Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 5 Apr 1923, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

CURSE OF • *(< ^The girl who'll"-! Reds at'Moscow Resent knows how to Pleas for Roman Catholic Unly Seven Minor Defendants Are Lord Cecil, Noted Briton, Pleads Persuasion as World Redeemed, l n Acquitted by a Federal juryi Prelate*; ir* V can do most & "A", TfllAL LASTED SIXTEEN DAYS Will DEFINE OWN POLICY FIRST, SPEECH IN AMERICA ^ther cooking well Send for free booklet ,.JT ,Br«uf " "l ?f 'i ' 'TArchbishop's Death Sentence la Com* awted to Ten Years' Imprisonment •--Appeal of Vicar-General for Clemency Denied. \ Not Bfc ImooMd Qelger Until Lats HI April or Early In May. In Arfdresa Before Foreign Polity •OOlation of New York He 8ayi Minds of Nation Must Be Turned From Force. it&>m r It--: « Indianapolis, Ind., April L--Fiftyfive defendants In the Gary liquor conspiracy case, including Rosweil O. Johnson, mayor of Gary; Dwijrht M. Kindier, prosecutor of Lake county; William H. Olds, sheriff; William M. Dunn, city Judge; Clyde Hunter, former prosecutor, and Lewis E. Barnes, former sheriff, were found guilty l>y a Jwry in Federal court here. Seven Minor defendants were acquitted. Sentence probably will not be Imposed by Judge Ferdinand A. Geiger OBtil late in April or early In May. The maximum penalty is two years to prison and a fine of $10,000 on e$ch at the four counts of the indictment. Attorneys" for the defense were given eight days In which to file motions in arrest of judgment for new trials, etc. These motions will be ruled on April 20, Judge Geiger announced. Tbe jury reached a verdict at 9:28 a. m. after being out sixteen hours. It was said the jury was unanimous from tile start as to tbe existence of a conspiracy, the greater part of the time being taken up in considering tbe gollt or innocence of individual defendants. Tbe trial lasted sixteen days And was one of the hardeot-fougbt cases ever tried in Federal court. Originally tbere were seventy-five defendants. Of tbese, five pleaded guilty, seven never were arrested, and the- case against one, Stanley Kosowski, was nolled by tbe government at the completion of its evidence. This left sixty-two to face the jury, the largest number In tike history of tbe local Federal court. STRIKES MENACE TO ENGLAND •00,000 Building Men to Be Locked Out jfP *4Uil Farm and Mine Walk- * * ' vents Listed. , i f ' J,ondon, March 30.--Great Britain's Industrial situation Suddenly has taken :M decided turn for the worse, not only In tbe scheduled lockout of 800,000 building workers «fter Easter, bat in •the threat of a great railway strike and the possibility of a miners' strike. Already the Norfolk farm workers are out, and they have received the endorsement of the executive committee of the National Union of Agricul- Workers. This strike to spreed- Lewis W. Baldwin, vice president of the Illinois Central railroad, has just been elected president of the Missouri Pacific system, succeeding B. F. Bush. COMPTROLLER NAMED Henry M. Dawefs, Chicago Bank- , Is Appoint^ s; Brother of Famous General Who Held 8ame Position Under McKinley Administration. Washington, March 30.--It was announced here on bebalf of President Harding that upon bis return here early in April the chief executive will name Henry M. Dawes, brother of Gen. Charles G. Dawes, former director of the budget, to be comptroller of the currency in succession to D. R. Cris singer, who was elevated to the position of governor of the Federal Deserve board. . Mr. Dawes Is a director of tbe Central Trust company of Chicago, a director of the Drovers National bank of that city and of the City National bank of Gvanston, III. Mr. Dawes will be given a recess appointment and upon the convening of the Sixty-eighth congress will be nominated by the President. The appointment of Mr. Dawes is of peculiar Interest because under the McKinley administration his brother. General Dawes, occupied the same position and fa that office first attracted national attention in tbe financial world. BONUS FOR DUPONT WORKERS MAIL HOLDUP IN ILLINOIS Unmasked Men Fire Sixty Shots In Streets of Springfield--Get Little of Value. Springfield, 111., April 2.--Armed with • ttwed-off shotguns and revolvers, six unmasked men held up a fnail auto driver and employees of the Chicago and Alton depot and made away with "tare mail sacks. r More than sixty Shots were fired daring the holdup and In the running fight between the bandits and pollee .Which followed. The robbers obtained little, if any, mail of value. REVOLUTION IN BUCHAREST King and Queen of Rumania Flee . ' Retorts, Paris Newspapers Are, informed. 1% Paris, April 2.--French papers report from Budapest that a revolution lb Bucharest compelled the king and qaeen to flee to Albajulln. The information comes from a radio agency. The Rumanian embassy has beard nothing of the story. The report says tbe soldiers refused to obey tbe populace stormed the palace, ttt rpyal family escaping secretly. MIKADO'S KIN IS KILLED 'fPfother-in-Law of Japanese Ruler Dies In Auto Accident In , France. *. Bernay, France, April 2.--Prince 4l Narlhtsa Kltashlrakawa, brother-inlaw of Emperor Yoshlhito of Japan, was killed, and his wife. Princess Pusako; Prince YaBuhiko Anoka, who Slso married a sister of the emperor, «nd a lady in waiting were seriously v. Injured in an -automobile accident - Sunday afternoon. The chauffeur also , » Was killed. Powder Company Announces Distribution of $1,578,400 as Awards for T 1918 to 1921, inclusive. N«W York, April 2.--E. I. Du ftait de Nemours & Co., of Wilmington, Del., announced distribution to its employees of 14,484 shares of its own stock of a par valre of $1,448,400, and $130,000 in other securities as the matured portion of bonus awards .made during the year 1918 to 1921, inclusive. U. S. OIL ROYALTIES BIG in Government Land TMs * Year Up to March 1 -H • Total 10,327. * Washington, April 2.--Oil royalties running into million# of dollars are being realized by the United States government as a result of oil and gas production upon leased public lands, according to Secretary Work. The total net royalties from these sources up to March 1, according to figures just completed reached $10,045,673. RUHR PEOPLE FACE OUSTER Striking Railroad Employees Must : Reeyme Work or Leave Territory, Says French Order. Bssen, Starch 81.--4 proclamation by General Degoutta. commander-inchief of the occupational forces for all striking railroad officials and trammen to resume work, or face Apulslon, wa« posted throughout the Ruhr and Rhinelaad. The order affects 500.000 Germans, as the families of those refusing to return w'Ji accompany them into unoccupied Germany. Approximately 125,000 men eoiqfe. directly under the order. Moscow, March Jl.--The death sentence recently imposed on Archolsbop Zepliak, bead of die Roman Catholic church in Russia, was commuted to ten years' imprisonment unuer strict Isolation. The appeal of Vicar-General Butcbkavitclj for clemency waa denied. Tbe central executive committee, which met to consider requests for mitigation of the bentences, said in its decision that both prelates were deserving of the penalty Imposed by the Moscow court, but that commuta- j tion was ordered in the case of the archbishop because a certain element of the Catholic citizens in Russia might exploit tbe sentence as being directed against the priests and their religion. Tbe committee, however, said it regarded the evidence in the case of Mgr. Butchkavitch showed hta direct treasonable connection with an enemy of the state. The decision was signed by President Kalluln nd Secretary Sapronoff. Poland draws the chief r ~w.ult. Referring to Premier Sikorstl's statement, tbe Pravda, the official newspaper, says: "In 1918 a man somewhat stronger than the ephemeral -tatesman of Poland. namely, the jgllsh foreign minister, Balfour, threatened the soviet government with persecution by land, sea and air if it f Ued to a'jfndon its sins. The soviet ai giily brushed aside the threats of tl - strongest capitalistic state in Europe; It has been doing what the inteiests of the Russian proletariat and the Russian peasantry demanded. "The decisions of the supreme soviet authority must be fulfilled. International counter resolution m>iy try as much as It pleases; the decisions will not be changed. The soviet did not allow capitalistic states to define Its policy when it was very weak; and even less will It now allow intervention in Internal affairs " The newspaper Is especially sarcastic in reference to the tote from Secretary of State Pughes. It «twuspl7 condeinns his "interferelnee." > Fred L Kent, vice president of the Bankers' Trust Company of New York,, who, as a member of tne American delegation attending the conference, proposed at the Rome session of the international chamber of commerce that an American loan sufficient in siase to resuscitate and stabilize industry in Germany be made. The plan is understood to have the tentative approval of the State department, although no official statement has been made. U. S. MARKET REPORT GIRL SHOOTS RICH BUILDER Frederick W. Burnham Wain b f Mist Helens Zeigler, Who Then Kills Herself. New York, March 30.--Miss Helenc Zeigler, -<wenty-six years old, who lived with ^her parents at 588 River' side drive, Jshot and mortally wounded Frederick W. Burnham. forty-six years old, a well-known contractor, in his office in the Grand Centre 1 terminal. With her second shot she killed herself instantly. She bad once tc Id hex parents that she cculd marry Burnham at any thne; and her recent discovery that he already had a wife Is believed to have provided her motive. Burnham died at Bellevue hospital without regaining consciousness. Weekly Marketgram by Bureau of Agricultural Economics. Washington.--For the week ending" March 31--GRAIN--Chicago cash market: No. 2 red winter wheat, (1.30; No. 2 hard winter wheat, $1.20; No. 2 mixed corn. 76c; No. 2 yellow corn, 76c; No. 3 white oats, Mc, Average farm prices: No. 2 mixed oorn in centra] Iowa, 62c; No. 2 hard winter wheat in central Kansas,r$1.01; No. 1 lark northern wheat in Central North Dakota, 11.01. HAY--No. 1 timothy, 119.76 Cincinnati. £23.00 Chicago, $16.00 Minneapolis, $22.00 St. Louis; No. 1 prairie. $19.60 St Louis, (16.60 Minneapolis. FEED-Bran. $27.76; middling*. $27.60. (lour middlings, $29.50 Minneapolis; gluten feed, $40.65 Chicago; 34 per cent linseed meal. $44.00 Minneapolis; white hominy feed, $28.25 St. Louis. $28.75 Chicago. DAIRY PRODUCTS--Butter, 92 score. 19% Chicago. Cheese prices at Wisconsin primary markets: Flats. 23c; twins, £2Hc; single daisies, 22%c; double daisies, 22V4c; young Ameri as. 23*4c; longhoros, 22c; square prints, 22%c LIVE STOCK--Chicago prices: Hogs, top, $S.40: bulk of sales, $7.90@8.30; medium and good beef steers, $8.35@9.90; butcher cows and heifers, $4.35@9.75; feeder steers, |6.36@8.50; light and medium weight veai calves, *7.00@9.75; fat lambs, $13.25@16.)S: feeding lambs, >13.25flx)l4.75; yearlings, $8.76 @14.25: fat ewes, $7.50011.25. FRUITS AND VEGETABLES--Eastern sacked round white potatoes, $1.65^)2.00 per ,100 lbs. in city markets; northern •round whites, $1.4601.75 In consuming centers. $1.06@1.20 at Rbfpplng points; Florida Bpaulding rose, $13.25©14.00 per bbl. Baldwin apples, $6.25@6.00 per bbl.; northwestern extra fancy wlnesaps, $2.25®3 00 per box. Texas yellow Bermuda onions, $2.60 per standard crate; eastern and northern yellow globes ranged generally $3.2504.26 per 100-lb. sack. Florida pointed cabbage, S2.2S(g'3.00 per 1% bu. hamper; Texas flat Dutch, $100.00@120.00 per ton; New Tork Danish. $30.00<fj70.00 In loading markets. Florida strawberries, 50@75c per quart; Louisiana Klondlkes, $4.50(fi5.00 per 24-pint crate in Chi' aKO. $4.5§©4.75 auction sales at shipping points. JOHN D„ JR.'S, OIL INCOME Owns 7,638,390 Shaf-es of 8tock Having -a Total Value of . t * $410,674,399. • •- M • • - * --_ N«» March SB.--D. Rockefeller, Jr., owns 7.638,390 shares of stock in nine of the mpyre prominent companies composing the socalled Standard Oil group, having a market value of $410,067,399. From those* he receives dividends at the rate of $11,946,622 annually at toe present rate of payments, according .0 a compilation tnade by Dew, Jones ft Co. CHINESE BATTLE BOLSHEVIKS ptotfe.Chang Tso Lin Orders Mobilization o* Ail Troop* in Manchuria. *** '<#->.4* ' Honolulu, March 30.--A cable from Tokyo to the Nippu" Jipi, a local Japanese newspaper, reports that Gen. Chang Tso Lin lias ordered a mobilization of all troops to check the Bolshevik forces which are' moving toward the south Into Manchuria. A clash Is reported. ^ * Ohio Wreck Death TolMtlow Eight. HI Columbus, O., April 2.--The death of W. L. Slebert of Cincinnati, student lo- ^comotlve fireman, increased the death : toll of the wrecking of the Southwestlimited of the Big Four railroad S p ; ; ' ' > t o e i g h t . . . . Prison for Ex-CaBTnet Membe«* Sofia, Bulfrarln, April 2.--The supreme court has sentenced to life Imprisonment six members of the Radoslnvoflf cabinet, which held office at the time of Bulgaria's entry as a German ally into the European war. WOULD CURB SUPREME COURT Senator Fess of Ohio Join] Radicate In Fight on the High Tribunal. Washington, March &1.--Th«v movement to curb the powers a* Supreme court, which heretofore has been confined to radicals in congress, gained unexpected impetus here wh<*n Senator Fess (Rep., Ohio), long Identified with the conservative wing of his party, declared In favo of legislation requiring ;oncurrcace of at least six justices to v*nder*a lnw cnconstltutionai. :(v, Given Fifth Death Sentence. Waco, Tex., April 2.--it„y Mitchell negro, who received his firth sentence hang when he was found puiltv of |lg. '-the murder of Harreli Bolton in Mav *; 1022, is in Jail with eight other, plaints charged against him. fc; Nova Scotia to Fight Strike Violence. Halifax, N. S„ Harch 30.--pians for iV organization ot a provincial police "{foroe of 1,000 men to comba" disorders £Vv feared during an expected strike of I * Uteel and coal workers after April 1, -were published by Premier Armstrong! Klansmen Put to Rout. . jnttehurjrh. Pa., April 2.--BefiOre gtateeri hooded Ku Kiux Klansmen who appeared In the Bellevue Methodist church Easter morning could reach the pulpit, they were put to rout by the ushers. fttinnes Buys rgentine Lands. ,:i. Buenos Aires, March 30.--Hugo '.fitinnes, the German industrial magnate, Is understood to have purchased large tracts of .I4bd along the bank of the Parana river, for co'.ton growln « niii'iyigna *7- • Sl fe- Stove Foundry Plant Burns. Akron, O., March 31.--Fire caused total destruction of the new foundry of the Taplin-Rlce-Clerkln company, manufacturers of stoves and furnaces, In North Akron. The loss Is estimated at several hundred thousand dollar*. Income Tax Receipts $450,000,000. Washington, April 2. -- Receipt of final returns frorti all over the country show that collections of Income tax up to March 15 exceeded $450,000,000. The receipts had been estimated at $400,000,000. New York, April 8.--Fear and suspicion, twin demons which have possessed the world, and which can be exorcised only by some form of ai) association of nations, are the forces that stand between France and Germany in the settlement of the reparations question, as they stand in the way of settlement of every other international que«-tlon. Lord Robert Cecil, noted British exponent of the league of nations, declared in an address be» for the Foreign Policy assocSation. Addressing his first American audience, Lord Robert declared it was eSsentlal for world safety to "turn the minds of nations from force as the only remedy." ' "Take the question of reparations," he said. "What'is It that makes that question so Intractable? It is that though the French are anxious for the Germans to pay, they are also anxious left If they are allowed to get on their feet sufficiently to pay they will become again a danger to the security of France. "Do not think I am attacking the French on that account. No one who has read the history of these countries even cursorily will say the fears of France are unreasonable--or, for the matter of that, the fears of Germany either. ""There Is a long history behind the reparations question of the present day. And if we are to bring some remedy to this state of things, the first thing we have lo do Is to allhy international fear and suspicion. We have to get a new spirit among the nations of the world. We have got to ftirn their minds from force as" the only remedy. We hi;ve got to teaph them that persuasion, public opinion, are far greater potency than mere physical compulsion." , - ^ . WOULD PROBE CAPITAL UPE HARDING TO VISIT ALASKA Territory .la .Placed .on .President's rw"p|tlnerary This Summer, « * ; It Is Announced, St. Augustine, Fla., March 81.--Official announcement was mads here by Fred Starek, managing director of the War Finance corporation, and one of the Harding 1920 presidential lieutenants, that the President would visit Alaska this summer on his western tour. Mr. Starek said the President is beginning to give serlot 3 thought to the essential features of bis proposed western tour. BUST m HOME KILLS TWO Illinois Mother and 8mail Son D^e When Carbide Tank Explode* < Near Free port. | Freeport, III., March 30.--ICxplosloa of a carbide tank used to generate illuminating gas In the farm home of William Wernecke, near Lena, killed Mrs. Wernecke and her son, Robert, four; seriously injured her husband, her daughter, Lois, six. and John Stabenow, « farm hand, and demolished the Wernecke home. Wernecke, Inspecting the tank, 'held a lighted, lantern at Its opening. FRENCH AND GERMANS CLASH Dusseldorf Dispatch Says El Persons Were Killed at Qeroii Rhenish Prussia. London, March 31.--The Times prints a Dusseldorf dispatch paying that in a clash at Gerolstein, Rhenish Prussia, between French an J Germans eleven persons were killed. Six of the Yictims were Germans. r? - * ;"8hakeup" in Prohibition Foroe. Washington, April 2.--All prohibition agents on the staffs of the New Tork and Pennsylvania directors are transferred to the force of general prohibition agents under a "shakeup" ordered by Commissioner Hayces. "Going Up." New Orleans, La., March 81.--John J. Pelly of Chicago, named general manager of the Illinois Central system. Quit teaching a country school in Illinois twenty-two years ago to becomo « section $750,000 Rum 8hlp Off Boston. Boston, March 81.--Riding at anchor outside the three-mile limit Is the British steamship Avontown, with 10,000 cases of fine Scotch whisky and champagne valued at $150,000 in her hold; • Michigan Congressman Dies. Charlotte, Mich., March 81.--Cox* gre*srnan, J. M. C. Smith of the Third Michigan district died here of heart disease. He was elected last November to his seventh term in the house. Ba waa seventy years of ^ U. 8. to Admit Mme. Kallnlfe. ; Washington. March 31.--Officials announced that Madame Kalinin, wife of the president of the Russian republic, will be admitted to the United States upon her asurances that her activities will be only Red Cross work, Army Flyer Breaks Speed Reoord. Dayton, O., March 31,--Flying at a maximum speed of 281.4 miles an hour, the highest ever attained, Lieut. Lester I J. Maitland, army aviator, broke all speed records when be piloted a racing plane here. 15,000 German Miners 8trike. Geisenkirciien, March 80.--Fifteen thousand miners are on strike in the Gelsenkirchen district at all mines occupied by troops, according to estimates which have come from German quarters. Far West Asks Jury Inquiry on Con* ~ iBftlons at Washington--Started. - by Senator's Wife. " V ; , - . • Spokane, Wash., April 3.--Petitions asking a federal grand jury Investigation of stateme3ntx,of alleged misconduct in Washlngtoii (D. C.) society circles, will be circulated in leading Pacific coast cities. It was announced here by H. C. Harris, chairman of a citizens' committee arranging for the petitions. •; Tills is the latest development of the furore started by newspaper articles by Mrs. Polndexter, wife of tbe former senator, detailing gambling and drinking episodes in the nation's capital. , v WORKERS' TAXES ARE Clfy; DwtJler Contributes 58 « Rural Resident ; *Y:'- But 50. ^ ' > • < - - ' • ' New York, April 3.--Statistics made public here by the national budget committee show that on average yearly earnings of $1,500. about 16 per cent of all the city worker earns goes for federal, state and city taxes. Taxes on all workers. Including inhabitants of both city and country, average 14 per cent. !, , RUSS PROTEST POLISH ACT Moscow Government Calls Warsaw's <Plea for Catholic Prelate* *!! sfe Unfriendly Move. ' ^ '.ftr. Moscow, April 3.--The Russian government st>nt a sharp note for" transmission to the Polish government, characterizing Poland's attempted "Interference with Russian justice" an unfriendly act. So far as coQld be ascertained Vicar General Butchkavitch had not been executed. OIL COMPANY IS INDICTED Tan Individuals Also Charged With Using the Maife to Defraud Investors. . New York, April 3.--A federal grand jnry here returned an indictment against the Great State Petroleum company. Inc., of Texas, and ten individuals, charged with using the nfcils to defraud investors In the stock of tlie corporation. The corporation is capitalized at $5,270,000. Was Also Stock Broker. Neyv York, April 3.--The artist's mode),'frornthy King Keenan, who was murdered with chloroform, was senior member of the stock brokerage firm of "King A Scott," it was learned since the girl's- death. Senator Nicholson Left Million. Denver, Colo., April 3.--The will of United States Senator Samuel D. Nicholson, opened here Monday, disclosed an estate estimated to be worth $1,000,000, largely in bonds and- ot^er securities. 'Wrong, The Wbttffiii has a friend who was recently married. "You didn't stay away quite a week, did you?" the Woman said. No; you see, every Friday night Peter has had his friends up for poker--he always has--and I made up my mind that they needn't thi^k a woman was going to spoil Peter's life. So we got back Friday mbrnlng--we were married on Saturday, you know' --and Peter's friends were so delighted that they went out and bought me tbe most beautiful of tea sets. Poker players arent so bad, after all/* She smiled.--New York Sun. (1730 N. AMand Avt^ OUcogo To know Ancient* Had Knowledge. The theory that tbe sun was tbe tenter of the universe and that the planets revolved .about it was advanced 500 B. C., and many of tbe proven factors in the knowledge we sow possess of the heavens were thrashed out centuries ago by men whose works have become as brilliant as the planets they studied.--Exchange. * **1! .*->?<• Wealth In the Mind. It Is the mind that makes as rlc|K and happy, in what condition soevef we are, and money signifies no moi% to it than It does to the gods.--Sen* Z or 3 Cans 0 Baking Powdef Are Not Worth the Price •( One K they are the "big can an<| che&p" kind because they « may mean baking failures^ ' CALUMET Yhe Economy BAKING POWDER Don't let a BIGCAN or a very low price mislead you. Wr: '[ < *' iSv i." Jf" mm ev* V cwMsn»n»_ 1 im ST TUT Experimenting with^fci uncertain brand is expensive -- because it Wastes time ant| money. The sales of Calumet are over 150% greater than that of any other baking powder. THE WORLD'S GREATEST BAKING POWDER The average age of Londoners has increased by two years during the last decade. , • ~ • i Old families always engnift prid* to their family tti*. ' V Of tlie 25,000.000 more women th« men In Europe, Russia has thegreate surplus. Luck is a good; thing to trust yon arent hungry JVi. . r "" J~ii* - >v' .•0T .. , a Utility" *4 Ixpyess Ijcuck Flint, Midw Hearet's Son Elopes. Martinez, Cnl., April 3. -- George Hearst, son of W. R. Hearst, and Miss Blanche Wilbur, daughter of O, K. Wilbur of Idaho, eioped from the University of California at Berkeley and were married here. Teach English In Germany. Berlin, March 30.--English Is thd most important language In the world. Therefore all children In Germany will devote the time given .^o linguistic studies to English, according to a gov- IftUMtt ordmi : .;> ^ ; Socialists Blame Nationalists. .Berlin, April 8.--Nationalists In the Krnpp plant are blamed by the Rote Fahne, a socialist newspaper, for Inciting disturbance at the Krupp plant that culminated in the death of nine Germans and tbe shooting of others, r Utility Express Is the lowe*t«f>riced quality trade in the world capable of fast heavy-duty service. It Hants your heavy loads quickly and economically® I It is reliable. ( •" Long grade* and deep mud are mattered by It I without racing the motor or boiling the water because the 3-speed transmission provides correct v gear ratios to meet any condition of load or road. You get fast, heavy-duty service at the lowest 1^;; operating and maintenance cost with this truck.. * •' It leads in high mileage on gasoline, oil and tires,. living up fully to the Chevrolet reputation for . unequalled economy. - Prices f. o. b. Ftmt, Michigam ^ V '^«tM t PMfc lloedmr . $5ICT 8wp*rtor 3 P-iJlldr• Superior 5 Pan. Tourins • 525 ®5**^or * V ?1? Superior 2 P.m. UtlUty Cou^ «S0 ill Superior 4 Pa*. SediMM . 850 UtlHiy Ezpr«M Track Chiaaia 57* Chevrolet Motor Co., Detroit, Midi* t, > - Diriiion of Generml Corporation it I*!' Af'if# 1 Dealers m4 8er*k#t > HlurtnliuB at feft (how# UtUitr Bxprtu Truck HMUrJ general Puivom body t-.T- s * f < . 1 • - v. lit-' -- i ^4i"' •• n- i' ilfftnlrefill tfi irf iiihiin ^ " V • /tH -'it' v!'. 'kfZUrM r / . t l ' /'* ] r - .• ,-#•? •M *• -' j

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy