Hammond Times, Volume 13, Number 84, Hammond, Lake County, 18 September 1918 — Page 4
Pase Four.
THE TIMEa
Wednesday, Sept. 18, 1918.
. THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS V THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING & PUBLISHINCI COMPANY. Tbe Lake County Times Datly except Saturday and Vwoday. Entered at the postofflca In Hammond. Jua it. 1I0. Tbe Time Eut Cb-lcago-Indlaoa Harbor, dally eicept tanday. Entered at Uie puatofHce la East Chicago. M" aaber 18, 181S. Tne Lake County Times Saturday and Weekly Edition. Katored at the postdfflge In Hammond. February . Tbe Gary Evening Clmea Daily except Sunday, t-a-aa4 at tbe Postofftce In Clary. April 18, 1U. , , JU1 under the act cf ilaroh 5, 1S79. a second-clas Bitter,, . FOREIGN ADVERTIIINQ OFFICE. Ml Rector BulidiDg Chicago TELBPHOWGJ. ,. Kammood (private exchange) . . .". 3100, 3101. 3101 (Call for whatever department wanted.) 0ry Office 137 Nseu & Troir.pon, East Chlcag-o Telphaoe U T. L. Evaaa, East Chicago Telephone 4i-M Raat Chicago. The Times .". Te'epnane SsJ Indian Harbor (News Dealer) Telephone Cl Indiana Harbor (Reporter and Class. Ad.). Te ih .n -l Whltln Tlephjne iO-M Crown Poimt i ,;inoiifjJ Larger Pald-Up Circulation Than Any Two Other Paper in th Calumet Region. JI you have any trouble getting Trie Times make complaint immediately to the circulation department. Tiie Times will not be responsible tor the return or any unsolicited articles or letters and will not notice anonymeus communications. Short signed letters of general Interest priated at discretion. JfOTICE TO IFBHH111EIU. If you fail to receive your copy of This Tins a as promptly a you have fa the past, please do not think It bas been last or wu not sent on time. Remember thai th railroad are engaged with the. urgent movement ( troops end their supplies; that there 1 unusual pressure la various parti of the country for food and fuel; that the railroads have mora buelnesa than they can handle promptly. For that reason many trains are late. Thb Tnrse hs-s Increased Its mailing- equipment and la eoopera t lor In ovary way with the postofflce department to expedite delivery. Tn o, delays are Inevitable be. e of the enormous demands upon the railroads and l& withdrawal of xneA from many lines of work.
hacked; mirrors were ahivered into a thousand fragcents; ma'trrsses and upholstery were Flashed; richl-' bound b.w'; ? were ripped; in fact, there was hardly a thing in the city left Intact. "Tho house? of the poor, in which tho German priates had been billeted, were just as badly pillaged and devastated as the homes of the well-to-do. The church, grand enough for a cathedral, had not been spared. Its paintings and altars and crucifixes and stations of the cross had been ruthlessly battered and defiled. "Yet even this does not tell the story a story which cannot be told to people who respect decency for the Germans left tokens of physical and mental obscenity in every house I visited, and I entered scores. If all hell
I had been lot loose In a choice suburban town for half a
jday, it could not have put its obscene and diabolical mark ! on a place more unmistakably than the Germans put
theirs on Chateau-Thierry. I stood amazed that there could be so much unrelieved vileness, such organized beastliness in the world." That's why you fire asked to buy Liberty Honda to prevent these things in America before the kaiser brings his hordes over here.
NO COVENANTED PEACE WITH GERMANY. America, unless we repudiate civilization and abandon humanity and put a premium on savagery and brutality, can make no covenanted peace, no peace by agreement or negotiation with Germany. It would be a covenant with hell, a partnership with infamy. Nor would such a peace secure peace, except so long as it suited Germany. We can judge the future only by the past, and to Germany sacred treaties are scraps of paper only. Germany's whole -history is a record of national treachery, national bad faith, national dishonor, national murder, and national infamy. Article 56 of The Hague convention, to which Germany solemnly subscribed, is: "Family honor and rights, the lives of persons ar.d private property, as well as religious convictions and practice, must be respected. Private property can not be confiscated.'' The world knows how Germany has observed this article. There are millions of individual witnesses to her flagrant breaches of if. Every acre of foreign soi! Germany has occupied bears mute, but unimpeachable evidence of it. There is plenty of German evidence of It, too. "The good3 of different, sorts seized in the enemies' territories are in such large quantities that the difficulty of knowing where to put them increases day by day. At the request of the Prussian minister of war, all chambers of commerce have been asked to give all possible information with regard to storehouses, sheds, etc., which could be used temporarily to warehouse the spoil." (From the Frankfurter Zeitung, January, 191S.) The German papers have been crowded with ad vertisements of sale of property takn from France and Belgium. Members of the fleichstag have boasted of. others have censured, the amount of booty brought to Germany from the occupied territory, and the destruction has been far greater than the confiscation. Of the old men and children murdered, of the women and girls ravished, of the noncomhatan's taken from their homes and deported to work for their conquerors, of the merchant ships sunk and passengers and crews murdered, of the hospital ships sunk, the hospitals and unfortified cities bombed, of the mutilation and murder by crucifixion and otherwise of wounded and captured soldiers of all this beastliness there is plenty of evidence, evidence that no one can disbelieve. The best answer to German peace propaganda is sinking more U-boats, sending more men to France, speeding up our work along every line, and a heavy subscription to the Fourth Liberty Loan. Teace must mean the triumph of right and justice, the defeat of Germanism, not a truce with it, not a compromise with it. Our soldiers in France are gloriously- doing their pRrt toward victory; the Liberty Loan subscription must, show them that the people at home are doing theirs.
A TIP FOR LIBERTY LOAN WORKERS. Remember that success in selling Liberty loan bonds is very largely a matter of overcoming the stinginess of some people, the rapacity of others and the squirrel instinct in those who have seen hard winters and are afraid of seeing more. A man who is stingy must be shown that tight wad-
; ism is the sure way to have no friends in times of peace; j btit in a war like this one its logical result is defeat and ! ruin. If everyone turns tight-wad, the United States will have to knuckle to Mr. Hohenzollern. So buy Liberty bonds.
A grasping man, who wants to keep every red copper he has and get more, must be shown that the onlysafety there is for what he has now is in upholding Hivr credit and armed force of the United States. As for increasing his possessions the "one best bet'' is to invest in some security that carries no risk and pays a generous rate of return. Buy Liberty bonds. A natural hoarder must be shown that it is foolishness to deprive money of the only property it has that is worth while its use in exchange. A squirrel can eat the nuts it buries, but the miser cannot possibly eat specie. The best possible way to have money safelyhidden in times of war is to have it hidden in Uncl Sam's pocket. The last thing the robber can loot, is Uncle Sam's strong box; and if any foreipn robber loots that cash box he will have all the private hoards corraled into the bargain. Be stingy in your own selfish indulgences and buj Liberty loan bonds. Be rapacious for income-earning investments and buy Liberty loan bonds. Be a hoarder in the U. S. Treasury by buying Liberty loan bonds.
WHAT AN EYEWITNESS SAW! Why are you asked to buy Liberty Loan Bonds? "Why are our boys fighting overseas? Simply to prevent on this side of the water such scenes of horror as have been enacted in Europe by the Hun for four years. If Germany wins these scenes will be repeated over here. What scenes, you ask? Well, here's one scene actual occurrences from an eyewitness, a man who has just returned from France. "Remember," he says, ' this is not. hearsay. When 1 Ac Germans evacuated Chateau-Thierry' I went into ChateauThierry on the heels of the American advance and saw things with my own eyes. Every available Hunni-h, fiendish, filthy thing that men could do these Huns did In Chateau-Thierry just before they left. The streets were littered with the private possessions of the citizens, thrown through the windows; every bureau and chiffonier drawer wa3 rifled and its contents destroyed: in the better class houses the paintings were ripped and the china and porcelain smashed; furniture was broken or
SHEEP OR DOGS? GARDENS OR CATS? "One tear of sentiment washes away a mountain of reason," says Charles E. Gapen In a current magazine. He sroes on to tell of a senator who "drew a picture, a true picture, of the dog that follows his master with worshipful eyes even to the grave, and sleeps across it when other friends have deserted, and who thereby nearly killed the sheep business of the United States. "In the light of statistics, logic, reason and experience there is little doubt of this. Not only have the dogs of the nation killed thousands of sheep, but they have discouraged the raising of millions more." When a nation gets right down to fundamentals nd the food supply, wouldn't it rather eat mutton and wear wool than go cold and hungry into its grave in order that its pet dog may sleep across it before he dies of starvation? Consider also the gardener. He is beset by a million pests. There are bugs and worms and living things in general whose existence he never dreamed of before he planted his first vegetables. In vain he sprays and studies and sprays again. His salvation is in the birds. He puts out bird houses and water pnns to attract his singing allies. They heed his invitation, they congregate about his yard. They eat his worms and things. Then, among them stalks the cat. The destruction wrought by one cat. among the birds can only be equaled by the ravages of a killer dog among sheep. In a battle asrainst starvation sense is a better weapon than sentiment.
HOW THE ACCOUNT STANDS. It does not take much careful observation to determine which party is best standing by the government in the prosecution of the war. There were in the Senate 44 Republicans and 52 Democrats, and the majority party is always charged with the duty of maintaining a quorum, 40 members. When the Senate met August 15 to take up the new draft bill, after telegrams had been sent to all members of the Senate, regardless of party, there were only 43 members on hand, and among these were 22 Republicans and 21 Democrats. On the following Monday there were 5S members present and of these 21 were Republican? and 23 were Democrats. In proportion to their representation in the Senate, the Republicans were still furnishing the larger part of the attendance. The National Security League has found upon analysis of the votes of members of the House on eight important war measures, only 47 members voted right on all eight issues. Of these 43 were Republicans and 4 Democrats. In the Senate it has been found that on the Republican side a fraction more than 76 per cent of the Republicans have supported war propositions while a fraction less than 73 per cent of the Democrats have come to the bat in support of the war. In view of the record, it is plain what the voter must do if he wants to stand by the government in pressing this war to a speedy and victorious conclusion.
NOW that the IS to 45 year man-power bill has become law it will be interesting to notice whether the 25 to 30 year old young huskies, thus far exempted, will continue to be overlooked by their draft boards.
IF the skirts continue TO pet much shorter IT Is goiuK to be awfully hard for a man of mature years LIKE we are supposed to be to PIT In a street car AND not pull down the skirt rf some FAIR young thing about KCU'Fi or five inches its she sits opposite TO us with her knees crossed and ENTIRELY unmindful of her CONTRETEMPS. IT sems that the season Is getting so FAR advanced that THE chnnces for one of our many lady friends to send IN a nice Mason jar of pickled reaches IN order to get our opinion on them ARE fadins and fading. SOMEEODT must have told the KAISER that he could walk on the water WITH his army. BEFORE vie die we have one wish THAT we would crave of Fatf AND that is to find a place where FISH are plentiful as bait. TERIIAPS if the
CLOWN prinz had more of a chin HE could stop the FLOW of words and NOT make- himself out such a liar. IHU'TOK says ou can always t"-ll A WOMAN'S age l.y her knee OR her elbow WELL, we either have to take their WORD for it or ak to have a PEEP at the elbow. WE never fear the hits mouthed ily who's looking for trouble HPT we are very careful about the SILENT guy who's trying to avoid if. JI A N I "FACT t R E R S say story about PUTTON shortage is a bare He St RE. look at the number of boneheads IN Germany. GOSH what a
WONDERFUL.
IT would be if every MAN" would i Til;' live up to the good opini' .n HE has of himself. GENERALLY a hat ehe '-shaped face PRODUCES SHARP words.
Where They Are News of Lake Co0 Boys In Uncle Sam's Service
if
Here and Over There
333
Letters are corning 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. "Yon. would be uxprlaed at the 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. 1 am sorry to say, those 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 enlisted man wants is news from home. Sooner or later, unless he gets It, it will make very little difference whether it comes or not. Tell all your friends to pass the word along that the men over in the trenches, who are doing the fighting, want news from their homes. Tell your church workers, welfare workers and the like to get on the job and keep their overseas church members, etc., closely informed of everything that is going on. This Is the way to keep them in the straight and narrow path."
Dr. IiehneI. a pioneer practitioner of Gary, now a lieutenant in the medical corps, left Saturday for Fort Oglethorpe. Ga . where he will be stationed in the post hospital. Lieut. M'-Michael ii a member of the University Club and other prominent Gary clubs. A large
BKcrt'tatinn of his friends both in
Gary and surrounding cities were at the train to bid him Godspeed.
Two or three units of the new ninetyfifth division will be formed In France with men who are In training, according to reliable Information given out at Camp Shermsn today. The infantrv regiments, which will be formed at Camp Sherman will be known as the 377th. 37Stb. 379th and 350th infantrv regiments, and will be made up of men now in the 198th Depot Rrlgade. The SP7th regiments will compose the IKSth Brigade and the 379th and SSSth. the 19th Brigade.
Mike Yesh. former paying teller at the South Side Savings and Trust bank, Gary, with the ?pirit of win the war. has offered his services in the service of the steel mills and has accepted a position as assistant of the office staff of' Supt. Rockwell of the plate mill. Yfsh h,i had an application in for the artillery officers' training school, soon to be opened at Camp Taylor.
Privntes A illiam Casper, formerly of the American Bridge company and Benjamin Bahn of Gary, have been assigned positions as clerks with the Gary Draft Board No. 1 and will remain until the first of January. The yonnE men have the full star s of a soldier and when they leave h- re they will enter the regular training camp.
Trivnte John I.. Murphy. "Whltlnc. who Is in the Storage Det., at Port Newark Terminal. Newark, N. J . writes bis parents that he has his application in for the offloe-s' training camp, which he has great hopes of making.
In Memortam
take County's dead la the war with Germany and Austrla-Eungaryi ROBERT MARKLEY. Hammond; drowned off coast N. J.. May 2. DENNIS HAN.NOX. Ind. Harbor: died at Ft. Oglethorpe. Tf-nn.. June 11. IAMES MAC KENZIK, Gary; killed in action France, May 3. 1517. KARL W ELS BY, Whiting. T. S. I.; died at Ft. Houston, July 25. 1017. FRANK Me AN LEY. In. Harbor; killed in France, Battle of Lille, Aug. 15. IRTHl'R BASELER, Hammond; died at Lion Springs. Tex.. August 26. IOHN SAMBROOKS, East Chicago; killed In France. Sept. 1C. 4RTIIUR ROBERTSON. Gary; killed in Frarre, O-t. 31. -IEl'T. JAMES VAN ATTA. Gary; killed at Vimy Ridge. DOLPI I RIEDZYKI, East Chicago; killed In France, Nov. 27. S. BURTON. HUNDLEY, Gary; killed avia. ac. at Everman. Tex.. Dec. 1917. PARRY OUTH BERT LONG. Ind. Harbor; killed at Ft. Bliss. Tex.. IV C. 10. DERWOOD DICKINSON Lowell; died somewhere in France. D-c. 12. 1317. 2DWARD C. KOSTBADE, Hobart; killed bv explosion in France. Dc. 22. THOMAS V. RATCL1FFE. Gary; killed jomo here In France, Feb. 2 4. FRED SCHMIDT. C. Point; died in Brooklyn. March 7. on torpedoed boat. CRPL. EDWARD M. SULLIVAN. Gary; killed In France, March . MICHAEL STEPICH. Whiting. Camp Taylor; pneumonia. March 14. ROBERT ASB1N. Gary. Co. F. 151st Inf.. Pp. Shelby: typhoid. March 17. CLIFFORD E. PETTY, Hammond: U. S. cavalry, died Delrio, Tex., April 3. PAUL FULTON, Tolleston; died Marfa. Texas. April 6, 1918. VICTOR PHOTLTFF, Gary; killed at avla. camp. San Antonio. April 191. JOSEPH RECRHART, Gary; died at eastern cantonment. April 20. 1918. LIEUT. IRA B. KING. Gary; reported killed in Frnr,c April 21. 1918. NEWELL PEA CHER. Gary; Graves Regis. Unit 3M. died in N. J.. 1318. E. BIRCH HiGl'ts. Gary; ord. dept.: died in Philadelphia. IMS. D. MISKEL.TICH. Hammond: Killed on Balkan front. May 25. 191 . PAUL GALL. Est trie Creek Twp .; killed in action. France. June li. 19U?. PVTE. FRANK TUCKER. Highland. Ind.. Engs.; killed. France, Juno S. JOHN MAOUIRES, Gary; bugler: killed In action, France, June 25. JOHN GAILES. Gary: died at Camp Taylor. Ky June 26. A PRAM FRY. Gary. 1?2 Aero Corps; killed in action. France. July 21. 1911. H FERCHOCKT. Gary; killed at Rochester, N. Y., R. R. accident. July 15. HARVEY HARRISON, Hammond. U. S. Navy; drowned n sinking of torpedoed U. S. Westover. July 11, in wnr zone. LEROY S. CROWNOVER. Hammond; killed in action. France. July 14. CRPL. GEORGE ALLEN. Gary; killed in action. France. July 14. WILLIAM ST EN PERSON, Lowell. I. S. Navy; drowned at submarine base near New London, July 19. J 918. HAROLD GOODRICH. Merrillville; killed in action, France. July It, 1318. CHARLES QUIGLEY, Ind. Harbor; killed in action. France. July 19. C. J. TE UNO N ES. East Chicago; killed in action. France. July 23. 131?. THARLES BAZIM. Gary, Co. H. 18th Inf.; died of wounds. France.'july 30. PHILLIP PETERSON. Hammond: died of wounds received June ,1 France SERGT. MARCUS VALEN'TICH. Gary; killed in action, France July 1918 PVTE. JOHN SANTA, Whiting; killed in action, France. July 1S18 ' FRANK STAXISLAWSKI, Ind. Harbor. Tp. F. 7th Cav.; kilU-,1 m auto accident in South Chicago while on furlough, Aug 9., 191s. OSCAR E. SHOVER. Indiana Harbor; U. S. Marines; killed in action. TLIEZO TRIORIAS, Indiana Harbor; U. S. Infantry; killed in action. J. Z. Mc A VCD Y, Gary, U. S. Engineers; killed in action June. CHARLES BOCCA. Gary, F. A.; killed in action July 8. PALPH COLTHORPE, Gary; died in France of disease, July, 1918. H. WILSON, Gary, with Canadians; killed in action, France, July. LAWRENCE Mt'LVEY, Hammond. U. S. A.; died from wounds, in France, Aug. 1. STEVE STREPI. East Chicago. Co. L: killed in action July 19. ROY NOEL, Indiana Harbor; killed in action in France. July 13, 19m. JOHN COLV1LLE. Hammond. 1st Can. Bat.; killed in action. Aug. 3'1. PAYTON DAVIS. Gary. Co. F; killed in action in France, July is. GEORGE R. PRANNON. West Creek. Great Lakes; pneumonia. Sept. 16. MISSINO IH ACTION. JOHN ZBROWSKI. East Chicago; Somewhere in France. July 4th. KARL DUPES, In. Harbor; enlisted July 1917, in V. S. marines, parents notified July If.. 1918. E. MASE. East Chicago; missing In action in France. July. 191R. O. A. DUEPPE, Hammond; missing in action. France, July. 191S. CORPORAL JOHN NESTOR. Gary; reported missing Aug. S. in France. GEORGE BEAL. next of kin. Andrew Kocalka. Gary. JOHN (' EN ICI ANKHIS, next of kin, Wm. Elisa. lf.5 Grand St.. Gary. WM. PAPKA. East Gary; found missing since July 21, in France. HOMER FRIEND. Co. L. East Chicago; missing since July 13. STEVE SZITAS, Co. L, East Chicago; missing since July 16. SAM TODOR. Indiana Harbor; reported missing, France, July 13. LEON A NGOSTI NA, Co. L. East Chicago; missing in action, July 15. WEST HAMMOND. JOS S. LIETZAN. W. Hammond. F. A.; killed in action. France April 27. FRANK MIOTKA, West Hammond, U. S. Field Artillery; died at Douglas, Ariz, Jan. 17. 1918.
Ike Orrshman, Lowell, wrltea from Syracuse. N. Y.. that he has been confined to the base hspital.for several days on account of a bad tooth.
Pnul Andrewe, Lowell, who is stationed at some iort in the east, came last eveninsr for a few days' furluogh.
Peter G. Scoofnkes, 4th Co., D. Bn., Camp Taylor, is the way this Hammond boy gets his mail now.
J. J. I.nrsen. Co. 5tO. !ith Tin.. T. B., Camp Dodge. la . has notified his parents. 10K4 Garfield street, Hammond, that he is taking to the service like a duck does to water.
Wm. If. Sfrnunrb. another Griffith boy who is enjoying army life has been transferred to 1st Bat.. 4th Bn., Motor School, F. A., R. D. at Camp Jackson. S. C.
Corporal Willinm F. Kyle. Whiting. has ret imed to Camp Taylor. Ky., after a five day furlough spent at bis home here. Ilnvld .1. KUen. Whiting, who spent Yum Kippur bete, returned to Camp Perry. Ohio, tod a v. where he is taking part in the nation.;! rifle range meet whi'-h is being held there. Thursday lie will return to the rifle range at Glen Rurnie, Md.
hnrles F. l.nmberg. of Crown Point. reported for duty ns a special clerk at the local board rooms in the court house on Monday. Charles wears the uniform of a U. S. soldier and has been inducted into li-nited service, having spent two weeks at Fort Benjamin Harrison at Indianapolis.
The Times rejoices to receive a card from its friend. Bernard T. Boyle, Co. E. 33rd Inf.. A. E. F.. announcing his sfe arival over there.
A morale officer In to he appointed for Camp Za.-bnry Taylor, under orders from Washington. It will be the duty of this officer to visit all organizations and work with the command
j ing officers to raise the morale of trie i troops. He will co-operate especially ! with the camp lecreational officer. Th"
headquarters staff is looking over the officer material throughout the camp in an effort to find some officer qvial'.fied for this assignment. It will take an officer with a rare knowledge of human nature, keen sympathies and with skill to see Into the causes of condition and what can be done to Improve them.
week to visit his parents. Lieut. Taylor was injured in an airplane acident some weeks a bo and his rescuers wer forced to dig him from the ruins of bis plane which landed astride a fence.
TOKIO MAYOR IS A YALr " 17 AD U ATE
Mr. nnd Mrs. tin are in receipt of Chenard of Dyer
Steve Scoofakee, Hammond, has been transferred to Bat. D. 2nd Bn., 12 Reg. F. A.. R. P , at Camp Jackson.
Chnrles II. Crary, Hammond, of the Great Lakes Training Camp, is confined to his bed with Spanish Influenza at the home of his parents. 2S2 Sibley street. Hammond.
v Abbott. Hammond. a letter from P. J. who is in the cav
alry and stationed at Fort Bliss. Texas, telling of an accident he met with recently. He w,-is kicked by a horse and suffered several fractured ribs and other injuries ar.d was unconscious for three hours. He is :n the base hospital and teported to be getting along nicev. He would appreciate letters from his friends. His address is 7th Cav.. Troop I. Fort Bliss. Texas.
Prlvnte C. 1.. Norton, a former Gary printer is visiting his cousins, Arthur Holce. 2921 Tenth Place. Tolleston. He i in the infantry, stationed at Camp Travis. St. Antonio. Texa.
Kflward J. Snnler of Oyer hns been transferred from Jefferson Barracks, Mo., to Camp Meigs. Washington. D. C His new address ts 12th Co.. B. 4. Camp Meigs. Washington. D. C.
Major J. . I mpleliT, formerly captain of Co. F. 151st Infanttv. organized at Gary, is now en-mite overseas. The Major states that he was in advance of his divis on accompanied by Captain Riley and Liuet. Otto Lindgren of Co F. to make preparation for their division on their arrival in France. Major Umplehy adds that there are no Indiana boys now in Mississippi.
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I. lent. Msrrln Tnylor, a flylnjc Instructor at Dallas. Texas, it is announced, will arrive in Gary one day this
' utount Injairo Tajiri. Viscount Injairo Tajiri, recently elected mayor of Tokio received his education in the United States. He prepared at Hartford High school and then entered Yale. After receiving his degree he returned to Japan and entered official life in the department of finance. He succeeds Baron Yoshindo Okua as Mayor of Tokio. Tajiri is an advocate of the hnple lifa and is regarded by his people as something cf a Spartan.
PETKY DTVK TVtcv's Option Wns Anword Quicklv.
By C. A. VOIGHS
L HELMET UNCC "EUCwJ P 1 S J WMMW" NAibW I GAS
