ‘Went Virginia vs. western vs. Purdue, at La- In re nt ee hole, while ; ‘ : And, pil airies atid has beconte: the dusing the fi chy? Sh “Your: medicine worked a miracle |” | an rey Several Dining Chairs—1 Davenport Bed—Quantity 2 r hip re Baring. the. Fires. nf to oi 0. F. Buck market a te F i ie P, 4 ih Ge apeheatoaaa oan loin sp fil every'winnde Uf Ga Sr ne eee ee Belden ‘of Beddirig—Quantity of Dishés—Doll Buggy. ~ And’ is rf ota, ¥ . eH at Ames, Iowa, iversity vs. Miss-| do so. He then launched into a nar- rative of North Dakota resources, telling of the great fertility of the coil, the progress in diversified farm-| ing, the great increase in the corn} crop, the increased honey production, coal and clay deposits and other re-| deposits in the closed ‘banks—less, than $15,000,000—was hardly‘equal to. one small New York bank, It was inevitable, he said, that with so many banks in North Dakota tHere would most favorable terms ér ‘to own one at a surprisingly low ‘figgte, or to those of you who are losking for a ‘than North Dakota and-‘yoo. ‘may ‘well place the utinost confidente in the integfity of its peoplé, the grent- Hess of its resoyrces, ayid,the unex. telled opportunities for safe. and re- ‘thunerative investments in its lands, jortgages,, bonds, mines nd manu- iterprises.” * 1 he greatest as- of North- Dakota is the character, ‘of the sturdy stock that-settled ‘He ficulties of the farmers, to aid in finding and applying the wisest pos- sible solution, that instead of stay- ing at home and helping solve these problems Senator Ladd saw fit to spend the summer and fall in helping the Russian autocracy to solve its the great Northwest, and you will agree that 1 ask only that which is our just“due when I naw demand re- | newed faith in the character ‘and idéals ‘of our people, with a restored ‘Unknown Poilu 16—2The tomb jot the Arc de Triomphe .will become a more impressive ‘sy! since. the proposal to-ke¢p a flame'tn- der the arch burning and night | ndopted. The unkhdWn soldiet’s ‘tomb contihtes as & mitional shrine and is‘Visited by ‘Widuisknds Sundaya| and hofidgys. ane Hof sacrifice with many ‘memories ‘ t Park’ thing td sec a Wi war: Tei tibbon.in a man’s but which had known him less than 40 years, Burial was made in the Cath- otic cemetery of Sheldon. Mr. McCusker was born in New York City, whither his parents ‘had immigrated from Ireland. He lived in New York state for 17 years, and then moved to Lake City, Minn. pases Bakr t Lowden May Aid N. D. Growers ‘ and other representatives * of the committee are willing to come to North Dakota this fall to engage in the matter is being delayed perfui: the return to Grand Forks of Presj- dent George E, Duis, who is now out of the city. President Duis had al- ready, however, telegraphed the Low- den committee that the Notth Da- kota association was willing to co- RECOMMENDS FOLEY. _ all run down, had a ing, home-loving, and, Gc a class, ate a home-' & Iso kidney trouble and-after taking {a few boxes of your: medicing my €ough and backache left me. : I can at and: sleep well, I canvass and recommend ‘It -at every house F ‘en: ter.” Prompt ‘relief secured from’ jets, and bladder irri: , rhea- tie: dains through using Foley Sidney’ Pills. Insist onthe genuine refuse substitutes, Ae 2 Farmers and business men ofthis district are angry over the proposed increase of railroad rates on lignite coal, feeling that. these rates ready high enough, studying nature. Dwight Carlisle i for Howard Browna‘ s0n Sohn Peterson, The Woman's Nonpartisan club vember 16,--. Miss Bilen Jager spent the week’ end at dock. ‘The “Wildcéts' vt, ‘stayed till & late hour. “A delici lunch .was served by dra, mites KIDNEY PILLS |sng Beulah Lignite Coal is Best $4.75 per ton. Order now ayacnter Transfer Co. Phom are al- —_——_____ YOU L HAVE TO MAKE ‘picking corn TINK IT. JNVENIENCE ANL 6 GREAT #afe investhtent in bonds and mort- a siik|* drive for co-operative marketing. will Meet at the home of Mes. Hrn- 50 GOOD! Work Harness—19x12 Axminster Rug—6 Clinker Rutgers vs. Boston University, at ewes, no’ tate offers a better chance| France's imknown:idildier | beneath) Decision of the Wheat Growers in | est Saville, Friday -aftetmoon, No- Tongs—1'5-Gallon Jug—-1 2 to 4-Inch Pipe Threading Made To Measure the ‘McCusker home in Brad- ee 3 ys. Minnesota,yat Minneapo- uring’ j +2. | operate with ‘the committees infts-eo- | Swatison home last Shturday ‘night. s 4 fe In this connection it , has been es 4 ! * aa lis, Minh. Gpecintony a speeds Fesources| “out that (iiiie Kas etfdeed operative markdting plans. : ‘There crowd and: they 4s. Swanson daughter at midnight. i The following goods will be sold to pay 1 8-H. P; ‘New.Gas. Bngine—1' New Heavy Concord ‘Stock and ‘Pie—1..Pipe Vise —2' Steel Ranges—1- Leather Upholstered Rocker — 1° Library Table —1 __ Kitchen Table — 1° White Enameled Sink—1 Dining Réom-Servihg Table+1-2-Burner Oil Stove—-25 Grain Sacks — Several 60-Gallon Stéel Barrels—1 Cream Separator,’ Friction Pulley—1 Sewing Machine—1 ~ Eledttic ‘Table ‘amp—T Pair Shoes with Skates At. tachet® Galvanized Tabs—2 Good-Oak Rockers— other articles too numerous to mention. :

Other pages from this issue: