Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 05, 1919, Page 6, Image 6

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    V
)MAHA SUNDAY BEEt OCTOBER 5. 1919
i
to
i
f
RESERVATIONS
TO PACT ASKED BY
BAY STATE G, 0, P
i i.
Prompt Ratification of Treaty
. Without Amendments
F Adopted in Platform in
Boston Meeting.
i
t
i
Boston. Oct. 4. Prompt ratifica
tion of the treaty of peace without
amendments, but with "unequivocal
and effective reservations, was
adopted in tjie platform offered at
the republican state convention to
day. The reservations include such
unequivocal and ertective reserva
tions as will make clear the uncon
rlitional right of the United States
to withdraw from the league upon
due notice, as will provide that the
United States shall claim no oblig
tion to our spliders and sailors only
as congress shall direct, and that
the United States shall be sole judge
as to the interpretation of the Mon
roe doctrine. ihe Shantung pro
vision of the treaty also was de
nounced.
Inability of the committee on res
olutions of the democratic state
convention to agree on its attitude
toward the league of nations caused
delay in opening the convention
this afternoon.
Only a small number' cf the dele-
Rates elected to the convention
came to the city, and there was lit
tle interest in questions other than
that of the league of nations.
, Overnight Compromise.
That the attitude expressed in the
resolutions toward the league of
nations had been an overnight com
promise was made obvious when
Senator Lodge was introduced. He
received the greatest demonstration
of the day. 1
"I am glad," he said, "that you
adopted the platform without de
bate.
"With the statement of reserva
tions, I am in full accord.
"t accept the platform. I have no
Hesiue to discuss it. but on the por
tion of the resolution embodied in
the two words 'without amendment.'
I wisJi to express my opinion. I
have already voted for amend
ments." Here the senator was interrupted
with a noisy demonstration, - after
which lie continued:
"I voted for the amendments that
have beeai presented. I voted for
them in the committee and in the
senate, t voted as I believed to be
right. I will continue to so vote.
I would have so voted if I voted
alone.
"In your resolutions you condemn
Shantung. You turned 40.000,000
peaceable .and friendly people, our
allies in tine war, over to Jaoan for
an indefinite period. I will never
vote to do tfcat. I eaitnot consent to
give to any other nation the power
to send to war the people of the
United States without the free action
of congress. '
"I wanted a league of nations,
founded on The Hague convention.
I wanted to see an international
court and judges. What have we
trot? A political alliance and noth
ing more; the representatives of
nations voting in the expediency of
their own countries. They all got
great advantages in the matter of
territory and otherwise, except the
United States. . ,
Can't Isolate U. S.
"We pot nothing and I am glad
of it. But as we asked nothing
certainly we've a right to say what
our burden shall be. I am not dis
turbed by the threat of isolation.
You can't isolate the United States.
. "I am not impressed with the plea
that if the treaty -waits it will be
necessary to re-assemble the peace
conference. It is already assembled.
They are in Paris now. I think
that at whatever council tables the
United States sits, her vote should
be the equal of that of any Other
nation."
Senator Lodge also declared that
he would vote for reservations as
suring the United States exclusive
voice on the questions of the Mon
roe Doctrine and immigration.
"Unless the reservations I have
specified are adopted," he said, "the
treaty is dead."
As the senator concluded the
nearly 1,200 delegates came to their
feet shouting and clapping their
hands in a noisy and prolonged
demonstration.
Gompers Firmly Against
An Anti-Strike Clause
Washington, Oct. 4. Opposing
any anti-strike legislation in the
railroad reorganization law, Presi
dent Gompers of the American Fed
eration of Labori told the house in
terstate commerce committee today
that workers would not obey it even
though it were held constitutional
by the supreme court.
Answering Representative Web
ster, republican, Washington, Gomp
ers said in such a situation he would
"remain silent and make a test be
fore the people," instead of advising
and counseling obedience of the
law. He insisted, however, that he
could not conceive of the court hold
ing such a law valid because, he
said, it would impose "involuntary
servitude." .
By appeal to the people, Mr.
Gompers explained that, he would
seek to have the court opinion "re
versed by the next congress."
Taft Proposes Budget v
System Before House
HOW WOULD YOU LIKE TO BE
The Visiting Nurse?
HER BLACK BAG
CARRIES MAGIC
Daily Trips Take Her Into
.. Odd, Squalid and Alien
. Corners.
Washington,. Oct 4. Enormous
ar expenditures, have forced the
attention of congress to the ques
tion of adopting a budget, former
President Taft today told the-house
committee investigating proposed
changes in government fiscal affairs.
"Every great nation except the
United States," said Mr. Taft, has a
budget and could not live without
one. The United States has been
able to live without one because its
revenues have been so large that
little need was felt for ecouomy."
Mr. Taft recommended that cabi
net officers be required to come be-
tore congress to testifv on est
ates contained in a budget.
I. I
in
BujfSHARDWARE at
HARPER'S
Hatiron BWt 17tk and Howard
How would you like to carry the
troubles of a whole street around on
your mind? That is what you would
have to do. if you were a visiting
nurse. Mcfct of us, think we are
abused when in addition to our own
misfortunes we are called on to sym
pathize with the troubles of our
neighbors. But the district nurse
never has time to think of her own
troubles, because she carries the mis
fortunes of a whole section of the
city around behind her genial smile.
somehow, the people of the city
whom the nurse visits, whether they
be Americans or of the variety of
races and nationalities which are
scattered over the poorer sections
of our city, think of her as a magic
visitor out of whose black bag must
come comfort, physical, m'ental and
spiritual and it comes. "Hey,
nurse 1 Oh, nurse 1" This is the call
which greets her from a half-opened
second-story .window or from the
obscurity of a narrow stairway as
she starts on her round of calls.
Some Easy; Some Hard.
And she always answers this ap
peal, no matter how it may cut into
her plans for the morning or the af
ternoon, i She enters the little home,
prepared to find a sick baby, a de
serted wife,! or merely a family jar.
Sometimes the door is locked, and
she knocks loud and long before the
door is opened, an inch at a time.
to admit her to a rdoriv littered with
unwashed clothes and dishes and
probably unmade beds. Sometimes
the door stands open; she goes in
and through several dark, empty
rooms until she reaches the darkest,
smallest bedroom, where four or
five women are hanging over a tiny
baby who gasps for breath in the
middle of a huge bed.
These new calls she always puts
down in the little notebook in her
black leather bag and follows them
up from day to day.
The other day a man came to a
nurse and asked her whatever in the
world he ought to do. The wife of
one of his friends. had died and his
own wire had decided that she
would go and keep house for the
bereaved man and take care of his
four children, so she went. She
had only one of her own, but she
took him along, so her own poor
husband was left familyless.
And I know I can give her a bet
ter home than the other man can,"
he said. What shall I do? " And the
nurse told him that his wife be
longed to him and that somehow
they would manage to get her back.
The man went away comforted, for
the visiting nurses always keep
their promises.
Gives Cat Castor Oil.
But even this list does not cover
all the range of calls which the dis
trict nurse gets.. The, other day a
nurse was called in by a woman who
seemed very much worried over
some member of her family. The
"member" proved to be a beautiful
white Angora cat who was suffer
ing from constipation. Instead of
being insulted at being taken for a
veterinary, the nurse saw the hu
mor of the situation, took the cat's
temperature and prescribed two
spoonfuls of castor oil, which the
worried woman hastened out to get.
' I
She gets closer to the souls of
these people she visits, does the vis
iting nurse, than do any of the other
social agencies of the city or any of
the institutions trying to "American
ize" them. Why? Because she
does things which they can see and
understand. If she goes into a
home and finds a mother with her
day-old baby by her side, lying in
bed, with no one in the house to
help her, the nurse sweeps the floor,
builds a fire and prepares some
nourishing food and by that time
the mother is very ready to follow
the advice ant suggestions of the
nurse about how to bring up baby.
" "You must keep your floor
swept, and you must open your win
dows to let in some fresh air," are
two of her most oft-repeated les
sons. In the matter of cleanliness
there do not seem to be any com
parative standards among the races.
Two Italian families or two Pol
ish families, or one of each, will be
found living side by side. In one
kitchen there will be banana peels,
egg shells and bits of broken crock
ery mixed with a great deal of
ordinary dirt about on the floor, a
stained half-filled glass of beer on a
dirty tablecloth, and a hungry cat
licking crumbs from the floor, while
one door down the hall the tin dip
per hanging over the the sink shines,
as docs the top of the stove, and
every stick of wood is its proper
place in the woodboje.
Counteracting Doctor "Magic"
One of the biggest problems
which the visiting nurse has to face
is the doctor problem. In the people
of Eurooe who have come to our
country, the people in our crowded
tenement districts who regard the
visiting nurse with perfect trust,
there lurks a trace of the old super-
stitution that a doctor is a witch or
a magic person who cures illness by
the magic of his presence or by a
scrao of Daoer. - When a Syrian
mother or a Russian mother realizes
' that her baby has a fever and is
probably sick, she calls a doctor, of
her own race if she can get him.; at
any rate the cheapest doctor she has
been told of by her neighbors, who
arrives, writes out a prescription
and departs with $2 of the woman's
- hard-earned money, if she had it to
give him.
Then she lays the prescription on
the shelf and thinks the baby is bet
ter. Next time she is worried she
calls another doctor, pays another
$2 and adds another written pre
scription to the collection. The
advice of the different doctors con
riicts and the mother follows none
of it. Instead she goes out and calls
in the visiting nurse, if she can find
her on the street. The nurse's first
impulse is to sweep all the bottles
and the unfilled Descriptions on
the shelf into the garbage can,
but she knows that she cannot use
such rough methods. Instead she usu
ally applies as much soap and water
and fresh air to the situation as she
can with her hands, and with per-
" suasion.
The powers of persuasion which
. the nurse acquires in the course of
her duties are little short of marvel
ous. Some families are very hesi
tant about visiting doctors, but if
a nurse gets a mother to promise
that she will take little Mario to the
doctor to find out what the measly
rash on his face means, she will
keep her promise. But dint of con
stant coaxing she gets impossible
. floors washed and windows open
' which have been nailed tight all win
ter. The children love the visiting
nurse and her path down some
squalid little street is made glad with
shouts and waves of the hand..
Smudgy little hands creep into hers
and equally grimy fists tug at her
skirts. When she enters the room
whence wails of anger or hunger
have been coming, the complaints
often cease" and the toothless grin
greets her as the baby stretches out,
fat arms to her. Many of the moth
ers are won over to the nurse and
her point of view by the confidence
and friendliness which their chil
dren lavish up on her.
Calling on Old Ladies.
But the duties of the district
nurs are not all for the saving and
preservation of life thnough the de
velopment of health common
sense. Sometimes the nurse just
feels like resting and listening to
some one else talk, so she drops into
see one of her "old ladies." And one
there is living in three rooms down
near the bank of the Missouri
river, who would delight the heart
of anyone who likes a bit of gossip
in the afternoon.
Through a rickety wooden gate
down a narrow broken walk to her
open kitchen door at the back of a
gray and somewhat tumble-down
tenement the nurse goes. - She is
greeted at the steps by two out
stretched withered hands and num
berless blessings are called down
upon her head as the old lady draws
her in the kitchen and pulls out the
one rocking chair for her. On the
kitchen table are a withered bunch
of violets and a dish" of oranges,
visible signs that the Girl Scouts
have visited their grandmother re
cently .
She talks. Her first husband died
shortly after the close of the Civil
war, although he paid his $300 for a
substitute so as not to have to die
fighting For a second husband she
married a veteran of the war who
was ill and unable to work from the
day she married him.i For 15 years
she supported him and two years ago
he died, just when his pension had
got up to . $95 a month," she said
regretfully. The pension was held
up for almost two years, . but in
March the Visiting Nurse associa
tion by communication with Wash
ington succeeded in getting back the
pay for her. Now she has $600 "up
to the bank, to bury me right and
proper." She lives alone and buys
her pork chop and pint ot milk every
day and beams with joy when the
nurse stops into see her.
Grandmother Goes Washing.
Another one of her "old ladies"
the nurse meets on the street corner.
She is little, withered and misshapen
with rheumatism; her dark' eyes are
sunken in the wrinkled folds of her
nut-brown countenance, which is
strongly Roman in cast. She hob
bles rapidly along leaning on a stout
staff, which she plants firmly in front
of her at every step. A wide smile re
veals her toothlessness, as she
catches sight of the nurse, and
when they meet she pats the nurse's
hand, murmuring indeterminate
greetings.
The old lady s daughter-in-law
does not give her enough to eat, so
she goes out washing two days a
week to earn a little money, in spite
of her rheumatism and 86 years.
Through the thin cotton of her well
worn shirtwaist there gleams some
thing suggestive of Mardi Gras. The
nurse pulls back her dress at the
throat to investigate,.' and the old
lady glows with pride. She is wear-
ng as near the outside as possible
her gorgeous sea-blue corsets with
Kelly green trimmings, which came
11 the way from Italy, and although
she is almost swallowed into the
tall, stiff steels of the corset, her
step is lighter and she carries her
head higher in the knowledge of her
glory. v !
, Babies are Greatest Care.
The babies of the district are the
nurse's chief interest and worry.
She stops mothers on the street
whom she has not visited recently to
cast a critical eye at the infant in
arms to urge the mother to bring
baby to the clinic next Thursday
afternoon to be weighed and meas
ured. Also in other parts of the city
the nurses pay more and more atten
tion to the welfare or the little ones
as the hot weather approaches.
The visiting nurse deals in trouble,
but she never becomes blase or pro
fessional. She is on her feet from
8 in the morning until 5 at night and
indeed it is all I can do to get my
bath and my supper before I go out
in the evening, and a holiday means
a little longer sleep in the morning,
for me.
Into every home she enters she
brings fresh interest and the influ
ence of her own personality and in
her eagerness to help people she
never thinks how tired she is until
her day is done. There is a friendly
rivalry among the district nurses
concerning certain difficult families
or groups of families and
each nurse who works in the
district is anxious to see if she can
not be the one who will "clean up
those people and make them stay
clean.
The district nurse does not work
for money, although her salary is
somewhat larger ithan that of the
average school teacher or many of
her sisters in some other profes
sions. A nurse who has one of the
most difficult sections of the city
to look after recently refused the
offer of a position outside which
would pay far better, because she
said she could not leave her "peo
ple."
SUGAR SHORTAGE
RELIEF NOW NEAR,
DEALERS SAY
Shipment of Cane and Beet
Sugar to Middle West Is
Promised In Near
Future.
That it is only a matter of a few
days until the sugar shortage here
will be greatly relieved, is the opin
ion of a majority of wholesale gro
cers and sugar brokers.
H. G. Hoel, manager of the Mc
Cord Brady company, stated yester
day that he believed three refineries
in western Nebraska would open
next week, and that shipments of
sugar could be expected at once.
Chicago Gets 12-Cent Sugar.
"We may not get as large a
quantity as we expected," said Mr.
Hoel, "because beet sugar produced
in Nebraska, Colorado and
Wyoming must be used to supply
territory as far east as Pittsburgh,
while formerly it was not shipped
farther east than Chicago in large
quantities. We will get our share
of sugar, however."
District Attorney Clyne of Chi
cago announced Friday that enough
beet sugar would arrive in that city
to provide Chicago arid Illinois with
l-cent sugar during the present
critical period.
Mr. Clyne stated that the, sugar
would come from Colorado, Utah
and Nebraska, and arrive by Thurs
day of next week.
H. B. Patrick, of the Russel Sug
ar Brokerage Co., asserted yesterday
that Chicago would nbt"get more
sugar in proportion to the popula
tion than Omaha, and would not
receive shipments at an earlier date.
'The statement of District At
torney Clyne is somewhat exagger
ated," declared Mr. Patrick. "Al
though shipments may be received
in Chicago from western refineries
by next Thursday they will ne-t re
lieve the shortage in Chicago at
once, as he intimates.
"The situation will be gradually
relieved in all parts of the west as
soon as shipments begin from the
refineries. Omaha may rest as
sured that it will get its portion
of sugar as soon as Chicago if not
at an even earlier date."
Pickens Less Optimistic.
Charles H. Pickens of the Paxton
& Gallagher 'company, was less op
timistic over the situation, but pre
dicted that the shortage here would
be gradually relieved. One of the
largest refineries was to have opened
on October i4," said Mr. Pickens,
"but excessive rainfall has put the
beets in a poor condition for slic
ing.
"Hence there has been some de
lay. The sugar equalization board
has decided that cane sugar cannot
be shipped west of Pittsburgh, so a
large territory is left to be supplied
by the beet sugar refineries. Sugar
is being received here now in small
shipments, and as the demand is
less than during the canning sea
son, it goes a little farther."
Its inventor has obtained a patent
for a telephone bracket consisting of
a number of telescoping mental
tubes.
Johnson Expresses
Sincere Sympathy a
For Sick President
Los Angeles, Cal., Oct. 4. Sym
pathy for President Wilson in his
illness was expressed here by United
States Senator Hiram W. Johnson,
who is enroute to San Francisco
from Los Anegels. Senator John
son issued the following statement:
"I think 1 can understand the
president's illness and I deeply
sympathize with him. Few people
realize the tremendous strain and
the great fatigue of a trip such as
he has recently taken. Even with
every possible aid and comfort it is
a most difficult and nerve-wrecking
experience. The constant travel
and continuous confinement, from '
which, apparently, there is no es
cape; the receptions, meetings ana
the necessity for mental alertaes
and for the maintenance of complete
equanimity in the face of any con
tingency will geenrally break the
nervous system of the very strong
est. "I can sincerely feel for the presi
dent in his present sickness, and it
is my hope that he niay speedily
and fully recover. He has, of course,
in his illness the best wishes and the
sympathy of all Americans." ,
Among other ingredients Chinese
joss sticks contain aconite to pro
tect them from rats and mice and
camphor to make them burn steadily.
urn
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Five Sherman A McConnell Drug Storei.
Prescription for
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liquid used externally injtant relief from itch.
the mildest of clean ert keep!
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Com ta and uk u about botk
Soap
Germany Rushing to Arms;
Goltz Defies Allies, and
Monarchy May Come Back
French Writer Just Back .from German Tour Says
kaiser's Old Supporters Really in Saddle and
Ready for War Again Situation Brought About
by "Fantastic" Versailles Treaty.
'- By ANDRE CHERADAMA. ,
Leading French Historian, Just Returned
From an Investigation ot Condition in
" Germany.
Written Expressly for TTnlverwil Service.
Special Cable Dispatch.
Paris, Oct. 4. Germany ' is not
beaten, nor is she repentant. Instead
she is again feverishly laboring in
preparation for a new battle of
world conquest.
What is more, the incredible
blindness and stupidity of the allied
statesmen, who are pinning their
faith upon the worthless treaty of
Versailles, will permit Pan-Germanism,
as strong and ruthless as in
1914, to win. .
The severest measures of repres
sion on the part of the allies are
imperative now. Next year it will
be too late. Delay means the en
slavement of Europe under the yoke
of the Hun.
Arming at Top Speed.
Germany is arming at top s'peed
this very minute. She has confessed
the truth through Herr Steger
wald, national minister of social
economy, who told the Rhineland
delegates at Cologne on September
IS:
"The Versailles treaty is a scrap
of paper. What does it matter if in
it we do recognize a debt of 3,000,
000 or 4,000,000 marks, as long as we
are certain that we won't pay a
single pfennig? Germany now has
800,000 men in the army, which will
be 2,000,000 strong within two
months if necessary. Now that Ger
many is revictualed she will refuse
to execute a single line of the
treaty."
What could be clearer and more
harmonious with the actual facts,
the most striking of which is Gen
eral von Der GoTtz's defiance of the
allied order to quit the Baltic provinces?
Black Germanism.
The real situation in Germany is
this: The social democrats, now in
power, are advocates of Pan-Germanism
iq the blackest hue. eaual
to that of the kaiser himself. All
of the . kaiser's strongest and most
ruthless supporters r Kuehlmann,
Bernstorff, . Lud'endorff, Hinden
burg, Prince von Buelow and von
Der Goltz are collaborating with
the social democrats for the im
mediate realization of Pah-Germany.
The so-called socialization of the
German productive sources is only
a fertile kernel of an economic
Pan-Germany. Production of war
munitions is going on intensively,
the stocks being concealed in the
German forests.
The new army is masquerading
under various designations, such as
"police," "gendarmerie" and fores
try service," and is expanding
steadily and on an enormous scale.
Good Pay for Army.
The humblest boche trooper gets
six marks (in normal times $1.50)
a day, in spite of the fact that Ger
many declares she has no" money
with which to pay her debts. She
has money enough to build up a
vast army. Soon 6he is going to
stage a clever farce, a la bolshe
viki. In a few weeks violent red revolu
tion will be instigated by agents of
the Berlin government. It will
break out in Bavaria.
This will be put down immediate
ly but no' without a bloody battle.
Then Berlin will tell the world:
"You see, we are still threatened
with bolshevism; we need a large
army to protect ourselves against
it."
The effect in Germany, on the
other hand, will be to frighten the
would-be revolutionists and avoid
all future trouble and seal the fate
of bolshevism once and for all, leav
ing the Pan-Germans free to pre
pare for world domination.
To Restore Monarchy. '
As soon as the last suspicion of
bolshevism is wiped out the Ger
man monarchy will be restored with
Prince Henry of Prussia (the
kaiser's only brother), the probable
candidate for the imperial throne.
Simultaneously, Poland and
Czecho-Slovakia will be attacked
and seized while Italy will be busy
squaring accounts with the Jugo
slavs and central Europe will re
turn to complete German domina
tion within a very few months. Ger
many's victory will be brilliant and
decisive. These are the plans of
Bernstorff and Company, to be exe
cuted at the very moment when
bolshevism, incited by Prussian
agents, rends France asunder.
Idealogy of Wilson.
Staggering under the dual weight
of radicalism and financial failure,
France will fall under the German
yoke and be ' reduced to complete
servitude all this without a single
shot being fired.
The fantastic situation thus cre
ated will be the direct consequence
of the idealogy of Wilson and!
Lloyd-George, coupled with the ef
fect upon them of international fi
nance.
We have been forced to make too
many capitulations to the Utopian
diplomacy of these two men.
Last Sermon of Old Pastor
At Danish M. E. Church
Rev. N. C. Hansen will succeed
Rev. Tames Sanaker as pastor of
the Norwegian and Danish Metho
dist-Episcopal church at Twenty-
fifth and Decatur streets. Rev. Mr.
Sanaker will preach his farewell
sermon at the services today. It is
expected that Rev. Mr. Hansen will
arrive in time to conduct the services
the following Sunday.
To get in or out of business try
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Heaters are 'up
For the woman who has long de
sired a combination coal and gas
range, here Is a model that will
instantly appeal to her. U means
a cool kitchen in the summer and
a warm kitchen in the winter.
Easy Terms to Suit
The Howard has a gas and smoke
consuming firebox that warms
the air before it reaches the coal
which means that every heat unit
in the fuel is extracted' which
means a saving of fuel $OQ BO
and more heat; prices. w5 iip
r
Characteristic Values In Dependable Homefurnishings
Curtain Stretchers" . . . 95c
Oak Tabourettes . . . .45c
Ladder Stools ... 89c
Oval Casseroles . . . .$1.69
Clothes Sprinklers ... 15c
6 Glass Tumblers . . . .49c
13 Glass Bake Set . . $3.69
10-Piece Guernsey Bak- -ing
Sets $2.29
Dress Up Your Dining Room
Suite With a New Buffet
If you are seeking
a new buffet that
will match your
present dining
room table and
chairs, you can feel
certain of finding
one in this immense
display that takes
in every type of
period furniture.
Prices on stately
buffets start at
$QQ50
Many New Dressers in all Woods and
Finishes Just Arrived On Our Floors
Our order on these dressers was placed about
a year ago and has been filled at the old prices,
which enables us to sell these dressers at
extremely attrac
tive retail prices.
Every one of these
dressers represent
decided saving and
at present prices
they should not last
very long, and we
urge immediate se
lection. Prices start
b ! at I
HOOSIBR
It Saves Your Time -Youf
Energy Your Health
The Hoosier represents the
last word in a complete up-to-the-minute
Kitchen Cabinet.
Equipped with ant and germ-,
proof casters, glass knobs, ex
tension table top and hundreds'
of other important features
found only in Hoosier Cabinets.
As low as $44.50
$1.00 a Week Buys One
$292
Oil Heaters
We handle the Perfection and
Florence Heaters that are eco
nomical of fuel and heat a room
quickly.
sr.
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