the answer is false
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Debt peonage
He never fought in a war on the the battle field. He only was president. He was a volunteer in the Black Hawk War of 1832 and was elected captain of his company.
Yes and no. He never conceived, never reproduced in any way, shape or form. But the dancers, the employees in his company, the students at his school... he treated them as his children, calling them all "dear." He was a father figure to all of them.They called him "Mr. B." But they might as well have called him "dad."
You call 911 if u burn ur face on soup Call your power company using a landline (never needs electricity) or a cellphone (always keep it charged)
sears roebuck and co Chicago illnois, red sleeping bag stock no 8318, no 2527, from 1923 what is it worth
Sears stopped selling firearms in 1988. Sears never made firearms, they contracted other gun companies to make guns for them under the Sears brand name.
Sears stopped selling firearms in 1988. Sears never made firearms, they contracted other gun companies to make guns for them under the Sears brand name.
Sears never made any guns. They were private labeled for Sears by gun manufacturers Sears guns are usually almost identical to a manufacturer's model, but I believe this particular one was made by Hi Standard to Sears' specifications and there was no equivalent gun with the manufacturer's name.
As I saw in other faq`s answered about King Nitro shotguns, they were made by Sears,Roebuck co. We need to find those other answers and correct them. Sears Roebuck never made any guns unless you count those manufactured by their subsidiary company, Meriden Arms from 1905 to 1915. Nitro King was a Sears brand but King Nitro was a trade name distributed by Shapleigh Hardware of St Louis. The guns were made by W.H. Davenport, Iver Johnson, J. Stevens (model 315 double barrel), and unidentified Belgian manufacturers.
No, it was never a retail store.
Even Sears & Roebuck did and never did make guns, theirs and JC Higins were made by Remenington No. JC Higgins was just a brand name used by Sears Roebuck on guns made by Stevens, Mossberg, and other manufacturers. The same companies made the same guns for the Gambles hardware chain, so there are identical models marked with different retailers' names.
Sears never made any guns. Several manufacturers including Marlin, Savage, Remington, Hi Standard, and Mossburg manufactured shotguns with the Sears name on them. Whatever company was cheapest at the time got the contract.
Sears Roebuck is known for selling hunting rifles and guns back in the day, but never among the quality items like Winchester, Colt, browning, etc. Shape is everything and these hawkens were kit builds so quality was low as kits and how well they were built/taken care of is everything. List for $150.00 and take anything near $100.00 cash if it shoots or 100.00 or less as wall hanger for decoration.
JC Higgens never manufactured any guns - Sears bought them from a variety of manufacturers. The best way you could determine if Sears sold such a gun is to find some of the old reprints of their catalogs between 1887 and 1920, which are the years that Winchester was making their 1887 and 1901 "Humpback" lever action shotguns.
Sears definitely sold donkeys. In fact, a book was written called Simpson, The Last Sears Donkey by Lee Jones and Guy Gillette. I gives a charming account of the donkey's arrival and subsequesnt adventures. The book is long out of print and I have been trying to get a copy of it. I have seen it only once. For a book I am researching I pored through all of the Sears catalogs of the 1950's but never found a listing. Was it in a special catalog or supplement? That too I remember seeing only once as a child. mawinslow49@gmail.com
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