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Show 0 THE LEW SUN, LEW. UTAH itlw ctionsi tot 4 craft ucisci I one I lot 11 J bdii Fill neei fbaacn ise suii mifliBi ignpnil want to! if there 1 jicallf 1 nfotiOf udircci t JOB LET PJKIi OU UK chv. m MINT,! :iv. Sid ore jw dmcsfij ritbout of gentlfj eel nu Hi QU1CKU shell m elp m nostril 1 ; Nasal kicked M 8. M lft. Sort . . III ifiJStl EYES KATHLEEN NCRWS-VVNU SERVICE ..m-Tontlnued rumbled along ioufihts wove back 'l. V that the - If over she felt oaaiy i Her shoulder hurt rfTAeei dully; she tf hpen done, nut obww 2 be to get home to 1 .wsjrom the crowd, 'Tnd the questions Kranvertakeo, HrS ! pnnv. In a few " ,he would be safe In .Dr; Ansela's round X- would be drinking a she liked it, thestoveforhertoast- f getting dark early?" i' .ji miTsine from .'".irh he occasional- fete!-Frank" SheUa 1 just saw a clock.".., . Ik in PS take time, you PLMMie observed soothing- IT and shaken 88 she .. l -u mnet rpmem. Uht tnai uc to tell Joe. poor puw "V" " ,uJf jng over we f beach and wintry the next minute just that toinai uo"'f --- in a terriDie aci-mcmi m And then, wearily, "But tt I been through In the weeks? a jeel good to be back in 70tk, Sheila?" Frank said, itoeyes - Idoes it! 1 was jusi uiuus.uiS. Lis pumping so, I can hard- ;ie." itre in the city streets; the a bell was ringing steadily si Sheila could see the side- bwds eyeing them interest- He; went through. them telephone Mother I d inn, and to have Doctor Ui at the house," Frank fell! Not much more of tt le'H be comfortable in now, Sheila." fe earth could you phone tliey it & police sergeant do it, him to telephone. Just to say bifbeen a smash and that iH right, and on our way to say that Mother her own judgment about kioucb with your mother" probably got the fire de ft out!" Sheila exclaimed. the poor fellow was killed, ill you can't avoid a cer- pat ol interest in that" khan. airplane smash" wed, struck afresh with tan and horror of it p my training at Bellevue," aid, as they stopped at nj artery, "and my first p a fellow that had come 'pane." She was diverted. sakes look at the " she exclaimed. pnng eagerly out at a cor- 1 she read a headline: 7 Girl in Plane Crash!" minute the words meant lo Sheila. Then her heart imt spring. In the remain- woods that they waited at he leaned forward and mi sheet of the paper, the wrea photographs of the "fpark, the plane's ereat FR the lifted form of the 'iftt ash, all right." Mis "It doesn't take 1r.no itU PaperS nowa mV t! But where do they get zm S sir1'-stuff? Yo" nffl It at F and xou-re his wife, 4 she asked. Mir McCann was just- oucua said, iumea uttle laugh, tte nurse said, in a itn o f.:.i. Sheila explained, "aTy l00k ,d, and unconscious A- Kennedy, of Spuy- eyes young bright pietic. fcto 6et away ?rr don t mean -o," SheUa said .mttettd incoher- Tfcf?, fr "id in a uiS me. ftirw V., wna lhk3; "a "hat hi, tictous. it tot Sheila ad-Miw!-ntit iust 18 had eon 1itSL!Ice hat still '"Wrightl- ru . , ins vat mrnea a corner-were corner-were at the Mc Cann hon' "Oh, God protect us!" Sheila said In a whisper. It was a prayer "Oh Frank," she said, "loo!;! There's a million people waiting!" Not a million. But a crowd that framed both sides of the brown-stone brown-stone steps; a crowd that demanded the constant attention ef two policemen.- Men were pressing forward women were planted in solid lines-all lines-all turned their eyes eagerly to the ambulance as it drew up. "Frank, I can't go in, I'm going on home" Sheila stammered aghast "I can't they've a cam-era cam-era there He had pulled himself together he gripped her hand. "No," he said, "you've got to go through with it Your mother may be here. Come on, just walk through" The crowd buzzed excitedly, as Sheila and a policeman between them supported the limping man across the sidewalk. "Narrow escape. Mr. Mc Cann!" one of the policemen said, respectfully. respect-fully. . .'Til tell the world!" Frank answered, an-swered, with a groan and a smile. The crowd laughed in shocked sympathy. sym-pathy. Sheila looked up. The door of the Mc Cann house opened, a flood of persons poured out; servants, family, fami-ly, and the gray-headed stout man that she was afterward to identify as the family doctor. And with them was Joe Carscadden Joe! and while Sheila was stumbling upward to the lighted wide hallway, half dragging Frank with her, and half dragged herself, she saw her mother, moth-er, majestic in her best dress-Then dress-Then they were all crying and milling about madly in the halL Sheila saw Mrs. Mc Cann, with her face white and tearstained, and she saw the judge, looking somehow old and broken. She caught at his hand. "Judge, I'm so sorry" she fal-tered. fal-tered. Judge Mc Cann brought his distracted dis-tracted gaze to her face. "Now, now, Sheila," he said gently, gen-tly, "accidents will happen! And he returned immediately to the business of the moment "Put your arm around him there, Leo. All right Mary. Hurting you, son?" "It's my arm, look out for my arm" Frank muttered, and the mother's moan was distinguishable above the other moans that suddenly filled the 11. "My darling, my son " "We'll get you right upstairs, Frank; we'll fix you up in five minutes!" min-utes!" the doctor said. Brothers, sisters, servants, parents, par-ents, they surged about him. His voice rang out suddenly, as he was being tenderly lifted upstairs. "Is Sheila there?" "Right here, son," said his father. "Sheila, I must see you before you go!" "Anything, dear'r, anything!" Judge Mc Cann said, faltering, and Sheila heard Frank's effort at a laugh. "I'm not dying. Pop. I want Doc' Underwood to look at her, that's alL She's done something to her shoulder" shoul-der" ... They were all straggling upstairs; they eddied into a big front bedroom bed-room where Mamie was turning down the covers of an immense old-fashioned old-fashioned walnut bed. "They've broke him completely!" Sheila heard her mother say, in a whisper, and Mrs. Mc Cann said weeping, "Oh, Mrs. Carscadden, how they break your heart on you the children." Frank gave another groan as they lowered him against the pillows. "Poor dear!" his mother, bending over him, said tenderly. She began to pray in a low voice. "Mother. I'm all right And the doc' has a lot of dope for me, haven't you, Doc'?" "I'm going to fix you up right here in the dressing-room, Frank," the old doctor said. "Doctor Rus sell is on his way from the hospital now. When he gets here we'll give you a shot put you to sleep "Doctor, do you think there may be internal injuries?" The frantic mother again asked. Frame answered: an-swered: "Internal injuries. Mother forget it! I'm fine. Give you a scare. Pop?" "Good Godl" "We came down," Frank observed briefly. "It was in the paper, Frank. That's the way Pep saw it" "In the paper!" . "The late afternoon edition, with pictures, dear." "They don't lose much time! Lord, fm sorry!" Frank muttered. "Ouch!" Sheila exclaimed, on a wearied and desolate echo of a sob. The old doctor, gently exploring -er shoulder, apologized sympathetical- "Go aisy on her," Mrs. Carscadden Carscad-den warned him. SheUa, complete disarmed by the concern in the beloved be-loved voice, began to cry bitterly m she slipped her bare, bruised snoui der back into her dress and straightened straight-ened the tumbled ruffle of white at her neck. "You had a narrow escape, my dear!! the doctor said, gravely. "Don't l'ave me again," Mrs. Carscadden said in a whisper. Sheila clung to her, their wet faces touching, touch-ing, her mother's arms about her. . . Kathleen Xorris CHAP1EU V1V rfwk, "W'1 his own shoulder restlessly, groaned. "Wouldn't you know the damn' u"ng- he began mildly. He put his uninjured hand on hi, mother's bowed head. "How'd you hear of it Mother?'1 he asked. "Oh. Frank, that was so terrible! God grant wc am have that to go through aeb! Pop saw it in the Paper, but I got it over the tele-Phone tele-Phone It was the police, dear, from Newark The man. said. 'Mr. Mc Umn has been slightly injured!' I tnought of course it was Pop." That must have been hot!" "It wasn't any better when I careen me truth, dear. Mamie had to take the nhoni T f.,it T.iey fayed me up on the sofa, and they tried to reach Papa; but they couldn't find him " "I'm so sorry!" Frank said heavl IV. TT-io W.l, tu- . ,UUIV U1(U ,vas aimost coma naa come into ins eyes again. There were fewer persons in the room now. The younger brothers and sisters were being firmly ejected, eject-ed, one by one. by a powerful, big black-headed woman who was being cajoled by them under the name of "Diddy." They were imploring Did-dy Did-dy to allow thnm to remain, and Diddy Did-dy was sternly refusing. Mamie and two younger maids were running back and forth, in and out of a large, adjoining dressing-room, dressing-room, with sheets, tables, electric- "Mother, I'm all right." light extensions. Someone had lighted light-ed a fire, someone else had drawn shades, someone was standing now with a tray and a steaming cup be side the bed, somebody else had ice in a bowl and was murmuring about comprises." An elderly woman, majestic and assured of demeanor, and identified as "Gramma," had established herself her-self in a great wing chair, near enough to the bed for a clear view of all proceedings; Judge Mc Cann stood at the foot, his graying, black curly hair rumpled, his face grave and pale, his eyes for his son only There were others beside Sheila and her mother; the big luxurious room was full of movement. The doctor, having finished a quick examination of her shoulder, drew Sheila toward the bed. "No harm done here, Frank. She wrenched her shoulder and scratched one side of her face." "Not broken?" Frank asked eagerly. ea-gerly. "Nothing broken." "We're going now," Sheila, beside the bed, said timidly. "I hope they won't hurt you, Frank." His eyes were beginning to burn brightly with fever; he caught at her hand. She looked shabby, tired, sick; there were great rings about her eyes; her lashes were stuck together to-gether in long points. Her hat had been" lost in the crash, and her soft coppery hair was uncovered in the evening lamp-light. Frank remem bered that she had not wanted to By home; she had said she was afraid of it and he had made her do it! Remorse surged in his heart. Thpr was something about this poor little luckless tiling that had appealed to him in the very begin- nf thpir acauaintance; it was UU'b - stronger than ever now. "I'm glad, if anything had to hap-npn. hap-npn. it happened to me!" he said. "It was my fault. Mom, you mustn't Ma me this child. She's oeen Ha tried to smile, but he was weak and in pain; the tears came instea'i- . , .. u -j "She'" been wonderful, he said. "Down in Atlantic City, all this time I knew it Her o-vii mother didn't know it She's such a scary uttio thinL. Pop; she didn't want to n,.mP home to face you alL u. ;m it" He looked through tristy eyes, managing a sicklv smue. "We didn't Know our adve'nture was g'ng to end Lke this. did we. SheUa? ne san. i 't W &t" Judge a WTien she heard voice SheOa's heart .ank within her to- it sounded as 'J Frank might be dying-Frank m'ght be dying- Gcd knows me hear'rt's broke the troobV me an' mine have I talked up at her Mc his brought on ye, sir!" Sheila's moth er was saying, as they all went out Into the hall. "But I know her there isn't a bad bone in her body!" "Mrs. Carscadden" Mrs. Mc Cann said in a whisper. Her face was ghastly. "We knew nothing of this," she began again. "My son Frank has always been we've depended de-pended on him!" she finished faintly. faint-ly. "You mustn't break. Mamma!" the Judge said. But he looked broken bro-ken himself. "Is he so sick?" SheUa faltered, bursting into tears. No one paid any attention to her. Judge Mc Cann, always grave and kindly, addressed Sheila's mother: "Mrs. Carscadden, as soon cs the boy is out of the woods, I'U get in touch with you." Sheila's mother appeared not to be listening. "He said it But I don't belave it!" she said, in a dull, stricken I tone. "Nor I, either," the Judge agreed. "There's some explanation" "No no no, he'd never do that!" Mrs. Mc Cann said in her soft eager voice. "He never they never thought that was all!" "WeU, weU, weU." the Judge said, , "we'U straighten it all out God's ways are not our ways. And the young people today are not what we used to be!" Indeed, you're right about that!' said Sheila's mother. iney were working their way downstairs; SheUa and Joe, and i their mother, and the senior Mc Canns, and various other unidenti fied persons, servants, cousins, aunts. . Among these Sheila had confusedly confus-edly noticed, from the beginning, a pretty, black-eyed girl in a dark red suit trimmed with black fur, and a dark red hat If she had tried to identify this girl at aU she might have placed her as one of Frank's younger sisters; he had three besides Veronica, she knew, or she might have supposed her to be a concerned, con-cerned, pretty cousin. But as a matter mat-ter of fact the group had been so large, and so mixed, and the babel of voices and the general movement so distracting, that SheUa, although she had distinctly observed this girl, had wasted no thought whatever upon her identity. But now, in the lower haU, the girl suddenly took the center of the stage by arresting them aU with a quick imperative word to the Judge. "Judge Mc Cann, and Mrs. Mc Cann, too," this girl began, in a high-strung and haughty voice. "I'm going. You'll understand you'll un derstand, of course, that this changes everything." "Oh, Bernadette, my dear!" Mrs. Mc Qann said, in a heartbroken tone. " ? "You must see that!" the girl said, in a quick, feverish manner. She stood close to Mrs. Mc Cann, her fingers nervously busy with her lace coUar. "You see that?" she asked. . . "Bernadette," the Judge said, "don't be too quick to judge him. We mustn't jump to conclusions. In a few days when, God willing, he'U be better" "No, never!" the girl said with spirit "Never! You heard what he said. He never saw me. He never spoke to me! It was it was" She began to choke, flung up her head, was sUent. "Bernadette, dear," Mrs. Mc Cann said, her arm about her, "control yourself. I feel as bad as you do.. It doesn't seem possible it's Frank. But let's give the poor child the benefit of the doubt" "Doubt!" the girl echoed quickly, with a scornful laugh. "You heard what he said!" "Bernadette," said Mrs. Mc Cann, "you know as weU as I do that Frank Mc Cann is incapable of any thing underhand" "Underhand!" The girl caught up the word again, angrily. "I don't know what you caU it Engaged to me, he was visiting this this girl down there at Atlantic City! I don't care I don't care whether he was Uving with her or not!" she rushed on recklessly, and the judge and his wife and SheUa's mother recoiled from the phrase as if from a blow. "That doesn't make any difference!" Bernadette Kennedy said, beginning to sob. "What difference does that make, as long as we know that he knew she was there, and was going down to see her and her own mother moth-er didn't know where she was and even the papers didn't knew it look at them!" "Why, that's a lie!" Sheila said, understanding at least. "That's a lie! Frank never telephoned me in his life!" "Oh!" breathed Mrs. Mc Cann, "this is terrible!" "I wouldn't believe anything you said, if vou swore it on the Gos- ! oels." Bernadette sai'l in a low. trembling tone, turning toward Sheila. "I wouldn't care whether you believed be-lieved me or not!" Sheila returned fiercely. "You ruined Peter Mc Cann's life, and Gertrude Keane's ! fe," Bernadette Berna-dette flung at her, oreathlessly. "You might as weU know it, you've ruined aU our lives! While your mother and brother were worrying themselves to death alout you, you and Frank who's a hundred thousand thou-sand times too good for you you and Frank were down at Atlantic City! The papers co sxner get through with denying you're married to Peter Mc Cann than they have you to an airplane smash with Frank!" (TO BE COSTlKEDi 12 STAGE3SCRE By VIRGINIA VALE . Released by Weitern Newapaper Union. ' GRACIE ALLEN sets an example for all radio and movie stars to shoot at. Asked to pose digging in a Victory Garden at a huge department store in New York, she arrived ar-rived right on timethough she'd been up late doing a benefit liked the clothes she was to pose in, complimented the store because she wasn't mobbed for autographs. "Sometimes when we're traveling we hardly get a chance to eat, because people want to talk to us," she said, then added, ' "But if it weren't for the radio public pub-lic maybe we wouldn't be eating!" Incidentally, broadcasting still scares her, because she gets -to thinking think-ing of aU the thousands of us, who are listening to her! Danny Kaye, one of the most amusing men on the stage, has reported re-ported to the Samuel Goldwyn studios stu-dios for his first picture, "Up In I K"Xrzrti DANNY KAYE Arms"; he should be a riot on the screen, but sometimes what's funny on the stage just goes flat before the cameras. A touching scene In "The Human Comedy" takes place between Mickey Mick-ey Rooney and five-year-old Butch Jenkins, who plays bis brother. Butch had to wear a long nightgownand night-gownand flatly refused. Finally Mickey, with Botch riding on his shoulders, disappeared, to return with Batch In the nightgown. "I told him that Buck Rogers and General MacArthur wear 'em, every ev-ery night," Mickey explained. In addition to his regular weekly radio appearance with Guy Lom-bardo Lom-bardo on "Three-Ring Time" Ogden Nash is collaborating on the script of a new musical, "One Touch of Venus," which will star Marlene Dietrich; he says that she's not Just beautiful and movie-wise, but is also a very creative woman with decidedly decid-edly individual ideas of her own. What Marlene thinks of the humorist humor-ist we don't know. " Most actors of dramatic parts in radio yearn for a good comedy spot which will land them on the road to fame, but Alan Reed, "Solomon Levy" on "Abie's Irish Rose," reversed re-versed things; be started as an ace stooge for Fred AUen and other comedians. After getting a good start that way, he branched out into straight character acting both in radio ra-dio and the theater. . .. Everybody'd like to know how Grace George, the celebrated actress, ac-tress, was persuaded to make ber motion picture debut in "McLeod'a Folly," the first picture which the new producing firm of William and James Cagney will make for United Artists release. Donald Duck's voice made a personal per-sonal appearance in the lobby of the New York theater where Walt Disney's Dis-ney's "Saludos Amigos" was playing. play-ing. It belongs to Clarence Nash, who's been doing the Donald Duck voice since 1934, beginning with "The Wise Little Hen." The first scene that Zoltan Korda planned to shoot for Columbia's "Somewhere in Sahara," on location loca-tion in the desert nesr Brawley, Calif., caUed tor a search by a unit of Nazi mechanized troops, dying of thirst, for an abandoned, dried-up water bole. But came torrential rains. So Director Korda thought fast and the script's dried-up water wa-ter hole became a brim-full water bole, poisoned by Bedouins I The famous 19ui Bombardment group, America's most decorated squadron, will be glorified in "Suzy Q." forthcoming film about our flying fly-ing forces in the South Pacific. It will have an aU-star cast ODDS AND ENDS Cianj Simmt wiade tome extra dollart by telling half a dozen eowt from her San Fernando ranch to Bob Burnt . . . "Madame Curie teU a nne record for props, with . mora than 7200 individual item . . . That cute dog you'll tee in "Swing Shift MaUie" passed the tetU for "Dogt for Defense'' with high marks, but didn't get in because his legs were to short . . . Harry James and hit band, appearing in lite Aim version of "Best Foot Forward," have been signed by Uetro for another picture: in it James will play m role ... Maybe Merit 0 ber on really is retiring from tho xxeen to become kousetoife! : Particular Mosquito It was midnight at Camp Barke- ley, Texas. Private George Proctor. Proc-tor. Co. B., 54th Medical Training battalion, was asleep in his tent just off the 51st Bn. srea. The rest of his tentmates had headed for "rec halls hours before mosquitoes were terrific. "There I was, peaceful like." Proctor recalls, "when I was awakened by something heavy on my chest What do you think was happening? Why, a great big mosquito mos-quito was sitting on my chest, looking look-ing at my dogtags to see what my blood type wasl" WS BUT AND BELL Offlra Farnltnre, Filri. T!writr, AMin( Mrhpp, Haft. 31 Wrt Broadway, Bait Laka City. Uafc Army's Purchasing System The , army's purchasing system wiU be further centralized by trans ferring procurement of many sup ply items formerly obtained by the army air forces, the medical department de-partment and the corps of engi neer, to the quartermaster corps. This procedure wiU simplify pro curement methods, facilitate purchase pur-chase control in instances where War Production board limitation or ders affect the supply of raw materials ma-terials and manufactured articles, and have the advantages attendant to mass buying. . The Bronx Cheer To explain one slang expression by another, a Bronx cheer consists in giving a person the "razzberry." Bronx borough officials have been quoted as saying that the "Bronx cheer" was brought to that borough from some other section and named for It for some unaccountable reason. Most Grasshoppers Are Harmless Of 130 species of grasshoppers, only five or six are known to do any serious damage to crops. About a dozen more injure grasses on the range to some extent but the rest of them are of little economic Importance. , " ' " Fish Coloration Fish that swim in open water are likely to be bluish or metallic in coloring, whereas fish that stay at the bottom of a stream are more often mottled or striped like the stones and sand. Strong Curio Hunters Amateur curio hunters stole an an chor weighing 1,800 pounds from the old United States cruiser Farragut while the ship was being demolished by a wrecking firm in Oakland, Calif. . Eliminate Rules The faculty of Connecticut Agri cultural college has placed the responsibility re-sponsibility of class attendance upon the students, eliminating all rules re garding attendance requirements. " ' Green Plant Pigment". Chlorophyll, the green pigment in plant leaves, bears a close chem ical relationship to hematln, the red pigment In blood, a government chemist states. Walk at 15 Months The average normal child learns to walk at 15 months. Variations from this figure do not Indicate sub-normality sub-normality unless in form of a pro longed delay. High Intensity Lamp A new type of high-intensity in candescent lamp equipment recent ly produced, eliminates three-fourths of the heat without appreciable loss of light. Michigan Hunting An average of one bird bagged out of every nine flushed was reported by 265 hunters in lower Michigan during the 1930 grouse season. OFFICE EQUIPMENT GARDEN TRACTOR WANTED Cah for Cardan Tractor, write Boyd C. Bott. tm Olympaa Dr.. Hoi. 3BS-W j 8. L. LENSES DUPLICATED v. TiTB OPTICAL SnOP tU Battan Bid Bait Lain City T.ium rfuiiHMted. Wholesale nricca. 14-hour aervlca. Mall In broken piteee. WANTED BARBERS ARB IN DEMAND. EARN while you learn barherina in a few ""''; MOU5R-SALT LAKE BARBER COLLEGB r70tegentSU USED CARS TRAILERS USED CARS TRAILER COACHES Libera) Credit Terma - - JESSE M. CHASE . .Jl Buy Sell Trade STORES IN ' OGDEN, PROVO, SALT LAKE CITT. 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Minerala are held together with molaaare. led aa aalt on range or in feed bine. VITELITE eontalna enough minerala in quantity to increane production aa much aa 20. And remember minerala are to atoek what vitamina are to human. Cornea in crystals not eompreaaed block recommended by authoriUea to prevent broken teeth. ORDER TODAY! SO lb. bag SJ.50 FOB Salt Lake, f 12S per ton packed in St lb. baits. Bend check or money order todbyi CRYSTAL WHITE Salt and Chemical Co, 1061 South State Street SALT LAKE tli r, UTAH W.N.U. Week Ne. 4311 SALT LAKE Orient Soybeans New kinds of soybeans have been brought to the United States by a government plant explorer who spent two years in the Orient Named After Indian The sequoia trees of the West coast were named after the Cherokee Chero-kee Indian, Sequoya, who devised an alphabet for his tribe. Fanther Pics Motion pictures of the hunt, from start to finish, were obtained when a panther was caught and caged near Cotulla, Texas. Popcorn Trouble A grain of popcorn was removed from the lung of Nettie Jean Trotter, Trot-ter, three, of Roe, Ark., by Little Rock physicians. Little Periscope A little periscope filler' erful electric light ige and device for the inspfjjaJfy barrel Interiors Adamd$tOH JuiSRY-CONTROUED first on RECAPPING ur tires. We will tell yon teed recapping. If they do, Firestone Factory-Controlled Army Bans Wives Wives following their husbands to camp to prepare meals for them, an old Mexican custom, has been abolished. abol-ished. The federal authorities in Mexico City state that an efficient commissariat will be organized.' At present only single men are to be drafted. i Shoes in New England In 1890 two-thirds of the boots and shoes manufactured in the United States were made in New England. Lynn, Mass., in 1890, was the premier pre-mier shoe manufacturing city of America, with 323 factories producing produc-ing annually goods worth $26,000,000. Fine Wire Valuable Platinum fuse wire used in delicate deli-cate electrical instruments, meters and special radio tubes is drawn so fine that one grade of it is not considered con-sidered expensive even at a price nai mazes its cost ?h,uuu,duo a nd. ,i ' m a ,i rk ' " Tod 7 Joliiitcn'i The floor polish that needs no rubbing simply apply and let it dry. Gives a beautiful, hard Tiniaft, march.and.to in ovary department Tiras and Recapping, Batteries, Spark Plugs, Radio and Muiic, Homo Appliancat, Housewares, Hardware, Lawn and Garden ion Supplies, Toyi, Garnet and Boob, Painh, Clothing, Leather Goods. MOTOR COMPANY me 124 American Fork |