Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 March 1947 — Page 14

vy

»

hia basic subject the attention

~ to-do so. That won hurt the

” would have given the mayor of

- \ _ Ge Loh ond ihe Peo J od Thur. Don Wor

E. ‘the stroke of 12 of the legislative clock a week from " tonight, the 85th general assembly adjourns. | _ It is going to have to go more than its normal “full R ahead” pace this last week if its record of accom4 pests Pr ; “Top issue is the budget for the next two years, which | the house has held a disgracefully long time and which cannot possibly be given adequate consideration by thg senate. One of the principal jobs of the general assembly i§ to set up a budget for the next two years, but seldom in any session does the senate have sufficient time to give

The house should suspend its rules and get the budget to the senate by tomorrow, even if jt has to work all night

NUMBER or good bills, and as many bad. ones, will die because of inaction. These range from salary grab measures which should never have been introduced to bills _ which would end segregation in the schools and “which

outside the police department to find a police chief.

3

it should receive.

Fepraseniulives, for once. " s =» X

Indianapolis power to go |

{that he had only one good eye

“two bills.

ar

phase of has been

veterans’

3 The . cessions principle.

set

a

apparent “way, all

»

accepted,

and this

.

»

a Mr.

for Mr.

i

* The Marion county delegation did not support these

nN Progress of the legislature was delayed by fights over| a statewide primary and liquor control—with both being won by the administration—and over teachers py in-

Teachers should receive more money. There is no

doubt about that. And the question of low much state R ecto f All Factions" contribution shall be made still must -be settled. one | Commands esp

sentatives’ methods and to impair future effectiveness of jack or material for a candidate for mayor of Indianapolis, in the (both political parties as candidates

be ducked partially by authorizing a referendum of the opportunity to be your “Yes” state’ s voters, as will be done on local option. GENERAL. estimate of the legislature to date is “fair.” The voting record of the Marion county delegation vd ‘will be published by The Times this week.

ARMY-NAVY MERGER

pAssace of President Truman's bill for unification of native soil, and understands Sie . the armed forces, predicted by congressional leaders, | should strengthen our national defense establishment. that is a student in the operation | into a Republican boob - trap.

“Many people will wonder, for example, why the navy | should operate land-based aircraft when the air force is | dictatorship by certain groups and 0/d days should not despair. up as a co-equal of the two older services. It is our | classes, one who would be as stingy | own opinion that we should have one agency for air, sot] one and a half, or two. 4:1. Confusion also may result because, in addition to the | super-dooper secretary of national defense, provision also - i8 made for secretaries for army, navy. and air. Measures | for co-ordination of the three services seek to offset this

sonalities of the individuals named to the posts in question, | and the degree to which each accepts” the unification | principle. "Congress undoubtedly will give thought to these points, | and others. The proposal, as presented, is a long step in the | right direction.

be corrected as they become apparent. 4: Duplication in research and purchasing can be pre-and one who knows how to lead for the better man. vented if the merger program is administered properly, |

and teamwork on the part of the three services is essential lof the G. O. P. to real security.

ANOTHER McKELLAR DRIVE ENATOR McKELLAR and his Republican allies have |caliver of the Republican just about abandoned hope that they can defeat David Democratic “candidates for mayor realize substantial’ dividends —lower | mm entators as well as columnists] EK Lilienthal for chairman of the atomic energy commission. But there is a somewhat better prospect of a conso- | lation prize for Mr. McKellar. ~ gamniittee has voted, T to 5, to reject President Truman's | nomination of Gordon R. Clapp to succeed Mr. Litienthal | as chairman of the Tennessee Valley Authority. + Four Republicans and three Democrats on the am

mittee opposed Mr. Clapp; three Republicans and two. | Democrats favored him. -

1939" He has done a good job. The McKellar objection to him, we believe, has the same basis as the McKellar hate | §

% The senate is ok, bound to follow the advice of it6 I public works committee, - and should nat without - most | gareful consideration. It will find that Mr. Clapp has stood | firmly with Mr. Lilienthal against’ Senator McKellar’s | Patronage-grabbing Attempts wo turn TVA into a Political machine, That’ i an excellent reason for Confirming the nomi-

scout COOKIE JAR gr 1] 1}

oa

"Hoosier Forum : "Get G.O. P. Mayor Candidate Who

"| do soi agree with a word that you say, but | will defend to the death your right to say it." — Voltaire.

{ices—on their annual tax investment.’ of millions of dollars . . . must come about through the election of honest and capable ‘admin- * |istrative officials. By Robert J. Wadswotth, 51 W. Fall Creek bivd. Indianapolis taxpayers who fail to This is an open letter tothe political king makers of the Republican lend active support in selecting the party of Indianapolis. I see by the papers that you are disturbed by most capable men to be found in

the. effort to lobby legislation through, however, to arouse a the teachers’ repre-

TOWN By Anton

. ‘ie

oR

rerio

El Coxey—the Temesramsiial Mule

I NEVER PASS the old Shoemaker building — «the one just east of Hotel Harrison on Market st.— but what I think of the livery stable run by Lee

" | Holtzman which used to be in the same neighborhood.

- Mr. Holtzman’s_stable was the home of. Coxey, a cinnamon-colored mule “every bit e of 40 years old. I rémember, too,

and a patch on each side of his body from which all the hair had been removed. Whenever there Was any occasion for a parade, Mr. Holtzman used to lease: the mule’'s smooth-shaven patches for billboard advertising, Originally, the mule's name was Cairg. Sometime around 1894, however, Mr. Holtzman got it into his head to rechristen his mule. When asked why he had chosen the name of the man who, ft that very moment, was leading .a group of 20,000 unemployed from the Middle West to Washington, D. C., Mr. Holtaman said it was because his mule had all the attributes of Coxey's “army.” Indeed, he elaborated

his answer with the explanation that his mule not “%

only had a chronic antipathy for work, but that he could keep going by eating anything that came his way and at very Irregular intervals, too:

Stable Men Mourn

STRANGELY ENOUGH, Mr, Holtzman also | picked the precise moment of the industrial revglu- | tion to put up his building. As a matter of fact, it Was nearing completion. The walls were up, the Joists were in place and the carpenters just about ready to nail down the flooring when, ‘one morning, Mr. ‘Holtzman. came: to take command of his barn and found all the stable men in mourning. Coxey- had disappeared. Seems that sometime that night, the mule had wandered into darkness. The police were notified. . Messages. were sent to all sheriffs of adjacent counties. Indeed, legend has it that Mr. climbed to the top of the Soldiers’ monument and scanned the horizon for missing mules. ‘That same afternoon, a gosh awful sound startled the men. working on the Shoemaker building. It seemed to come from somewhere in the basement.

WASHINGTON, March 3.— Meeting here in executive session, the top officers of the C. I. O. took a significant step the other day. They voted to prohibit . any C. I O. official or C. I. O. union from becoming

part of either of the two iiberal organizations recently formed.

While it was not at first apparent—even to some who attended the meeting—this represents an im-

that lobby. | coming primary. I disagree with your opinions. I know that the party jor Foi deterve | to lose financially has many men in its ranks who are able and qualified but you so-called {on their tax vestment. The cigaret tax is “due to be the only new tax. A !leaders are looking for a man who will abide by your desires and | It is up to you, Mr. and Mrs. |

bonus is a ‘dead issue, although the question MAY | wishes and who is financidlly able to pay for the privilege of. the Indianapolis, to write your own!

man under the guise jof mayor of |ticket! After the primary in May it will be too late. People in other | {with sufficient civic pride and one lin government as Americans have {who knows the pulse of the real] lalways insisted for the - professions standing, well-grounded in the art] G O. P. Lincoln day speeches and efficient city government if our of accomplishing deeds for the giant touch on how Old Abe might ‘voters are not too lazy to work {poration of Indianapolis gilt-edge, The Lilienthal hearings turned |above par, maintain an unimpaired |

Indianapolis. . If you were sincerely interested in

“a. 0 # y aa giving the city a real mayor, a man

cities are demanding and securing! {the same high standard of efficiency | folks of this Hoosier capital, one : jand all walks of life. Indianapolis, | who has vision and political under- By DANIEL M. KIDNEY | too, can have honest, economical betterment of the city, social and fee] - about his party following °F it: ; {economical, one who is loyal to hisigenator McKellar. : | Let's keep our stock in the cor-

| problems bf all classes of the people {who make up this great city, oneian over-age Democratic destroyer | credit rating over the country of | which we'll be justly proud. Elect ‘_|a competent business administrator

- between the army and navy of municipal government. and- will} billie a comproatise y y This 80th ‘congress gets 50 per for mayor-manager, a syre guaran-

do great things for the betterment

viewpoints, and, as might be expected, some of the con- | of all classes within the boundary cent more pay than the 79th, but tee of lower taxes and improved

made are not in harmony with the ynifcation {of this: municipality, one that be- so far the difference hasn't been municipal services. | Lieves in an econpmical administra-|that great.

| tion and will defend the rights of | “LITTLE LIBERAL MATTER

Statesmen who igh for the good | IN DAILY NEWSPAPERS” By W. C. Frye, 811 N. Grant ave. ‘McCoy is dead and a Hatfleld is| Aq citizens of this democratic with his people's tax altars as wel}/ in. jail in West yogis jysay e ong, J aliases ate os as his own, a man who is proven| y,oks lke” Kin George must | of us really want to e o- | honest and commands the respectip.ve peen Hay off by the cratic; really A want freedom {of all factions of the Republican | | weatherman to take the family on | i speech, freedom of the press, party in this county, a man who! that South African trip at this | jogunl rights and opportunities snd will weigh and consider the recom-! time. 1 mendations of - you political bosses _ 4 ‘and have the ability to judge the 1 the press and radio. chaff from the wheat for the best ‘are too busy making a living to! weakness inthe plan, and if they operate that, interest of the voters as a whole, devote NUCH time 10 the stay of 11 d N h Hoffmann and Mr. Ludlow, whom! well and good. Much will depend on the per- ‘one who will .inspire the workers '° PeWipaper Supported, di for political or ecenomical matters, so of the paity, restore err fajn | ceveral other Democratic candidates instead We read the editorials and | ithe principals of the party, one who!’ tact election. There - ave]

and file Ib the n i ln hk SH 8 SD Te hed cena

{either case we get about the same lof man for your candidate for Party fines W eleck whichever op, line, and upon this we build our imayor of Indianapolis onthe Re- didate ‘is better. 5 Say go policies. publican ticket, I give you such a Mr. Ostrom and Mr. Boetcher—

: This would be very fine if we Once the idea of one police force is man, John M. Caylor, . lawyer, i good Sandie zie make the really could have freedom of the contradictions within the new framework can |Siatesman, student, soldier of world J¢E9n, @ FauEh one fH 18 INCE”

{people = against the - invasion ‘ofl

he -are kept informed through

which ever man loses, the city will gain a good mayor. I voted for Mr.

ress and free speech. This, how-| {war I, a man who believes in the pendents who are, I believe, nu- ag is seldom so. Each dail” paper | | principals of the Republican party, Merous enough to win the election and eacls radio’ has its own policy {but must yield to the policies of {huge financial interests more than |they want to ‘and more than we {want them to. And these fellows make it their business to see that | you get the news propounded to

" = 2 “ELECT GOOD MAYOR; KEEP YOUR STOCK GILT-EDGED” { By “Joe Doakes,” Indianapolis 2 gw Every taxpayer in Indianapolis is “HOPE PARTY CHAIRMEN _ |a bona fide stockholder in our muGET GOOD CANDIDATES” {Dicipal government « «. the biggest And I'm telling you, brother, they

By_ Independent Voter, City {and most important business cor-|,;e not looking after anyone else's I am impressed with the statement poration in Indianapolis. interests.

of The Times that it hopes -the| The enly way in- which these! There : is 4n . recent months and stockholders - might ever hope 10, ticeable - absence "of radio “com-

party workers: back to these principals .for the good of their fellow should ‘save a lot of money. That is important, {men and for the continued success

v

will. be 80 ‘high in each ‘case thatitaxes and improved Rimieipal Serv-iwho are liberal minded, from the

Side. Gapuostt C8

speak well for freedom of the press or speech. I just read.an article from a man | Who is being discussed by every | | paper in. the United States, but I] | | didn’t. see his article in any daily. |x is one of the finest democratiC | expressions 1 have seen this side "lof Lincoln and Jefferson. Look on] | page 7 of the Feb. 17 “New Re- |

.The. senate public works t

Clapp has been general ‘manager of TVA since | Believe,” by David Lilienthal.

We have very little liberal matter coming through the daily papers as ‘compared with conservative propaganda. selves and our posterity to seek out both “side of the great questions s| | confronting us in order to find the truth. The daily papers give us the conservative. side but ‘the liberal can be found only in such papers as “New Republic,” “The Nation, » and “P. M". :

Editor's Note:

Lilienthal, - . ° }

Reader

< / — We don’t knew what he’s been: reading lately, but: it ce

{the discussion in Times editorials, umris.about Mr. Lilienthal. have said so editorially. columns present factual informa- : tion on. both sides- of questions, :

| ‘DAILY THOUGHT

or the Girl Scouts i in Marion county. et : rls are working under a carefully- Ye : y oF = worthwhile product. 1t’is to be’ Lg or ev smn 10 ISA1.0Y NER SSNVICE, We 0 LY SINS DOV, ei ic this ‘year's tilting of the favor- a el enable % ‘The rerve of her asking me ho i ever manage to oop $0 young

{oSking—'m m going Jo de ie, a. ree i ! for bor next >

ns folly, lest thou also be like "unto him. “Proverbs 2 4,

Sa. - oN

Most of i

reports from the columnists - or lis-|

you as best - suits. their interests, |

al | seemed considera bly

| public” and read “That I vey :

We owe it to our-

Frye's {| comment about yielding to the huge financial interests is news to us.

inly is not columnist comment and news col‘We hap-

| pen to support Mr. Lilienthal and Our news

“Answer not a fool. according, 87, we

|suage, is so

portant victory for the extreme left in the C. I. O. It will.-be "interpreted as a triumph for those who follow the Communist line. +=" The decision must be ratified by the C. I» O. policy ‘board, which meets March 13. Strenuous efforts are now being “made to persuade - Philip { Murray that the.move is a tactical error. Why this will be interpreted as a Communist victory is clear when you see what the effect ‘of the decision would .be. Among the backers .of Americans for Democratic Action—which does not admit Communists to membership—are several - top

C. I. O. officers, including John Green of the shipbuilders and Walter Reuther of * the ate workers. Unless the decision of the other day is

reversed, they will have to withdraw.

Only One Sponsor

THE OTHER organization, the Progressive Citizens of America, which admits Communists to membership, has only one C. I. O. sponsor. That is Jack Kroll, a vice president of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers. : Thus, by getting Mr. Murray to agree to pull out of both organizations, the left-wingers will take away an important element of support from A. D. A. The

REFLECTIONS .

Scherrer ©

- Was up (or. down),

Holtzman, equipped with a telescope,

‘Ladies

. By Robert C.

One ot the bravest descended a ladder to. learn what

help. When picked up, he could give no explana: tion except to say that a monster had Attacked him and hurled him into space. Sure, 1t was Mr, Holtz-

»Man’s temperamental mule. ‘When finally discovered,

Coxey ‘Was eating the mortar out of’ ed stone walls

of Mr. 8hoemaker's cellay,

Nobody could fgure out how Coxey had maava in the basement. The only thing left to believe was™ that some time during the night the mule had tried to walk the joists and in his mad adventure, had fallen a distance of 18 feet. There was only one place where the joists were set three feet apart— big enough for a niule to pass roi Coxey had found it, you bet. !

Lets Out Yell

THE NEXT THING to do. was to ; Adare out a

- way of getting Coxey out of his predicament. There

wasn't any way except to tear the Joists from their .. moorings, lasso the beast, and pull him up with a derrick, The contractor let out an awful yell when ‘he heard of the plan because it meant a loss of time —an important factor in this case inasmuch as the building contract called for the completion. of the structure in a certain number of days. After which

- the contractor had to pay Mr. Shoemaker a stipu=

lated and fabulous sum” of money known as liquidated damages” for every day the building remained uncompleted. Unless, said” the contract, the delay was caused by an act of God. Well, that raised “the question whether or not God had anything to do with the behavior of Mr. Holtzman's mule, It was too big a problem to settle that afternoon with the result that:Coxey was still in the basement when the carpenters knocked off work for the day. The last thing Mr. Holtzman did before returning home for supper was to poke some hay -through the first floor ‘joists. : , Next morning when Mr. Holtzman arrived at his barn, believe it or not, there in his stall stood Coxey, hale, hearty and kicking like nobody's business. .And to this day nobody knows how the mule got out of his dilemma. Nor was it ever settled whether God

had anything to do with Coxey's fal into Shoémaker's cellar. ny

IN WASHINGTON .. . 8 Maia Childs : ClO Lefts Score Important Victory

C. 1. O.: will, in effect, be announcing to the world that it refuses support to any organization which does not take in Communists. The order will have no effect -on P. C. A, which has had virtually no union. support. This is a strange décision to take at a moment when the question of trade-union ‘objectives is so much to the fore. It can be argued, of course, that it tends to take the T. I. O. out of politics. But that argument is invalidated ‘when one examines the net result of the move, which is to weaken a liberal-progressive grbup favoring political action free of Communist intrigue.

Another Motive

AMONG THOSE who want to pull out of A. D. A; jealousy between C. I. O. and A. PF. of L. unions is also’a motive. A prominent backer of A. D. A. is David Dubinsky, who has anchored his International Garment = Workers union securely in the A. F. of L. The C. I. O. Amalgamated - Clothing - Warkers is an ever watchful rival of the I. L.G. W. U. Representatives of these two unions would ‘have difficulty working together in any organization, even one with the broad objectives of A. D. A. This fact points up the remoteness of any working agreement between C. I. O. and A. F. of L., although in the face of congressional hostility shey have good reason to unite . Mr. Dubinsky and other A. PF. of L. leaders who helped to form A. D. A. have given every indication of staying with it. Their active and. continuing support would tend to make the organization an : A F. of L. adjunct and therefore limit its usefulness.

Ruark

Bullfights Mors Sporting Than Hockey

MEXICO CITY, March 3.—It is very fashionable for the new spectator to bulifights to be aghast at | the slaughter of innocent animals, and sickened by

the blood, and to go away muttering that this is all right -for the spicks but yours truly will take hockey. I hate td fall short on thiS tradition, but I have i been conditioned to bloodletting by fhe seientific | | killing of innocent hogs and cows by the Swift peo- | ple, an operation I watched in Ft. Worth, and I must confess ‘to finding bullfighting more sporting.

Ornery Beefsteaks

ALSO I do not think I ever saw more ornery beef- | steaks than the miura bulls which snort around the Plaza de Toros in Mexico City’ - They are as mean or meaner than the guys who kill them, and generally much braver, and in some cases, smarter. A bull that is bred to fight is as wild a beast as a | lion, and considerably more fierce than an African buffalo. .I saw one of the critters climb the barrier three times, and he finally worked up as far as the second row. There he wound up in the lap of a fat : Mexican lady with a neat hairline moustache. Both ;discombooberated by the. experience. “. The trouble with bullfighting in Mexico today is two-fold. Occasionally: you get a smart bull who

“ought to hire out fo“the nearest abbatoir.

Two or three years back, when Manolete, the top i

| glamour boy of the .Corridas, was competing with Toreros Garza and Armillita for the soltd” gold bull's ear Sophy: one good pate of seats -at the Plaza was’

WORLD AFFAIRS i By Willi

WASHINGTON, March 3—Pan-Germarnism is not ‘dead. Neither is naziism .nor the danger of a new Hitler. These ménaces are merely more or less in a state of suspended animation. Therefore,’ unless the people of America are prepared for involvement .in another war within a decade or wo, they - must. not relax their vigilance. In substance, this was the ‘warning of Dr. Kurt Von Schuschnigg, last chancellor of: independent, Austria, in an interview with. this writer.

U.S. of Europe Best Hope otis

United States gradtially will lose interest in Europe .and withdraw before the peace. is; secure. Dr. Schiischnigg's. opinion is for the United States, now the strongest nation, permanently to use its power and influence for peace. And it cannot be effective without (1) remaining. strong; and’ (2) retaine ing the closest possible. contact with the rest of the . world. Such influence ‘and power are costly, but in ' the, end, it is far cheaper that way than war. Dr; Schuschnigg believes. Germany should be “organizéd into a loosely -bound confederation of auton“‘omous states with a -central regime of limited power. The Ruhr, he thinks, should remain an integral part of “this system though under. an international control which would see to it that. it served no aggressive | pirpose. The Baar, though largely Germanic in lan--with French economy

closely’ tied in with

Tes dn air and the dailies. This. does not. ‘plays . Ferdinand, sat mere sftén--you-get—a bunch Bs

of bullfighters who have lost their daring and who -

DR. SCHUSCHNIGG'S. greatest fear is that the

known to have sold for "10,000 pesos, which Is a lot of pesos. The matadores de toros were taking chances then. They let the bulls work close. One, Garza, I believe, tied his feet together with a handkerchief and dared the bull to kill him. _ But Garza has become a prima donna who spends

,more time fighting ¢ustomers in“the stands than he

spends fighting bulls, and Armillita goes «qfter a bull with all the alacrity of a lady who is forced to pluck a snake off her shirt. Something of . the - chicken-livered quality of the bull-killers, who make as high as $10,000 for knocking off two animals in one afternoon,. seemingly has infected the bulls. - We had one: A most ferocious black {fellow who made more noise, with accompanying ges tures, than a. tough drunk. But the picador, the guy on the horse with the long pike-pole, shoved one good pic into his hump and Ferdinand started -to think. - You could see him think. a “There is. no future to this business,” Ferdinand said to himself. “A fellow can get hurt in it.”

Stubborn as a Bull

-“80 THE bull steadfastly refused to have any more ..

to do with picador, matador, horse or the ‘assistants. Shr oionds $isanpetn~the 7 was shunted off to the abbatoir, - My wife, I think, sums up the bullight situation in Mexico rather” aptly. “I. am not disgusted, ‘or sick,” “she said, testily. But $12 a seat is an awful lot to spend to ‘watch some scaredy-cat guys heckling a poor old irritable cow.”

am Philip Sirois

“U.S. Must Not Relax lts Vigilance

‘that it ‘might well be intékrated with France politically as well as economically, In line with Winston Churchill’s recent. pronouncements, the former Austrian chancellor holds that a United States of Europe is the ultimate best hope of that continert. Meanwhile, something more modest might be started in 2+ way of regional understandirigs.” An Anglo-French entente would be a step in the right direction. So would an economic agreement, between Austria, Ataly and Hungary -whose

“interests are largely complementary. 3 Sn

Living Standards Retarded ita THERE IS already a Balkan blog organized by the Soviet Union-and, while he did not mention them, the Scandinavian nations have much in common as have France and the low countries. Eventually the

entire “continent should effect! some soft of unity or. .

federalization, split-up into many. nations, each with its own customs barriers. The present arrangement

unquestionably - is retarding the living standards of

‘everybody in Europe. Back 1045, said Dr, Schuschnigg, he was ‘confident world.war II was the ‘ldst. Now he i8 not se certain. Forces, are in motion which might lead to

‘world war 111 which really would be the last, Such °

a ‘war would be so terrible thal America, would be as back | Indeed, he added, |

+ Europe, if not

A momeht later, he yelled for =

riddle ot tine THES He =

Py

3

ame

nto the dark ages, J ow,

219 Skeins I “YARN, excellen skeins, each os Reg. 59 © GUEST 91 Balls Re 100% a colors, © 236 Reg. 1. for mak with les sizes l; 163 Tubes ¥ erocheti mats, } or greet pe tubes .d

I ——

|?

~ »

20 Reg. 2 COMFC . also as | ing, che covers 12 Reg. 9. PETTI( com= forters 125 Pairs R _CURTA cila, r green,

QUISE? with co figures 15 Reg. 13 BED 8] 8 Reg. 9.1 VANIT "300 Yards | REMNA and a fe Mery 1a 25 Reg. 3.! ODD C 1 Reg.’ 24 from d floral c! A Pair R from d print 1: 50 Bolts | ~~ SHORT , yards ‘i piece . 8 Reg. from display 20 Pairs 1 HOME! DRAPE 25 Reg. 2 LOWS, and flo

(100) Child - chintz, 8 size (500) Disco and coat only . (125) Parc] colors, ro ruffles, 2 length . (75) Buck ‘ments, sl 50) Elect) ties and (30) Elect for cloth

‘FINE

(2) Large (boudo ~. rose. (1) Tufted ‘rayon —.-plue, (1) Reg. 2 and R Fringe (1) Reg. 2 estry ¢ Lawsol (1) Reg. “Vanity Vanity Reg. 3 (2) Reg." | Lamp

(4) Reg. 1 tables (2) Reg, 4 : Lamp (1) Reg. Loungt predon (2) Reg. 2 wood spun... shades (8)-Reg. wv. ‘floor 1 (1) Group

- 500 Yards TOW]