Show - - i - s ''' - IIS APRIL THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE THURSDATMORNING 1 12 1934 - - - - ' 11 SCANT SUPPLY SUN OF WATER - Day By Day With the Utah Pioneers 1847 I BY RIGINEERS Outlook for All Sections of State 'Ranges Far Below Normal (CUntied from Psi Ott) cre-feIs the logical estimate of the water supply available from Utah lake exclusive of seepage Seepage available to the Associated Canals (one of the five of which Is owned by Salt Lake City) will probably afThe estimated to ford 5000 acre-fetat supply for the seuon is then 55- et cre4eet1 (This Is just about 100000 acre-feless than that used tut year)- 'There la a possibility that the ac14 miles for the Elkhorn 'rations to the river will be so while the wagons traveled a distance small that they will be insufficient to supply the primary rights in of 64 miles in a round-aboway width event It- will be necessary the Woodruff party only- traveled either to pump from the lake to about 20 miles A eouncil meeting make up the deficiency or to motors was held at Winter Quarters in the ha the West Jordan at which Thomas Bullock - Figures such an these give point evening was called lo go with the pioneers to the meaning of the statement to keep the camp history and return made by Jacob L Crane of New with the twelve in the fall York in a report made to Governer - Those of the pioneers who did not Henry H Blood as chairman of the return to Winter Quarters journeyed state planning board Wednesday 14 miles from their Elkhorn encampthat "water storage is the focal ment In a westerly direction to the point in the industrial and apicul- Plate river Where they encamped tural planning here" near a cottanwoodsrove located about three miles southeast of the Crops May Be Saved On the Weber river storage will present city of FremontrDodge counco far toward saving late crops it ty Nebraska and near the present is indicated by a report from Com- boundary line between Douglas and missioner P H Sorensen that Echo Dodge counties At this place there reservoir with a capacity of 74000 was also a fine sand bank en the 000 -- - acre feet and with 35500 acre feet stored at present "may fill" to 50- 000 acre feet while East canyon acre feet and now containing 14- reservoir with a capacity of 23000 175 acre feet may fill to 13000 Paul FHenderson project englneer for the Uinteh irrigation project of the Indian service reports -- -that the snow and water content in the tlintab mountains is "less than the dry year of 1931"' 'In Scofield Wounds Provo ' Fatal to reservoir on the Pricel river with a carryover of 0000 acre 1 Outlaw's Confederate feet may fill to 20000 W R Waysnan commissioner writes Shot in St Paul Four treasuring courses- - on the bead of the Provo river watershed Indicate an average water content ST PAUL Minn April II 01— of 39 per cent of normal according Anothfr victim of saeociation with to Commissioner Wentz - John Di Singer died today ' And within a few hours of The Storage 14 Per Cent C H J'ex commissioner on the death of Eugene Green In a hospital from gunshot wounds author! Spanish Fork and the Strawberry here reclamation project finds storage to U In Chicago believed they had data in the reservoir during the once more found a warm trail In winter bu been 10000 acre feet or their bunt for the Indiana outlaw 14 per cent of the sold water right Federal agents there were reportcontracts The snow on the greater ed to have captured and to be questioning Evelyn Frechetti companion portion of the watershed has melt- of the desperado on several recent ed be saya with no appreciable inereue in the flow of the atreams flights from justice After July 1 inflow at the Straw- Green who fled with billinger berry will just about offset evapora- from aa apartmenthere March 31 tion and seepage losses and be ad- was wounded three days later as he vises the farmers hi the district was taken by government agents to be very cautious in the planting His death is the eleventh which officers have ascribed directly or Inof late season crops" Reports from other commissioners directly to Dillinger's career of are similar The Clyde report covers crime prospects on 22 different watersheds Whereabouts of Miss Frechetti and of the state as to probable water the operatives questioning her in Chicageta were closely guarded and supply and is as follows: Bear river above Bear lake 60 some federal officials 'there denied knowledge of her arrest Employes per cent of the 1933 supply Bear lake drainage 40 per cent of of a liquor tavern however said the woman was seized there Monday 1933 Cub river drainage 33 per cent of night by a heavily armed squad of 17 officers A man was taken with 1933 Maple creek High Summit Prov- her but it was' not Dilliotero the idence creeks etc 33 per cent of tavern workers said ' Officers said are still holding Beth 1933 'Green who was arrested at the time Logan Figures of Green's wounding and capture Logan river dratnage—April-Sep- tember runoff between 40000- - and She lama S focteralcbargeofharboring a fugitive 44000 acre feet runoff 17000 to 21000 acre feet Maximum discharge $00 second One Killed'14 Injured 1'(1 I d : ' Ili ''''11 '1' 1 ris4 'i111 : diti ' 04'1' 01' PAS ‘I ) iin III 1 ' !11111!' tl'l lq i '''11t''''ll 'i i11iit' H'114i011 ti I411 ii11 )1 - II (' fliii ik :114 IL1 'ilitx tki) L COURT S Thirteen Alleged Specilers Arrested as Traffic Drive Continues 1111) CI' 4 11 if 4 Wi41 r til '111"1111IIP go i 4 IN i ''' il'ili III !177711r11 ' t 411 I:i'' 1 !!14414 ' FOUND GUILTY Historian l 1 DRIVER I By ANDREW JENSON Assistant L D S Church MONDAY APRIL 13 The night guard in the Pioneer camp called the brethren by daybreak when the bustle of camp We began The Pioneers prepared their teams for continuing the westward journey end commenced rolling out from the Elkhorn encampment while the twelve and several others started on a return journey to Winte Quarters They recrossed the Elkhorn early in the morning and on their way stopped at the old camping ground an hour or so to feed their horses Thomas Bullock reports that he and Willard Richards arrived at Winter Quarters at 6 p In Wilford Altoodruff others followed an Indian trail and 11DRUNK ings and four others in the afternoons in apprehending speeders Traffic Sergeant W E Jukes said Wednesday Thirteen Arrested 'The 13 motorists arrested on speeding charges included seven motorists alleged to have speeded on South Main street by Traffic Patrolmen L R Terry and C J Larson They are: Mrs W J O'Connor 32 accused of driving 45 miles per hour Milo J Andrus 25 alleged to have driven 50 mites per hour Vernet Ballard 31 50 miles per hour David H Owen 41 46 miles per hour H C Lehr 50 45 miles per hour D E Bloomquist 22 50 miles per hour and George H Brown 24 44 miles per hour Arrested on West Tertiple street were: Merlin Jensen 34 accused of driving 41 miles per hour W W! Crawford 50 alleged to have speeded 41 miles per hour Glen Fogle 21 accused of driving 45 miles per ''''')tuvre: and Louis Roser 22 alleged to speeded 40 miles per hour August Spitko 29 was arrested on South State street and accused of driving 42 miles per hour and H W Derbridge 20 was arrested on West Temple street after he allegedly " Dail Expresses Conaolencei In Death of U S Minister 4 n - DUBLIN April 11 (R)—SymPathr for President Roosevelt the people of the United States and the relit tivel of William Wallace McDowell was expressed by the Dail in it special vote today as President Eamon de Valera eulogized the American minister to the Irish Free State who died Monday night Deeply moved De Valera said: "We were all protid when President Roosevelt chose as his representative here this most distinguished American citizen "He had many associations with p r 41 lk our nation and be actually was tellAn accused drunken driver was convicted and eight speeders were ing us of them when death came upon him" 1 arraigned in police cowl Wednesday 'I — and traffic officers arrested 13 al4 leged fast drivers as prosecutors and iti -' J2Jr (!)::police continued their drive to curb 11 I I '111'1 S TO r‘Llii :J1'!' At traffic accidents ' William V Booth 29 349 Almond Mt D Malloy Gram VhOrrItoll —7 I 7 t' : '''I''' t'l 12) hair asse set le Walsh l'i ii '' ili court was convicted by a jury in poi ''':'''"'—' 11' I was teethe Ossi Is mesh I luro''' ti' of and esse 2 betties et Javanese mi court lice drunken ' ekt't driving L go 4 )rs It hair from 'tweed tallish aly ' ‘ Judge Daniel Harrington scheduled i bst ead rirt how hatt m "If 'i 1'11 '' Ili ir4 Friday for date of sentencing l'It t FREE '1N‘ 6P JAPANsea Ike memos OM The was defendant arrested 1 :4 ' early f' l'olk i 't1101011'1' O ollill l' 1474" Ili' ' 4 ' 1i 1440111 March 17 by A H Vogeler police strd'etagrhtlet12" lab: Itrl'c: ilif litVIII )11liat !q' Aii 'of :11:0011 iiii ii4)''Iii4 if ipb loose denitnilf and scalp tub radio- technician after :T itlioripximmom01 --his drove 45milesper hour p &moor alas St Alt AbOUTI TrE druerteic car Into a safety zone abutment at British 1 ' I r are -- nteemz thew V II eV it II having railways t MIMIC Second South and Main streets : best illommuseeseseeemesoloos travel in holiday years Booth testified That he had been October 10 1819 in Salt Lake City) Joseph (born drinking moderately and was not Brigham Young and his four brothers—Lorenzo 11 D (born October 19 1807 in Hopkinton Maw—died July 16 1881 in drunk Patrolman Vogeler said the April 7 1797 in Hopkinton--die- d Salt Lake City) John (born May 22 1791 In Hop-ne- defendant at the time of arrest adNovember 21 1895 in Salt Lake City) Brigham Phi- 16 1799 in Hopkinton—dled kinton—died April 27 1870 in Salt Lake City) mitted he had been drinking heavily IL PULLLIAII FACTORY !JADE III during the night of In streams the union travel Chase several brethroute James which best the river for Platte upon Filled Six Speeders North Park of ColoradcP and ren could take their animals to wa- Return Jackson Redden and two PULLIAM FACTORY SOLO IN Six motorists who admitted speedter The pion'ters had been instruct- others were chosen to start out On the South Platte takes its rise in the GIVES YOU A DIRECT DEMAnd Eliminates 411 Middle Men and ed by the twelve to travel to a cer- the morrow as scouts or guides Fair South Park They flow east and ing were fined a bench warrant was unite In Lincoln county Nebraska Issued for another similarly accused High Main SIMS RentMaking THIS SENSATIONAL OFFER Possible tain point of timber on the Platte weather prevailed As the Platte river figures so about 400 miles from their source and bond of an eighth alleged and there form an encampment en11 gage In blaclumithing and do other prominently in the history of the pio while the united stream also flow- speeder was forfeited Claude Hinnen 38: Harold Dean ROTH necessary work until the twelve neers the following Information may ing mostly east crosses Nebraska Tailored and enters the Missouri river on the 26and Fred wash 21 were each should return from Winter Quarters not be out of place: FOR to Order: Gmiv fined $750 and L LHaker 26 Frank In the evening a Meeting was held river a tributary of the border of Iowa 15 miles-beloIn the Pioneer camp at which Ste- Missouri river rises In the Rocky ha after a course of1000 miles The J Holler 50 and'Harry Deardorff 31 were each fined $5 when they phen Markham explained that it waa mountains and is formed by the principal effluents are the Elkhorn TWO PEOPLE MAT SHARE ONE ORDER—Only Two Days Requited the wish of the twelve that some of Junction of two streams called the and Loup Fork The river is from pleaded guilty to speeding A $5 to Complete Your Clothes familiar with the coun- north and south forks of the Platte one to three miles broad but Is so bond of A F Elgren 63 was ordered OUNDREDS OF NEW SPRING PATTERNS was a and bench forfeited warrant not Is the is shallow formed that The it Platte choose the North and navigable heed by try should go Issued for Leonard Jackson 29 when PULLMAN WHOLESALE TAILORS he failed to appear Under a new policy adopted by the 136 SOUTH WEST TEMPLE molpow traffic division four traffic officers were detailed to work in the morn yr ii 1:1 '17' 041 : ‘' fi i - ij' I 1 i 4 ' 1 4 ''ll'' ' :''' 'f 4!i ' I 11 ' i 1 -- ' '':'Irr t v 'Hi If 7' ' ) i t '' 0 it'C - c he-dro- 4 PSIA'I 4iiii A 'i i -- Y d IN vi (born-Februar- TIIE I d TIIE 2 S t S Ill Inc Engineer Reports Diking WIRE CONTROL Plan as Vital to State GAINS IN FAVOR DILL1NGER PAL DEATH CLAIMS TF 41 c Crane Holds Fresh Water Storage Essential Utility CommissionersFed era' Radio Board Beek: further Communication Bill to Agriculture and Industry 11 It be considered an item for in the major program study GovernotilloodbegaUse quested by ter the engi-of the relationship of that project to —"Referring specifically of the diking pro WASHINGTON April 11 the development of the metallurgical neering features from the engi- National Association of Railroad and resources and industriea of Utah It posal it is found thatis standpoint it entirely feasi- Utility commissioners and the fedhas no interest in the enterprise be- neering ble to create a fresh water arm in the eral radio commission today approved wise of developthe yond promotion southeastern part of the Great Salt the Rayburn bill to create a federal ment of these resources" lake The inflow can reasonably be commission to control radio te1e-1Summary et loped to balance the evaporation expected telegraph systems A summary of his report to the cor- and draught for use Itlifeasible to phone and hearThe committee suspended poration prepared by Mr tram fol- protect against the remote possibility ings on the bill until late next week lows: of a rise in the level of Great Salt to clear the way for the stock mar7he people of Utah are the °tim lake above the height of the original ket bill ers of two important basic resources dikes It has been satisfactorily estabSeveral Important amendments —the waters of the state and the lished that the water would after a were recommended by E O Sykes chemical content of the Great Salt short period have a salt content below chairman of the radio commission lake he proposal to create a fresh' the necessary tolerance limit With dealt with the supervision of water arm in the Great Salt lake adequate protection the dikes can be They the broadcasting division of the new may in the course of events become built and maintained against the ac- agency and governing i part of a program for the exploitation tion of the water and Ice al programs coming :nii:tfrom resources under "The fresh water arni if built Mexico of the and other foreign state control and for the benefit of would be in extremely useful several Recommended that the jurisdiction the'state and the country ways: of three divisions created under the we in Utah find important 'Equally "First it would offer a supply of be changed to give the radio I long solid tradition of wise collec- virtually fresh water for industrial bill broadcast section control over all tive acUon expressed through honest purposes—washing flotation proc- matters related to broadcasting and state government and supported by essing condensing and so forth amateur-servicthe strong and humane L D S church "Second if and when there 11a Sykes proposed the telephone divi"Hence there exists here the back- demand for additional irrigated land sion have Jurisdiction over matters reground essential to the use of that near the lake the water will be availa- lating to common carriers engaged for instrument increasingly powerful ble for that purpose In telephone communication and all solving the complex problems of mod'Third it would have great Value forms of fixed and mobile radio teleern industrialized society—governfor recreation—swimming boating phone service when connection is etmental participation in and guidance fishing end bunting telephone fectedthrough apublic of development ' :signally it would be a great scenld network United' In the nowhere 'Perhaps asset be said The telegraph division States is the situation so well groundshould have jurisdiction over mate Cheap Storage ed as in Utah for the furtherance of "As compared with the cost of ters relating to common carriers encooperation between eprivate entergaged in recorded communication)y and government-botirstatereating and prise wire radio or cable including all national in line with the trend of the In Utah this fresh water arm would forms of fixed and mobile radio telethou and with the program coura- provide relatively cheap storage of graph service fresh water Rooseinstituted President geously by He also recommended' that broad- velt This relatively isolated state "The cost of creating the fresh water casters be forbidden to advertise lotincilake of items several offers an American including 'Workers' Riot opFrench outstanding teries gift enterprises and similar portunity for effective cooperative dental expense can be expected to- schemes explaining that existing between and $2000range $1500000 as a demonstration the for planning mails and newsof statutes affecting the rest of the country The readineu 000 or less than $5 per acre-foREM Lietard Trance April 11 with "have not been interpreted by papers can Provided storagestate the which the project 01—Political bitterness smouldering prepared for in a large development the courts as applied to advertising since the disorders of February 6 state planning program lit collabora- take this-cola moderate by radio broadcasting" tion program board the national with very planning flared into a riot tonight in which 'In the of Public the Works administration were undertaking project ar a miner was killed and fourteen indicated that this is a dynamic and rangements should be made to re- SOVIET FLIERS SAVE injured cover part of the cost from the im Twenty shots were fired when not a static force available - mediate benefits accruing to adjacent - 62 IVIAICOONED ON ICE workers jammed their way into a Other Great Researees hall where Leon Daudet "In addition to the natural resources property wherever such benefits rib royalist leader was scheduled to speak owned by the state there lie in Utah be clearly demonstrated The assess(Continued from Pan One) Folic said the worker was killed other tremendously rich mineral re- ment of such benefits might be r7 when the :amelots Du Rol or the sources which if properly guided for through special levies through gen4 to Cape Van !Went and the camp eral taxes or by way of otherforms king's henchmen as the royalist youth the general welfare ar susceptible of used 'an American plane compensation to the public agen- IleKaminin of great further development The organization is calledt opened- pistol and Molovok and a comLire on the invaders extension of agriculture in this state cies: A number of planning and engi- panion had been feared lost in their to be have The workers mostly Communists would be stimulated by the utiliza- neering problems wosld worked out before the project could flight over the polar wastes on the and socialists seized chairs and tion of the mineral resources t way to Cape Van Karem ' "Tor the exploitation of both the be started tables A violent battle followed unThe approximate Poaition of Alt "The of this kind major Significance police succeeded in restortng mineral and agricultural resources of of Cheliuskin party was 350 miles enterprise must be d - Utak additional fresh water storage vv- --northwest of Nome A radio m7unge is absolutely essential' No great de- During the past generation-anlast gave the position as canyon—No high water can be ex- velopment can take place until there greatly accelerated rate during the 68 Thursday degrees 20 minutu north latitude h the initiation of runoff 25 is available new supplies of Impound- past year pected 06 minutes west longiRroug there has been a 173 degrees per cent of 1933 ed fresh water under proper control President )i tude Hobble Spanish Fork Payson And to provide the necessary stored trend toward increasing interest on Members of the expedition have creeks etc—No spring high water fresh water it is necessary that there the part of the government in the conhad months of thrilling experience& can be expected froin any of than be and utilization of our natu- The government participation in the servation soviet Ice breaker Chelluskini-streams runoff 40 planning and in building the storage ral resource& National planning is was held fast In the East Siberian sea in the United States PIP cent of 1933 just emerging works also in and and guidplanning a time last year Early in Debe ing and participating in the metal- To be effective it must be supported for Strawberry reservoir—May after two mpnths cember considerably less if the spring rains lurgical and agricultural develop- - by thoughtfully workedt outt state winds gave some promise are deficient and the temperatures ment Utah's The planshigh—April-Septembmineral and chemical resources is a ship could get out4 of the ice Inflow 45 "It becomes to then that 'apparent 4hw ship laced a matter of national concern and an Or On December per cent of 1933 out carry new storm and it began to drift with any program " Dintah basin streams—April-SeptembWater for the utilization of Utah's resources ment in nat1onalplann1ng iceenear Alaska It was crushed runoff 60 per cent of 1933 a new type of governmental agency is storage is the focal point of industrial the the pack February 13 and slow by Daggett county desirable- - Such an agency might be andagricultural planning here as food and clothing were sank ly runoff 65 per cent of 1933 set up bz the state or it Often Fine Opportunity taken off might be runoff $O Per cent set up as an arm of the federal gov"One of the most important eleot 1933 '' ' or it might be a combina- ments In the national planning pro-- lined above Nearly allot the factors Price river and Huntington creek ernment tion of these two While it would gram is that desding with the for rebuilding American life Into a Little high water can be expected t and secure economic have talk? fintmced from public funds decentralization of industries - apd more satisfactory be drawn together in No High Water its eperationshould be expected to with the reintegration of rural Sevier valley area—No spring repay those funds and to yield a profit and urban life Utah's industrial this enterprise' -- to coffers Such an agency resources offer a fine opportunihigh water Runoff from the high the public be described as the Great ty for drawing industry back from might ' snow cover SO per cent of that in Basin 1 board or the Utah the overcrowded Development ' big cities par1933 Development board and its functions ticularly for the reduction and fabricaIf saitly functioning Xidneys and Sanpete county area—No spring would include the making of survey& tion of heavy Inetalsfor the extracMulder make you motor Irma Getting rub-o- the preparation of construction plans tion of metals for the prepare- high water lip Nights Nervousness Ithetunatic light and the management of project& 50 per tent of that in 1933rains Stiffness Bunking Smortine of various chemicals and for the Itching or Acidity by the guaranteed Coal creek and Virgin river—Lit- state and the people of the state manThe of metal and chemical DoctorestrescriptionCystes (Sisa4es) also the country as a 'whole would specialties tie high water can be expected —Mint Ix up or back Only 7So M 4 t:scIng Is In this state runoff 45 per cent derive great benefit from such work "Furthermore there 4 of that in 1933 a tradition ot common interest be- Program le Include Diking 4 - Beaver river area—There may be !The Salt Lake diking project' If tween farm and factory which needs a little high water and when undertaken would be part only to be encouraged and guided for runoff 60 per cent of that in 1933 of such a program 'Ma diking enter-°ris- e success in the Fillmore-Chal- k creek area—Litin providing a large residual moots Banish tle spring high water be expect- storage of fresh water would have a "Not literally the 'subsistence home- pg I rean ed 45 per definUerelationship to all of the de- stead' but the reunion of agriculture thorn scientific way ' Use concentrated cent of that in 1933 outlined and as such and industry in the rural city is a above Velopment ' it would amply pay its N113' This natural course in Utah Making over large flats Into amall report does not propose that the —"For the realization of these poten- ones la a feature of the present diking project be undertaken at oneettialities a new perspective and a new out of state funds but rather thatItype of agency is adyisable eta-building activity in Germany i " (Continued from ease one) ITIsirt u To 1 el s - Sale Secure-These-Hardware-Bargains- -- --- -- - Continues- in All Departments s 1 STAINLESS STEEL House Brooms Paring Knives Enameled Handles Good Quality 8 ' C ' ' : :: t k P - 29c 1 ' er state-owne- d i STERILIZED "NORTHERN" ' - ' - - - °SUPERIOR" Elec Toasters Tissue Paper 3 ROLLS for t 19c : f - s With CORDS ' Nickel-Plate- d I ' ' 9 N 9 - "BRASS DUKE" SIZE 7 GRISWOLD Polished Wash Board Rigid Frames Iroalkillet s7 -- - Blacksmith Fork river drainage runoff 18000 to 22000 ure feet runoff 6500 to 7300 acre feet Little Bear river drainage—AprilSeptember runoff 40 per cent of 1933 runoff 45 per ' cent of 1933 Ogden river area South fork at Iluntsville—April-Septembe- r runoff 15000 acre feet runoff 4800 acre feet Weber river area at Oakley— runoff 39000 acre feet to 43000 acre feet runoff 9500 to 1600 acre er —April-Septemb- er er er 'April-Septemb- er er feet Salt Lake City watersheds—AprilSeptember runoff 40 per cent of 1933 moll 60 per Cent of 1933 Provo river watershed at Provo —No high water can be expected runoff 58000 to 62000 acre feet runoff 22000 to 25000 acre feet American Fork drainage Amen- ' can Fork river at the mouth of the er 'April-Septemb- er er p conms 11 7 c ( : - i - 41 e 0 I I L SOOTHES AND HEALS ItEMOVES COINS ------ 1- QUICK SURE RELIEF ' i i I I 1 I 2 C tie DrScholre Zinopads and you'll have instantrelletThese thin soot& i ngsling protective pads remove the cause make new or tight shoes our prevent corooOlore tocsand blia ter& To quicklytemove coma use Dn Scholls Zino-pad-s with the separate MedicatedDisksincludedforthatptu6 poseCet a box at yourdealer's today r ScbEIk s Pm' L1130-pa- d Put mole17th' ' - Brassed - 69c - ': 254auFAEKEETAITNyCli : - - 123-1- 51 95 4w t - -- : i - - April-Septemb- er Righ-Orade--- t Cystex (4 April-Septemb- " S u — - - - )S d 0 Clubs a i uti 1- - - IIIIIIIMPNIMIIIIMEIMP KENT'S !'EXPERT" I ' Teti': Rackets: 't ) Select Frames— — A Wonderful Value 0 $395 ' Zaq13 '' r ' 1 ) - ' PER ' DOZEN ' A re - : C '' - :' m Pi F prospective dr -- re ! Golf 4PA " ' April-Septemb- er -- f - ff April-Septemb- er Steel-Shafte- Drivers Brassies and Spoons ' Forks r'' trtrn Hoalp Iticineys -' I f Balls- Golf -t 1 utsc S L 1 '' S' - Irserrule I 1 Strapped' ' ' i : E " ' ' 4 $61145 I 1 - ) ' t Drive Wheel ch Bator Blades Cut-OYear tree Service Reinforced Cable Braid Guaranteed for b Ptentir - ' Lalls itlo Well Carden Hose er ' "ApEri 2 pack- ' I Combination Streani and Spray Rice Boilers a ' Nozzles Hose T k er P Heavy Cast ALUMINUM!" " ' - 4PURE ' its er -- STOPS CAUSE N ' ' er ' 69c - I g ' - ' ' st er - ' ot ' ( "Ivy - ' In ' ' (:) - 641"6" - lat ' r I tr - ) o o - - iti : - I c - It I LKI1 d I d -- - ''' : |