Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 March 1950 — Page 19
in nisi
els ndianapolis FT “By Ed Sovola]
: ny TWICE K WEEK the FBI srps fof action i
“One of my undercover men’ gave me - rather startling essentials of Eu m the federal gang-busting agency. He told me what nights agents exercise and where. The Indianapolis Athletié Club was a cinch to find. " - . Hiding myself in a clothes hamper, I waited for the arrival of the agents. Ned Teany, IAC athletic ditector, said hiding was usetess if not dangerous. He suggested I talk to Harvey Foster, agent In charge. It seems the Federal Bureau of . tion-is particular whom théy allow to spy on | their activities. Better be up and above board,
Told to Get On His Shakers
; “YOU GET into a pair of shorts and sneakers,” ; .. sald Mr, Teany. “That way you can hang around and one glance will be sufficient for an agent to tel} there's Bothing wrong with you tHat 1 a few
a
Capes : : % “ality. In two shakes I was dressed for. physical _ exertiosband immediately worked up a sweat by getting on a scale and weighing myself. Enough, Can't overdo it. It wasn’t long before big bruisers began to appear carrying small satchels, dufflebags, packages and I noticed several were wearing shoulder pads under their topcoats. Later I discovered my obserx vation was wrong. G-men don't wear shoulder ] falsies. “What do these guys work out for anyway?” I asked the athletic director. The agents, on the
Ld &
10 on
Your FBI . . . They find staying in fine physical shape a pleasure as well as a necessity.
panthers and you wondered where they grew men| a ; ©. == FRIDAY, MARCH: 10,1950 =
soccer; wrestling; king-of-the-hilly was first on the | " program. Every once in awhile someone would lay| a shot in the basket with great skill. How homer) Simply because at one time the gentleman who
weight lifti i
~men you have never seen ‘before in your life?
‘began to head for the showers. There were gray| Overton Johnson, Wm. H. Winter
_ attached to the hair made you swear up and down | By CARL HENN
ianapolis Times
ere wate only 2 Tew aches over ix Tour alts : Ss mee of waist. and wide of shoulder and walked like ~~ men TTT :
7
like that. = a » : - : a
Garrulous Mr. Teany snorted and repeated sev-| : > 2 ah o we Wri A Ay i ng ho Historical Indiana— } Ts - Set i
on this exercise business: “ I recognized several famous athletes in the : make headlines in the FBI i oof L Wo Wabash College Boy: Basketall. 45d the way a score or more G-men. -
group. Surprised me, too, to discover they had be-, come long arms of the government, Men don't played the game it became a mixture of +3 en} nid Pees
Fhy
made that long shot was a star college: player.| Name? Sorry. : After about a half Roar of this brytal- “type ba
The fron n they were playing with over their heads 1 have ‘seen cranes lift. Little out of my department. . Various mechanical contrivances for limbering and building muscles were given a workout. One agent punched a heavy canvas bag. My jaw ached from watching. Did you ever stop and think how many times in your life you have popped off to
Imagine how many men walking around have the training and ability to knock your block off. Coach Teany led a group of five men who expressed interest: in finer points of the game of squash upstairs to the courts. Four men went into the handball court and squared off. The boss agent, Mr. Foster, came into the gym and checked on his boys. He was informed where| they were and what they were doing. His only| activity for the evening would be a long swim in! the pool. Urgent business prevented him from | making it on time and a speech that evening made | a short workout necessary. Before he left for the pool, Mr. Foster called | an agent over on a mat and the two men brushed] up on disarming tactics. Rough stuff. I'd suggest oing what an FBI agent asks you to do. I'm pretty strong, by certain standards, but Mr. Foster, | when he showed me a simple maneuver in making |
EC less ame 3rol {0 21000 show . It was during this period that flatboats were extensively used for commerce. Miss Carol Deschler, state library typist, likes ofd books. | isd > ; They Headed For the Showers Book Tells Thrilling Adventures -of
TWO HOURS after they arrived, the agents heads among the group. One look at the physique]
that the very riext day a program of body-building | THE INDIANA HISTORICAL SOCIETY LIBRARY owns $400 was going to be instituted. worth of adventure. There was strength, power, vitality to burn in| That was the amount paid by Miss Caroline Dunn, librarian, each man. As one agent said, you never know when two years ago for a small, nondescript book written by two exevery bit of strength an agent has will be needed. Wabash College boys.
~“We like to be ready,” laughed the G-man.| The high price of this volume, perhaps the most consistently = x Good. I'm all for it: Nothing like being ready, Iiyaluable of Indiana- printed or — always say. ' Indiana-authored books, is owing shooting buffalo. The book con-. -
‘Human Machine
{to its rarity and desirability to tains a fine description of the shooting "of three mammoth
collectors. By Robert Cc. Ruark I le adventure is found between bears, a task which nearly took i covers, For the two. youths the lives of several hunters. —. ..
Je a fascinating story to tell. The wagon train went on at a
opular
end of a log from Mr. Bernard Baruch not so long Navy, ago, down in South Carolina, absorbing economics : and waiting for one of the old gentleman’s tame quail to attack us, so we could shoot him in selfdefense. We were talking taxes, a favorite topic at this horrid time of the year, 9: Uncle Sam said he hadn't got it completely thought out yet, but the President's committee on steel wages: and pensions had brought at least one thingeto the attention of everybody: That while
emp as " there was amortization and" depreciation for ——— : machinery, bricks and mortar, no real provision had been made for the depletion of the human machine, Therefore, he said, they had recommended pensions. “This human allowance heretofore had been taken care of by individuals, from individual earnings, but the state is now saying “we can’t allow you to save as you wish—we'll do it for you.” I am just thinking, he said approximately, that every human being—not alone the workers—wears out. How about some provision for artists and writers and baseball players and executives who can last only a certain length of time? It's claimed that even the Soviets allow larger returns to artists and writers.
‘Earnings ‘Short-Lived’
AT A TIME when so much is being said about the humanities; B. M. B. mused, it seems odd that depreciation on materialistic machines is given preference over the human machine which can only last just so long. Through preparation and long, arduous work, artists and professionals have brief moments of fulfillment, Their earnings may be large temporarily, but they last only a short while. While it may be said that undoubtedly artists —be they writers or boxers or ballplayers-—obtain some extra dividend of enjoyment from their work that is denied more prosaic toilers, it is still regrettable that no taxation arrangement exists whereby they may arrange a more satisfactory amortization of a relatively short period of peak earnings. “Is this a statement, chief?” I asked the ol ooo gentleman... } “Naw,” he said. “This Ff a thought Is am Just tinkering with. ‘Let’ s go shoot a bird.”
Classic Drama
NEW YORK, Mar. 10—I was sitting on the other .
i RG Ta ie i} ritory. Darkness hid all evidences one of the indomitabl denly thought about the pe to fere agin I ru | EASY Tact o ¢ wagon| After taking a long look at of civilization. NY uy amne pak id orlo braved a wild mil pid roof circuit of my own racket, and then I really Fé Trail, into Kansas, esis ard Peon gon yaawake with the ards gar. turned to Inatana‘apa married a 2 308 Molar ama pester: al started eastward and north-| to look upon fields, orchards, gar- In Indiana, the stat - Filet the ball players and the actor# and the oyetr Laramie, up the Snake ward. On. June 20; 1845, the dens, houses and villages; our Hoosler girl. | behind him, Winter's a ry at et artists and the strip teasers look after them-| Farr hg Salmon Falls, to Salt group met Johnson's party, which country and countrymen.” , 4-0 | well_as- that of Johnson, yy ; “selves,” said I to the horse. “What we want spe. Lake, o Ft. Boise and to Powder had left Oregon City for the re-| Johnson, - although responsible HE COULDN'T STAY. The served in the book which tells 86 cially 1s financial amnesty for rum-sprung writers “on the way the boys joi. od In [turn trek on Apr. 19, 1845. [for the high literary quality of next time he started West he vividly of the “Route Across the
ree Wihereupon-Fdismounted and, ‘uninerved by thts! Oe TS | unaccustomed intellectuality, proceeded to miss the About People Real Estate Men
While I am engaged in this pleasant rmm——rh They entitled their book: slow oxen-pace, to Whitman's istic endeavor, I got to thinking about ball players, "up, ie Across the Rocky Mission near the Columbia River, and strip teasers arid newspaper people and quail Mountains,” by Overton Johnson down the Columbia’ to Ft. Vans shooters, and how they are mangled every Year and Wm. H. Winter, of the Emi- couver at Cascade Falls and fiby the revenooers. {nally arrived a y My heart began to bleed for Joe DiMaggio, who | gration of i iNov. 13, 1843, Dtegon Uity on was poor most of his early youth and who will be| PRINTED by John B. Semans It had taken almost six months poor for most of his old age unless he can find in Lafayette in 1846, the book to traverse a great part of the steady work not involving the personal use of a tells the story of two sophomores continent. ball bat. |with a desire to escape school-~ In Oregon City the wagon Joe's got about 35 years invested In a dozenirooms and textbooks and with train and the two young adyears of big dough, most of which he can’t keep, itching heels that couldn't be sat- venturers parted company. Johnaccording to the taxes on personal Income. lisfied in college. [son wished to stay in OregonDiMaggio's sale of himself to the Yankees this| Of the two, William Winter City with those who were settling
year for 100 grand is as much a capital investment Was the first to desert Indiana. there while he looked the coun-
we Darky
as if he had kept a factory for 35 years and sold leaving Wabash College in 1839, try over. Winter wanted to see Winter and Johnson left college to travel west with an oxen-pulled wagon train, it at a profit, but the government doesn’t see it he went out to Missouri when California. S P 3 that way. % {that part of. the country was| Winter had his wish. After six! entire. train moved toward the of note. He taught school in Day- Sonoma, Cal, and raised stock; : aise hardly settled. | months stay in Oregon City he Mississippi River. Before they! ton, Ind., for-a time and died on grain and grapes. He did so well Invested in Annuities His friend, Overton Johnson, left Te with 37 _ others, of reached it, they saw a mammoth Feb. 15, 1849. {De bought another 1480 acres - Iwas still in school when he got Whic were women and chil- buffalo hunt conducted by In-| Winter was made of sterner| near San . Joaquin, - where he BABE RUTH and Ty Cobb were about the only i}. western fever from Winter, ren, on June 18, 1844, for the dians on the south fork of Sweet gus. ‘The West had gripped him! Planted wheat. .
big boys I can remember who kept any dough, dnd they were being paid in gold dollars at a time) when the tax collector just wanted some instead of all. The only reason Ruth spun out his years in| ease was that Christy Walsh forcibly took his!
The son of a prosperous farmer, | trip to Ubper California, | Water. with a clutch he couldnt es-| But Winter was by this timean {Johnson owned the - only gold| Johnson and Winter both said cape. He headed back across the almost incurable traveler. On a |watch at Wabash at that time, | THEIR FIRST stopping place| they must have seen 100,000 buf- Father of Waters toward the set- cattle drive into Nevada in 1872 Inot excepting faculty members. was Capt. Sutter's fort on the falo in the herd which passed ting sun. he fell in love with the. country The two got together in Mis-| Sacramento River, 50 miles above them in two days’ time. The After exploring California in Shasta County.
1 est money away’ from the Babe and plastered it into| Sours Sua Secited, 30 teaver i) San Franeiso, . There, Winter! arges Anis. they in Stood! again, he went down into Mexico, He bought land, built a flours annuities. Cobb took his few bucks and bought go reut Unknown be A the In mined, Sav Bo “| least 2000 pound across country to Vera Cruz em- mill and sawmill, and almost: Coca-Cola stock. But DiMaggio and Teddy Wil-| yon the | Ing a commodity which! | barked for New Orleans and re- singlehandedly created the town
[plains. Their tale begins thus: |was directly responsible for the " =» er liams, the big earners. will get nicked for the bulk| «jp the —iatter —part —of- May; Gold-Rush-in-'49, | THEIR RETURN to the place] Wed to Indiana. -oL-Fall River Mills. He moved-itis p shabby genteel. 1843, we Again he grew restless. This family there from California in time he left St. Joseph, Mo., as 1875, and there he stayed.
The so-so players. who make the (to them)! captain of a company bound for _ When his wife died in 1879,
fabulous sums of $15,000 and $20,000, fetch up with| beans when you figure they've got to parlay this] 'the California mines. Instead of Winter survived her by only a grubbing for gold, however, Win- f€W months.
d 1 rendezvous for persons wish- icans and Indians. Its climate! “On A 29, 1 dough over 80 or 70 years, and the $5000-$10,000 C= n Aug. 29, late in the night, | kids are just working for board and room on the| ing to emigrate or travel beyond then, as now, was so agreeable we passed the boundary line be- ter opened a store on the He had left his mark on the
same specifications. the Rocky Mountains, " 2s to cause Winter to remark on tween the States and Indian ter-| yovelumne River, made some! {land. Winter was a true pioneer,
left Independence, a| At that time, the southern part from which they had begun their {small town in the western part of California was populated al- journey marks the end of the lof Missouri, and a place of gen- most entirely by Spaniards, Mex- book. They salid:
and dessicated quail shooters.” boys Jol. Joining forces at Ft. Hall, She the book, , produced nothing more bought 1280 acres of land near Rocky Mountains.”
next five shots.
Girl Shut-In’s Painting Wins Visit to Opera
“By Frederick C. ‘Othman Music Lover Who Drew Picture From Club, athletic booster organiza- skunk reposed in a plano. To Confer Here
tion for outstanding men stu- bought recently,
WASHINGTON, Mar. 10—The Bonnie's marble- / lined caucus room, with its mighty chandeliers, — soft carpets, polished cuspidors and red leather : chairs, is- by all ‘odds the seat of drama. in Amerrere ssi ssc doareesn cs fog oo end alse farce comedy. ‘Sometimes it sounds like soap opera. } There I once was conked by mistake when a ~~ couple of lawgivers got into a combined fist fight. | and wrestling. match. There I watched the midget climb on J. P, Morgan's lap. There I saw the high-binding Gen. Benny Meyers get the ax and there I listened while Howard Hughes, the movie-maker, made monkeys of some of his inquisitors.
Lights, Action, Camera
I HAVE spent more time in the cawcus room probably than in any other one chamber, but I never saw anything there before like the arrival s : * of Sen. Joseph H. McCarthy (R. Wis.), with red’ tie slightly askew to tell what he knew about Communists in the State Department. The gentlemen of the Foreign Relations subcommittee, led by the debonair Democrat, Millard Tydings of Maryland, were waiting for. him. The kleig-lights flashed on. The crimson lamps glowed on the. television cameras. # “Lean in close,” a photographer ordered Messrs. McCarthy and Tydings, “and look at each othet.” “Yeah, and growl,” muttered a reporter. I don’t think the lawgivers heard him, but they followed instructions, anyhow. The pro- : longed growling of all the gentlemen sounded } @ver the loudspeaker system like a bear pit just > before mealtime. Sen. McCarthy, the most eligible bachelor of Appleton, Wis, brought in a 1 s double arm load of documents concerning the 81 oi y : workers at the State Department he. charges have + «~— pinko tendencies, or worse. ’ He tried to use a chair for a file cabinet, but. VS : : his books spilled to the floor. Time and again
Imagination to Be Met Manage [ r's Gue dents at Purdue. He is a junior » open, ie statement about lady No.| PA Tambouri, 16, of New. nay City, has i at- HW the Schoo! of, Mechanical Ew a Bore, tne come a, International Masting. : e 8, © > W “Now take Dorothy . ” he'd begin. Itended the opera because she’s been a shut-in since the age of 9. gineering, 2 2 = damaged $50 wrth by an off Scheduled Apr. 7-8 “Just a minute,” Sen, Tydings would interrupt. -- But she painted a picture, ‘A Scene at the Opera,” that earned Dr. Alfred B. Garrett, research Screen fall on the way to his By LARRY STILLERMAN
And the argument would resume. For one solid her a seat for tomorrow's matinee of “Aida” at the ‘Metropolitan hour Sen. McCarthy tried in vain to take Dorothy. Opera House. “I just painted: the picture from 1 thinking about the ~He~said -he-really -didn't believe he ought to opera,” she said. - mention her name in public. Sen. Brian Mc-| To the painting, exhibited with Ray Burch, Bloomington deMahon (D Conn.), agreed’ that this would be other paintings by handicapped tective chief, at dinner last night. unfair to her. Sen. Tydings said if the commit- school children receiving instruc- Guests also were members of | tee wanted he’d ‘eject the spectators. . And then,|tion at home, Margaret attached Beta Theta Pi and Sigma Alpha so help me, Sen. McCarthy began reading his {this-'note: “I ‘would love ‘to be Episilon fraternities, the groups| ficiary 18 Gen. William J. Bush, and appraisers from five North fornia afatement charging Dorothy Kenyon, re-|able to attend the opera. as these relieved of the trophies. The mys- last Georgia Confederate vet-.Central states.-and Ontario, Cas cently of the State Department at the United Na-|lovely ladies are doing for I love tery was solved when Sigma Chis, ~ eran. He 5.108 yeas old... nada, will-attend- the-seminar- ny “tions with-joining-28-different -Communtst™ Front the music a8 a8 Well a8 the gIitter Were discovered Stuffing the miss- | asited tos EE SeTieRoe for] the Lincoln Hotel... i oy Dorothy w hep sary Tet have burned. | Edward Johnson, Metropolitan Bloomington bus station. savings after he shared his home i conned to ¥ Sollwond hos- the, local ‘chapter of the a come to nk o cughtn’t to be general manager, read” the note, a = of Residential Apprais and so familiar. After all, she's 62 years old, a one- checked Margaret's doctors, and _ Everett G. ‘Brooks, 109 Berkeley with hen, ow y coun Jo was removed there by ambulance p,4,,4n0)is Real Estate ey time municipal judge, and one of the most promi-|invited her to ,be his “personal Rd. has been elected secretary P e judge sentenced from a movie -location in Death. my iq and round-table discuse’
chemist at Ohio State, will give incinerator: He filed suit yester- Times Real Estate Editor an open lecture at — Purdue day against his-landlady, Char-;- A two-day international confer‘Wednesday night. He'll speak on lotte Fisher. . |ence on 1950 real estate valuation
Probl D ( - ers to Operate ot ro Sehr The state, of Georgia will pay Problems will be held here Apr. 7 off a $2000 mortgage on ‘an indi- and 8.
ture 4 2 ures.’ |vidual's lome Sundiy.. The bene-|. More than 300 realtors, builders
» » » ‘Ignazio Lachino, 53-year-old immigrant of Reading, Pa, was
Plastino to 2'; years’ imprison- Valle nent feminine lawyers in New York. She also guest. of the Dolphin Club, men’s swim- " y sions’ on current and ment and his wile to a state insti-| ent realty buildcalls Sen. McCarthy an’ unmitigated l--r, without | ming honorary at Purdue: He’ ot tution, | Willie Quinn of Oklahoma City Ing problems by national experts
the hyphens. Alumni of the w Beta Theta sophomore in the School ill b hen aw. 4 |almost lost his homestead be- Will be conducted by Robert IL. ie Chapter of Kappa Sigma national Mechanical Engineering, | " “|cause of a one-cent tax debt. The Free of Cleveland, O., vice presi+ A Gallant Gnetleman social fraternity arrived in Bloom-| Tall Tek ~ B eragust Charlie eon |county treasurer said Mr. Quinn's dent of the American Institute of BUT WHAT I'm driving at is that Sen. Mc-|ington today for a three-day ob- Pip oo ne Hollywood Si 'house and lot. were assessed at Real Estate Appraisers. Mahon, who said he never heard of her, sought, |servance of the 50th anniversary Ticker, 552 N. Oriental St. has his enemies were he in 1948. He got a homestead Hoosiers on Seminar
allantly to defend womanhood in general. © lof founding ot the IU chapter, {exemption for that amount, but| g Lo At she was just naive,” Be ol, “After | = = [been named editor-in-chief for, jury ng oS a _m lowed the county one cent for an Hoosiers on the Institute seme all, some people will join anything.” Six Todians students have been the freshman issue of The Frank-|barrass’ him by [old country road bond issue. The inar include Ross M. Hutchife lin, Franklin College school paper. reporting he [treasurer said he paid thé tax "OM Cambridge City; Arthur M.
ledged to - DePauw chapter of tiP Sage Delta Sigma, noel. ad- He is- make-up editor for that hopes to become
isi h Th paper, director of college sport] 0. 8. citizen. yertis he Yui; Ein publicity, and a member of Phi . “As a belisves. H ldo ot to complet ti with g SIH: Marton; Gilbert. Seott, Ak- Delta Toeta Fraveriy. : J aie la > Hamilton W. : e seldom g mplete a sentence out! ..n. Robert Martin, Auburn; Don-| . . ! ‘Acacia Fraternify amilton Hunter, Ft. Wayne. interruption. He only managed to read four pages! lald Breimeler, Ft. Wayne: John Cortez W. Peters, winner of the fully state that All are members of AIREA. ‘ of his 11 pages of charges against Miss Kenyon gp. . wontiand. world’s amateur typing cham- my position is: Mr, Chaplin Plans State Meeting — Besides Canada and . before the gentlemen, including himself, had to| » oo a pionship in 1935, will give a pub- unaltered and I ) The Acacia Fraternity win (delegates will attend from go to work making laws. At this rate there'll be| Teuton Suzjki and Kanji Ha- lic -typing demonstration at But- have not made any Yeiues: © launch its 29th annual stafe meet-| 201% Ohio, ‘Michigan and ey more later about Commies in the State Depart-! ler Mar. 21, 10 a. m. for the|cially or undfficially for citizen-| tucky. : {tano,. Japanese educators, will ip,” the English edi id. | 108 with "a luncheon at 2 p. m. Cs ment. Much more. Much later. oisit TU's. Audio=Visual Center in| ROY3l Typewriter Co. Miss Mar-|ship,” the English comedian’ said.| °€ 18, in the Claypool Hotel. = = Bloomington Mar. 20 to 23. . SyeTe Jamas, healt of Bitleves *# # #°. |" Wiliam R. Brenneman, prores- Father Spicvere ge su. secretarial s , The Coast Guard at New gor of zoglogy at Indiana Univer- ‘Making Pilgrimage
ide. Mr. Peters will type, ’ Philip Flath : ” Test Your. skill 299 F. Gene Newton, 780 E. eorgia pres (Orleans can’t use Phillp Flathouse sity and a member of the Indi- Avg St. and Richard T. Kreusser, Pindfolded and wearing mittens. of gan Antonio, Tex. but his 8p-/ana chapter of the fraternity. The Rev, Fr. Anthony Splcussa,
“Anybody naive enough to join 28 differen Communist Front organizations is too naiye to! be a good security risk,” snapped the gentleman from Wisconsin,
himself and tore up a certificate! Weimer, dean of Indiana Univers on the homestead that had been ItY’S business school, sold to another party. (ton; Paul Starrett and George LS : Whelden of Indianapolis, and
|| The Quiz Master
“Who holds. the U. 8. ross country bicydle
Rx ; “The record is 20 days, & 29 minutes, held ok | by Eugene McPherson, Ohio State University, from 3 : whee: Cal &y New York, 8 Wwmnee » > { : * & @ wen? 8 "| © What are thesthree sources ot atomic energy? : = 3 XY \ po
4+
b3 ES
ig AN x x » { : ty
3 \! X : ‘ : ES
R.R. 17, have roles: in .the play, plication. was stimulating. He|will speak. {of Richmond, Ind. Has any President ever- visited Alaska during|“Shadow and Substance” to be Dr. art 1 Kautman executive offered to work for $5.95 a week ‘Following the luncheon the an- Indianapolis, is making a his administration. presented by ‘the Purdue Playshop macy will speak on “New Jf you will supply a room and|nual informal state dance will be| Year pilgrimage. Assistant: Warren G. Harding was the only President to Mar. 290 to 31 in Latayetis Both “Trends in Drug Developments” at| food—and let me have two week- held in the Columbia Club. tor of St.-Andrew’s C visit Alaska during his term of office. He made are seniors. : a meeting of the Indiana Phar- ends off a month.” He concluded:| Active Acacia chapter members : "the Journey in 1923, shortly before his death. | . : A. Teling ¢ Assqeiation’s. fair) } Wii.De 10 years old Apr, 17." trom IU. Purdue, Illinois, Michi- Mrs. Gus. oa . * IU Sigmas Chis, repitnk OVET trade education committee # = =» - gan, Ohio State, Ohio University, . What 1s : the average number of patents issued a prank by freshman pledges, ‘Wednesday night in Kokomo. John T. Trimble of Tyler, Tex. Miami University, Evansville Colweekly by- the U. 8. Patent Office? , | that resulted in a month-long has found strange things in-theilege and. the University of Cin- \ The average mumber “1949 was: 700! mystery ‘over . trophies “missing | Charles D."Paiers, 6003 E. 38th pianos her, tuned but never be-cinhati, will be guests in the 1) Ee Trae in honored St., has Been pledged. to: i fore Dag be run into, skunks. A aay, meeting. i
