The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984, July 12, 1934, Page 3, Image 3

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    THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON.
THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1934
FARM CO-OPERATIVE DIVISION
A
ECOOPERATOR
PRINCIPLES OF SUCCESSFUL
COOPERATIVE MARKETING
Specialized Business—
MESSAGE
TO
EVERY MEMBER.
CANNERY SCHEDULE.
Butter Prices Hold Strong.
July 16 to 21
Butter prices have been showing
a stronger tone throughout the
United States at a time when nor­
mally the trend is still downward.
This condition results from a com­
bination of four outstanding fac­
tors; namely, low milk production
per cow. a large proportion of dry
cows, less than average storage re­
serves, and relatively strong de­
mand.
Due to the very poor condition of
pastures over a large area, the short
age of hay and relatively high feed
costs, milk production per cow on
June 1 was lower than on that date
in any recent year. It is also to be
noticed that an unusually low pro­
portion of the milk cows on farms
are actually being milked, and.
therefore, the output of milk is
small in relation to the heavy cow
population. There has been some
liquidation of milk cows in the more
severe drought areas but this has
not yet reached large proportions.
Total milk production on June 1 ap­
pears to have been 5 to 6 per cent
below production on that date last
year.
United States storage holdings of
butter on June 1 totaled 27,110,000
pounds, or about 8 million pounds
less than on June 1, 1933, and 8.5
million pounds less than the June 1
average of 1929-1933. Pacific Coast
holdings were about 1.8 million
pounds greater than they were a
year previous. The rate at which
butter has moved Into storage in the
35 large cities recently has been but
little over half the into-storage
movement of a year ago.
With butter stocks less than aver­
age at the present time, production
conditions unfavorable in the North
Central State, and consumer expen­
diture for butter larger this spring
than a year ago, the statistical sit­
uation seems favorable.
A. M.— 8 to 11
P. M.—1 to 3:30
Monday—Beans 2%s, A.
Corn, 2‘s, P. M.
Tuesday—Beans, 2s, A. M. Corn
2s, P. M.
Wednesday—Beets, 2 %
M-;
No canning, P. M.
M.;
Thursday—Bea ns, 2 % s.
Corn, 2‘s P. M.
Friday—Beans, 2s, A. M.; Corn
2a, P. M.
Saturday—No canning.
The cooperative must conduct its
business in a specialized line rather
than try to carry on several differ­
ent types of work. Few associa­
tions are existing today that have
carried on a diversified business. On
the other hand, successful coopera­
tives in specialized lines are very FARM BUREAU AUXILIARY
numerous. Leading cooperatives to­ NEWS OF GENERAL INTEREST
day are those which are engaged in
The ladies of the Farm Bureau
handling only one product, such as
dairy, grain, vegetables, fruit, or Auxiliary plan to hold the annual
lawn party on the club house lawn
eggs.
Management and organization of in Columbia park Friday, July 27.
the marketing association have been At this time a free-will offering
successfully coordinated when the will be taken as a benefit to build
entire set-up deals only with the a club house porch. The committee
channels through which only one to make arrangements consists of
type of commodity or allied commo­ Mrs. J. H. Reid, Mrs. Jackson Harr
dities must pass. Wheat pools have and Mrs. Alfred Cable. Members of
been successful in handling oats and the refreshment committee are: Mrs.
barley in addition because they are C. L. Upham, Mrs. Tom Wilson and
products which use the same or Mrs. W. A. Mikesell.
similar routes and equipment in
being marketed.
An all day meeting will be 'held
The chief reason given for the Friday, July 20, at the club house
collapse of the Oregon Growers’ Co- with a pot luck dinner served at
operative assôciation is that the at­ noon, for the purpose of building
tempt was made to handle too great the club house porch. The men are
a variety of products. The Federal being asked for donation labor for
Fruit and Vegetable Growers, Inc., this day. Members of the committee
a national sales agency, has a rather arranging for the day are: Mrs.
diversified business in fruits and Frank Guiwits, Mrs. H. T. Clark
vegetables and seems to be the only and Mrs. Ed Dunning.
exception to the rule. Dr. Cornish
attributes its success to the “large
Members of the committee ar­
volumes of business and the ability
ranging
the program for thé meet­
to keep its representatives busy all
the year round by offering fruits ing Friday, July 6, are Mrs. Tom
and vegetables continuously to the Wilson, Mrs. Lester Hammer and
trade as the seasons come and go.” Mrs. E. E. Rainwater.
Whether the association is a cen­
tralized one or a federation or a AVERAGE PRICES RECEIVED
community cooperative, they alike FOR FARM PRODUCTS.
have run amuck and most of them
have failed when attempting to
Spokane, Wn.—Herewith is table
handle lines of unrelated commodi­ of the average prices for farm pro­
ties.
ducts received by farmers of Wash­
ington and Oregon, June 15, 1933,
Adequate Volume—
and June 15, 1934, according to re­
Closely tied up with the need for port by John S. Dennee, federal ag­
a specialized business is the need ricultural statician for Washington"
for adequate volume. A common and Oregon:
cause of failure is the lack of suffi­
Wheat per bushel .............................
cient volume of trade to insure suc­
Hay per ton ........................................
cess. Although the law of diminish­
Potatoes per bushel ........................
ing returns would operate In a co-
Hogs per hundred pounds ............
operative that got to be too large,
Apples per hundred pounds ...........
it has had very little chance to op­
Beef per hundred pounds ...............
erate yet in associations in this
Veal per hundred pounds ...............
country.
Sheep per hundred pounds .............
Adequate volume is relatively
Whole milk per hundred pounds .
more important to the cooperative
Wool per hundred pounds .............
than it is to any other business.
The cooperative can not be expected REPUBLICANS WILL GATHER IN
to satisfactorily fill any need if PENDLETON, MONDAY, JULY 16.
there is not enough business on
hand to keep the equipment or staff
Joe E. Dunne, Republican nomi­
operating at close to capacity. In­ nee for governor, Earl Snell, Repub­
sufficient activity is linked up with lican nominee for secretary of state,
lack of interest on the part of mem­ Jay Upton, Republican congression­
bers, which is detrrimental to the al nominee for this district, and C.
life of the association.
A. Howard, nominee and present
Benefits derived from large vol­ state superintendent of public in­
umes of business are the same as struction, will be the principal
those in any privately operated or­ speakers at a republican banquet to
ganization. The 'concern builds up a be held next Monday evening. July
strong buying power for equipment 16. at 6:30 o’clock in the dining
and supplies, develops powerful room of the Elks building in Pen­
bargaining and selling power in dleton.
handling purchases and sales of its
Members of the county central
commodity and operates more effi­ committee, the congressional com­
ciently than is possible with less mitteemen, state committeemen from
volume.
many of the eighteen counties of the
second district, the republican nom­
inees for county and city offices and
Editor’s Note: This is one of a
republicans from the city and coun­
series of articles on cooperative
ty will gather at the banquet. The
marketing, much of the data for
affair is not planned as a huge re­
which was taken from the work
publican rally but as a banquet
of Dr. N. H. Cornish, W. W. Cum­
where members of the party may
berland, W. E. Humphrey, A. W.
become well acquainted with the
McKay, C. H. Lane, Henry C.
major state nominees and the other
Wallace and the American Bank­
visiting leaders, according to J.
ers Association.
Lowell Stockman, chairman of the
county central committee
Speeches by Dunne, Snell, Upton
U. of 0. Art Students Honored.
and Howard will be the feature of
Eugent, Ore.—A pencil sketch, the evening since the committee in
made by Mrs. Almse Gorham, stu­ charge of the banquet feels that the
dent in art at the University of local and visiting republicans will
Oregon summer session, has been be moet interested in hearing from
used as the cover illustration for a and meeting the leaders of the state
current number of School Life, ticket. All republicans are Invited
monthly organ of the office of edu­ to attend the affair but reservations
cation of the department of the in­ must be made before Saturday even­
terior. Mrs. Gorham’s sketch de­ ing with either Rex Ellis, secretary
picts a crew of C.C.C. workers la­ of the county central committee, or
boring in the forests. She is a stu­ members of the banquet committee
dent in the Carnegie art class, • A. L. Koeppen, John Kilkenny and
project financed by the Carnegie Clarence Penland. A charge of 75c
Corporation at the university here per plate will be made.
Congressional committeemen from
in the west, and at Harvard in the
the eighteen counties of the second
east.
district will meet with Tom Elliott,
After a farmer In Datchet. End., chairman of the state central com­
had abandoned his home because of mittee. during Monday afternoon In
a ghost It was learned that the ghost the Chamber of Commerce rooms in
was only an owl.
.
the Elks building.
THE FASTEST SELLING
CAR IN AMERICA
Here’s a sales record from Wayne
Ccunty (Detroit. Mich.) where
they know and produce cars:
Ford Chev. Plym. I
December. 1933 J 1046
January. 1934 ... 1420 j
February. 1934 ,.| 2208 I
March. 1934 ... ] 3342
April, 1934 .... ...| 3750
May, 193 4 ..... ... 4950 1
16.716 I
83
176
708
1069
1228
1143
4407
1 180
1 221
1 720
1 1006
1 840
I 720
I 3 6 8 7
After you ride and drive in the
New V8 you will understand
such an outstanding sales record.
IF IT ISN'T A V-8,
IT’S OUT OF DATE.
ROHRMAN
Motor Co.
PHONE 571
HERMISTON, OREGON
WANT ADS
WANTED—A BOY, 13 YEARS OF
age or older, to work in exchange
for piano lessons. Goldia Mumma,
Hermiston.
46-ltc
FOR SALE—STANDARD MAKE
piano near Hermiston. Will sac­
rifice for unpaid balance. A snap.
Easy terms. Write Tallman Piano
Store, Salem, Ore.
44-3tc
WESTERN YELLOW BLIGHT
SWIFT & CO.—BUYERS OF POUL-
try and Eggs. A. M. Smith, Her-
27 Itfc I
Curly-top disease, which on toma­ miston. Ore., Agent.
toes is commonly called western yel­
low tomato blight, has definitely ap­ CANNING PEACHES, 3c AT THE
peared this year in most parts of
orchard. W. T. Bray, Umatilla, j
western Oregon for the second time Oregon.
4 6-Aug. 30 |
In recent history. In 1926 curly top
STRAYED
1 BLACK HORSE
Washington
Oregon
(mule) brand IB, right hip; 1 |
1933
1934
1933
1834
bay, brand SD, left hip. Notify R. |
.46
.63
.51
.65
Isackson, Eugene Ranch, Rt. I, Her-
9.50
7.90
8.80
6.80
miston.
46-ltpfc
.60
.55
.65
.55
4.65
3.60
•4.60
3.55
.70
.85
.65
1.15
CANYON CITY—The grasshopper
4.55
3.60
4.20
3.45
menace in Grant county, so far as
5.20
4.90
4.95
4.50
a serious infestation goes, is a thing
2.85
3.00
2.70
3.40
of the past for this year, reports
1.20
1.25
1.25
1.50
County agent R. G. Johnston. The
.19
.21
.21
.21
Logan Valley Cattlemen’s associa-
tion worked diligently and with !
appeared in thei Willamette valley federal aid tor supplies has com-
after continued east winds which pletely wiped out the beds in that |
are believed to have aided the mi- district, Mr. Johnston says, thus
gration of the leaf hopper insects
saving summer feed for at least
which carry the virus of the di- 4000 head of cattle. The main beds
sease.
in the Fox Valley district were also
Just what conditions have favored poisoned and killed out before the
the migration of the insects across hoppers spread very badly.
the mountains this year are not ful­
ly known by scientists at the Oregon
No. 9281.
Reserve Dist. No. 12
State college experiment station, but
REPORT OF CONDITION OF
it is known that there has been a
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
rapid build-up of numbers of the
hoppers through the early spring of Hermiston, in the State of Oregon, at the close
of business on June 30, 1934.
and that migrations seem to be in­
RESOURCES
duced by such rapid increases in Loans and discounts .............................. $ 95,598. 42
numbers.
Overdrafts ..........
.............. ........ ..
None
The blight on tomatoes may kill United States Gov. securities owned .. 54,050.00
Securities guaranteed by U.S. Gov.
6.500.00
very young plants outright. On old­ Other bonds, stocks, securities, etc
12,982 50
er plants the disease stops growth, Banking house............................
8,000 00
the leaflets tend to roll up, become Real estate owned other than banking
house...................................... ..... .
7,146.30
yellow and leathery and veins on a
Reserve with Federal Reserve Bank
39,002.29
purplish color. Fruits of affected Cash and due from banks
55,586.07
plants ripen prematurely and the Redemption fund with U. S Treasurer
plants gradually- die.
and due from U. S. Treasurer
312.50
448.75
Unlike most virus disease, curly- Other Assets -.................. ......... .. ...............
top is transmitted from plant to
Total
$279,426.83
plant only by the beet leaf-hopper,
LIABILITIES
Tutetix tenella. The adults carry
Demand deposits ....................
.......
134.925.15
the virus over winter in their bo­
Deposits
.
dies. and while the young are free Time
Public funds of States, counties, etc.
82,665.65 |
of the virus at first, they become Due to banks including cashier’s checks
outstanding
....
..........
2,930.60
carriers as soon as they feed on an
Capital stock paid in................................. 25,000.00
Infected 'plant.
10,000.00 |
Surplus ...............
« ..
No "cure” for the disease is Undivided profits---- net ..... .......... ......... 18,468.71 |
known and no satisfactory control
Total
..................... $279,426.83
of the insect carriers has been de­
Pledged against circulating notes out­
veloped. East of the Cascades fair
standing
........... .
6,250.00
control has been obtained on a small Pledged against public funds of States,
counties, school districts, or other
scale by keeping plants covered un­
subdivisions or municipalities
10,000.00
til about July, after which they Total Pledge ......... ........................... $16,250.00
seem to resist the virus if not pre­ County of Umatilla 1 * ■
viously infected. Shading has also I, A. H Norton, cashier of the above named
helped as the hoppers prefer hot
dry, conditions.
A. H NORTON, Cashier.
Roguing out the diseased plants
Subscribed and sworn tn before me this 6th day
is recommended though not as a ma­
July, 1934.
jor means of preventing spread.
Transmission by contact of a di­
seased plant with another has nev­
R ALEXANDER
er been observed. Beets are the fa­
F. B SWAYZE,
vorite feeding and breeding plants
w L HAMM
Directors
for the hoppers, but tomatoes, beans
BAD ON OREGON TOMATOES.
and squash are seriously affected.
Metallic Silver Helps
Purify Drinking Water
Metallic silver in an Ionic condition
appears to exercise s very effective
bactericidal action on the germs which
are usually present in drinking water,
say Scientific American.
Various
means of introducing silver ions Into
water are described in Chemical Age.
An electrical method Involves the pas­
sage of the water between silver elec­
trodes through which a very small cur­
rent is continuously passing. By this
method an effective number of silver
ions sre introduced Into the water
with the aid of a three to five milliam­
pere current.
One of the earlier methods of puri­
fication was based upon the ability of
water to take up silver by merely al-
lowing it to trickle over glass beads
coated with a very thin layer of the
metal. A suitable small-scale plant
consists of a 25-quart stoneware jar
filled with a quantity of silver-coated
glass beads which reduces the capacity
to 18 quarts. The water is passed into
the Jar via a tube filled with silver-
coated quartz fibers, and a velocity of
flow of half to one quart per minute
suffices for thorough Infection.
A curious feature of this catadyne
process can itself he used as a steri Ha­
Ing agent for mineral water bottles
and the like. It appears that on al­
lowing such silver-charged water to
stand in a glass bottle for several
hours, a proportion of the tonic silver
becomes transferred to the walls of
the bottle and serves to sterilise any
liquid subsequently poured Into it
Girls in Teens Lead Sex
in the Habit of Blushing
Girls of high school and college age
blush more than older women, accord­
ing to psychologists, says the Chicago
American. Thousands of question­
naires filled out by girls and women
of all* ages were summarized as fol­
lows :
L Blushing Is most common among
girls between thirteen and seventeen
years of age, with 61 per cent admit­
ting that they blush frequently; it is
least common among married women
over fifty, with only 21 per cent ad­
mitting that they are habitual blushers.
2. Unmarried women are 35 per
cent more apt to blush than married
women. The greatest difference In
blushing habits between married and
single women is between the ages of
twenty to twenty-five. During these
years blushing Is 50 per cent more
common among unmarried than among
married women.
3. Both married and unmarried
women show a distinct tendency to
stop blushing as they grow older.
4. Divorced women blush much
more frequently than married women
who are still living with their hus­
bands.
5. Widows blush less than divorcees,
but more than married women.
PAGE THREW
'll
MANY OSC STUDENTS MAKE
SPRING TERM HONOR ROLL.
In spite of popular opinion as to
the effect of spring westher on stu­
dents' Inclination to study, an unu­
sually large number of students st
Oregon Stste college made the
straight “A” honor roll for last
spring term, according to the report
just released by E. B. Lemon, regis-
trar. A total of 26 made perfect
grades, while 86 others made aver­
ages of 2.5 or above. Although men
out-number women about two to one
in the student body, 12 of the 26
straight "A’s” were made by women.
Thcrald Moeller, senior in engi­
neering from Toledo, and Henry
Levinger. senior in pharmacy from
Baker, tied for highest individual
honors by making perfect grsdes
for the seventh term during their
college careers.
Others on the straight "A” list
were as follows; Wilbur T. Cooney,
Roseburg; Virginia L. Fendali, For­
est Grove; Thelma A. Gregory. New­
berg; Marlon N. Nance, Hood Riv­
er; Gwendolyn I. Haight, Cottage
Grove; Ewald Rohrman, Pendleton;
I. Virginia Chase. Eugene; Mildred
M. Raasina, Astoria; Fletcher Walk­
er, Salem; Maxine Hornbeck, Seat­
tle; Matilda K. Holst, Juneau. Alas­
ka; Carl Neusiis, Baker: Kenneth
I R. Eldredge. Dorothy Atwood, De­
Marls Hertz. Noal Larson, Marjorie
L. Benton, Don E. Johnson, and El­
len V. Lunn, Corvallis; Albert A.
Rosenberg, Waldemar A. Schmidt,
pscar Heintz, Susan H. Miller and
John M. Hogl, Portland.
------------------
1
'I
«
NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN that
the undersigned has been appointed
administratrix of the estate of
Frank L. Jowett, deceased and has
qualified as the law directs. All
persona having claims against said
estate are required to present the
same to me. at the office of W. J.
Warner, my attorney, in Hermiston,
Oregon, with proper vouchers, with­
in six months from the date hereof.
Dated this 12th day of July, 1934.
IDA L. JEWETT.
Administratrix.
(July 12 - August 9)
NOTICE OF HEARING UPON
FINAL REPORT.
IN THE COUNTY COURT OF THE
STATE OF OREGON FOR UMA­
TILLA ’COUNTY.
In the Matter of the Estate of
Robert A. Allen, Deceased.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
the undersigned administrator of
the estate of Robert A. Allen, de­
ceased. has filed his final report
with the Clerk of the above entitled
Court and that the Judge of said
Court has designated Saturday, the
21st day of July, 1934, at 2:00
o'clock in the afternoon as the time,
and the rooms of the above entitled
Court In the County Court House In
Pendleton, Umatilla County. Oregon
as the place when and where hear­
ing is to be had thereon. All per­
sons Interested are hereby notified
to then and there appear and show
cause, if any they have, why said
report should not be aproved, the
administrator discharged, his bonds­
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
men exhonorated and the estate
closed.
IN THE COUNTY COURT OF THE
Dated this 21st day of June, 1934.
STATE OF OREGON FOR UMA­
FRANK A. ALLEN,
TILLA COUNTY.
Administrator.
(June 21—July 19)
-------------------
In the Matter of the Estate of
Frank L. Jewett, Deceased.
HERALD WANT ADS PAY
Business and Professional Cards
HERMISTON
W. J. WARNER
Attorney-at-Law
Hermiston - Oregon
Hermiston Beauty Shoppe
Duart Permanent Wave.
Late Appointments by Phone.
Phone 141
Not Familiar With Wood
Wood is one of man's oldest and
most useful materials for an almost
unlimited number of purposes. Man's
familiarity with It has very often bred.
It not contempt, at least carelessness
in Its use, which lias resulted in unsat-
isfactory service attributable not to
the Inherent qualities of the wood
itself, but rather to its improper
handling. One serious mistake is to
neglect the moisture content of wood,
says a bulletin of the Canadian depart­
ment of the interior. In common with
all other vegetable products, wood con­
tains moisture. The amount so con-
tained Is usually expressed as a per-
centage of the bone-dry weight of ths
wood. Thus “25 per cent M. C." In­
dicates that the weight of water pres­
ent Is one-quarter of the weight of the
absolutely dry wood. The importance
of the moisture lies In the fact that
the dimensions of a block of wood
are. within detinite limits, dependent
upon It.
W. L. Morgan, D. M. D.
General Dentistry
X-Ray and Diagnosis
Bank Bldg.
Phone 9-J
Residence Phone 25-J
Sunday and Evenings by
Appointment
The speeds of some birds are re-
markable. In California a duck hawk
was once timed while chasing Ita prey,
and Its speed was found to have
reached nearly 165 miles an hour.
Maliarda timed In England and France
have exceeded 50 miles an hour, and
when pintails were chased by an air
plane It was found that they flew at
about 65 miles an hour. The common
Canadian goose normally Alea at be­
tween 40 and 45 miles an hour, but
lt has been estimated that speeds of
over 100 miles an hour have been
tained by frightened birds.
Abyssians’ Idea of World
Ostrich egg shells are considered
highly decorative In Addis Ababo,
Abyssinia, where the religion Is a mixed
form of Christianity and the church
owns one-third of all the land. Numer­
ous temples of worship sre surmount-
ed by a cross with ostrich egg shells
stuck over the points—sn ancient sym­
bol of the primitive belief that the
world was created from an egg.
CHIROPRACTOR
Office: Two doors west post office
Office Hours: 8 to 12 - 1:30 to 6
Phone 481 — — Hermiston, Ore.
A. W. CHRISTOPHERSON
Physician and Surgeon.
Bank Building
—
Office Hours
—
—
9-12 and 2-5
Hermiston Post No. 37
t
Meets first and third
Legion Auxil-
meets second and
fourth Thursday.
Legion Hall.
PENDLETON
Constituents of Human Body
A man weighing 150 pounds will con­
tain approximately 3,500 cubic feet of
gas-oxygen, hydrogen and nitrogen—
In his constitution. He also contains
all the necessary fats to make a 15-
pound candle, and thus, together with
his 3,500 cubic feet of gases, he pos­
sesses considerable Illuminating possi­
bilities. His system contains 22 pounds
and 10 ounces of carbon, or enough
to make 780 dozen or 9,360 lead pen-
ells. There are about 50 grains of
Iron In his blood and the rest of the
body would supply enough of this
metal to make one spike large enough
to hold his weight.
DR. A. E. MARBLE
ERNEST GHORMLEY
MEN’S CLOTHING and
LADIES HOSE
Phone 326
301 E. Court St.
Pendleton, Oregon
Office Phone 623
Res. Phone 461
DR. F. L. INGRAM
Dependable Dentistry
Pendleton, Ore.
Bond Bldg.
DR. H. A. NEWTON
Dentist
X-Ray Work
Phone 12
Manicuring, Marcelling Hot Oil
Shampoo, Fingerwaving, Facials
Realistic Beauty Shop
Finger Wave - 60c and 25c
We Specialize in Permanent
Waving
<06 Main St.
Pendleton, Ore.
W. G. FISHER
NEW AND USED FURNITURE
BOUGHT AND SOLD
Bowman Hotel Blk.
Phone 191
507 Main St.
Pendleton, Ore.
Pendleton, Oregon
W. J. CLARKE
TO SELL OR TRADE YOUR
PROPERTY SEE
Majestic Ranges, Red Jacket
Pumps, Iron Pipe, Nails, Fencing
Phone 21
211-213 E. Court St.
Pendleton, Oregon
HARDWARE
J. w CLARKE at
G F HODGES AGENCY
721 Main 8t.
Pendleton, Ore.
WE
BRADLEY & SON
Shoe Rebuilders
We rebuild shoes with machinery
your shoes were made on. The
only factory machines fa Umatilla
County. Mall your shoes te us.
Wo pay the return postage. Bet­
ter shoe repairing for less mon­
ey. Olve us a trial.
Bradlev & Son
Pendleton, Ore.
■ s ■ we s ees ere tre •
643 Main St.
............
Specialize in Good Furni­
ture at Lowest Possible
Prices
Free Delivery
to your door.
FÜRNITURF ©o.
PENOLE TON OREcCN