The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, March 01, 1904, Page 5, Image 5

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    THE OBEGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, T CTESDAY EVElSTIXGr, MARCII , 1. :1904.
RETUR
AMAZONS FIGHT
THE PARENT BODY
FIG TO
jj News, Gossip and Speculation
i : From the National Capital
t
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CHICAGO
DRIVERS
&abob trcnoirs "" which szfessro
, TKOM nBATXD TRADES COVK
CO. U.ST STOKES IBB OOISQ
' BACK, OXTB BT OHB COUHCHi BE
"OKQAjrmWO JTTJIB TAXB,
Excepting the plumbers and machin
ists all the labor unions whichWith
drew from the Federated Trades Council
last summer ' have again applied , for
membership and been admitted Into' the
parent body. Delegates from the palnt
trs union were granted admlssfon Fri
day nlsrht. It la believed that v the
Plumbers and machinists will take aim-
Mar action within the next1 two or three
weeks." -. ,: -v, v.:-...
After the big strike last summer sev
' eral of the unions In the building trades
line became dissatisfied with the Fed
erated Trades council, and seceded. They'
believed that tbey were not given the
support which they deserved. -
At that time there was & strong build
ing trades council In the .city,, but in
terest in It began to wane. Union after
union withdrew, quietly,, and a ? few
weeks later the organization was diB
banded. ' -
Of late an attempt has been made to
form another building trades council, but
' pressure, has been brought to bear upon
those having the matter In hand to defer,
final action for a. few wepks. -
The FederatecfjTrades council is be
ing reorganized . upon new lines, and
when completed, it is said, will do away
with the necessity for a building trades
council. For this reason the building
trades people have not as yet carried out
their Intention of forming a central body
of their own. f
It has been explained to them that
the Federated Trades council, under the
new constitution, which will be adopted
next Friday night, will be In a position
to look after and closely guard the best
Interests of every local in the city. Un
der the new order there will be standing
grievance committees in the- council
composed of delegates from the water-'
front federation, the allied printing
trAd thn Kullrltnor traripa- h Iron and
foundry men, the retail clerks, the com
mon laborers and all others. It will be
the duty of the members of these com
mittees to listen to all complaints, and
,s soon as they are made to devise
plans for investigating and rectifying
them.
v Should" differences arise, the members
or the grievance committee will be given
the task of settling the difficulty.
By this simple arrangement many of
the union men are confident there Is no
real necessity for the organization of A
building trades council.'
A contract has been signed by the
J"deratBd-Trade Council -with the
Alfresco &. La Fiesta Amusement asso
ciation of New York and Portland for
a two weeks' Mardl Oras carnival. The
entertainment will be given at Mult
nomah field, beginning June 28, and will
"be more" In the nature of a circus than
anything else. It Is the Intention to
build a labor temple with the funds that
are realized.
CAPTAIN ROWAN'S
WATCH IS RECOVERED
. Captain, Rowan, 19th infantry, who
was robbed of a watch and a consider
able sum of money by Private Thorn,
of his regiment, has secured the time
piece. While undergoing an operation at
Vancouver, Rowan's watch was intrusted
to Thorn, who ' disappeared. He was
later arrested In California and returned
to Vancouver. He had spent the money
and said ho had pawned the watch in
a Portland second-hand store.
The watch was finally located by De
tective AVeiner In the Oregon pawnshop,
on Third street. It had been pawned
for 120, and when the money was paid
the watch, was turned over to Welner.
Later Saturday afternoon the watch
was turned over toColonel Huston, of
the 19th Infantry, who delivered It to
Captain Rowan.
CHIMPANZEE HAD v
LIFE INSURANCE
(Journal Special Strrlce.)
London, March 1. In a recent death In
Berlin ' of a performing chimpanzee,
"Consul" has brought to light another
of those strange risks taken by Lloyds.
It transpires that "Consul," whose Lon
don engagements were worth from 200
to S0O pounds sterling weekly, was in
sured for 20,000 pounds sterling at the
rate of 10 guineas per cent for a year.
It Is now a common thing to insure race
horses. Bt Simon, now a very old horse.
Is Insured for 20.000 pounds sterling
and Flying Wax la Insured for 30,000
pounds sterling.
SLEEP IS PRICELESS
But ' It Caa Be Obtained By Simple
Methods.
Are you a hard worker? . Are you
overcome with fatigue at the end of
each day's labor, and instead of retiring
to bed with a feeling of satisfaction at
the prospect of a night's repose, do you
wait the hour of bedtime with dread and
shrinking?
Is It your unhappy lot to be awakened
every night. Just after you have dropped
off to sleep, by an Intense, uncontrolla
ble itching of the rectum? Do you then
endeavor to relieve the sensation by
scratching so desperately that the skin
becomes raw and lacerated, and you
finally sink Into the sleep of exhaustion?
If so, you do not need to be told thai
you are afflicted with itching plies. Tou
have probably tried every remedy you
could hear of, with but temporary relief,
if any, and have concluded there was
nothing left for you but to drag out a
miserable existence. ; As, . a drowning
man grasps at a straw, so should you
eagerly devour the words -ot W. O. Mil
bury, ?0 Pearl St., Reading, Mass. .
"I am pleased to state that I bought
one fifty-cent box of Pyramid Pile Cure
at the drug store, and used about one
half of It, and it. not only cured me of
itching piles, but also of constipation, a
trouble of about fifteen years' standing.
I have tried almost everything without
.any lasting benefit, but I can lionestly
and truthfully state that Pyramid Pile
cure has entirely cured me, and X havo
had no return of that terrible Itching,
which used to keep-roe awake by the
hour, night after night . If the old trou
ble should ever return I will know Juaj
what to do, but I guess H won't, for It is
now six or seven months since I first
used this wonderful remedy."
. We vouch for the authenticity of the
testimonial, and as Air. Mllbury found
relief and a cure, so you may also. Do
not delay, but buy a box and try it to
night and do not allow any dealer to
sell you "something Just as good." You
wtll dowell to write Pyramid Drug Co.,
Marshall, Mich., for thIr little book on
the causes and cure of piles, which is
sent free for the asking.
' "(Waablntton . Bureau of The Journal.)
v Washington, Feb. 24. The .Roosevelt
administration Is at - last making ..over
tures to Wall street " The agent conduct
ing the negotiations Is United States
Senator Aldrloh of Rhode Island, and It Is
assured that he Is well chosen since he Is
the father-in-law of John D. Rockefeller,
Jr. Senator. Aldrich's mission Is to as
sure the leading, financiers, and.: large
commercial companies that . they have
nothing to fear from President .Roosevelt
should he secure a second term. Sena
tor Aldrlch Is not marching into Wall
street with a brass band in full play ad
vertising his operations, nor does he go
like the Mormon missionaries, ."without
purse and scrip," but all. the same with
Industry he is influencing the Interests
of the street and solemnly assuring them
that what he has to say is true.- When
it is pointed out to him, as it has been
more than once, that two 'of the four
planks the president has publicly declared
he will stand on 'in the coming cam
paign, are, first, his attack on the princi
ple on' which the Northern Security com
pany is based, and which the legal de
partment of his administration has
pushed to the court of last ' resort, and
second, his attitude and participation in
the great coal strike of a year, still
shakes he the senatorial head, and re
peats the assuVances that the great
financial and large commercial interests
of (he -country have nothing to fear "from
President Roosevelt -
In short, there are people In the finan
cial district who do not hesitate to say
that Senator Aldrlch is acting as Presi
dent Roosevelt's political agent and that
his mission is to placate the great finan
cial and large commercial Interests, and
allay their fears as to the acts and pro
nunciations of the present administration
Intended to be vote getters. And It Is
asserted with a chuckle that the agent
Is well chosen, since he is the father-in-law
of John D. Rockefeller, Jr. That
Senator Aldrlch has been busy In his
visits to financiers,' and .'that he has
given them assurances will .not be de
nied, for It cannot be.
That this mission Is a part of a well
defined plan Is also asserted and proof Is
offered in this: That no person promi
nent in finance and commerce goes to
Washington but he Is Invited to dine at
the whitehouse, while the fact Is com
municated, not by the diner, to the press.
One of the recent diners at the white
house was. John W. Gates. He said so
In "the street" many times after his re
turn from Washington, and each time
he added, -"Roosevelt's bark fs 'worse
than, his bite." A. J, Cassatt who is a
Democrat and is the head of a 'monster
railway system which will be In an extra
ordinary position If the contention of the
administration In the Northern Securities
case is sustained, was a diner at the
whitehouse, but a short time ago, a fact
that was widely spread by the press at
that time. It Is but a day or two ago
that-the -l.announcement ...was made in
the press that J. Plerpont Morgan and
John A. McCall . had been received at
the whitehouse this week.
Another Wall-street agent of the ad
ministration is the late secretary of war,
Hon. Ellhu Root. Mr. Root who has re
sumed his practice of law In New York
city, is In close touch with- the' large
corporate Interests centered there, and
like Senator Aldrlch he has a definite
mission to perform in convincing these
interests that their welfare Is better as
sured in the keeping of President Roose
velt -than it would be in the hands of a
Democratic president. It Is pointed out
that even should a conservative eastern
Democrat be elected to the presidency
the Influence surrounding his administra
tion,, would be of the socialistic order
and entirely Inimical to business stability.
In fact, a carefully devised plan Is In
operation to placate and allay the fears
of the business Interests and hold these
Interests- in line for Roosevelt
There la a persistent rumor here that
an understanding has been effected be
tween William R. Hearst and General
Miles by Which a Hearst and Miles ticket
Is to be put in the field, and the questions
have been asked a number of times re
cently If General Miles is a candidate
for the presidency, or will ha accept a
nomination for vice-president General
Miles makes no comment himself one
way or the other, and no one Is qualified
to talk for him. Recently when both
questions were put at him .point blank,
he said: "I decline ro talk on the sub
ject of politics." It Is the general opin
ion here that General Miles would not
decline a nomination for the vice-presidency.
He is leading a juiet life, but
maintains a keen interest in the events
here and abroad. Were he to enter the
political field he would undoubtedly con
tinue his oppossition to the policy of ex
pansion as represented In the purchase of
the Philippines. Recently, on this sub
ject, he said:
"The contrast between war and peace
Is illustrated In the fact that what the
treasury has expended in the Philippines
would have put water on every quarter
section of the arable land in our country
where it Is required. It would have built
for the farmers of this country a system
of good roads,' or built two ship canals
across the Isthmus. " And yet, with all
that has been expended, the Philippines
Is not a country for an American woman
or family." .
A party of white-capped and aproned
American women nurses Is being organ
ised here to Journey to the far east
In order to take paYt In the hostilities
there This band of nurses Is being
organized , by Dr. Anita Newcomb Mc
Gee, who was the moving spirit In the
organisation of the corps of volunteer
nurses in our late war with Spain. The
list of those who will go on the expedi
tion Is confined strictly to nurses who
served in the Spanish war. The organi
zation will be completed in time for the
party to sail for the orient March 1.
There will not be more than 12 nurses
accompanying the first expedition.
"We have ample funds to carry out
our project," said Mrs. McGee today.
VWe calculate that 2100 will provide for
one nurse. This will cover all expenses.
Including uniforms, up to the time of her
arrival in Japan, when the Japanese
government will foot the bills. We ex
pect no salary whatever, giving our
services entirely free.. The Japanese
government will . provide rations and
quarters and we will furnish the rest
We will have two sets of uniforms,
blankets, ponchos and other things that
go with a full outfit The hospital uni
form will be of silk pongee, and the field
uniform will, consist of the usual blouse
and skirt made of brown serge, em
ployed In officers' uniforms In our army.
Each of the nurses will wear on her
left arm a red cross, the sign of neu
trality. " We offered our- services to the
Japanese government because we think
that they ace more nearly like Americans
than the Russians: that they are fighting
practically for their Independence In pro
tecting thetnselvesjagalnst the advances
of the Russians, and the element of
patriotism are found only on the Japan
ese side. We realize that we have no
child's play before us. None of the
nurses are looking upon this business as
a pleasure lark. It will be rough, hard
work in a strange country, under ad
rerse climatic and other conditions. Most
of us expect to go direct, to the field of
military operations In Korea and Man
churia." .
"Jti"s. McGee has been swamped with
applications to Join her band of nurses,
but she has confined the list to those
who saw service In the Spanish-American
war and who have special training as
surgical nurses and dictists. Those who
accompany Mrs. McGee must pledge
themselves to remain in the service at
least six months. Mrs. McGee holds a
certificate of graduation from, a medical
school, and In addition to being the
organizer for volunteer nurses during
the war with Spain, she was appointed
an assistant surgeon in the United
States afmy. She lives in a beautiful
heme in this city, filled; with' artlstto
furniture and decorations, and after vis
iting it one appreciates that Mrs. Mc
Gee Is indeed a true Samaritan to be
willing to leave such attractive sur
roundings for the uncertainties of Man
churia and Korea. .. " '. T
O. B. THOMAS BXTTTBHS TBOM
BASTEBH TBCP WZTS VBWB 01
CHICAGO ' SHOP OXBS 8TBIXB
10W TEMPSBATTntB OBIT HADB
MAIDENS 1SOBB BAJUBO.
F, J. Payne, of the Yellowstone Na
tional Par, who is visiting the capital,
says that catelo, the cross between the
buffalo and the cow, of which so much
has been said, la pn unalloyed fraud
and failure.
. "In the first place," said he, "they
are too -hideously ugly to be permitted
In the sight' of sensitive persons, and
In the second place well, everything
else. '..,-''. ' '
"The only characteristic they have In
common la their ugliness. One will have
a neck like a giraffe, and another no
neck st all; One will have a hump like
a camel, while the other will present
the dwindling - shanks of a greyhound.
They are of so many different colors
that the rainbow is cast in the shade,
but, like other marks of the animals,
the colors are invariable unattractive,
running from a dirty white to an imi
tation sky blue. In the matter of horns
they are equally Inconsistent, their ap
pendages in this direction ranging from
a pair that would do -credit to a Texas
steer to no horns at all."
Chas. Dick, whose election as United
States senator from Ohio to succeed
Senator Hanna seems certain. Is the
natura legatee of the late senator's po
litical strength In. Ohio. His rise was
co-incident with that of Hanna's, and
with him he took a leading part In the
campaign for the nomination of Mc
Kinley in 1896. After McKinley was
nominated, he had charge of the west
ern headquarters of the republican na
tional committee, and later was made
secretary of the committee. Mr. Dick'o
strength Is essentially with the politic
ians, and be probably knows personally
more republican workers than any other
man In the United States. He has not
the broadness of character that disting
uished Senator Hanna, and he is almost
entirely out of touch with the business
world, The biography of Mr. Dick, as
published In the Congressional Directory,
states that he was born at Akron, No
vember S. 1858, Is a lawyer, served In
the 8th Ohio volunteer Infantry in Cuba
In the war with Spain, was elected to the
6 St a, 66th and 67th congresses, and re
elected to the 68th congress.
A tradition of the senate that Us new
and young members should be seen and
not heard has been swept away. Senator
Beverldge of Indiana violated the tradi
tion when in the first year of his mem.
bership he made a formal and lengthy
speech on the Philippine question. Sen
ator Patterson in his first session went
beyond Beverldge, for he spoke on prac
tically every subject which came before
the senate. During the present ses
sion of congress, ' senators Newlands,
Fulton. Clarke of Arkansas, Stone, Hop-,
kins, Latimer, McCreary and Overman,'
all new members, have made speeches
and' participated in debates. The older
members of the senate like Cockrell,
Hoar and Allison stana aghast at this
infraction of the unwritten law of the
body, but the rule that a new member
shall do nothing beyond, presenting peti
tions. Introducing bills .and answering
to roll call, seems to have been swept
away for good.
p- J. Adam Bede, the new funny man
of the house of representatives, besrs
a striking resemblance, to James Whit
comb Riley, both so fsr as personal fea
tures go, bis gestures In talking, and
in his brilliant wit Bede is a natural
humorist and this fact crops out in
his private conversations, as also In his
efforts on the stump and on the lecture
platform. Since -his witty speech in
congress he has been deluged with in
vitations to appear at dinners and ban
quets to make addresses. Bede is sn
old newspaper man, and Is credited by
many with being the best paragrapher
In the country. - He worked as a re
porter in -Washington some years ago.
and made the acquaintance of the many
public men who gather in this el'y.
When Cleveland was president Bede de
cided that he wanted a government Job,
and wrote a little note to the president
on a piece of birch bark, saying he
would like to . -e made United States
marshal for Minnesota. He got the Job.
Bede was a democrat -ten years ago, and
supported Cleveland In 1892. He switched
when Bryan was nominated in 1896. and
since that time has been one of the most
effective speakers on the republican
side.
Secretary Hitchcock Intends to make
it as difficult as possible for entrymen
to prove up on desert land filings. In a
recent ruling he holds that entrymen
must have absolute right to sufficient
water to successfully irrigate the land:
that the system of ditches to conduct
the water to and distribute it over the
land must be adequate for the purpose,
and that the land must have been ac
tually Irrigated for a period long enough
to demonstrate the sufficiency of the
water supply and the effectiveness of
the system. Actual tillage must also
be shown, and that if It appears that
on account of climatic conditions crops
other than grass csnnot be successfully
produced, or that actual tillage will de
stroy or injure its productiveness of a
crop of hay of marketable value, the
result of actual irrigation may be ac
cepted as sufficient compliance with the
requirements cs to cultivation. Proof
which show that because, of irrigation
there Is on the land, "a marked In
crease In the growth of grass," or that
"grass sufficient to support stock has
been produced on all the land," wtll
not be accepted ss showing compliance
with the law. It is stated by the of
ficers of the interior department that it
has frequently been the practice of large
canal companies in the west ' to sell
water rights far in excess of the water
supply, or the carrying capacity of the
ditches, and this decision as rendering
such water right as no value as proofs,
will serve, the officials state, to protect
innocent purchssers who .. contemplate
taking up homes on desert lands in the
vicinity of these canals.
The committee on military affairs of
the senate has favorably reported a bin
authorizing the issue of obsolete-ordnance
and ordnance Stores for the use
of state and territorial educational in
stitutions. These store will be Issued
' G. B, Thomas,' vice-president of the
Port of Portland commission, returned
home last evening from Newark, Ohio,
where he attended a family reunion at
the old homestead On the Teturn trip
he stopped a day' at Chicago, and while
there says he saw a sight which made
an indelible Impression.. -
"I eaw 600 girls," said he, "on the
warpath. ' They were employes of Weld
erman's big department store, which Is
located on the corner' of Milwaukee
avenue. They had gone on a strike for
higher wages, and no fiercer fight was
ever made than they were Making.
"It seems .that the teamsters were
bound down to their employers by a
two-years', agreement Notwithstanding
this the girls wanted them to declare a
sympathetic strike, and refuse to han
dle the Weiderman goods. The team
sters could not see their way clear to,
comply with the request, and a three
cornered fight was precipitated. They be
gan to spar with the teamsters more
zealously than they did with their em
ployers. .
"Whenever one of the drivers loaded
his fuck or dray with Wetderman
frieght 'he was pounced upon by about
60 of the dauntless maids who made his
Ufa a real burden. Some of them would
seize the horses' bits and others would
climb in the wagon and grab the driver
by the ears, nose and hair and force
him to get 'down and beg for mercy.
But none was shown. All around the
big store they had- wagons held up In
the same manner, and they were certain
ly mistresses of the situation. Big
crowds gathered to take in the sight
but no one Interfered not even the
police.
"The thermometer was 12 degrees be
low zero, but it seemed to have no ter
rors for the girls."
upon the recommendation of the gov
ernor of the state or territory, and the
institution receiving the same will have
to . pay the transportation charges.
There Is a vast amount of ordnance and
discarded equipment of every character
lying around the different forts and
posts throughout the country of no use
whatever. Generally, after it ha's rotted
and mildewed a board of army officers
is convened at some expense who
solemnly go over the different heaps of
stuff and solemnly condemn It, and It Is
either given to second-hand dealers or
is destroyed. Many military academies
throughout the country have requested
ordnance and equipment which could no
longer be used by the army, but under
the law It could not be given to them.
Senator Proctor of Vermont has there
Yore introduced the above bill and it has
been favorably reported and in all prob
ability will be enacted Into law at the
present session.
The horse and carriage graft inquiry
started by Representative Hitchcock
has practically failed, and the real facts
back of the graft have not been brought
to light Mr. Hitchcock was on the
right track, but the more experienced
members out-maneuvered him, so that
his inquiry when adopted, permitted the'
heads of the departments, to whom It
was directed, to give the most barren
information on the subject As a matter
of fact, the abuse of the public vehicle
privilege extends away beyond what was
indicated In the replies of the heads of
the departments. None of them took
the occasion to state in his report that
chief clerks and heads of divisions are
accustomed to take their Sunday drives
and horseback rides in carriages and on
horses bought and maintained by the
government Heads of separate bureaus
of the government were saved from re
porting the abuses of the horse and
carriage privileges, by the fact that the
inquiry was directed solely to the
cabinet officers. The reports of the
cabinet officers merely stated the num
ber of horses and carriages in use, and
the value of same. This Information
was of no particular use to the house
of representatives, and consequently the
proposed investigation has flattened out
to almost nothing.
'
"(?,li-v.'.wi;ii"..-,.-"sCM'4j "" Wtf'r
mm - jja. la'.'WlT." JT
1
-' -vy
on
Merit
For smoothness,
. delightful aroma,
and rich flavor,
Golden
4- $
Gate
has no equal. No matter
from whom you buy,
it's the same coffee.
Always uniform.;
1 and 2 lb. aroma-tight tins.
At high grade grocers.
Grind fresh each day not too , fine,
J. A. TOLGER OX CO., 4" frtselict
Import and Rtaiisrs ef r In. OldiCof
Officers of the Insular bureau of the
war department say that the war in the
far east will precipitate a boom In the
Philippines. Even before hostilities be
gan an agent of the Japanese govern
ment arranged for the purchase of 24,
000,000 rations of rice. Japan Is de
pending upon the Philippines to furnish
the bulk of the rice needed for Its troops
during the war.. Since this first order
was given, large additional orders were
placed for rice to be delivered at Yoko
hama and Nagasaki. The Philippines
would be unable to meet these orders
but for the fact that the rice crop of
last year beat all records. It Is de
scribed as simply phenomenal. The
yield of one province is said to be 825,
000.000 pounds. It was enough to sup
ply the whole Island of Luzon. The re
ports from other provinces all Indicate
tremendous crops. Lack of transporta
tion facilities Is all that stands In the
way of making the year one of great
profit to the growers. The Insular bu
reau officers say that this is the first
time Jn a generation that the natives
have had a chance to grow and market
rice without interference either from
insurgents, tax collectors or political
schemers.
NEGROES ROB POSTAL
CAR AND KILL CLERK
(Journal Bpc!l SpttIc..)
Birmingham, Ala., March 1. In an at
tempt byagang of negro desperadoes
to rob a postal car attached to train No.
2 of the Alabama Great Southern Lim
ited, near Meridian, Miss., yesterday,
J. T. Stockton, a postal clerk, was
shot and killed and Postal Clerk
A. J. Ban was shot in the ' arm.
Jim Paris, colored, who did the shoot
Ing. secured the registered letters, but
in Jumping from the train crushed his
leg. He dragged himself three miles
where he was captured by bloodhounds.
f It is worth your while, who
ever you are, to know
Schilling's Best
tM ,
coffee
baklBf-powAer
BatorlDf tx tracts
plots
and the moneyback dealing by
which they are sold by the best
of the grocers on this Coast
JS3
TALKING--MACHINES
Sold on the
Installment Plan
' $5 Down
and $1 a Week
Running
in Price from
$3.50 to
$100
A VSKPETTTAXi OXIJOHT XTX THE ROIOS st all seasons of the year la that unfailing souros of more kinds of
entertainmsnt than' caa be extracted from any aosen other Instruments combined, namely -
The
Wfclon la the prince of entertainer. The mnslo of band or orchestra is render ad by It in a manner absolutely
faithful to the original, and It will sing your favorite songs as well as any artist can, or tell yon funny storias
when yon are In the humor for amusement There la no other instrument known to science which caa furnish
such a variety of entertainment. Xo not let your home be dull for want of one. On request' ws wtll send on to
your house for examination. Phone, Main 1750. , '
Columbia
Phonograph
Company
345 WASHINGTON STREET
128 Seventh Street
Our Columbia River
Logger
Jfnd tha Prle on it is Right
Mr.
Shoe Merchant:
We are still making some rattling
good shoes. We put Custom oak
sole leather in the bottoms, Asbes
tos leather in the tops and sew
them with silk. Do you know
what Asbestos leather is? It is
the hardest wearing material on
the market If you want some
good shoes, let us hear from you
and we will guarantee satisfaction.
RE
I'D fiJ E
9 AND II NORTH TlaST STREET
Rise -a
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