Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 78, Number 35, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 17 March 1955 — Page 7
THURSDAY, MARCH 17, 1955
Luxury Mainliner Flight From San Francisco Ends on ‘Wayward Bus’ Lost In the Snow Storm
by Rita Myers Our eventful trip home from San Francisco New Year’s day, ranged from the most luxurious “Red Carpet Flight” of United 1 Airlines, to a dark, bumbling bus, lost in the wilds of southwest Chicago, and it resulted!, indirectly in Tom discovering Gina Lollobrigida and being barred from the Empire room of the Palmer House. At least it was a lively start for the new year. All the time we were in San Francisco, we had no idea of how we would get home again. Both first class and tourist flights had long waiting lists and all we could do was wait until just before each flight, in case there might be a couple of “no-shows”. It was a bit nerve-wracking not to know when we would be going back, as we felt we had to be back in Nappanee by Monday morning. MAINLINER FLIGHT New Year’s Eve, the man at the ticket office said he could give us two seats on the DC-7 Mainliner ‘‘Continental” flight Saturday morning at 9a. m. This luxury flight usually went coast to coast, ignoring Chicago but would stop there Saturday because of the holiday. It meant losing a whole day in San Francisco, as we had expected to wait until Saturday night at the earliest, to leave. But it was still raining, and another rainy day in San Francisco did not seem very attractive, so we decided it would be best to take that flight and be sure of getting homeWe’d get the B&O to Nappanee Saturday night and have all day Sunday to rest up before going back to work. That’s what we thought! We got up early New Year’s morning and Ken, my husband’s son in law, stayed up all night, driving back from a job with his orchestra east of Sacramento, and arrived at the hotel just in time to take us to the airport at 8 a. m. At the airport we were informed the plane was delayed an hour and a half by some mysterious trouble and wouldn’t ieave until 10:30. This always seems to happen when you get up early to catch a plane.
San Francisco has anew airport terminal building, vast and modern and a bit bleak, as all airport buildings are. We had a wonderful breakfast in the restaurant, tiny thin hot cakes covered with whipped butter, the best I ever ate. While we breakfasted, the rain stopped at last and a watery morning sun came out while we watched a crew work .on our plane. . r Passengers for the Continental flight are given lots lof unnecessary ’ little extras to try to justify the huge difference in cost from a tourist flight. HAWAIIAN ROOM One of them is that they are not required to sit in the common waiting room with the hoi polloi, but have ain intimate, little lounge of their own, decorated with an Hawaiian motif, softly lighted and presided over by a smiling young woman serving orange juice and coffee to passengers and guests. We sat in there awhile, but it was quite dull. Everybody looked at everybody else to see if they might be “somebody”, and spoke in half whispers. We went outside where it was livelier, after we had some orange juice. Another extra is a “red carpet” flanked by heavy silver posts and chains, so the pampered passengers won’t have to walk on the bare old concrete going out to the plane. Marian watched it being unwound from a big reel and worried about the way it was put
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down over pools of water still left from the rain. Bui when we got outside we saw that it was only red rubber. There isn’t really much that can be done to make a plane luxurious or spacious inside. Tourist or Continenal flight, it’s about the same. The seats seemed a bit farther apart, -but they are the same seats and the windows are the same inadequate peepholes that strain your neck and your ears hurt just the same way, 'when you come downStill, it is a wonderful way to get places in a hurry. The flight to Chicago, if it had been completed on schedule, would have been only a little over five hours.! with the plane making a speed over, the ground of 480 m. p. h. We were impressed at the idea of an observation lounge in the rear of the plane, when we read about it in our ticket folder, but when we went back to look, it was just a semi-circular bench with a small table in front of it, and was filled during the entire trip hy three men playing cards. STORMY TRIP We saw a few moments of beautiful sunshine as we roared over San Francisco bay, and then in moments, thick heavy grey and white clouds blotted out everything and the air began to bounce and drop the plane slightly. The pilot announced he was leaving the regular course to go north to avoid a storm, but it seemed to be stormy all the way and we didn’t see the ground until we were somewhere over Nebraska.
According to the ticket agent, passengers would be served breakfast jUst after the plane took off, and then cocktails and another meal about 1 p. m. and champagne in the afternoon. Two stewardesses were aboard to take care of our every need. That was the schedule. Breakfast never did arrive, but we decided that; was because the plane was late taking off and it was too close to dinner time. About 1 p. m., when our airport breakfast began to seem a long time ago, we heard faint sounds of silver and glassware in the rear and smelled hot coffee. By 3:30 ip. m- we were starving. With nothing to do but sit and look at white cotton outside the window, food became very important and we were ravenous, when at last the stewardess brought our trays. We found out later that, because of some emergency, both the girls on our plane were novices and had never been on their own before; Usually one trained girl takes one new girl and trains her on the flight but these two girls were both new on the job and flustered. I think they had the pilot come back and show them how to start the coffee. One of the passengers, who sat back near the galley, said they were having a terrible time with everything, although they managed to behave with confidence and ease when serving us. The meal was wonderful. Airline meals have much improved from World War II when the food was dull and steamy tasting. We had a chef salad bowl first with crab flakes and shrimp, and louis dressing. Then breast of chicken virginenne, delmonico potatoes, string beans paysanne, French rolls, then a tray of assorted French pastry, beverage and dinner mints. All cooked and served beautifully. CHICAGO CLOSED UP We had just finshed eating, about 4:30, when pilot announced that Chicago was closed up and he would have to land us at Moline, 111. It seemed incredible that we were already approaching Illinois and the announcement didn’t bother us too much much at first. We felt fairly close to home, but, as it turned out, it took over seven hours from the time we left the plane until we reached Chicago. The Chicago passengers piled out into the icy cold dusk at Moline and were told we would be taken to Chicago by bus, after first going to Moline to have supper at the hotel there. Tom and I who had been among the last served dinner, had no appetite yet for supper at all, which was a pity for the hotel served a very good lavish midwestern Sunday meal, course after course, with six kinds of relish, roast beef, heaping mounds of buttery potatoes and rich dessert. At any other time, it would have seemed very good. About 15 of us gathered in the lobby after supper, disgruntled and worried. Almost everyone would miss some connections by the de-
lay. Maddest of all was Dolly, a middle-aged mink-coated lady who had apparently been doing some private'drinking all the way from Calif, (at least I didn’t notice anybody being served any champagne. I don’t think the. harried stewardesses ever got around to it.) Dolly stuck - her chin out and looked willing to fight anyone connected with the airline,* including the poor little ticket agent, who was there to see that we got on the bus. Her husband was terribly embarrassed and would mutter “Be quiet now, Dolly, I’ll handle this. Go sit down. Dolly.” But Dolly paid no attention to him. She told the airlines man oft because she had left a fur piece on the plane and it had gone off to New York, and when was she going to get her fur piece back? When we got on the Greyhound bus, Dolly sat down behind the driver and told him in a loud voice that never in her life before, had she ever been on a bus. Her husband grunted, under his breath, “Aw, shut up, Dolly!” But he seemed to have mo hope that she would. Moline had the same lighted Santa in his sleigh and reindeer that Nappanee had, as Christmas decorations but they used each piece separately on lampposts so they were not nearly as effective. We drove out to the airport, picked up our luggage and some passengers who had come in on a later flight, dropped them at the hotel and started off for Chicago on a trip that seemed to have no end. Snow whirled against the window and when we came to a highway we’d strain our eyes to try to see a town name that was familiar. After hours and hours, when it seemed we must be coming in to Chicago, if we hadn’t missed it altogether* Tom began to say “We ought to be getting into Cicero soon.” Then we’d come to a town, and I’d say, “This looks like Cicero” and he’d agree that it did, and then we’d see -a sign and it was still a place we’d never heard of. Cicero began to seem as unattainable as Paradise. WHERE’S THE AIRPORT
When we did go thru Cicero at last, we missed it. The next thing we realized was that we had been driving and driving' around Chicago streets, more or less in a circle and. still there was no sign of the airport. At last the driver put on the brakes, honked his horn at a nearby police car and walked over to talk to the officer.
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SMILE IN THE MORNING Rare indeed is the family that doesn’t start the day vith a smile after a hearty, attractive breakfast. Well prepared, and eaten in pleasant surroundings, breakfast can be the most important mea! of the day.
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Chilled Fresh Applesauce Cereal Fresh Cold Milk Fried Eggs and Bacon Toast Butter or Margarine Hot Coffee Dry cereal flakes stay crisp after the package is opened if the box is stored in a warm dry place. Upper cupboard shelves are warmer than lower ones. You may even be lucky enough _ to have a cupboard near the chimney in the wall. This makes a warm storage place during fall and winter. Grade "A" Eggs Careful cooking can’t correct an egg that isn’t good to begin with. U. S. Government graded eggs are the shopper’s best guide to quality. Next, the quality of the eggs must be protected by refrigerated temperature all the way from the
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NAPPANEE ADVANCE-NEWS NAPPANEE. IND.
We all had been cramped and cold and glumly silent for the last hour, but a wave of laughter swept the bus suddenly and everybody woke up. The bus driver was lost! He was mad too. It was supposed to be his day off, and here they’d called him to make this long trip on miserable roads and didn’t give him good directions and he didn’t have any idea in the world how to find the airport! But the policeman gave him directions and we turned around and went back south a couple of miles and there it was, silent and closed in, with the waiting rooms cioged with smoke and people sitting on every available chair, or suitcase or just leaning in corners. They looked so tired and dejected. Some of our passengers got off here to take their chances, but most of us rode to the loop terminal at the Palmer House. Here, a couple of passengers suffered the final cruel blow. When the luggage was unloaded, theirs was missing! Whether it was sitting in the airport in Moline or long ago landed in New York, was something it would probably take them all the next day to find out. We had a battle to get a room in the Palmer House, which was crowded with grounded passengers and the vanguard of the furniture show due to start the next morning, but at 2 a. m. we finally got our room, apd by 2:05 were asleep. The next day, after church, we had dinner at Le Petit Case in the hotel and then went the Cinema theatre and saw the- Italian film
“Bread, Love and Dreams”, with Gina Lollobrigida. Tom is not a big movie fan- About the only movie actress he can name fast is Marlene Dietrich. But I think Gina has replaced Marlene. We met Bob Kinnare, my husband’s lawyer at 6. for a last dinner before he left to live for awhile in the Virgin Islands. We planned to have dinner in the Empire Room. But the headwaiter took one look at Tom’s turtleneck dickey and sport shirt and murmured that the gentleman would have to wear a tie. So, we went to the Porterhouse at the Hotel Sherman .which always has very good food, though it’s a rather ,gaudy place. An old man walks around in full Indian regalia with a feather headpiece that drags to his heels, the waiters are dressed like South American cowboys, and the bus boys are painted young braves and look ratheg embarrased in their getups. In the and, we had to run for the 8:55 B&O, and our trip ended as we dragged our suitcases at midnight thru Nappanee’s deserted streets, tired and glad to 'be home. Revival Begins Tuesday At Tlte Nazarene Chfirch Revival meetings begin Tuesday thru April 3 at 7:30 eaoh evening at the Niazarene church with Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Gililispie, of Farmland, special workers. The pastor, Rev. Delmar Stalter, who will conduct the revival campaign, states that his preaching will be Bible-enitered, designed to introduce Christ to the listener, revealing Him as the bearer of men’s sins and the answer to life’s multiple problems. Rev. Stalter, a graduate of Fort Wayne Bible college, entered 'his first pastorate in 1949 at Geneva, Ind. He moved to Nappanee in July of 1952. The Gillispies are full time evangelists who have traveled widely for the Nazarene church, Rev. Staffer states, and are among the best. GUERNSEY MAKES RECORD A registered cow, Broadmoor Vena, owned by Albert Buchanan, Milford, produced 9,951 pounds of milk and 534 pounds of fat, approximately 4651 quarts of highquality milk, according to official Herd Improvement Registry record released by American Guernsey cattle club. “Vena”, a junior three year-old, was milked twice daily for 365 days, while on test, and met calving requirements. She is the daughter of the famous Guernsey sire, Meadow Lodge King’s Dauntless, that has one son and 34 tested daughters in the Performance Register of American Guernsey Cattle club. Mennonites Plan Week of Services Starting Mar. 27 Pre-Easter services begin. Sunday morning, 'March 27 at First Mennoniite church and continue nightly thru April Rev. Earl Salzman announces. Dr. Don Smucker of Mennonlte Biblical seminaiy, Chicago, will speak at the series. “And Away We go” by Jackie Gleason! It’s his own story of his fight for stardom—exclusive in Thtk American Weekly, with Sunday’s Chicago American. (Adlv.)
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Ads Selling Now In Nappanee City & Farm Directory . • Work is going forward on Nappanee City and Farm Directory with many ad/*, sold to date. The book will be issued as soon as it can be printed. Nearly ail names have been set in type and work on the advertising is started. Businesses that wish to buy advertising space in the directory are asked to call the AdvanceNews if they wish a salesman to call on them, or else bring their ads into the office. All directory advertisers will be listed in the classified section of the directory, at no extra charge from their regular ad. STEWARDSHIP FILM AT CHURCH OF BRETHREN The 65 minute Stewardship film, “All That I Have”, will be shown at Nappanee Church of the Brethren Sunday at 7 p.m. The film tells the dramatic story of Dr. Grayson,- a retired but noted surgeon, who is on trial for giving generously to persons he considered in need but whom the community looked upon as unworthy. After Dr Grayson heard his pastor’s sermon on Christian Stewardship, he is motivated to give a “thank offering” of $50,000 to the church. His nephews then institute court proceedings against him to prove him incompetent in handling financial matters. The sincerity of Dr. Grayson’s Christian conviction, “That offerings are a measure of one’s true love” give the jury, the attorney and the audience anew interpretation of the meaning of stewardship. The program is sponsored by the finance board of the church, Delbert Fox, chairman. Mary Burkholder & Andrew Yoder Married Sunday
Three hundred guests witnessed the marriage of Mary Belle Burkholder, daughter of D. O. Burkholder, and Andrew Yoder, jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Eli Mullett, Fredrickburg, 0., Sunday at Maple Lawn Amish Mennonite church. Attendants were her sister, Iva, Betty Gingerich, Hartville. 0., Eli Troyer and Daniel Troyer jr., Wooster, O. Ushers were Ann Yoder and Carolyn Burkholder, Richard Burkholder and Loyal Mast. Homer Miller read the opening, David Stutzman of Kidron, 0., preached and Clarence Yoder, Goshen, married the couple. Dorothy Stutzman led congregation singing. The bride wore a blue dress and young lady attendants wore pink. At a reception in the Burkholder home, 125 guests were served by the bride’s sister, Tillie, Sylvia Wagler, Mabel Troyer, Dorothy Stutzman, Lydia Bontrager and Esther Miller. The couple are living in Orville, O. Farmers To Roof Fair Barns And Eat Bar B-Q, Mon. Volunteer farmers mostly cattle, swine, and poultry farmers and 4-H parents will converge on the barns at the Exposition grounds Monday to put on brand new roofs. Calvin Rogers is captain of the east and LaMar Loucks key man of the western part of the county to organize the men for the job. The roofing has already been purchased and delivered. The city of Goshen is providing SIOO,000 worth of accident insurance.
Pringle and Roth Processing Plant will furnish sufficient barbeque chicken for the noon day meal and Poultry association members will prepare it. Trimmings and coffee will also be furnished. Between 50 and 100 men are exipected to give the day helping repair the roofs to Insure dry and comfortable quarters during the big unified Fair in August, according to Elmer Lehman, who is recruiting volunteers. Every person wso plans to help is asked to write or phone “Uncle Elmer” so iMr. Roth may know how much chicken to prepare. Spot 45 Planes During Ground Observers Test Eleven members of Nappanee Ground Observers corps took part in a 12 hour exercise Saturday to test Ithe effectiveness of spotter stations, Supervisor Betty Holderman reports. Volunteers, who spotted 45 aircraft were: Mrs. Holderman, Charles Green, Gwendolyn Tobias, Dave Arch, Jim, Kay and Sally Stouder, Jim Spioher, Bill Conrad, Irene Moyer and Lowell Pippenger. Sally Stouder stood watch for four hours.
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BEVERLY GEORGE AND JUDY SHORI ELECTED TO HEAD 4-H CLUBS Napanet and Clover 4-H clubs had a pot luck supper and election of officers Monday night in the home ec room at tihe school with 65 members and 45 parents attending. Beverly George was elected president of Napanet dub, Thelma Rose, vice president; Sharon Sechrist, secretary-treasurer; Clara Walters, recreation leader; Carol Weldy, song leader; Marguerite Wagner, health anud safety; Pat Lutes, reporter. For Clover club; Judy Shori is president; LuAnn Wyman, vice president; Pat Warren, sceretarytreasurer; Karen George, recreation; Marlene Parks, song leader; Carol Hollar, health and safety; and Jane Lakins, reporter. Mrs. Neher Dies At 85; Funeral Is Here Today Services for Mrs. Anna Trainor Neher, wiho died at 85 in Bristol, Pa., Tuesday are at the Methodist church today (Thursday) at 2 p. m., led by Rev. Jennings. Friends may call at Wright’s funeral home between 1 and 2Mrs. Neher, mother of the wellknown Nappanee cartoonist, Fred Neher, who draws the syndicated Life s Like That”, was an active member of the Methodist church during the many years she lived in Nappanee. She was born Sept. 12, 1869 in Plymouth, and married Jesse L. Neher in 1891, moving to Nappanee where she lived until her husband’s death in 1940. Mr Neher was a talor and later operated a wood-working shop in his home. Survivors include another son, Harry, with whom she made her home in Bristol. Pa., and four grandchildren. Fred lives in Denver. Pall bearers are Dan Metzler, Freed Miller, Calvin Lehman, Wayne Best, Don Wagner and Firm Troup. Burial is at Bremen cemetery. Daniel Messner Dies At 76 After A Year’s Illness Daniel W. Messner, 76, died at his home, 351 E. Market, Sunday at 1:30 p. m. of a cerebral hemmorhage. He was ill for a year. Mr. Messner was born near Etna Green. Dec. 26, 1878, son of Peter and Levina Boyer Messner. He married Rosetta G. Davis, Sept. 7, 1902 and she died two years later in Peru. His second wife, Mrs. Della Hepler, whom he married Aug. 23, 1947 at Bremen, survives along with a daughter, Mrs. Paul Becknell, Bremen, step-children, Denzil Babcock, Mrs- Edgar Martin, and Mrs. Joseph Stouder, Nappanee, Mrs. Donald Grusb, Goshen, and Mrs. Arnold McGowen, Mishawaka. Also a sister, Mrs. Flora Austin, Nappanee, nine grandchildren and six greatgrandoliil'dren. Rev. E. E. Bragg led services yesterday at Wright funeral home and burial was at Stony Point cemetery. Dadio Balloon Lands in Field Os M. Farntwald A Radiosonde balloon with its radio, rubber balloon, parachute and frame fell in the cornfield of Mervin Farmwald, 3 mi. south and a half mile east, about a month ago. Marvin saw the red paper in the field but presumed I it was-a fertilizer bag until Monday when he went into the field! and saw it was a scientific instru-! ment. It’s at Ziliak Ford sales | pending return to the Army Sig-i nal corps. No card for return! was found on it.
Sally Snider To Sing at Bourbon With Coll. Choir Sally Snider, 352 W. Walnut, a junior at North Central college, will sing with the college choir Sunday night at Bourbon Presbyterian church. The choir is on its sixth annual tour, visiting Evangelical United Brethren churches in Michigan and CanadlaIt is the first time the choir has gone into Canada. The Bourbon church is the home Phurdh of one of the boys in Ithe choir. NEW HOOVER CONSTELLATION, WORLD’S MOST POWERFUL CLEANER, WITH EXCLUSIVE DOUBLE STRETCH HOSE. SEE IT AT PLETCHER FURNITURE CO.
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“Martin Luther” should be seen the beginning for maximum enjoyment. Starting Times Sunday 1:50 4:05 Starting Times Mon - Tues. 4:10 6:20 “If you’ve seen it.....y0u’1l want to see it again and again.”
Melvin Snow Held on Check Charge, Had 14c in Bank — j 7 % A police chase leading thru Orlando, Fla., Texas and ending in Gary landed Melvin Snow with Sheriff .Cripe and an affidavit was placed againsit him by Police Chief Herman Fogel on charges of passing checks for $l9O with 14c in the bank, the chief reports. Snow was under $3,000 bond in jail, Fogel added. He came from New York state in September and opened Mel’S garage 2" miles west on Rt- 6. Passing six worthless checks in Nappanee and one in Bremen is the charge against him. Fogel add 9 that Snow was ejected from Ossie’s case and on Feb, 2 was fined $5 and given a suspended sentence after he tangled with a state trooper in civilian clothes, after disrespectful remarks to a woman. The state trooper phoned Ligonier who called Nappanee police and officer Ken Weldy responded. Snow put up a fight ini Which Ossie’s door was badly damaged before he was subdued. Services Friday For Mrs. Beber Who Died at 92 i Services for Mrs. Florence Isabelle Beber, 92, who died Tuesday in Niles, are tomorrow (Friday) at Wright’s funeral homfe, led by Rev! Don Jennings. Friends may call between 2 and 5 and 7 and 9 p.m. tonight. Mrs. Beber, grandmother of Mrs. Harter Wright, was ill for four weeks and hospitalized with pneumonia for 11 days in Berrien Center hospital where she died. She was born in Kosciusko county, Oct. 24, 1862, daughter of Benjamin and Martha Wells Keasey, and was married twice; to Edgar Farmer Wilson. who died in 1906 and to Samuel Beber, who died in 1938. She is survived by one daughter, Myrtle Goodman. Niles, out of seven children; 24 grandchildren, 58 great grandchildren, and 29 great-great grandchildren. Mrs. Beber was a member of United Brethren church, Claypool. Burial will be at Mentone cemetery. Sail Fish Gives 8 Nap Fishermen A Busy Half Hour Mr. and Mrs. Earl Nunemaker and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Uline are home from a 17 day vacation in Florida. While at Palm Beach the men went deep-sea fishing with Memno Pletdher, who hooked a 45 lb. sail fish and it took all three men a half an hour to get it in the boat. Mr. Nunemaker also caught a 7 lb. dolphin- Returning, they spent a week at Sarasota and saw numerous other Nappanee residents. VISIT FURNITURE DEPARTMENT. NEW STYLES IN LIVING ROOM AND BED ROOM FURNITURE. SHIVELY’S FURNITURE DEPT.
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Page Seven
Jackie Thompson Weds Navy Lt.; Living In Boston Jacquelyn Thompson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John T. Thompson, and Ernest Eugene Howard; son of Mrs. Ohrysbal Osborn, Warsaw, and Ernest Howard, Indianapolis, were married Mar. 5 at the bride’s home by Dr. Francis Reese, with 41 relative* attending. After a wedding trip, the couple are living at 1730 Beacon 9t., Boston, Mass-, until May 1 when they leave for Europe. The groom is a Navy Lit. (j. g.) and expects to be stationed in Europe for a year. Margie Howard, the groom’s sister, and Bob Henderson, Warsaw, attended the couple. Jackie attended Indiana U., where she majored in jouralism and art and her husband is a graduate of Penn State with a degree in engineering. Mr. and Mrs. -Glen Ganshorn and Mr. and; Mrs. Waiter Sechrist attended North Indiana EUB church conference at Warsaw last Wednesday evening.
Market Report
Corrected March 16, 1955 Wheat 1.94 Soybeans 2-52 Corn 1.30 Oats .75 Eggs . .. .40
FORREST Electric Service Electrical and Refrigeration PHONE 35 1605 E. Market (Rt. 6) Res.
FOR SHELL NO. 1 PRIME WHITE AND SHELL FURNACE OIL PHONE 500 Courteous Service Tyndall Oil Cos.
Boy’s Suits Short & Long Pants with Shirt-Tie Sizes 2 to 6 $4.98 • $8.98 Jr. Bow Ties 59c Solid Colors & Figures Long Pants 52.25 - 52.98 Gabardine - Twill - Linen £ Sizes 3 to 8 Spring Coat Sets Infant to 6x For Boys & Girls ISABELLE Shoppe Phone 595 104 E. Market Nappanee
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