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About The Flathead Courier (Polson, Mont.) 1910-current | View This Issue
The Flathead Courier (Polson, Mont.), 12 Nov. 1937, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn86075296/1937-11-12/ed-1/seq-6/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
THE FLATHEAD COURIER [CLASSIFIED] \—ADVERTISEMENTS APPLES FOR SALE: APPLES. All grades and OTTO BEEN Stevensville Mont Terrence O'Connell Proposes varieties. By IRENE HUNT ASSAYERS. CHEMISTS LEWIS & WALKER, assayers. chem- ists, 108 N. Wyoming. Burrs, MONT. — - - -- BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES FORCED TO SELL a finely located, well established auto wrecking business. due to failing health THEODORE KUNICK. Lovell, Wyo. - - - — $500 PER ACRE INCOME. New crop Write for particulars. VALLEY FARM, 13813, S. Dunklin, Jefferson City. Mo. FOR SALE—Lunch, fountain and candy store clearing 475 to GOO vo-eekly. Must un- derstand business and have 82.500. Good reaaon for selling- will welcome investigation. Write BEZOLD. 730 Sumner St.. Sheridan. WYo. --- -- BAKERY FOR SALE, in good business section. Reasonable if taken at once. BOX 175. Belgrade. Minn. TWO -ROOM COTTAGE. Two Acres land fenced Noce location for trailer camp. cabin Camp. roadhouse. chicken ranch. etc. Cash. REYCHLER. 1831 Holmes Ave., Butte, Mont, DOGS FOR SALE kilii. - 14DID SETTERS, Pointers, Irish Spaniels, Chesspeakes. Trained dogs. Pups. PEDIGREED - THOROUGHBRED KENNELS Atlantic, Iowa. FARMS 'ANTED FARMS WANTED—With the comple- tion of Fort Peck dam hundreds of farmers will be obliged to move Iron their Missouri bottom lands and will be looking Or new locations. If YOU want to aell your farm advertise it in THE GLASGOW COURIER, Glasgow, Montana. Covers Port Peck terri- tory completely. Write for rates. FARM LANDS FOR SALE GRAIN RANCH r.ear Great Falls, Mont. Good building,. ALBERTA WALES, Yucaipa. Calif. 40 ACRES ON STATE HIGHWAY— Plenty water. all in crops. two-story house, some orchart.. 82.700. Terms, $800 down. W. E. KOCH, Clahon. Mont. FARMS AND RANCHES for sale or trade. Write for list. WHEELER BROTHERS. Inc . Billings. Mont FIELD SEED CRESTED WHEAT GRASS seed of highest quality. DUBAY AND STADLER, As'socisted Seed Growers. Poison. Mont. FILM FINISHING QUALITY KODAK FINISHING—Any size roll developed and TWO prints printed of each negative tor 25c. Reprints 2c each. THE PHOTO NOOK. Box 3134, Billings, Mont. HUNTERS' ATTENTION -- SPECIAL SALE on Flood shotgun shells. Any gauge. unanarted shot. Mail orders. 2 cts. each. Any quantity. PHIL JUDD. 83 So. Park St . Butte. Mont. _ LIVESTOCK FOR SALE •.. RAMS, Just a few choice ones left. R. E. )4cALLISTER. Box 393. Great Falls. -- 500 EWES, good ages and 250 ewe lambs. R. E. McALLISTER, Box 393, Great Palls. Mont. HEREFORD BULLS—Coming 2 -year - old registered bulls for sale. A. B. COOK STOCK FARMS, Townsend. Mont. MISCELLANEOUS—FOR SALE CORD WOOD SAWS—Saw mandrels. belting Our goods are right and so are oat Pr-ces, ALASKA JUNK CO.. Ina.. Spaltatia. Wain. PF.RSONAL LONELY? Marriage thru honest, sin- cere efforts. DORA MAY, 13-242ls Washing- ton Spokane. Wash. LONESOME! ENJOY ROMANCE—A C Sweetheart or wealthy mate is waiting to meet you among our members everywhere. Discreet. confidential service Particulars free. 5 FRIENDSHIP SOCIETY. Box 595. Et Wayne. Indiana. _ NO CHURCH SERVICE. No Sunday schools: no suited 'aegis: , for Prayer? Isolated Christian believers denied these spir- itual privileges are invited to accept Scripture portions gospel sermons by some of the world's most honored preachers and soul -nourishing deiotional• messages in print. Please indicate ..,a1 conditions. naming this paper. Bible laititute Co:portage Assn . (founded by D Moody , . C43 N Wells St... Chicago. Ill. I ONELY? JOIN A NATIONAL church ,. 0llocation. sure to lie: e stlect helpmate . oei Si amp and erg REV. JONES, BOX a iS car, mg. \If you could know how he's alway • loved her,\ she'd say over and ov . again. \Always so tenderlike an thoughtful of her with his whole hear MM' in his eyes—and 'twas plat , as the nose on your face from his tette that he Is cornin' with a question o ,a love on his lips.\ She sighed heart brokenly. \I've done many a hard task in my time, Susan; life has never bee , o'er easy for me, but the tellln' of this to Terrence is the hardest I've eve r - le ; wit and kind ness—we raised our eye- brows sometimes' and pressed our lips pretty tightly together at others, but we liked her immensely. For it was Lizzie who came privately to Bill of- fering the loan of her small &wimp to pay for the help we had to have in getting our young Susan safely landed; It was Lizzie who all but burned joss sticks to the Grim Reaper when in great aunt Agatha died, leaving m live hundred precious dollars, and it was this same Lizzie who then went piously to church where she performed Bill's and my duty by burning a grate- ful candle to the old lady's memory. And we certainly could feel nothing but tenderness for her when the blow of Kathleen's leaving fell upon her faithful head. That was a Wow, indeed, and the sight of Lizzie's plain face drawn with bewildered trouble touched me deeply. Bill said that I divided my time into emotional turmoil for first one sister and then the other, but I noticed that he was mighty tender toward Lizzie in those days. It happened like this. • • • There was a joint letter for the two of them one night. From Terrence O'Connell, and what was he doing but coming to America for a visit, and where in America should he be heading for but Mrs. Fish's \light housekeep- ing\ rooms in Chicago. He said that iti was important for him to see them; that too many years had already gone by before his de- cision was made. It certainly looked as If Terrence O'Connell had some thing on his mind, all right. Bill thought maybe he'd Just finished a 10-18sson course on -\How to Propose Gracefully—Results Guaranteed or Money Ftefahded.\ Lizzie and Kathleen were delighted —Lizzie doing all the talking, of course, and. Kathleen sitting quietly with smil- ing and sometimes tear -wet eyes. \To think we'll be seem' him— straight from the old home, Susan.' she said to me, and I put my arm about her shoulders as she spoke. It seemed so plain that she wanted her love of home to mask her love for Terrence. And no wonder, I thought. It isn't a pleasant thing to have one's friends know that the man one loves is tongue- tied on the subject. That night when I prayed that Bill would always love me as much as he did then and that little Susan wouldn't take the whoop- ing cough she'd been exposed to, I added a petition for Kathleen. \And please. God,\ I asked Him, \make Ter- rence O'Connell propose this time.\ Lizzie scrubbed and scoured their alrzady _immaculate rooms and gave them an extra polish for luck. She even commenced baking favorite dishes of Terrence's, early as it was—\to get her hand in, again.\ she told us—and when there was nothing else to do she sewed as If her life depended on new cuffs for Kathleen's dress or on a dainty bannet for my Susan. Published by Special Arrangement witl5 Th Chicago Tribune -New York NeWs SynSicate Incorporated IN TWO PARTS—PART TWO \Like a bride in her rich adomin',' there was something in Kathleen' eyes, I thought. which told me mor than she would have had me know as she sang that, and I felt like a spying gossip as I watched her. I was angry at myself for knowing her secre I was even a little angry with Lizzi , for her garrulous tongue. But one couldn't be long angry wit Lizzie. Her officiousness was so in cited by genuine affection and since ity; her sharpness so offset by lovab \Terrence will think she's the broth of a colleen.\ she assured me en- ouragingly as she crooned over the baby. \And she is that too, or the truth never fell from my lips, and a comfort he's goin' to be to me when the sea is between all of us and Kathleen.\ Her face sabered a little at the words, but brightened. \W then, 'twill be blessing enough to know she's happy with Terrence, and in a home of her own back in the old coun- try. And certain 'twill be a good reason for Inc to work and save for the day I'll be goin' back to see them.\ There wasn't a doubt in her mind about Terrence's intentions on this visit. YWA MP YOUR CHICKENS and eggs to ;STRAND POULTRY CO. Ruite. Montana. too Prices and Prompt Returns _ RIESORT PROPERTY MOUNTAIN RANCH for sale. Ideal location for dude ranch. Good fishing, hunt. ii,.. S. J. McKINSEY, McLeod. Mont. RUBBER STAMPS AND SEALS ri RUBBER AND METAL Stamps, Sten- K cils, check signs. PACIFIC STAMP WORKS. op W. 518 Sprague Ave.. Spokane. Wash. WE MAKE STAMPS, Rubber type. to HELENA STAMPS WORKS. ReNna. Montana. $ STOCK RANCH FOR SALE , le 2,540 ACRE STOCK RANCH. Joining le mountains. 80 acres irrigated. Lots of build- t Miss. Two streams running through ranch Ii Price $10.000. STREETER BROS., Northern hotel. Billings, Mont. • She was talking along in such a vein s this on the evening that Kathleen ame home with her news. I had never seen Kathleen animated before, and the glowing radiance of her little, heart -shaped face with its great blue eyes sent a thrill of pleasure through me as I looked up at her. \Lizzie—Susan.\ she gasped. \I'm going back to old Ireland - .\ She threw her arms about her sister, and laughed like a delighted child. I figured it out in a flash—Terrence O'Connell had come to America sooner than he had said he would; he'd ar- ved in Chicago. had gone straight to athleen, he had made himself master f that faltering tongue of his, and all heir plans were made. I was so sure was right that I felt a little superior Lizzie who was still looking at her ister in amazement. \You're goin' back in 10 days, Kath- en? And with Terrence ready to ave Ireland, like as not on his way o us. But you couldn't be doin' a thing ke that, Macushla.\ Kathleen's voice was like a song. • • • . \But Lizzie. darlin', I am going.' she I said. \To see Terrence would have been I a joy, but this—to be back home. Lis - minims! Send for free illustrated I sic—to smell the peat smoke on the animal snares, snare wire. snare Parts. Killer I of ,he bog hearth again—to walk along the edge Price list of world famous 'Genoa steel !CLEF/WAN LOCK SNARE at twilight. and hold my traps. Lire traps. CO.. Dept. 4. Hibbine. Munn. , breath against the sight of a lepre- chaun—this will be nearer Heaven TRAPPINGthan I've thought to come these last ' weary years.\ TRAP FOX OR COYOTE: Bunch :rya - tern gets the slyest furbeurer Results guar- She seated herself on a hassock at antetd. CT BUNCH, Welch. Minn. Box z Lizzie's feet, and fondled her sister's hand as she spoke. WINTER PASTURE \It's through a cousin of one of the — girls at the store. Irish he is, arid rich, HAVE GOOD PASTURE • with 200 and wanting to give his young daughter or cattle. cow SPRING RANCH. Forsyth. a year in Ireland where she can learn acres beet tops, hay and corn, for sheep j Mont. o to love her father's birthplace as he does. He hears of my longing to go ; back through my friend at the store, RUSSELL PRINTS and finding, as he says, that I am a woman of intelligence and breeding. I asks me to be his daughter's chaperon.\ I I just sat there looking at her, and thinking that if Bill Herrick were on I his way to see me after a separation ; of years, nothing but grim death could , pry me away until I realized that the I difference in our opinions was that I ' loved just Bill—anywhere—in Mada- gascar or on Mrs. Fish's musty second floor. while Kathleen loved only her homeland. It was hard for a person like me to comprehend such a situation; it Just didn't seem to make sense. I In the days that followed, Lizzle's ' cheerful voice was hardly ever heard. She walked about quietly, bowed with ' her unhappy thoughts. She would come into my kitchenette occasionally and sit thoughtfully watching me prepare the baby's formula without offering one criticism of my procedure:it was as If the old cipMineerIng Lizzie had died. Groupings of RUSSELL PRINTS are, to a large extent, a matter of personal taste. For two -print selections we would suggest the following combinations, for color harmony. I. The Bolter, The Wagon BC411 2. The Jerkline Caught With the Goods 3. Shooting Out the Stragglers Innocent Allies PRICE 50c EACH :Postpaid in the United States) MONTANA NEWSPAPER ASSN. GREAT FALLS, MONT. • • • Terrence arrived one afternoon about 10 days after Kathleen's departure— suddenly and without announcement. Lizzie was at work and Mrs. Fish out at the market, so I ran downstairs to answer the insistent doorbell. I knew him at once; a big, broad - shouldered ,man, with crow's feet around his kind, blue eyes and a con- siderable sprinkling of gray in the hair , around his temples. He was dressed in a stiff blue serge with a rough topcoat and his very new suitcase and shoes were of the same gleaming yellow. He seemed about as old as Dad, and for a second it struck me as being a little funny that a man of that age should be coming across the Atlantic in a wooing mood. Then I remembered that this kindly. smiling Terrence was in a short time to hear how his Kathleen had walked out on him, and there seemed nothing funny about that. I think my voice I held the maternal vibration strongly I as I greeted him with the thought of i Kathleen in my mind. \You could maybe be Mr. Terrence O'Connell, himself?\ I asked him in Lizzie's manner. • I nodded and he went on. \It's been or I like that the whole of; our lives,\ he d said. \Kathleen has been the darlin' t 0/ her heart, and everything on earth n was for Kathleen. She would fair push 3 that sweet, dreamin' child, that was f never thinkin' of a husband in front - of me. and off she would scuttle her- self. And anyone could see her plans n sinnin' out of her eyes—all but Kath- leen. She never paid much attention r to Lizzie's talkin' at any time.\ e I :Then it's all been in Lizzie's mind? , d You don t care for Kathleen at all? t He looked at me reproachfully. \I'd y O give my life's blood for her sake,\ he e I said stoutly, \but she's not the one ; faced.\ However, there wasn't much tim for talking about it We sewed an shopped and packed for Kathleen a high speed. I had a picture of the bab rushed so that Kathleen might has gift;it for a farewell Bill brought her flotvers the morning she left, and Liz- zie, though her face was white, be - hayed like the sporting soul she was, \Mind you enjoy every minute of your life in the old home, Kathleen, darlin'. and if you should meet. up with , Mollie Maguire, a little braggin' abo u t: how well we've done In AmerlC won't damage the sweet soul of you none— her with her fine sayin's of how we'd be starvin' In the states.\ Then she was gone—lovely, frail: ; Kathleen, whose eyes had lost their haunted look of sorrow and whose homesick heart had no room for Ter- rence O'Connell. I We tried our best to comfort Lizzie afterward, but nothing helI She never cried or wailedP ed but the spirit in her seemed snuffed out. There ' were no scoldings, no lively tales, no pettings from Lizzie after Kathleen left. She even neglected little Susan for the first time since she had laid eyes on her. I fixed gay, tempting sup- pers so that when she came home tired from her work, she might find food and companionship waiting; Bill squandered six dollars on theater tickets for the three of us, but we might as well have not taken her. She was as quietly grateful as Kathleen would have been, but I saw her sitting • in a deep study during the play, quite 'oblivious to the actors. Kathleen was gone, and Terrence O'Connell was com- ing to America only to be hurt—that was the requiem in Lizzie's soul those days. His face glowed. \Faith you must have a strain of Irish in you yourself.: to be spottin' an Irishman so quick and sure -like,\ he said. \It's because I've heard so much about you.\ I explained. \You may not believe it, but I know your favorite' songs, and how you part your hair and the way you like your potatoes best.\ I held te door open for him, and he stepped inside chuckling. \All that brather would come from the pratin' tongue of Lizzie Leary, I haven't a doubt,\ he said. He knew who I was from Irrrie's letters, and seemed pleased with my invitation that he come into our liv- ing room to wait until Lizzie came home. \She'll be here within a half hour,\ I said, suddenly nervous at realizing I hadn't mentioned Kathleen. Then he asked the sort of thing I was dreading. \Will she—will Lizzie be gettin' home before Kathleen?\ he asked. There was an apparent wistfulness in that simple question; the wistfulness, I thought, of a lover who longs for a moment with his sweetheart before a third party ar- rives. I didn't know what to say. Here I had pitied Lizzie for days to think of her hard task in explaining things to Terrence and now I had blithely let myself in for her job. I stammered and got red. \Yes Lizzie will be here first to- night.\ I said stupidly. \You see, Kath- leen—that is, you see. Lizzie is the only one that will be here.\ He was looking at me soberly. \From your way of sayin' It, I know something is wrong,\ he said quietly. \Is It that Kathleen is sick—or something worse?\ Oh. but I liked that fine, steady look of his. There was no use hedging be- fore It; I knew that he'd have to have the truth, and that he'd take it like a man so I told him. \It's like this, Mr. O'Connell: Kath- leen had been homesick for Ireland 'ever since she came here, and only a few days ago she got a chance to go beck, and is now on her way. She was terribly sorry to miss you, but she felt—we thought—it really was 'Such a splendid opportunity—\ I commenced to falter and then breathed more freely again. For Terrence O'Connell's face showed great relief and little or no disappointment. \Bless you, girl.\ he laughed. \And why were you after lookin' so tragic at the tellin' of it? You had me fair scared out of a year of me life.\ He leaned back in his chair and sighed comfortably. \I'm that glad to know she's on her way back to the old sod, much as I'd have liked seem' the sweet face of her.\ • • • After my first breath of relief. I began to feel rather cool toward Ter- rence in spite of the fact that I liked him. So he hadn't come a -wooing, after all, and all the sympathy that Lizzie and I had stored up for him Was just so much wasted emotion. I wondered how in Heaven's name Lizzie had ever got the idea that this drink of ice water before me was ro- Inantically inclined. I didn't say any- thing more: just sat, gettng madder and madder as I thought things over. He was silent, too, for a while. evi- dently busy with his thoughts. Then he suddenly leaned toward me with an almost sheepish expression on his face. \Do you know that things are after workin' themselves out for the best all 'round?\ he asked \I don't think I quite understane you,\ I said still a bit distantly. \Has Lizzie ever in all her talkin's, mentioned anything to you in regard to a feelin' between Kathleen and me - self?\ he asked. ii like me. She's far removed and a e l:: : :/e ' either Lizzie or me in her ways of thinkin', and more akin, I've always thought, to the angels of Heaven. I've , need of a companion who will stand at my side and battle in the teeth of despair. I've need of Lizzie, missus, but I've never the chance with her be- cause of her way of pushing Kathleen between us. Lizzie, you must know,, would be after takin' over the reins of: Fate herself, and crackin' the whip.\ , I just stared at him open-mouthed. - And it was Lizzie all the time,\ I said at last, more to myself than to was, with all me, heart, and has been like that since we were children,\ he he said simply, and I could have hugged ' him. We heard her coming up the stairs a short time after that, slowly and heavily without the little humming I tune that used to announce her home- r coming. He walked to the open door, and waited till she turned the bend' in the stairway. \Terrence O'Connell!\ I heard her gun! - Lizzie, me darlin' girl.\ said Ter- rence O'Connell. I pushed him gently out into the hall and closed my door discreetly. ;Then I hurried to the telephone to call Bill. MOTHER BERRY'S HOME DESTROYED MONTANA'S \FIRST LADY OF THE TRACKS.\ LOSES HER 30 - YEAR -OLD HOME Mother Berry, Montana's \first lady of the tracks,\ was without a home of her own after flames of undetermined origin swept over the state fairgrounds north of Helena recently leveling her residence and an $800 old-time stable, department, which laid more than a Prompt action by the Helena fire half -mile of hose despite the fact the blaze was outside the city limits, pre- vented the blaze from spreading to adjoining stables in which were quar- tered 10 head of racing stock belonging to George Cooney. The race horses were valued at more than $10,000. The stable that was burned was valued at $800 and was covered fully by insurance. It. along with other equipment, was leased by Mr. Cooney for stabling his racing stock. The stable, built prior to 1900, was the last of the old-time buildings at the fair- grounds Biggest loss was sustained by Mother Berry, now 83 years of age, who has made the fairgrounds her home for more than 30 years. In the flames, she saw her home and all her belongings swept away despite efforts of the fire- men to stop the fire that raged through the tinderbox building. Mother Berry, widow of Dr. J. B. Berry, veterinarian with the famous Kirkendall string of horses years ago, did manage to save one thing closest to her heart—Rosa Lockwood, a thor- oughbred race horse, who was one of this state's best racers. Rosa Lockwood,' now 14 years old, has been cared for and quartered by Mrs. Berry for years and was led to safety while flames licked at her stable. Mother Berry. escaping with only a few of her personal belongings. is ; staying at the Jim McVej home. She I will stay there until she recoups from I the loss suffered in the fire, which! swept away in a few minutes all she' had stored up for years. Firemen said the fire started in the I west end of the destroyed stables and I RONAN MAN HAS CARVING TALENT FRANK ANDERSON, FORMERLY OF WHITEFISH. WORKS EXTEN- SIVELY IN WOOD Frank Anderson. 62, whose occu- pation is leather work, has taken to wood carving as a hobby. Sixty- two years old, he has always been , bandy with a knife in whittling, 1 SO after the death of his wife, he took up wood carving in earnest to occupy spare time. At the Quality shoe shop in White- fish, owned by Larry Anderson, son of ; Frank, there is on exhibit a display of wood carving suitable for wall plaques at Ia attracting considerable atten- tion. A profile of President Roosevelt is done in teak wood. There is a copy of the \Pioneer Mother and Her Son.\ Other works portray a North Dakota homestead, a low squatty building, with a man on horseback in the foreground, and a woman in the doorway; a copy of the Madonna and child; a Catholic nun and the head of an American In- , Man chief, all carved out of Brazilian walnut. These are a part of an exhibit. Mr. Anderson had at the Seattle Art institute and at Tacoma. Mr. Anderson Is now located at Ronan. swept quickly through the- dry, -old building. Harry McGahan, contract rider for Mr. Cooney and caretaker: of the Cooney plant, first discovered' the blaze and turned in the alarm.; Before the fire department arrived, he and Leonard Young, former rail-, road commissioner, formed a twa-man ; bucket brigade to keep the wooden ' fences adjoining the two buildings' soaked With water. The fire in addition to leveling the building, also ate up hay and racing I equipment stored in the building. Saved from the flames were $500 worth of hay and $2,500 in racing equipment in the newer Cooney stables. GRAZING TRACT 25,000 Acres at $3 Per Acre AGRICULTURAL LANDS In the ('lark's Fork valley, terms of Iii percent down, balance 10 yearly payments, bearing 6 percent inter- est. For further information, write Anaconda Copper Mining Co. Lands Department Drawer 1243 Missoula, Mont, YOU CAN THROW CARDS IN HIS FACE ONCE TOO OFTEN WHEN you have those awful TY cramps; when your nerves are all on edge—don't take It out on the man you love. Your husband can't possibly know how you feel for the alinPlo reason that he Is a man. A three-quarter wife may be .no wife at all if alto nags her hus- band *even days out of every month. For threegonerationsone woman has told another how to go - stall- ing through\ with Lydia E. Pink - ham's Vegetable Compound. It helps Nature tone tip the systetn, thus lessening the discomforts trent the functional disorders which women must endure in the three ordeals of life: 1. Turning from girlhood to womanhood. 2. Pre- paring for motherhood. 3. Ap- proaching \middle age.\ Don't be a threo-quarter wife, take LYDIA E. PINICHAM'S EO ETAB LE COMPOUND and Go \Smiling Through.\ Read the Classified Advertisements TO BE TOPS ON ANY JOB *Oda. GOT TO KNOW YOUR STUFF —whether building a skyscraper or dis- tilling fine whiskey! Glemnore Kentucky Straight Bourbon is the whiskey of a lifetime, because the men who make it have spent their lifetime at it—to- taling nearly 600 years. Gleomore DIsdlieries Co.,, Inaorporated Lowisgale—Oweasboro, Kentucky 100 4 4. 4 • . PROOF 4fro/*t. . , s 44),,..,94,. QUARTS $1.70 i oor 'sale at State Liquor Stores. Prices Subject to Change Without Notice. CODE NO. 75-1. oit eleumort o s e KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY At the very first sip, you'll give Crab Orchard your stamp of approval—it's IVIRIMIImm+ KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON OW 1111110mimm004 TWO YEARS OLD Ow ImaiimaimIMM00114 93 PROOF ak. tawarpoist. TOP -RUN WHISKEY at. M. N. A. NOVEMBER 8. 1037 (3)