Thursda
Page 2
THE KINGS MOUNTAIN HERALD. KINGS MOUNTAIN. /N. C.
Established 1889
The Kings Mountain Herald
" 206 South Piedmont Ave. Kings Mountain. N. C. 28088
A ttookly newspaper devoted to the promotion of the general welfare and published
for Ihe enlig'litenment, entertainmnt and benefit cf the cilize.is of Kings Mountain
and its vicinity, published every Thursday by the Herald PublLshuig House.
Entered as second clas.s matter at the post office at Kings Mountain, N. C., 28086
under Act of Congre.ss of March 3, 1873.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Martin Harmon Editor-Publisher
Miss Elizabeth Stewart Circulation Manager and Society Editor
Mls.s Deboie Thornburg Clerk, Bookkee'per
Ray Parker
•Rocky Martin
MECHANTCAt DEPARTMENT
Allen Myers
Roger Brown
Paul Jackson
Dean Goins
' On Leave With The United States Army
MAIL SUBSCramON RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE
In North Carolino and South' Carolina
One year $-1; six months $2.25; three months $1.50; .school year $3.
(Subji iiption in North Carolina subject to three percent sales tax. i
In All Other States
One year $.■; six months $3; three months $1.73; school year $3.75.
PLU.S NORTH CAROLINA SALES TAX
TELEPHONE NUMBER — 739-5441
TODAY'S BIBLE VERSE
Turn'not, .and [mi, tepcoo/; f,cl,old, I will j,our ^ut mi, ,ti,irit iiinto Uimt, I will fnakc known mt,
words junto ij/ou. tprmerbs '
Repeat Play
In waning 1961, Charles R. Jonas,
the Republican U. S. Representative
from Lincolnton was completing his
tilth term in Congress and being touted
a.s ttie GOP “wliile hope” for governor
for 1964 as he had been in I960.
There was little liklihood he would
offer for the simple fact ho would be
forsaking a safe House seat for a con
siderable gamble. Meantime, there would
be tlie disservice to himself in defeat
for governor, and a disservice to his
party in forsaking the seniority he had
built in Washington.
Mr. Jonas, of course, chose to stay
where he was—and Mr. Jonas still is.
Ten years later an almost identical
situation has posed itself for U. S. Repre
sentative James T. Hroyliill, Republican
of Lenoir. He is completing his fifth
term in Washington, attaining the pow
er that seniority brings in the house. His
district is considered "safe '. Differences
principal are: Mr. Broyhill was being en
couraged lo run for either governor or
U. S. senator, he at 43 is a potential ap
pealer to the new large group of voters
in the 18-20 age bracket, and the finan
cial heft of the jPj;oyhill family.
But the possible losses to person and
party remained.
V", Broyhill apparently has made
an “irrevocable” decision to remain
wiicic .;e is in Washington, according to
his slalement of Tuesday.
He never seriously considered a bid
for the governor’s job. In fact, he told
Kings Mountain State Senator Ollie
Harris weeks ago, “You can go home
and bet 10 toil Jim Broyhill won’t run
for governor and I'll guarantee youll
win.”
Problem of Grass '
Kings Mountain's chief of police
said months ago that the community
has its incidence of “grass”, vernacular
in the trade for users of marijuana,
which is, indeed, a grass.
Today, grass, not “grass”, is a pro
blem of virtually the whole community.
But not “grass”.
In the Bromfield novel “The Rains
Came” and Ihe rains have come to Kings
Mountain and the surrounding area.
With the rains have como copious
lawns that cry for the mower. When the
sun broke through Tuesday, virtually all
lawns were past the push mower stage,
some needing a double going-over by
the power variety, and others even test
ing that tribute to man’s ingenuity, the
riding mowc'r.
Oscar Gladden says it’s the wettest
summer he remembers since 1908.
PenefUs oi Ridges
In his coverage of the approval by
the Conservation & Development de
partment of Crowder's and Kings Moun
tain a.s a state park site, Dave Baity
quoted George Ball, head of the conser
vation.
Mr. Ball outlined .some of the bene
fits of the ridges, among them: they
break up windstorms, they grow rare
flora, they collect rainfall and feed it
into Ihe underground water table.
It was news to many that the strip-
mining and leveling of Henry’s Kndb
caused wells in the surrounding area to
dry up.
Postal Service, Already?
Little more than a month in har
ness, the new Postal Service, semi-di
vorced from Uncle Sam’s main stable
of agencies, the new pony e.xpress is in
financial trouble, its manager says.
In spite of the heavy rate increases
imposed in May before the new quasi-
govornment agency came into being July
1, there looms a deficit of nearly $500
million over and above the subsidy Con
gress has approved.
Congress appropriates more or rates
escalate more-and-fast, say the manag-
er.s.
There were many skeptics, both
postoffice professionals and citizens, of
the laudatory claims of proponents of
the change whereby the postal opera
tion is no longer a direct governmental
operation and there is no longer a post-
office boss of cabinet rank.
One Kings Mountain postman was
wondering aloud whether a regional
boss arrangement would—or could—be
better than the old one. “I can’t see
much difference,” he commented.
Nor can we.
With its myriad of “loss” agencies,
it would appear that Congress and post
al deficit critics have long pulled the
ostritch act (head in the sand) when
wailing about postal subsidies out of jhe
federal treasury.
Congress for some decades, actual
ly since Pearl Harbor, has tended to ap-
pi'opriate more for defense than even
the wasteful crowd at the Pentagon has
asked.'-
A few weeks later there was some
indications Mr. Broyhill was getting ex
cited about unseating U. S. Senator Ev
erett Jordan, but the excitement was
brief, culminating in Tuesday’s state
ment.
It’s a long, hard road to the top in
the House and five terms, particularly
when his is the minority party, means a
good leg up toward that top.
By the numbers of last year’s and
prior general elections and in spite of a
sl'ght switching of counties via re-dis-
ti'icting, Mr. Broyhill will be hard to
head In 1972. Cleveland County is the
Democratic bastion in the tenth Con
gressional district. Once-bastion Gaston
went to Broyhill in the 1970 election.
As much as all government grant
programs may be worthwhile and rever
ed, can any claim to bind the nation to
gether more than the vital passing of
the mails from sender to addressee?
In the past few months, Congress
has “bought” the bankrupt Penn-Central
railroad and potentially bankrupt Lock
heed Aircraft Company via loan guar
antees.
:r.l.ss little sense to worry about
Iho postal problem, a paltry piece of the
federal finanical pie.
The Naarrow Streets
The Herald commented last week
on a fine street, garbling the name by
three blocks from Cansler to Gaston,
and proclaimed for good the topping
King street is now getting.
As anyone driving a’ town
knows, the majority of Kings Ivn. ntain’s
streets, designed for the comparatively
narrow T-Model and comparable autos
of that era, are too narrow to accommo
date today's wide models.
Two principal ones, carrying large
amounts of traffic, are West Mountain
street in the business section, and West
OrtW Va act, from the rail crossing to
Phifer road.
Dr. Nathan Reed, who practices
optometries at the corner of West Gold
and South Cansler, labels the street
“High School Speedway”. Limited to
one-side parking several years ago by
the Bridges Administration, it appears
today that no-parking should be decreed
for this strip which does carry, nine
months a year, a large volume of traffic
to and from Kings Mountain high
school.
In the business section strip of West
Mountain, it is almost literally, worth
one’s life to exit after parking. A too-
quick opening of a door on left hand
side of the car, can (and has) cost the
door.
There’s no question that one-side
parking here is needed—or that such
a decree would be odious to merchants
in this area.
But tie squeeze on passenger cars
is close.
Meet a truck?
Huddle up’ I 2i:i
MARTIN'S
MEDICINE
To Be Young Again
By MARTIN HARMON
Commander Bruce McDaniel’s
fir.st-oif-August bulletin to the
more than 700 mtimoer.s of OtLs
I D. Green Post 155, American Le
gion, contained an item of par
ticular interest to navy and coa-^t
guacd members. It read: “Our ad
jutant has a coropleito list of all
the fighting ships of the U. S.
Navy and U. S. Coast Guard from
1883 to date. Pictures can be ob
tained beginning at $2 for an 8
X 10 unframed black- and white
' to $15 for a 16 X 20 framed hand
I colored job. This is actual cost.
-Anyone desiring one of these
pictures can contact Adjutant Jor;
1 .McDaniel and he will place your
order. Cash in advance, please.”
\
Thursday,
Multi-Color.
Print Shag
Rugs For Fall
NO
m-m
Joe says the glossary and pic
ture deals came txj him by adci-
dent of his reeeiv'lng a copy of
“Our Navy”, to wi ieh Old Tar
Joe once subscribed. Joe figure.-;
the sample copy arrived in pro
cess of “Our Navy” gleaning its
old lists for re-upping subscri'oer.s.
At any rate, Uie glossary cost on-
i ly a dollar and he figured it a
reasonaole investment. The pic
ture offer accompanitia the glos
sary, I ur-.dcrslancl.
m-m
Bill Surbor beat Joe out for
first customer. Did it include U5.'<
Cavalier (APA 35) a navy troop
transport on which Bill served?
It did. fee’s wondering for him
self pictures of USS Zaniah (lAG
70), in navy parlan'.;p a suppiy
.ship on which Joe served, and
U£5 'Ihomas Jefferson APA, on
which he sailed -as a passenger.
m-m
SVJIHN/Nf
I R.-ALBICiIL Allhough fall
I fasliions r.ir me i and women
^iM'ive great allenlion, ti fair
; amount of notice is given to
i fall lashi'ins in house furnlsli-
ings loo.
l/y.
And the fall fasliion news
in car] cis .appe.ars to Ite sliag.
AccordiPig to Airs, i-.dilh .M'*
Glamery. exiension house (!i r-
nishings speciahsi, North Ctir-
olina .Stale Un'.ver.sily, Iheri-
will ire luxurious lexiurc | sliags
in llie maikel, as well as eoin-
binalion plu.sli-shag creations.
.Mulli-coIoTod and printetl shag
•ai'pets will Ih- avaiLihle, too.
h *1
l.'l
wwmiiw^
V.NV»v“*
There will lie a broad run-'e
of pri-ils in carpets of all types,
with exerylhing from ahslraets
lo p-laid.s and palchwoik pal-
torns, t.lie specialist adds.
Colors are many and varied,
hut r: -h earth tones, deep [ilums
■ind t'he iex' cream ; o'ors of pis-
mhi'i green and rasplierry pink
u'p new attractions.
Then, when it comes lo furni
ture, jxtaee anil ipiiel are
key phrases, ^
FiirniUire for Hall lias a s li-
dued look; it's S|>3re, u'lclutter-
‘d and cle.in-lixiking. The ef
fect is soolliing, not shocking.
Lines of new furnilure tire
gently ciirxing, sliapes are sim-
le and basic. Colors are softer
than in past .seasons.
The whole route would put
Lur pictures cn my list: USS A1
maack (iVK.A 27), a cargo trans-■
port, and USS PC 473, a patrol!
boat, on wliich I serx’cd: and
USS Maddox, destroyer 424, and
USS West Point, the big troop
hauler -and in civilian life SS
America on both oil which 1 was
a passenger.
mm
KINGS MOUNTAIN
Hospital Log
VISrnNG HOURS
Doll; 10:30 to 11:30 A.M.
3 to 4 PM. and 7 to 8 PM.
GIVING BACK SUMMER
GUNS AND KILLINGS
1 There’s still some of Huck Finn
' in all of us—summer comes and
I we dream of driliting lazily down
the Mississippi in a homemade
raft, free of the restraints and
complaints of life.
‘‘By the way, Joe,” I asked,
“did you order black-and-white!
or color?”
m-m
“Ahem,” Joe replied, “black-
and-white.”
m-m
It is axiomatic thnit an/ branch
of service takes care of ils own.
A guy named Hart from New
York, with a gimpy leg and a
dangling wrist as result of a 'pa
trol plane crack-up af Port Lyaut-
ey, shared a stateroom on the ‘
nine-day voyage from North Af
rica. .Acro.Ss the passageway, in
the same size stateroom, reiiosed
nine army wounded, none ol
whom would accept my pi-.affei
of a wager they’d get seasick be
fore reaching port. Tney missed a
bet. The ocean was a repLva ol
placid Lake Montoni-a for tiie
whole voyage, with the only sem
blance of a ripple the entrance
to Boston harbor.
Humes Houston asked a few
Tuesdays ago if I had seen the
Monday night movie, a well-done
British film on the battle of Dun
kerque. I had. We agreed that
the movie w-as well-laced with
the real stuff, film clips on scene
at t'he time the British rescued
238,000 of Uieir own trapped sol
dieis plus 20,000 French.
I was reminded of an inteirest-
Ing incident in Humes' service.
One of the young men in his out
fit was named Kesselring, wbo
was the son of German Field
Marsliai Albert Kesselring. No
Nazi and suspicious thereof,
Prussian Kesselring, at the Hitler
take over had sent his wife and
sen to the United States. Young
Kesselring had entered the army
from Chicago. "Ho wtts a good
sildior,” Humes recalls. Still in
the States, young Kesselring got
transfer orders. He approached
Humes, "Lieutenant, when I
learn my new address, could I
lot you know and have you for
ward my mail?” Why, sure,
When Kesselring packed off, it
was the hist Humes saw or
heard of the young son of the
Field Marshal, What "happened to
him? Was he put to work in tlic
code room as a cryptanologist,
was he a-tsignod to OSS as a spy,
was he used as an interpreter in
interogations of German prison
ers, or did he serve as Just an
other GI in some other outfit?
The answer xvould be indeed!
m-m
In town: Ben Long, Lake Wales,
Fla., son of Mrs. Ida Lon-», fr ■
several years roc-~ * •
air force ,
.and Mrs. Beverly
J. - lison, 15-year air force veteran.
Who has been flying civilian for
the last half-dozen years, the past
nearly five of them in the Laos,
Cambodia, Thailand area. Bud
returns soon after a month’s sab
batical.
Claude Beam
Mrs. Merle Beatty
Jessie D. Bolin
Lonard Brackett
Henry M. Broome
Wm. R. Brown
Mrs. Mamie Carson
Jennie Davis
Mrs. Mattie Davis
Mrs. Georgia Detter
R. B. Dukes
Mrs. Lila Ervin
Willie Freeman
Mrs. Ernest Gosey
J. B. Hawkins
Mrs. Rivers F. Hayes
Mrs. Eugene Isenhour
Mrs. Verdie Kale
Mrs. Jas. T. Martin
Mrs. Ethel Mullens
Mrs. Grace Pbilbebk
Mrs. Fredrick H. Raines
Mrs. Marie Ramsey
Miles Roberts
Mrs. Mamie Roper
Mrs. Daniel Sexton
Mrs. Donald Sipes
Anderson Srnarr
Mrs. Viola Stone
Martin Wilson
Mr.s. Willie Wright
Of course as adults we have to
live with our responsibilities,
which do not vanish just be
cause the sun is warm. But at
least we can let our children have
a time of fioedoim in the sum
mer, free of unnecc.s.sary adult
restrictions.
ADMITTED WEDNESDAY
Mamie H. Smith, _ Rt. 1, Gas
tonia
L. C. Garris, 411 B. Apple St.,
Gastonia
■Willie Grice, 401 Cherokee St.,
City
Wm. C. Huss, 307 Blanton St.,
City
Mrs. Glenn Patterson, Rt. 2,
Dallas
Mrs. John Turner, Rt. 1, Clover
Roosevelt Williams, Rt. 2, iCty
m-m
Alluding to the Viet Nam pull
out, iBud jested, “Looks like I
wont get to stay long. Then I’ll
have to com^ back home and go
• to woik.’'
ADMITTED THURSDAY
Mrs. Jas. Davidson, Rt. 1, Clov
er, S. C.
Mrs. Carrie iBolin, PO Box 155,
Sharon, S. C.
Mrs. Maggie Hinson, Rt. 1, City
Mrs. Grady Leopard, PO Box
493, Bessemer City
Mrs. Ora Mauney, Rt. 1, Besse
mer City
Mrs. John McClain. Rt. 2, Be.sse-
mer City
Mrs. Floyd Sanders, 1020 Mid
pines, City-
ADMITTED FRIDAY
Chas. Huffstickler, 312 E. Ir.d.
Ave., Bessemer City
Kirby Johnson, 1016 Dodd St.,
Shelby
Claude Kelly, 324 S. Rhyne St.,
Gastonia
Mis. John Phifer, Rt. 2, City
Mrs. Jas. Turner, 406 Fulton
Dr., City
Mrs. F. G. Weaver, 410 Tate
Terr., City
ADMITTED SATURDAY
Wm. B. Barber, 1503 Shelby Rd.,
City
Ralph Caveny, 315 Piedmont
Ave., City
Mrs. Neddie Hayes, Puckett Tr.
Pk., City
Mrs, Eunice Head, 804 Groves
St., City
Mrs. Violet Smith, 308 W. West-
view St., Gastonia
Mrs, Mattie Stowe, 825 N. Pied
mont Ave., City
.-ed 'Thompson, 101 S. Iowa
Si., Bessemer City
ADMITTED SUNDAY
Mary P. Ruff, Rt. 1. City
Mrs. Howard Hill, Ht. 1, Grover
Mrs. Alma Sessoms, 514 Broad
St. City
Dean Ayers, 109 N. Dillinig St.,
City
Kenneth Crawford, 708 Landing
St., City
Roy C. Grayson. Bt. 3, City
Mrs. Horace Hardy, 109 Mt
View St., Gastonia
Mrs. Donald Hawkins, Bt. 4,
Castoni*
Or can we?
Wlien my husbitnd was a boy,
he and his pot, old Joe the Cro^v,
went exploring in fields which
are now a housing development
where children don’t even see
crows. 'Die little creek I used to
look for crayfish in has been, for
all practical purposes (such as
.sitting and dreaming) demolish
ed by pollution and litter.
And you don’t have to be “over
thirty” to have your special bit
of nature destroyed for you.
The woods whero my teen-age
nephews used to play tag is now
a parking lot for bulldozers and
payloaders. And the field behind
our house where my son, who is
now eight, used to watch a fam
ily of pheasants marching along
every spring, is now a road, with
three houses, four half-built
houses, and a cellar hole.
Our family is no exception. It’s
the same for everyone.
The population is growing larg
er, and the open spaces smaller,
every year.
And the cities are wtorse. There
the children have only streets,
or, for the fortunate, -a few sup
ervised outings to parli and mu
seums, orderly itirii>s with Mamma
or with well-organizetl groups.
Can freedom and population
pressure go hand in hand?
Not for ohildren—ehlldren need
some space to be themselves,
free of constant surveillanice and
yeit safe from such dangers as
cars, trucks, and gangs of trou
ble-makers.
We need to build a world that
is better for ohUdren'—a clean
xrorld, an unpolluted world, a
world w:(tere there is space to ex
plore with a feeling of freedom
and expansi'veness.
We need to give the children
■back their summertJme.
Polly Bradley, Massachu
setts Audubon Society
Good Price
Foi Feeders
St., City
Sherry Lanier, PO Box 293,
York
Mrs. Bill T. MiMurry, 708 Mea
dowbrook Hd., City
Mr.s. Mildred Scarborough, Rt.
2, City
ADMITTED MONDAY
Polly S. Goodson, Rt. 3, Gas
tonia
Sam Jackson, Jr., Rt. 1, City
Mrs. Willie T. Bell Jr., Rt. 1,
Bessemer City
Larry Ware, Rt. 2, Bessemer
City
Roger Stalcup, 607 E. Lee Alve.,
Bessemer City
Mrs. Albert Anderson, PO Box
24, Grover
Mrs. Brice Bolin, Rt. 1, Kings
Si C
ADMITTED TUESDAY
'Russell Ellis, PO Box 333, Bes
semer City
Isaiah C. Davis, 210 E. Parker
St., City
iMrs. David Thomas, 213 Sims
St., City
Hubert Massagee, 108 Sadie St.,
City
Diane Dugan, Rt. 1, City
Jas Campbell, Jr., 105 Poiplar
St., York
Donald Wells, 307 Cleveland
Ave., City
Lanny Watterson, Rt. 2, Cherry-
ville
Mrs, Wm. Wyte, 100 Welfe 'St.,
TIio wounding of two police
men and the slaying of two oth
ers in New York in retent days
.should alert Americans to two
dangers:
First, such murderous atfacfc
are the surfacings of a widespread
disrespect and hatred of tire in
struments of law in sociiPty.
It may be that a clandestine
group whieli calls itself Ihe
"Righteous Brothers of the Black
Liberation Army” pulled the trig
gers in Harlem, as it claims. It
may be that blacks in New York
and other parts of the country
have a history of grievances a-
gainst the police. It may be that
many whites also see Hie police
as instruments of repression. But
the present hatred of police is
more widespread tlian Hie opera
tions of'militant groups. To "ride"
as well as deride the police is a
vogue among many of tile young
and many intellectuals. Witliout
a climate w'liich makes the pol
ice a target of animosity, the
violent attacks on them would be
fewer. At heart, attacks on the
police are attacks on the liberty
protecting restraints of society
and law itself.
Second, the reei-nt attacks
should impel progress on limiting
the availability of handguns.
How strange it is that America
balks at meaningful private anrt-
eontrol! This past Jonuary, (he
National Commission on Reform
of Federal Criminal Laws urged
the utter banning of the private
ownership of handguns and the
registration of a'll other fire
arms. We seconded tliis.
-As it is, Congrc.ss ha.s been
weighing a proposal that would
waken the 1968 private arms bill
(by ending the nametaking of
ammunition buyers), not .streng
then it. A New York congri-ssman
has proposed legislation that
would prohibit the manufactUTo
and sale of a particularly sini.ster
species of handgun—^the so-called
“Saturday night special.” These
pistols sell for loss than $10.
More than two million are ex
pected to be sold in the United
States next year. If thi\ federal
government is going to take any
meaningful steps to reduce de:ui-
ly assault — aaginst citizens as
well as police — in America,
surely it can begin by banning
Beef producers are anticipat
ing a good market for their f.all
harvest of fcodcr cattle anil
L’alves. They are liopiiig lor a I'o-
peat Ittsl fall's strong di*-
mand.
North Carolina Stale Univer
sity extension live.iluck special
ists report that the current de
mand lor fi'ciler cattle and cal
ves is strong.
With the stale ;rraded sales
iche lulcd lo start in Sepitemlxir,
irodu.ers would like to .see the
'lem'anrl 'liold up. kast year's
averages were 32 cents a iiounil
'or leedev ralvos and 29 1-3
■eats for ycai-ling steers, ’rho.se
1970 pr: -es wei<‘ the highest
since 1351.
A total of 21 slate grader
loeder calf sales will be hel^
his year. Some 23,3’Jt) head
‘.-cpccted to be con.-egm'. lo ilic^N
;als.
There will he 11 yearling sleef
auctions -same as Iasi year.
Here are the schedules;
Yearling steers: Sept. II
Canton, 15 Boone, l;i Jeffer-
-son, Oct. 5 -Asheville, 12 Can
ton, 13—^Boonc, 11 Jefferson,
19 Asheville.
'Feeder (alves: .oept. 14
Goldsboro, LI Laurid Hill (An-
-usi, 16 ■ Hill.sliorough, 17 -
Greensboro, 21 Clinton, 22 -
Rich Square, ,23 iP,;..ky .Mount,
24 Oxford (imorning sale), 2-1 -
Laurel Hill (night sale. Here-
fords), 27 Mui-phy, 2S .Ashe
ville, 29 .Slalesville, 3(1 ."Nor
wood (morning .salei, 30 Min
eral Springs mi.ght saloi,
Oct. 1- -.leffcrson iHerofords),
a—.lefferson (morn'ng sale, An-
'gus), 5 Boone might sale), 2.")
—Shelby might salci, 28 Can
ton, 27-Statesville, 2.S Rocky
Mount.
You can eiil food cosis in
other ways. Impr'-p<*r storage
and discarded leftovers are a
prime cause of waste, Hius of
higher food costs. To avoid un
necessary and waste, store -food
promptly and properly when you
return from shopping.
the.oo insidious weapons, whia
sport.snl
not even gun-toti/g
would defend.
Christian Science Monitor
Keep Youi Radio Dial Set At
1220
WKMT
Kings Mountain, N. C.
Jffews & Weather every hour ou tiie
hour. Weather every hour on "the
half hour.
1 h
fond of
W1
good ol
is my f
have ni
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lost a 1
lose mt
Bui
In
the sta
in the
23 yeai
found i
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state, a
some f
and \vi
dams. !
Be
to angl
fish air
Th
spots,
any sti
fishern
our gr;
tackle
roanok
water
just to
Ev
lent ai
si ream
mote f
and yc
sure a
Ml
men. i
a doze
with r
years,
and tl:
tracts
W
cent a
and fi
seems
F'
previc
and fi
to be
B
Lands
acres
Natio
csts \
land
progr
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No m
this r
to hu
suppi
hunt]
Jo
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ary J
charp
of th
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Darli
Wall
John
ing I
liltk
Wi
mini
fyinj
sotu]
rctui
Sout
Fine entertainment in between