Hammond Times, Volume 13, Number 79, Hammond, Lake County, 12 September 1918 — Page 4
Paso Four.
THE TIME&
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS
Thursday, Sept. 12, 101 5.
BY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING & PUBLISHING COMPANY. Tha Lakt County Tlmas Dally except ftaturday and jBdny. Entered at the postol'flce. la Hammond. Juua Tbe Tinaaa East Chieaso-Indiaiaa Harbor, daily axcept Sunday. Kntcrnct at tha pocitfQca in Euit Chicago. Nov amber 18, 11. The Lki County Times Saturday and Weekly Edition. Satared at the postoffiee In Hammond. February 4. 1J1L Tha Gary Evor.ing rimss Dally xopt Sunday. Enterad at the postotfks In Gtrr, April 13. l?lt. Ail under the act of March 3. 1379. a second-class rrattcr.
to get the girl and woman pcnpr of the Calumet region in line. There is necessary work, other lhan munition work, i be done in this conmurr.t y and as the men are being called in greater numbers it is up to the women to keep our industries active and efficient. Let each woman over eighteen ask herself if she can effectively occupy each day, and if not she should find a necessary job at once. Slacker" is a term not limited, in its application, to one sex.
FORKIGV tDVEII TISINO OFFICE. 112 Rector Building
. . Chicago
TfclLEl'HOMCS. Hammond (pr)vate ctir.ge) . . T. 31C0. 3101. 310J Call for wnatevrr department wanted.) Gary Office Telephone 131 Nassau & Thompson. Ecst Chicago Telephone J1 F. L. Evans, East Chicago Telephone J43-R East Chicago. The T:me .". Telephone !5I Indiana Harbor (News Dealer) Telephone 80S Indiana Harber (Reporter and Cias. Adv.). Telephone 2S Whltta I Telephone 8t)-M Crown Point . WW". ." Teieynone 4 J Larger Pald-Up Circulation Than Any Two Other Paper In the Calumet Reglen. If you have any trouble petting- The Times mr.ke complaint Immediately to the circulation depart". ent. Tile Times will not be responsible for the return of any unsolicited articles or letters and will not notice anony. mous communications. Short signed letters of ganeraU laterest prinlea at discretion. NOTICE TO StTBSCnXBERS. If you fall to receive your copy of Thb Tunes as promptly as you have In the past, please do not think; It has been lost or was not sent on time. Remember that the railroads are engaged with tha urgent movement of troops and their supplies; that there is unusual pressure In various parts of the country for fo.od and fuel; that tha railroads have mors business than they can handle promptly. Tar that reason many triilns are late. Tn Tutls has Increased Its mailing equipment and Is operatlng In evecy way with the postofflce department to expedit delivery. Even so, delays are Inevitable betause of the enormous dam anas upon the railroads and thew!tMrawi of eusa from many lines of work.
M'CORMICK, PATRIOT, WINS. If, as appears to be true at this writing, Illinois has defeated "'His Bill" Thompson in the senatorial race today should have been made a sua-? holiday and the Stars and Stripes should fly from eves' mast and pole. Of course, as was forecast, Chicaeo, the sixth German city in the world, voted to nominate Thompson and hence Chicago will be bitterly disappointed and we may see its prominent pro-Germans attired In sack cloth and ashes as a sign of mourning. Chicago may have all it wants of the unspeakable Bill, but the rest of the country fondll hopes that it. will hear no more of him for ages or at least until next spring, when of course he will run again for mayor and be nominated of course, it is the mystery of a decade how a supposedly intelligent city like Chicago stands for Thompson, but as the old song ran, "There are things we cannot understand, we will never know," etc.
A PRETENTIOUS PROGRAM. The East Chicago chamber of commerce has decided upon one big objective for the work of the ensuing year and that is to secure from the state assembly such legislation as will make possible ihe purchase of the water plant by the municipality. It is understood that the city administration is very much in sympathy with this plan providing some way can be worked out which will make this purchase possible. A mandamus suit filed by M. K. Crites, city attorney, is now pending in the superior court in an effort to find some means whereby the tilt rat ion plant can be secured. It is believed that with the city in possession or the plant and properties of the water company, such equipment as needed for a supply of pure drinking water could be obtained. Among the: replies to the questionnaire recently sent out to members of tbe chamber of commerce this matter of a filtration plant and pure water headed the list of necessary things to be done this year for the welfare of the community. Other activities mentioned by members are securing a north side park for the west end of the city: reduction of retail prices to what they are in nearby cities; th construction of a bouleva-d system connecting the cities of this region: moral support in the construction and equipment of a welfare station in Calumet and a community house for East Chicago; enforcement of sanitation and state prohibition measures; secure wider support of the chamber of commerce; improvement of parks, streets and schools; wider co-operation in war work, (specially in the enforcement of the "work or fight" order; etc.
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ARE THEY FIGHTING?
The pro-Huns who were wont to sneer and say that the British are not fighting but are permitting the colonials to do the lion's share are not so keen now to malign the British. The official British figures give out that the British casualties in officers and men from August, 1914, to th end of 1915 totalled r50,ono; in the year 1316 they numbered 6.-iO,fion: in 1017 they reached Sfto.OOO; and the first six months of (estimated') broueht casualties of 500,000. The year 151S will total all previous years of the war. The total of the forecoing figures reaches 2.500,0n0.' Of this number one-fifth must be dead, while another half million are so maimed and broken that they cannot ever again become useful citizens. Louis Tracy, the novelist, puts it this way: "If the dead and wholly war-shattered youths of the British Empire could march down Fifth avenue in New York in platoons of twenty men in a rank the pallid host could not pass from Central Park to "Washington square in ten long summer days." The details of British losses are appalling. During one month in France in 1917, 27.000 Britishers were killed; in the first 12 months of the war fi.fiO officers and 95,000 men were killed in the British ranks. This doesn't look as if they husrged the sidelines while the colonials did the fighting. Even now, with the Allied offensive in full swing, the British are letting no opportunity slip by to fight and win more ground. Since the beginning of July, two months ago, the British casualties havp averaged from 15.000 to 20,000 a week. Men of 50 to GO are fighting in the front trenches and not only France but England is being bled white. Though There are l.fiOO.ono Americans in France, neither the British nor French are waiting until all the Americans are trained to fight they are bravely pitching in and bearing more casualties as they keep on winning while America gets ready for the finishing touch. The next time you hear a pro-Hun saying the British are not fighting report him to the Department of Justice.
THE APPROACHING SALE OF BONDS. It is probable that on the day that the next Liberty loan campaign opens, which is September 2S, the new government bonds will be ready in the banks for immediate delivery. Just how far it has progressed here is unknown, but the state organization for putting over the next loan has a plan under which every person abk to do so is asked voluntarily to go to some central point, of his own volition and without being solicited, and there give in his subscription. It is believed that in ths way the bulk of the loan should be obtained without anybody'" being asked to perform his obvious patriotic duty. The man who has the money to do so may well set himself up as an example to all about him by going forth on September 2S. the first day on which the opportunity is given him, and buying all the Liberty bonds he is able to purchase, paying the cash and getting the bonds. Not only will he thus be getting the matter off his mind, but he may incite those about him to take similar action. It ought not, really, to be necessary to ask anybody to buy national bonds. The patriotic man as well as the one of good, sound business judgment, should see the advantage to him in bonds as an investment. You would not wish somebody to plead with you to accept $104.25 for $100 would you? Then why expect anybody to do It in this case?
YOU know there are plenty of people IN this community WHO have got it In their noodles THAT l,f they don't lrad the. PARADE It won't be much of a procrysion. Kr pity's sake no. t said that FASHION; favored the coatee NOT the cootie. l"rt kuoss is that if women wore barrels THEY would cut the bungholes above THE waist line. KAISER ?ys Kultur is at stake but THE poor nuts who are ruled by him FEEL as if a square meal was at stake. WE suergept that Clerk Whtaton down AT Crown Toint. HAND a cute little white frather TO all the old bachelors WHO rushed down there to pet licenses THIS weok early. AFTER readlnp of theye hun atroclt l"s In Belgium nh'n von Bissing RULED there WE hope the devil Is putting COAL under him these days. IT seemed as if we had eaten so MUCH plaster o(f raris BEFORE Mr. Hoover allowed the bakers TO use more wheat in their bread
THAT we feel on the inside like a cast of Donizette, the discus lesser. HOW would it do to anrtify FRENCH hospitals in th.? eyes of the hun bombers by
TAINTING signs
Anheuser Busch beer
ON the roofs? IF the neighbor women ever ct toRfther thse days WITHOUT discussing the natural deprnvity of man or the MERITS of lard or rotolene we would fain be APPRISED. IF we were not so heart and soul WITH our brave Italian allies WE woqld simply raise hell when they CHARGE us six cents for an apple THAT is so sour it reminds us of an. old maid WHO was asleep when opportunity knocked AT the (front door. THE win, nothing, if not tart In her views ON being: told that a certain DAMSEL had refused us once in marriage retorted that SHE respected her pood Judgment WHICH you will admit is erolng some. CLOWN PRINZ says he is not a flreea'er YOU mean not so much of a fire-eater AS you was, don't you clown?
Where They Ar News of Lake Co. Boys In Uncle? Sam's IServlce
BITS YOUR LIBERTY BOND WILL DO. If you buy a $100 bond of the fourth Liberty loan you are lending the United States government enough money to feed a soldier in France a little more than seven months. Or you have furnished enough money to give him a complete outfit of winter and summer clothing, including shoes and stockings, and slicker and overcoat, and blankets, with enough left over to arm him with a good revolver. You have done that much to beat back the Hun. It takes $35 more to arm him with a rifle with a bayonet on it, and if you buy a second $100 bond you furnish him thl3 rifle and 1.000 cartridges for it; and there will ptill be enough of your money left to purchase a good sized bomb to throw in a dugout, or demolish a machine gun together with tbe Huns operating it.
ARE YOU PATRIOTIC?
All patriotic women and girls who are not employed In a necessary work at home or in training either at school or in special work should be finding out where they may find a place to help nut in the present emerencr. Girls in Hammond may find plenty of work in a number of industries in their home town unless they are employed in necessary service elsewhere. Cirls and women in East Chira-o, Indiana Harbor and Gary have opportunities in various lines of work in their own town. Some concerns, hitherto employing only men in their production departments, are preparing to use women in a couple of weeks because of the scarcity of men. This will become more and more common and Miss Stone of the T. S. Employment Service at East Chicago is anxious
"IT is neing found out," says the Springfield Republican, "that Dr. Garfield knew business before he adopted educational work." It was found out long ago, may we add. that the business which he knew is not the coal business.
A COMPANY ha3 been organized in Denmark for the manufacture of spinning material from paper. Nothing startling. This country has been consuming yarns secured from George Creel's Official Bulletin for over a year.
WHERE now are those submarines that were guaranteed to "freeze the marrow in President Wilson's bones"? Has the marrow been frozen in Admiral Tirpitz's bones?
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Here and Over There
Letters are coming to THE TIMES from overseas in the last mail by swarms. Our friends must have patience. We'll get them all in. Just watch. EDITOR.
Corporal Paul T. Malkonln, By. Co. 330. A. P. O. 711. A. E. F., via New York. Is another well known Hammond boy In France who has made pood.
Walter Jordan, another onward looking Hammond boy. son of former city clerk, Thomas E. Jordan, has been promoted from first class private to corporal. He is back in Boston anj is studying for the officers' training school he expects to be sent to with seven other hieh mark men. Walter is with Headquarters Company. He
has been enlisted about a year.
"Too would ba BTurpriaed at tha regularity with which enlisted men write home: the anxious inquiries as to home folk and friends, his Interest in all his old civilian friends, his thoughts of others and his good wishes for them. For all this on his part, I am sorry to say. th.-se to whom he writes are not answering his letters or appeals for news. These same people, most likely, are busy attending all manner of meetings, knitting socks, etc.. and convincing themselves to their satisfaction that they are doing their lot. . . What the enlistej man wants is news from home. Sooner or later, unless he gets it. it will make very lirtle difference whether it comes or not. Tell all your friends to pass the word along that the men over in
in -renc... -.... .... n. . ronlpMpr, it piiminarv training want news from their homes. Tell your ..... . . , . wMin. urv.- i 'and the boys have been sent to various church workers, welfare worker and the ,. , , cnuiLu ' . . . , ... lines of work. Robert was sent to the
like to pet on tn Jon ana Rerp inr-ir overseas church members, etc., closely! informed of everything that is going on. j
This is the way to keep tnem in me straight and narrow path."
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In Memoriam
take County's dead In the war wita Crermaay and Austrla-H ang-ary ROBERT MARKLEY. Hnmmond; drowned off coast N. J.. May 2. 5ENNIS HANNON. Ind Harbor; died at Ft. Oglethorpe. Tenn.. June 11. IAMES MAC KENZIE. Gary: killed in action France. May 3. 1317. CARL WEI.SBV, Whiting. V. S. I.; died at Ft. Houston. July 2S. 1!17. THANK McANLEY. In. Harbor; killed In France. Battle of Lille, Aug. 15. ARTHUR BASELER, Hammond: died at Lion Springs, Tex.. August 26. lOM.v SAM BROOKS. East Chicago; killed in France. Sept. 18. ARTHUR ROBERTSON. Gary; killed in France. Oct. 31. -IEUT. JAMES VAN ATTA. Gary; killed at Vimy Ridge. SOLph BIEDZTKI. East Chicago; killed In France. Nov. 27. 2. BURTON. HUNDLEY, Gary; killed avia. ac. at Everman. Tex . Dec. 1317. IARRT CUTHRERT LONG. Ind. Harbor; killed at Ft. Bliss. Tex . Dec. 10. HKRWOOD DICKINSON. Eowell: died somewhere in France. Dec. 12. 1917. :-im.RD C. KOSTRADE. Hobart: killed by explosion in France. Dec. 22. THOMAS V. RATCj.iFFE. Gary; killed somewhere In France, Feb. 24. FP.KD SCHMIDT. C. point; died in Brooklyn. March 7. on torpedoed boat. CRPL. EDWARD M. SULLIVAN. Gary; killed in France. March 8. r X-lVi1' STKrK'H- Whiting, Camp Taylor: pneumonia. March 14. n, .I ASPIN. Gary. Co. F. 151st Inf.. Op. Shelby; tvrhoid. March 17. CLIH-ORD E. PETTY. Hammond: V. S. cavalry, died Deio. Tex.. April S. PAl L FULTON. Tolleston; died Marfa. Texas. Arril . 191 VICTOR SHOTLIFF. Gary; killed at avla. camp. San Antonio. April 131S. JOSEPH BECKHART. Gary; died at eastern cantonment, April 20. 1911. LIEUT. IRA B. KING. Gary; reported killed in France. Arril 21. t318. NEWELL TEACHER. Gary; Graves Regis. Unit 304. died in N. J., 1918. E. BIRCH HIGITK" Gary: ord. dept.; died in Philadelphia. 1915. D. MISKELJICH. Hammond: Killed on Balkan front. May 25. 1915. PAUL GALL, Eaarle Creek Tup.; killed in action. France. Jun; IS, 191S. PVTE. FRANK TUCKER. Highland. Ind . Engs.; killed. France. June S JOHN MAGUIRES. Gary; bugler; killed in action. France. June 25. JOHN GAILES. Gary; died at Camp Taylor. Ky., June 26. APRAM FRY. Gary. Ig2 Aero Corps; killed in action. France. Julv 21. 191,. H. PERCHOCKI. Gary; killed at Rochester. X. Y.. R. R. accident. July 15. HARVEY HARRISON. Hammond. U. S. Navy; drowned In sinking of torredoed U. S. Westover. July 11. In war zone. LEROT S. CROWNOVER, Hammond: killed in action, France. July 14. CRPL. GEORGE ALLEN, Gary; killed in action. France. Julv U. WILLIAM STENDERSON, Lowell. U. S. Navy; drowned at submarine base near New London, July 19, 191S. HAROLD GOODRICH. Merrillville; killed in action. France, July IS 191S CHARLES QUIGLEY. Ind. Harbor: killed In action. France Julv 19 C. J. TEUNONES. East Chicago; killed in action. Frane July '3 191s CHARLES BAZIM. Gary. Co. H. ISth Inf.; died of wounds' France Ju'v ILrLT' 'I'; of wounds received JunT3 France! l RANK KTAMSLAWSKI. Ind. Harbor. Tp. F. 7,h Cav.; kiHed m aut, accident in South Chicago while on furlough ug 9 1318 OSCAR E. SHOVER. Indiana Harbor: U. S Marines' killed , PLIEZO TSIORIAS. Indiana Harbor; II. S. If. Z McAVOY. Gary. U. S. Engineers; killed in action June CHARLES BOCCA. Gary. F. A.: killed In action July g I'ALPH COLTHORPE, Gary; died in France of disease' July IMS H. WILSON. Gary, with Canadians; killed in action. France Julv ' LAWRENCE MULVKV, Hammond. U. S. A.; died from ' wound . in France. Aug. 1. ' MIKE STREPI, East Chicago. Co. L: killed in action July 19. MISSING- IN ACTION. JOHN ZBROWSKI. East Chicago: Somewhere in France July 4tb KARL DUPES. In. Harbor; enlisted July 1917. in V. S. marines' rareat. notified July IS. 1918. Parel E. MASE. East Chicago; missing in action In France. July. mg. O. A. DUEPPE. Hammond; missing in action, France July 191S CORPORA L JOHN NESTOR. Gary; reported missing Aug 5 in France GEORGE BEAL. next of kin. Andrew Kocalka Carv ' JOHN GENICIANKHLS, next of kin. Wm. Elisa. ICfg Grand st r.,r WM. PAPKA. East Gary; found missing since Julv 21 in Franc ' HOMER FRIEND. Co. E. East Chicago; missmg since Julv 13 STEVE SZITAS. Co. U. East Chicago: missing since July 16 SAM TODOR. Indiana Harbor; reported missing. France, July 19 WEST HAJQCOXD. JOS. 8. LIETZAN. W. Himmond. F. A.; killed in action. France prii -FRANK MIOTKA, West Hammond. U. S. Field Artillery; died at' Douglas. Ariz, Jan. 17. 131S.
Thomas Stack, Hammond, ti hose addrees is Northern Bombing Group. V. A . has been in France since June 22. He writes that It is vcrv cold. . Phillip Mossier, Hammond, returned to Camp Sherman at Chillicothe. O.. yesterday after his furlough spent with Mr. and Mrs. Leo Wolf of South Hohman street. The farmer hattallon to which Itob-
I ert W. Bruce of Crown Point belonged.
Serart. Glenn L. Hldlnger, Co. F. Pr. Bn. Engineers. M. P.. Fort Benjamin
Harrison, is a well known Lake county boy stationed at Indianapolis.
school for non-commissioned officers. H is delighted. His address has been slightly changed; Private Robert W. Bruce. Co. V. Camp 5. N. C. O. Schol. Paris Island. So. Carolina.
IT doesn't matter whether Hindenburg is dead or not. His reputation is dead. The punch of his army is gone. There are no more Hindenburgian victories.
THE war He factories, by standardizing their output, contrive to keep up quantity production, but the consumption of their fabricated facts is steadily waning.
THE woes of persecuted Germany, "surrounded by foes seeking her destruction," are nothing compared with those of American liquor interests.
THE Germans are beginning to suspect that we really have a few men in France.
V.'E have a bigger tobacco crop, too another contribution to victory.
ATTILA, the original Hun, was licked at the Marne,
too.
Bna-ler Joa. PedlnWI. Hat. A. P. O. 733. A. E. F., via New York la th wy to address a well known Whiting boy.
When good old Joe Pawlow.kl. M Eng.. Co. D. 20 Platoon. A. E. F. gets his Times today he will know his message has been answered.
nanlel J. Prochaska. 1 Engineers, Med. Let . A. E. F., via New York." is the address this tine Whiting young man wants you to remember.
Herman Mueller. Hammond, stationed with Battalion 2S. Camp McClellan. Ala.
Is F.
now A .
Lieut. Harvey H. Phillips. Jnmr Artillery School. A E F.. is the new address for a popular Hammond boy.
Frank IT. Volk, 314 Cavalry, Troop K. Fort Bliss. Texas, is a Hammond boy whe anxiously awaits the Times each day.
Joha A. Hook, from Highland, Ind., now stationed at Camp Sheridan. Ala., has received his appointment from the war department as lieutenant. His company commander congratulated htm on being promoted from first class private to corporal, then sergeant, then supply sergeant and now lieutenant, all in the last six months. This is a fine record and Highland is mighty proud of Lieut. J. A. Hook.
Alhert Schola. Whiting, who Is now located in France, has the following address. Headquarters Co.. filnd Eng.. Camp De Orasse. A. P. A. 717. A. E. F.
Melvln Abraham. Whiting, who is In the quartermaster's corps at Camp Devon. Mass , has been promoted to a first class private.
Clarence E. Miller, or 444 Northcote avenue, has been transferred from Valparaiso. Indiana, to 4th Signal Service Co.. University of Vermont. Burlinpton. Vt. Clarence was an employe of Inland Steel C-.. president of the Epworth League of Calumet District and fourth vice president of ths East Chicago league. He will be glad to hear from any of his friends.
Franeis Englehanpt. one of the very finest young men of Indiana Harbor, to offer his services to th government, the day after war was declared, lies In a base hospital In France, having been gassed. He is the son of August Englehaupt of Block avenue. While the young man is unable to write himself, owing to his weakened condition, letters come through his comrades and the nurses who have assisted in his care. Many rumors have gone afloat regarding the nature of his illness and for this reason his own story of his true condition, written in a letter of very recent date, is given out for publication.
W. K. Hill, a civil engineer nt the Inland Mill before his enlistment has had official word sent here that he and his company have gained the other side safely.
Misses Callahan and Murphy, are in base hospitals In the United States. Lieutenant I. I,. I.nraen member of Co. B. 57th Engineers, A. P. O. 702. and one of the army's popular artists writes his parents in Connecticut street, Gary, that things with him are pretty lively, that he is kept busy. He sends twj pictures of scenes in Paris the hlstor'c towel of Eiffel and Le Palais I Elysee boulevard.
rrlTate Ed Lnrsen. Hammond, of the 12th F. A. writes from France that h is having a rest after several week of hard fighting. He is with the second division, who have captured about le.not) Germans. His brother. John, ij at Camp Dodge, Iowa.
Daniel Smith, aon of Mr. and Mra. D. Smith of 3729 Hemlock street, and with the motor corps. 449, was sent across from Fort Oglethorpe. Ga., and his parents received word that he has safely landed on French soil. Walter and Frank Hurt. brother, continue to write interesting letters to their parents in Hemlock street from somewhere in France.
Lieutenant Oscar wanaon who visited Gary last week was one of the hundred second lieutenants to graduate from the officers' training camp at Camp Shelby two weeks ago and received an assignment with the 3Sth division. Seventy-three others received assignments to Camp Tike. Arizona. Lieutenant Swanson is now attached to the 151st Infantry at Camp Shelbv.
Harold Browne!!. Wllforrl Weaver
Glen Surprise. Clayton Davis and Geo. Stuppy left Ixiweil yesterday morning for Lafayette, where they will take the examination to enter the government student training camp, which is being conducted at Purdue U ntverslty Oeorge Mulcohey, a young Gary attorney, will leave for Camp Sherman at Chillicothe. Ohio, this week to swell the staff of the Knights of Columbus building.
Sli Gary Mercy hospital nurses leave next Sunday for army hospitals somewhere in the United States to begin their career as Red Crops nurses. The nurses going are: Misses Mab-'l Keouch. Catherine Cross. Marie Halev. Helen Adams and Dorothy Carroll. They will not know their destination until their transportation arrives next Saturday and they hope to all be sent to the hospital. Of the three Mercy hospital nurses already in the service, one. Miss Sullivan, is now in New- York preparatory to sailing. Th other two.
Lieut. George Mikela. former well known Wabash college football player, who left college at the end of his junior year to enter the officers' training camp, has been promoted to a rap. taincy. Lieut. Mikds has been with Company F. 151st infantry, stationed for the last year at Camp Shelbv. Hattiesburg. Miss. Since his promotion T9 a captaincy Mtkels has been ordered to report at Camp Sheridan. Montgomerv. Ala., for assignment with the fiRth Infantry of the 9th division now being formed there. Mikels was guard In football and pitcher on the baseball team.
Warren F. Myers famous rnil the Little Giant football teams several ears. has received a commission as first lieutenant in the tank service if the United States army. Myers won his commission in the tank training camp at Gettysburg. Pa. Buy a Thrift Stamp and lick ths Hun.
PETEY DINK It All Depends on What Comes Within Peter's Vision.
By C. A. VOIGHX
"SOQU LUJCLE "PETE.V ( VL T3E CALLED IN J VSsERT? '
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