Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 37, Number 48, Decatur, Adams County, 25 February 1939 — Page 3
LvSOCIETY Iff
£TY '»'■' ThUrSd “ y "'"m * h on>p «f fierft d “*7 h N. Shroll was in the pr<’K ram and ' L»e president. < onductJ" jovely refreshments 1 L bv the hoste”. assist7, Jstnes Strickler. | JJrtfW*’ fromthP Fir ’ T ' pleasantly surprls-i ’ uarv V. Biossom at her i Tenth Street yesterday asJ iter the World Day of , jerrit*. Mrs. Blossom H I[i3 r her eigbty-’econd birthL™ and is enjoying the day * itnmedla'e family and [K*h lodge EE T TUESDAY staff of the Rebekah «f Portland will v lsit with tebekah Lxxlp. No. Sfi of this Tuesday evening. February [Wjfht and Will confer the de-. yaolsss of candidates for the vug? iDuke Oecbsle. Noble Grand W ! lodge will b- In charge .meeting, which will begin Uy st seven-thirty o’clock, ta the conferring of the derefreshments will be served, members of the Retoetab residing in or near Decatur ritsd to attend. Will NEWS if. P. Critchfield of Delphos i week end guest of her parMr. and Mrs. W. W. Parks. .and Mrs. Herman Myers and Gene were Sunday dinner lot Mr. and Mrs. John Myers, -ud Mrs. L E. Brandt and m of Wapakoneta were Suntuner guests of Mrs. Harriet r. iF. A. Detter and Mrs. DenmJukta were guests Thursday low at the home of Mrs. icyJonee, attending the “Farm n’s Club.” Ise a number are on the sick lift the fin. i Gale Hook and Mrs. Odus ■tertalned the Wesley Guild riiss Tuesday evening at a nine party at the Hook home, twine of business, followed program, contests and a de-
pßehlnd the ScenefZt
Bj BARBISON CARROLL tonight, 1939 “F Fotur* Syndicate. Ise. HOLLYWOOD. — None of the ■tojtor. papers got the story IBeanor. Powell had a black * when she met the president I entertained at the birthday balls ' The star LMUk ] got the shiner on the train near Chicago 19 when a sudden lurch threw j 9 ber °® ba!anc e Hs fal as sbe was do•dSklkfl in S exercises in her drawing room - Ice packs did JMBBi no goo d, so Eleanor liberalCarroll 'Y applied violet L eye shading. payoff was that a Washingnewspaperwoman, noticing anrote: ‘it's a new Eleanor a more sophisticated type ■“ wry becoming, too." ’J' "Gone With the Wind" com““working only about Kffles behind Scenarist Oliver who 18 re-writing Howard script that was ■» months ago. Jatieth Century-Fox wishes Ita.,, Spencer Tracy workl“2 ver Y scene of "Stanley and E*®*" for, when he gets an he plays pol ° and - ls happened, a $2,000,000 n„ eat “'Rht be endangered, ftsi* teach,, .u* 1 contract contXßtudlocan’t isn ’ t rehearsing kh his nau??? Theater Play, f that he wm £ P h et v“u mean ' 1 wanner back here to ni&ke pictures. almos t hanged *'St ln ra^, r8 ° f herfa - W o/ „ ta Cb'caßO- Acciitoget„urae; The actre3S 10 put on .« a trunk that had tta X?®o ve r h e a d shelf. To * ladder C l tab a sh ‘P’ B 1 (eU ’ catchine aUpped and * w Th? he r neck ln an W tet only thing that from strangling WM
club calendar Society Deadline, 11 A. M. iMnette Wtnnea Phones 1000 — 1001 II Saturday Zion Lutheran Supper, Church Dining Rooms, 5 to 7 p. m. Shakespeare Program Cowmitteo Miss Rose Christen, 2 p. tn. Monday Pythian Sister Needle Club, K. of P. Hall. After Temple. Research Club, Mrs. C. C. Pumphrey, 2:30 p. m. Music Department, Miss Helen Haubold. 7:30 p. m. | Dramatic Department, Mrs. Hen Duke, 7:30 p. m. Literature Department, Mrs. W. F. Smith, 7:30 p. m Art Department, Mrs. W. Guy frown, 7:30 p. m. Zion Junior Walther League, Lutheran Church. 7:30 P. M. V. I. S. Class. Miss Lois Dellinger, 7:30 P. M. Tuesday Kirkland Ladies Club. 1 P. M. Rebekah Lodge Odd Fellows Hall 7:30 p. m. Wednesday Historical Club. Mrs. Floyd Acker. | 2:30 p. m. I'cious lunch. Several guests from Drcatur were present. Franklin Detter was a business visitor in Fort Wayne Tuesday, j Mrs. George Dellinger and Mrs. Herbert Avery were dinner guests Thursday of Mrs. Floyd Morrison in Spencerville. Mrs. Harriet Colter entertained the W. H. M. S. Wednesday evening. Mrs. George Dellinger gave the scripture reading and prayer. Mrs. John Byer read an interesting letter from one of the schools the W. 11. M. S. helps to support. Mrs. Dale Cowan favored the guests with a musical reading, accompanied at the piano by Mrs. W. G. Hoffer. Miss Mary Deter sang a solo “My Father Knows It All." A dainty lunch was served by the hostess, assisted by her daughter. Mrs. Herman Myers. The Father and Son banquet was held at the Methodist church Monday evening and eighty responded to invitations. Don Eicher gave a toast to the sons and his son Bob pave a toaat to the fathers. The principal speaker of the evening was Rev. Danford of Van Wert. Th? banquet was served by the M. E. lid Mr. and Mrs. Jarome Morrison were gnests Sunday evening qf Mr. and Mrs. Herman Myers.
that her toes were just able to touch the floor. Jack Benny’s birthday came on Feb. 14, Valentine’s day. and the tribute paid him on the "Man About Town” set was touching. There were gifts from every member of the cast and crew ... a sort of vote of confidence in his time of trouble. Story of Nelson Eddy picture. "Let Freedom Ring,” is creaky stuff, but we’ll bet you that audiences are going to cheer all over the country when he sings “America.” Hollywood is entirely sincere in I its rush to patriotism but, if the 1 producers are smart, they'll avoid over-selling. Otherwise, the im- • pending cycle of films may defeat their own fine purpose. Irene Dunne is singing the praises of a new (to Hollywood) vacation spot. She has departed for Sea Island, Georgia, to recuperate from many consecutive weeks of work in “Love Affair” and in "Invitation to Happiness." Alex Fisher, of the Earl Carroll show, is plenty burned at the M-G-Mer who Is making passes at his partner, Ruth Harrison. This team does the Amphytrion dance number . . . Tony Martin will get $3,500 a week for his appearance at the New York Paramount. This makes his former salary at Twentieth Century-Fox look like pin money . . . Wendy Barrie and Frank Shields are a new twosome ... Joy Hodges and Pat De Cicco made a round of the night spots celebrating his birthday and had one cake at the House of Murphy, another at the Cocoanut Grove and still another at Marcel's (formerly Marcel Lamaze’s) . . . Richard Gulley and Sir Anthony Hogg will be at the train to see Ruth Sellwyn smd Adrianne Ames off for New York. Ruth will conI tlnue on to Europe for an eightmonth stay . . . Ona Munson and Billy Sellwyn were a twosome nt i the Case Lamaze . . . Ditto Kay I Sutton and Vic Orsatti at Ruby i Foo’s . . . Bob Hope won’t have i either Martha Raye or Shirley I Ross for his feminine vis-a-vis in i "The Cat and the Canary.” It’ll : probably be Ellen Drew or Evelyn i Keyes.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25,1939.
YELLOW JACKETS (CONTINUED from PAGD ONE) hurst, 11 a. in. — Harlan vs Hoagland. !! p m New Haven vs Areola. 3 p. in. — North Side of Fort Wayne vs Monroeville, 1 p. m. — Huntertown vs Winner of game 1. Official* - Lowell D. Sparks. George Williams, Wlter A. Cook. Bluffton Thursday ' P- m. Berne vs Pleasant. 1 Mills. X p. m. — Ossian vs Rockcreek. ' 9p. in. — Liberty Center vs Petroleum. Friday i '• a. m. — Jackson vs Bluffton. Id a. m. — Chester vs Monroe. 11 a. m. — Vnion vs Geneva. 2 p. tn. — Lancaster vs Jefferson. 3 p. tn. — Hartford vs Kirkland. Officials - Fred J. Shroyer, James R. ('raw, George Yarnelle. Huntington Regional Saturday. March 11 2 p. m. — Winner at Huntington vs winner at Bluffton. 3 p. in. — Winner at Fort Wayne vs winner at Hartford City. Muncie Semi-Final Saturday, March 18 2 p. m. — Winner at Auburn vs | winner at Muncie. 3 p. m. — Winner at Huntington i vs winner at Marion. Indianapolis Final Saturday. March 25 2 p. m. — Winner at Evansville I vs winner at Hammond. 3 p. in. — Winner at Muncie vs j winner at Indianapolis. FARM BANQUET (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) | ible through the courtesies of the following Adams county firms: Otto Hoile, Berne Equity Exchange Co., Berne Review. Berne Witness Co., Sprunger-Lehman & Co., Stengel & Craig Drug Co., Yager Furniture Co., Community Exchange, • First State Bank. The Schafer Store, Decatur Daily Democrat. Central Sugar Co., Burk Elevator . Co., Decatur, Mutschler Packing Co.. First Bank of Berne. Bank of Geneva, Geneva Milling and Grain Co.. Geneva Equity Exchange, Berne Lumber Co.. Habegger Furniture Inc.. Preble Oil Company. R. A. Stuckey, Ed Boknecht, P. A. Kuhn Chev. Co., W. H. Zwick & Son, A. D. Suttles, Cloverleaf Creameries. Inc.. Monroe Grain Co.. Doc’s Place, Lee Hardware Co.. Reifsteck Bros., Herman Scheumann. Winfred Gerke, Heller & Neuenschwander, Burk Elevater, Monroe, Ashbaucher’s Tin Shop. Carl C. Pumphrey. Lank enau’s Boston Store. Dr. E. P. Fields. McCormick Dce-ing Store, and Farmers’ State Bank. Preble 8080 NEWS Robert Colter left for Chicago. 111.. Sunday evening where he has employment. Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Troutner and family were Sunday guests at the home of John Rash. j James Parr of near Berne called I at the L. F. Sapp home Sunaay as ternoon. Miss Neva Rash entertained the I’ioneer B. Y. P. U Group of the Baptist church Tuesday evening with a Valentine party. Games were played and Valentines exchanged, after which refreshments were served to twenty-one members. A group of friends and neighbors gathered at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Ohler Friday Bachelor Adopts Boy » ■ 'WoC?-’ -- H -A ... Z ' <i Sydney and Jon Guialaroff Sydney Guialaroff, Hollywood hairdresser, holds his adopted child, Jon, whom he named after one of his favorite customers, Joan Crawford, film star. Guialaroff has designed a "little baby haircut, cut and curled just like I his foster son’s hair. It has proven popular with movie actresses.
Hitler Liked Her Dancing '2" - I : -I SjU. Ma / ' x/ IHV / - K '*v- "a r I*l r 7 i / I F j * r j i ! i \ : . i -c* ’ j i A- * fvL 11L f J L _ ■ z Marion Daniels After performing for Fuehrer Adolf Hitler at Munich, Germany. Marion Daniels, San Francisco dancer, told reporters at Cannes, France, that he was “one of the most charming and nicest men I have ever known." Marion was taken to Munich and returned in Hitler's personal plane. Miss Daniels said that Hitler called her “the most marvelous dancer" he had ever seen.
evening in honor of Mrs. Ohler’s < Birthday. The evening was spent in 1 , a social way and a chile supper was I served to the following guests. Mr. ■ i and Mrs. Ru-ford Broadbeck and sens. Mrs. Lucile Miller and family, i Mr. and Mrs. Ray Meyers and sons, i Betty and Myrtle Death. AH departled wishing Mrs. Ohler many more (Happy Birthdays' The Ladles Aid Society of the Mt. Tabor. M. E. Church met Tuesday evening at the home of Mrs. Ed- : ward Koos. The meeting was pre- , sided over by the president, Mrs. | Carl Daniels. After the business imoetine nvrly refreshment were meeting, lovely refreshriieiits were Mary. Contests were enjoyed and tiie winners were Miss Myrtle Clemen’s and Mrs. Carl Daniels. Those I''esent were Mrs. Carl Daniels and sons James. Clyde and Paul, Miss Myrtle Clements. Miss Patty Chron- - is - er Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Chronister and son Eugene. Miss Rachel Springer. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Koos and daughter Mary. Many were ab- . sent due to sickness The place of the next meeting has not definitely i been decided. There is quite a number of sick folks in this neighborhood, he small daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Vilas El- 1 zo\ has been seriously ill the past ; two weeks with pneumonia l Mrs. Margaret Waltha. Mrs. Bertha McMichael, Mrs. Mary Tope. . and daughter Mary and Miss Mildred Helm spent Monday evening 1 with Mrs. Artie Jackson. Mr. and Mrs. Groce Tope and daughter Mary motored to Rockford I Ohio, Saturday, where they were t
Ex-Film Star s Romance Ends 4 Wil Mr. and Mrs. Albert D. Lasker Though married less than four months, the romance of Doris Kenyon, former film actress and widow of the late Milton Sills, and Albert D. Lasker, advertising executive, appeared at an end with I announcement by Mrs. Lasker of their separation and her intention to seek a Nevada divorce.
called by the serious illness of Mr. Tope's sister, Mrs. Clarence Fegley. Mrs. Mamie Jones called on Mrs. Susie Bowen and her sister Clara Frisinger Monday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Myers entertained the following guests Sunday. R. K. Flemming and daughter Esta, Mr. and Mrs. L. K. Flemm'ng and sons. Mrs. Iva Teeple and sons. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bunge of (Butler, Mr. and Mrs. Millard Maloney and Robert Rash, of For* Wayne, Mr. and Mrs. Orville Lenhart and family of Wren. Ohio, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John Elzey. Mr. and Mrs. Groce Tope enter‘ained the following gnests Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Brunner and sons, Billie. Joe and Lester. Mr. and Mrs. Gifford Brunner, Miss Ethel Bunner. Mr. and Mrs. Doyl Daniels and family. Miss Mary Girod. Gordon Welker and Marion Bure, Mary and Robert Tope. Perry McGill and son Murlin of Monroe spent Sunday w’th Mrs. Gertrude Clements and fami'y. H, G. Miller spent Monday and Tuesday with his uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stevens and family of Mendon, Ohio. Roy Davis and Dean Colter of Chicago, spent Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. Ben Colter. Robert Colter accompanied them home after spending the past two weeks in Chicago. Miss Melba Hill spent Thursday night with Miss Mary Tope. o Miss Edwina Shroll is visiting friends and relative in the city over the week end. |
Mr. and Mrs, A. J. Beavers attended the funeral service for Floyd Rnbenold yesterday at Bluffton. Mrs. S. E. Hhamp and Miss Wyroma Johnson are two more victims of the flu epidemic. Tliomaslne Aspy, nine-months-old daughter of Rev. and Mrs. Homer Aspy, who has been seriously 111. Is steadily improving. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur R. Holthouse went to Bloomington today to visit their son Dan. who will bo Initiated tonight in the Sigma Chi fraternity William Bell, son of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Bell ofiPellmont Farms,! has a large St. Bernard dog. The animal Is as tame and gentle as a kitten and is a popular net with William and his friends. o ANNUAL SAFETY (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) with the enthusiasm and earliest nesa of public officials, safety leaders ami business men in achieving this fine record Thi: same enthusiasm was shown in extending the invitation to hold the 1939 congress in Atlantic City. “We have every reason to believe the 1939 congress will be one of the best and largestsW have ever held."
KIT GARSON -jfauptf EVELYN WELLST
CHAPTER XIII Toward noon of the second day, Kit sighted moving objects on the far horizon. “More Indians,” he groaned. “Won't they ever stop coming!" Then his voice rose. “Those men arn’t Injuns! They have saddles and hats. Boys, it’s Bridger!” His blood-stained and powdergrimed heroes cheered like madmen. The second party of fifty trappers had caught up with them! The fifty swept down on the Indian horses as if the former numbered fifty thousand. French-Cana-dian and Kentuckian, Mexican and Missourian, they were united in common hatred of the enemy. There was confusion as the Blackfeet ran to their tethered horses. Far beyond, i the woman’s camp could be seen hastily moving. Kit saw advantage in the confusion. He cited his exhausted trappers to their horses and pushed down a section of log wall. His men shot out over the plain after the fleeing thousand that had surrounded them for five days. Whooping, shouting, louder than any Blackfeet ever born, the Carson men rode to assist their friend’ Kit directed both parties. Between them trapped Blackfeet fought desperately. Back rolled the feathered tide to ebb and swell again. Three hours the fighting went on under sweltering sun. , The trappers’ rifles were empty and they used their single barrel pistols. Joe Meek was one hero of this battle—his bravery would be commemorated in a famous canvas by Stanley, “The Trapper’s Last Shot.” Newell made the mistake of dismounting to scalp a dead Indian. The warrior was not dead, and “Doc’s” fingers caught among the gun screws braided as ornaments into the savage’s topknot. Their battle was waged privately amid the slaughter. Trapper and redskin fought tooth and nail until Newell •merged alive. Kit sighted “Old Cotton” Mansfield pinned under his dying horse. Five Blackfeet sprang for the trapper s scalp. “Tell Bridger, 01’ Cotton’s gone!” Mansfield shouted to Kit in farewell. I But Kit sprang from his own horse to defend his friend while Mansfield wriggled from under his horse. Kit's own horse bolted from the melee and both men were left •foot on the battlefield. Both jumped up behind other trappers as the battle raged on. That night, camped upon an emptied field, the white men burned their trapper dead. The several hundred Indian bodies they left to the vultures and jackals. Kit stumbled through a faintly remembered but heartfelt prayer for his lost comrades. He trembled as he prayed for. the men who had given their lives to win one of the greatest battles in the history of the American plains. He was weak with hunger and fighting. But he had won that day a title that would stand beside his name as long as history stands: “Kit Carson, Scourge of the Prairies!” For this was victory—tremendous victory that would spread terror among all tribes. Pine Needle, wherever she might be, would hear his name and shudder. That name spread. Through Wyoming, north to Canada, south to Mexico, east and west between Los Angeles and St. Louis, Carson’s title became known. It swept like • flame through the terrified Blackfeet bands. Kit Carson had defeated them. But they would know worse terror. Riding toward the summer rendezvous of 1835, to be held on the Green River in Utah. Kit learned of woe among the tribes. Bridger’s men entered village after village on a broad Blackfeet trail and found the lodge tepees deserted and empty. Smallpox! It raged through the primitive tribes, contracted, it was said, through un»erupulous white traders who sold infected blankets to i the Indian*. Blackfaet band* fled
FORTUNE TELLING IS FUN Ever entertain your guests at a party with fortune telling stunts? It's a lot of fun. Our Washington Service Bureau's booklet on the subject, tells how to read "forluties" by numerolugy, palmistry, playing curds, teu leaves und coffee grounds. Send the coupon below, with a dime enclosed for return postage and luitidllng costs, for your copy: CLIP COUPON HERE F. M. Kerby, Director, Dept. B 122, Daily Oemocrat'e Service Bureau, 1013 Thirteenth Street, Washington, D. C. Here’s my dime: send my copy of the booklet "Fortune Telling" to: |NA M E i STREET and No CITY STATE I am a reader lit the Decatur Dally Democrat, Decatur, Ind
ARRIVALS Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Troutner of North Eighth street are the parents cf a baby boy born, Friday after-1 noon at 2:45 at the nome. The baby | weighed seven pounds and has not I ret been named. 0 James J. Hines Case (Joes To Jury Today New York, Feb. 25.—(U.R) The ' case of James J. Hines, consort of gangsters and benefactor of the poor, of Tammany Hall, goes to the jury today after Judge Knott. | Jr., made his charge. The maximum penalty of the
in terror to the Roekie*. There they [ wrapped themselves in gay blankets. There, they died. Over ten thousand Blackfeet died in this epidemic. And Pine Needle—what of her! Kit asked the question constantly of the stricken left behind to die. He met an old crone squatting by the trail, waiting for death. He stood to the windward in dread of smallpox, and shouted to her in dialect. “Pine Needle is dead,’’ came back the thin voice through the sage. And when Kit entered the summer rendezvous on Green River lie found no joy in the scene at all. All his old mountain friends were there and many new, for Kit Carson who had whipped the Blackfeet was hero of all the Western men. But there was an empty space in his heart where. Kit knew at last, had nestled a faun-like maid in
Trapper and redskin fought tooth and nail, tomahawk and gun, until Kit Carson and his comrades triumphed.
white doeskin. He could have wept i amid the laughter and good cheer i and friendly festival thinking her t gone. 1 Men were gathered on that grassy plain by Green River who meant i much for better or worse to Kit ' Carson. There was the FrenchCanadian trapper Shunan, known as “The Bully of the Mountains.” i From the beginning Kit coulu not like him at all. Bridger and Meek and Fitzpatrick and all the other important trappers were there, and Bridger again had flint arrowheads in his back to be extracted after the battle with the Blackfeet. “I’m collectin’ my second quiverful,” he remarked, wincing under the knife. A short time before there had been another terrific Indian war on Green River Among the slain had been Joe Meek’s gentle Indian wife. Mountain Lamb. But the whites had triumphed and, for many years later, the white war cry in battle would be a how) for extermination: i “Give ’em Green River!” To this rendezvous, for a few days’ rest on their long, dramatic journey, came the two white women, Mrs. Henry Spaulding and Mrs. Whitman, with others of the first missionary band to enter Oregon. These delicate women were destined to be the first to kneel on Oregon soil in prayer, in a gesture as significant as that of the Pilgrims at Plymouth. Kit gaped at them with shy reverence. Ten years at a time would pass in Kit’s life without a glimpse of white women. These frail beings
PAGE THREE
| crime is 27 years in prison. Hines lawyers have admitted his friendship with the slain Dutch Schultz but said Hines, like Lincoln, turn- ' ed no man away. o Picnic Before Funerals Sydney, Australia (U.R> — How little attention the public ever giv- ! es to Hie working hours of undertakers became apparent when The I Undertakers' Assistants and CetneI teiy Employes’ Union of New South Wales felt itself impelled to post the following notice: “We would very much appreciate It if the public generally would refrain from I holding funerals on this day, to en•able the employes to attend the picnic."
whose soft voices silenced the usually rowdy camp, in whose honor the whiskey barrel was stoppered, and who led in prayer night and evening by the fires, seemed to Kit like sacred presences and not like women at all. Not like Rosita of California, nor Dolores of Taos. Not certainly, like Pine Needle, whose walk had been free as a faun's in her loose Indian clothing. Kit’s thoughts closed with pain, thinking of her. These white women were wearing crinolines and many petticoats and straw bonnets over the western plains as intrepidly as they carried the banners of righteousness. So shy Kit found no words to answer, when Mrs. Spaulding questioned him of the Oregon Trail. How he would have stared, had anyone told him that within a few years Kit Carson would sit at ease in a plush upholstered drawing room among gracious Eastern wo-
men, and be able to answer, “Yes, ma’am," without blushing when asked would he have another biscuit with his tea! Within a few days the white women moved on over the Oregon Trail under the escort of Thomas Fitzpatrick, and the camp breathed freely again. The trading and drinking and fighting began with new enthusiasm. Kit was a hero among heroes now and his word was iaw in the rendezvous. Quietly, for he had no liking for needless fighting, he adjusted differences and served as judge in the endless disputes arising among boasting, swearing, harddrinking mountaineers on their one yearly holiday. Only one man disputed Kit’s word. Shunan. Kit tried to ignore Shunan. • There was a new man this year at the rendezvous, a trader by the name of John A. Sutter. Kit took a liking to the Swiss who had wandered from Europe to St. Louis, i and westward. I Over small glasses of whiskey in a buffalo hide tepee surrounded by heaped gewgaws brought for Indian trade, Kit told Sutter of his trip to California, back in '29. “You should see California, Mr. Sutter. There is one valley where we spent the fall and summer. The Sacramento, it’s called. There’s • river full of salmon and beaver, and plenty of deer, and tarnation, not another soul around except Injuns! A man could be in paradise there." (To be continued) OpyMfht by Er«lyn W«lto. Dlitrlbuted M JKIM Feature* iynrfUiete.
