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STAR—TUESDAY, AUG. 15, 1916. PAGE 4, FitiisestsitierititisM@mecaessetitttritenetitistesettet iets taes Hiiies Pittsreeieges terse ee seit TEETiistitieetisteeeseeiteeetesteties ete LEE tte est tsetse tates tees atts ssgansaszaszzzzszzz: | B THE SEATTLE STAR A Novel “ANNE, ACTRESS” “Into the Primitive” *™ Ames Bennet A Novel A Week BY Couyright, 1808, by JULIET G, SAGER SERRE ESTER: GPaggaaaeaaeaaatbcaaegiagcuseestacres, — ERRPREEEEETERRRAEYIEY f Sve FNPYTSTETETS#¥t FST TOOTTISTOMMRL Loot jatataes: Winning. MEMBER OF schirTs “Nonraw wer Telegraph News Service of Batered at Seattie, Wash. Postotti (Continued from Our Last Issue) | |, The others followed within re an and tld not stop until he By mail, out of city, abo per month up to N a temperate climate, ten miles f E T pre nagge Phy re Al ree bend t @] UM Biss ‘ e a cata iol dantinnha - « on the| Of satisfaction brondened when he By'varrien, ety a Lote tir eiointir's tame |] Outbursts Of EverettT rue] ov: o setiovion reovics on mel of smictoction yrosdened when, COL welk for one accustomed to the hak. ho Goer sania iter they | balf a mile distant, a wooded cleft;A ONE-ARMED MAN COULD exere! Quite a different matter! a 4 out upon @ stretch of clean ich apparently ran up to the sur COUNT ‘EM ALL ON HIS s ten milgs across mud-flats, cov waded out up MAND AND HAVE Five FINGERS LEFT It won't take long to count the ered with a tangle of reeds and rushes, and frequently dipping mto| = 5 ARI iD and ‘ r the top a gigantic \ ( ed e Winthrope Instantly aquatted YVA Pj | an'a'vtte he sl | sgee the top 9 sionntie * Bareahes i in Seattle salt mareh and ooze, Before they aE t 1 nay. Blake.” he sald, “can't] “Say, we may have a nen on the platform with Charlle EATTLE will extend a cordial welcome ; pry Chea 2 gaa air’) Truce At OSs. you find ine somne kind of a crutch?| money, after all,” he Hughes at the Arena we ¥ ° ¥ ie ont ° ds sround to| “Shade, and no end and. |voted for © wy then thie to Charles E. Hughes republican presi “Oh, Blake,” called Winthrope eee pow Oe} fp eke at PR 9 fen ach thas Gee clean, Wak evens aes 4 will ‘dential candidate, who arrives with Mrs.| tor the American was rome yards| Cees decavens| uw haven't beeu|epring—iimestone water Wing be st the band wail in the lead, “pull up a bit on that es here tonight. |knoll, We'll have to rest a while }1 fancy. Miss Leslie ts about As a presidential possibility, Hughes is ||,;°"\": fool enough to overstrain th ext thing, I'll find a flint! suffrage is joned now ankle es, you have. Darn it!] It was past two o'clock when Pe | why couldn't you tell me before?” | Blake returned for his companions.| PROBABLY $7. PrreR Hap It did not feel so painful In the! Mins Leslie, Winthrope said, had entitled to a representative hearing. “What's thet?” demanded Blake. | water gone to « shaded pool which they, HAND IN MAKING THAT |We're not halfway yet!" [Took at that cloud!” growled) had discovered not tar away. There| BIMITING THE HEIGHT Op ; Arrangements have been made to accom-) Wintnrope did not teply. It was Blake “We're in for ® squall. she had intended to bathe and dry BUILDINGS IN NEW YORK. “ ; ‘ere! ner clothe q 5 o me walte " modate the largest political crowd assembled |) (Meh nnocl shatann ale tik cet ghy auballer| far semsetiie: Gad der op Bioko : ‘in many years. Not*since the visit of Col. |sinting. upon the ary reeds I serine of coooanute, flung the otber| wae beginning to get nervous over 3 : oop) “Well,” said Blake finally, “we've .- a \P up the beach, and stooped for Win-| her non-appearance, she stepped| > Roosevelt, four years ago, has a presidential |got to jot to water, or din; and .S\ ) ALD) |thrope to mount Me back. He then around the corner of the cliff | jady © ” | 4 fh | ed 0 m he beach at al A 6 approached ro | candidate of one of the big parties been here. |*; or ak fee ee ate : we AG | ace ee Mane, Cece totlewia| onto ghost pina se ena b Hughes will draw a great crowd, and it i 1am not! I'd} FIRTARMS. Jas beat she could. ; , face positively pleasant. The cliff sooner die!" The wind was coming faster than foot being well shaded by the Ewell that he should, for Seattle is entitled to) “I'm afraid you'll find that easy | Hake had calculated i pofore they | towering wall of rock, she had| . oe enough, later on, Miss Jeany.| had run two handred paces the taken off his coat, and was carry- hear in specific terms what a future presi- {ioii by, ‘Winthrope, to help her | squall struck them ing ft on her arm; so that there Blake slackened his pace to ® was nothing to mar the effect of | walk, and plodded sullenly along be-| her dajnty openwork waist, with it« neath the driving downpour. The elbow sicevex and graceful collar rain storm was at its height when| Her skirt had been washed cluan| » dent, possibly, may have to say. ood abe he knife and fish, and Ee. It is to be hoped that the Seattle audience) Tho scarlet with mortification, | | Miss Lesite permitted herself to be will be fortunate enough to hear Hughes dis~ taien “picik-u back. upon Maken! they reached the foot of the cliffs.) by the rain, and she had managed te broad shoulders, and meekly obeyed ¥ | The gray rock towered above the to stretch it into shape before cuss the political issues specifically and con-|}io"! outer, and meekly obeyed See aS TS FOR | lin or forty. tect high. Blake ing | paid yy deposited Winthrope upon a wet Refreshed ty a nap in the fore-| Kip A Ree ren Hl po jedge, and grunted with disgust. | noon and by her salt-water dip, she| KILG HIMSELR / It'd take a fire ladder to Ket UD showed more vivacity than at any} G) % this side,” he sald, “We'll have) time that Winthrope could remem-| to try the if we can 6¢t)ber during their acquaintance around the point. I'm going OM) Her suffering during and since the Scretely. Platitudes are altogether too com- |»! bis throat . 7 . More than three miles had heen »mon and Candidate Hughes is too big a man covered berore Blake stopped on a hummock, Releasing Miss Lealie,| to rely on them, let us hope. is vccrunael get onthe WY oreet Should Hughes speak concretely, should °° the knoll, and called for a slice ry > ry of the fish. He rested less than ahead. You can follow, after Win-| storm had left its mark in the dark he tell his Seattle audience what constructive! tes minutes; then, taking Miss thrope has rested his ankle” circles beneath her hazel eyes, but + . . . . esiic up again like a rag doll, he Me started off at his sharpest! this in no wise lessened their ‘administration and legislation he proposes,|jeunz awas at a ood pace. pace, ‘Beneath the cliff the sand| brightness; while the elasticity of ENTITLED TO IT beach was succeeded by @ talus Of her step shoved that she had quite| The republicans won't allow lrocky debris, Blake picked his way recove: her well-bred ease and|Charlie Hughes any rest in Seattle. quickly over the smaller stones! grace of movement But take jt from George E. Ryan, near the top of the slope, now and) She bowed and smiled to the two|secretary of the state democratic ‘what definite acts and policies he would) ,,.5,cic0) Jivts ushaied tor the ' adopt and follow, then, indeed, his addres: second time. He would have gone will be historically worth while. beanies pare actromae Tait ae then bending to snatch up a frag men impart Good afternoon,| committee, Hughes is very much jbaustion, had not Miss Leslie [ment that seemed to differ from entlemen.” entitled to arrest. Criticism of President Wilson’s policies|'s\"\\07, ei. Bot Miss, Lesll Tan Gthard, Winding eothtng. ‘bacl Gaaaes ko, neu Sbses Teel” os rest. ) should logically be followed by a definite «"" A that Winthrope was no longer tatement of what Candidate Hughes would og EEE his hold, and she found herself imself have done under the same circum-|2).,}10) A$ she found horselt Mmestone,/he soon turned his at-| spond lake, staring at her with Mayor Gill says if he had sat on | tention solely to the passage around) frank admiration. “You look fresh|an iceberg at the North Pole eating the headland. a daisy.” an ice cream cone he wouldn't have Another hundred paces brought| enial and sincere as was his! felt chiliier than at the Chamberot | Blake to the second corner of the the familiarity jarred on her| Commerce meeting the other day. i | ® stances. Such a statement from Mr. Hughes|*"4 *s'+r | attack of a leopard and others of|he started for the break in the! “Hf, which jutted out in @ little/ sensitive ear. She colored as she|He made s bunch of ‘em hot, just . As Blake splashed away on the it was safer than the|jungle which marked the hippo point. Within the last few minutes | turned from him. lthe same. ‘would be genuinely a treat for the intelli return trail, Miss Lesiie would have g |potamus path. the squall had blown over, and the| "te there anything new, Str Win-| 9 \ 2, sunk down where she stoo ad not 4 " 7 na " " sun bureting thru the clouw to thrope’” she eaked. NO WORD YET gence ns: Se n chosen a fig tree for) It was midmoruing before Biake | * | thro | . that usually copstitutes a attle is: ees oe ee wae teneeee and its bik crotehed red, but as he approached,| ‘at the storm was past. © |" afraid not, Miss Genevieve.”| DUCK POND, Wash., Aug. 15— audience. jher. She gased longingly at the client resting places ne brim of his palm-leaf g the south sh e cliff! “Just see if you've got everything, |Nothing has been seen here yet of 4 d | * th jtrees, tp the fore of which stood a the Kathering night led to bide his exultant ex . extended in far/and fix your hat sald Blake|the merchant submarine, Bremen, | Seattle, forward looking, keen for the) rors of stately aims Kened. to. nideous!| Presalc |s\on the north. From the end of| abruptly. ““We'l be in the sun Tor reported to be coming here to bring + Stumbling anc silpping one e finally slept thru c ian called, “T've| the talu © coast trended off four) half a mile or so. Better g ona message to Congressman Hum- ‘# nation’s good, patriotic, intelligent, is most! waited’ ou actors the. inundated DOU ' Stree Gale he calle, is calor tive miles to the southeouth west] tne-coat, Mies Leslie, It's ‘motter ‘anxious to hear Charles E. Hughes and to) #222". #24 came out gpon a bait ""]) camanation. daylight next] hour.” gia in & shallowy bight, whose south-|than yesterday.” hase ame baked mud-flat, where the walkin, morning when Blake awakened | “How's that?’ asked Winthrope.|@™? ¢xtremity was bounded by a| “Permit me. id Winthrope Vests ome him. was much easier. She tottered on|fealising that mach erploring| “Bar,” anewered Blake, hurrying | Second limestone headland, This! Biake watched while the English- ‘3 @ fow steps farther, and then ridge ran inland paraliel to the first.| man held the coat for the girl and should bo done during the day he| forward. “How »bout the nut N stopped, utterly spent | r r trings Between the two ridges lay alrather fussily raised the coll: : apoke to the others, and soon a Here they are. Three string , he ar % le Will Not Work The next she knew, Blake was ps oe were standing about the foot| all that I fancied we could carry,”| Plain, open along the shore. The/ about her neck and turned back the splashing ber head and face with) ¢ the tree. Here they discovered | explained Winthrope. jend of the storm was proclaimed | sleeves, which extended beyond the 6 VERY girl can be a Venus,” says Miss Illingworth,| brackish water out of the whiskey che suaule of auene Of Gib hideous “The Venus of New York.” a — rained oe. | noises of tho night fust passed. nf samy or face, and sat up, alc . ks of Now, what a wholesale calamity that would be! With! and dizzy — pick peed sere oe ote of al ry girl a Venus, one girl would be just as good as an-| “That's it!" sald Blake, He spoke) pack of jackals, lay half covered | r, So far as looks went, and girls would be pretty tame,|!2 ® kindly sone, tho bis roles was) with grass | The big one ts mine, | > & deafening chorus of squawks/ tips of her fingers. The Amert- suppose. I'll take two, Wetl|84 Sereams along the higher! can’s face was stolid; but his glance Bh the other. Lean on me, if, ¢dges of the cliff. Staring upward,| took in every little look and act of your ankle is still weak.” | Blake for the first time observed | his companions. He was not alto. ke: I can make it alone.” | that the face of the cliff swarmed) gether unversed in the ays of! in a Tone, | impatience discouraged gy rege wig ote | good society and {t seemed to him| Pei) bet - harsh and broken with thirst. o leasant sight, this| inquiries. Hoe had turned as be at's luck muttered. | that the Englishman was somewhat | listless and lazy with all the competition for superior looks|-you're all right now I your | ccneh ae tne terocity of the tsland.| spoke, and the others followed hiro, | “Guess I haven't forgot how to rob/ over-assiduoue in his attentions taken from their lives. self together, and we'll get to the| 4.4 Winthrope, finding he could| Blake skirted around in the open| ests. Bet our fine lady'll shy at} “All ready, Blake,” remarked Cheapening of Venuses is like cheapening of any high- ar ina ditty.” “ ‘ re) Walk. without pain. hurried Miss|until they came to the seashore. prem yy Elie pit Hi = — muthiobe, finally, with a last Vests ise since? a ry : : . - m here, ss Genevieve. e rec Dt The ti jow en ° ng ie. Hwanted| to knock greed out of his people, made money 50] had a stick, Blake, I fancy 1 could | COCORMME Palme, mitio Jtake, Ae He advanced again along the| «Got the flask and cigaret case and|being such » thing as a vest? cheap that when papa sneaked out for a glass of beer, or nec-| make a go of it over this drier) sharp, strong ivory points would| Presently the party came to the | the knife We thought not. Well, a vest fe by tar of the gods, or grape juice or something like that, he had| #found " ‘ , | make better pons othing|end of the apit, where the river|/® “All safe, sir—er—all sate, |® veo d eee ioe ties suspender | to take along a wheelbarrow load of shekels Ans ley youreeit up for & Month. | as aft water rippled over the sand with|| NEW PANAMA HE sD? | Blake " Leoncealer, @ ce for carrying F : , Come, Miss Jenny, brace up for an Once on open ground again, they| the last feeble out-suck of the ebb.| » ———@| _ With due consideration for Win- Matches, pennies, tobacco coupons, g Again, there was old King Midas, who wanted the whole|other try. 11's only a quarter-mile,| goon gained the fallen palma "| Blake halted at the edge of the : thrope's ankle—not for Winthrope— |toothpicks, theatre ticket stubs and thing. He wasgranted his wish that everything he touched) and I've got to pack him.” At a word from Blake, Miss Lestie| water, and half turned | Blake set so slow a pace that the|® watch. should turn to gold, and the first time he tried to yank his}, Fortunat the remaining di) hastened to fetch nuts for sted Close up.” he sald, “It's shal half-mile’s walk consumed over half, Pickpockets only remove the tance across @ sire’ of bare,'thrope to husk and open. Blake,| low enough; but do you see those an hour, But his smoldering irrita-| Watch. The rest of the stuff in the suspenders over his shoulder, he howled for a return to the! gry ground, for even Blake had all whe bad plucked three leaves from| loge aver on th normal condition ‘ ; & but reached the limit of endurance.|q fan palm near the edge of the| are alligators.” It will not work, girls. ‘The value of things depends upon] At lant the nearest palm was only| jungle, eran to split long shreds| "Mercy!—and you expect me to relativeness. Beauty will sure lose its charm when all girls|*,%e* Paces distant. Blake clutched! trom one of the huge leaves of a| wade among such creatures?” cried oe rs 2 a . | Miss Leslie's arm, and dragged her) cocoanut palm. This gave him a| Miss Leslie. ‘are Venuses. You'll simply have to have an almighty ugly) forward with a rush, in a final out-| stiff fiber, part| "I went almost across an hour tion was soon quenched when they Pocket is never removed. It's eves drew near the green thicket at the in the pockets while the vest fs foot of the cleft. In the almost setting its last joy ride in the junk death-like stillness of mid-afternoon, Wagon. the sound of trickling water came Vests make men round shoul to their ears dered, but this can be overcome by mud-bank? Those | quantity of coa girl, here and there, as a contrast, as a relief from the over-| burst of eneray. lof which he twisted In a cord and| ago, and they didn't bother me any “A spring!” shouted Blake, “I removing two of the pockets in powering monotony. But the river was yet another! used to tle one of the leaves of the| There's wind in that cloud out sea-| guessed right!” front and hanging them on the back §) STE i ae hundred yards distant. Blake wait-| an palm over his head ward. Inside half an hour the| | The others followed him eagerly, of the vest, thus making it equally ‘ : jed only to regain his breath; then How's that for a bonnet?” he| surfll be rolling up on this bar lke At the foot of the slope lay a pool, balanced. Brutality of War jhe staggered up and went on. The! gemanded all Niagara,” and Blake splashed some ten yards across, and over- oth nable to rise, gazed after improvised head-gear bore| out in the water. ~ , P : P adowed by the surrounding trees. ERMANY refuses to permit America to send relief to the! him in silent misery a reece was no underbrush, and the ven vepaiabe canons cont ae starving civil population of Poland. Great Britain | Soon Blake found himself rushing pieture hat e335 333) was trampled bare a8 & that a submarine, possibly the lo Fe-/thra the jungle along a broad trall| 1 not repre fuses to allow.America to send Red Cross supplies to the] pitted with enormous footprints; | isugh Mise Lesiie, however, exam: | wounded and suffering people of Germany. We, the Nation] but he was so near ayy Pune je {ned the hat and gave her opinion Peace and Good-will, must stand supinely by and see the}; p20") 00 [0 ab cise. be ran dowd) without sign of amusement. “I/ 4 law of | ty outraged bi aye of th bid| re tone, And. Cropping upon his} chink it is splendid, Mr. Blake. If| common law of humanity outrag ecause of the rabid) knees, plunged his head into the| w» must go out in the sun again.| jexpected Bremen, was (Continued in Our Next issue) | off this port HOW TO BE SLIM If you are too fat and want to reduce your weight 15 or 20 pounds, don’t starve and weak- hatred, the ferocity, the callousness to suffering, which two] water. it is just the thing to protect one.” en your system, or think you years of horrid war has engendered thruout the old world. ao oped ie Brghacs was 80 oz “Yous, Here's two more I've fixed | must always be laughed at on ; 7 ha could no more se ope?” Two years longer of this war, waxing more brutal each| hig mouth. With the fret pone ge a mT od Lh ol yer gitar 2 18 eccount of your fat, but go to id -w,| ‘The Englishman nodded, and the| rtell Drug Co, or an day, and all the higher attributes of man will have departed| his swollen tongue mocked him] three sat down to thelr third feast Seaccker Gah cok a ben, from the whole Eastern hemispt with the salt, bitter taste of sea-|o¢ cocoanuts. Blake pondered as he of Ke cappuien a ket water, The tide was flowing! " a after each meal and one before - SMe aiadir “the crmidhie teitaak ait a when fully satisfied he retiring at night Dr. Valdes has just been elected 2 Sudde 6 noo! eo line selped himself up with his club, he eigh yourself on ? sresident o' » republic of Some Obstacle Berg wl dolont Qpinshidg| Geen ck theethers’ to senate Weikh yourself once « week # president of the republic of Pan id HE stand-pat progressives who met in Indianapolis,|%%4 loud snortings down-stream ‘ lo method this is for re- ma, to succeed Belisario Parras, 2 stand-pat jf ~- 1 ' *PO"'S:| He glanced about, and saw six or|-rnore are your hate and thel# 1 ia et the eae. Who. tas Deen te office since 1912 a. stated that the only objection to nominating a presidential cant monatrose Beads drifting to-| strings,” he said, “but you won't Taiaieake. isthe, da-aeoabicke idate is the difficulty in finding a man who will accept. ds him with the tide need them now. I'm going to take “ne woveee iter # LETTERS TO EDITOR aes his! What's ha setiek te all our iene “What in— Whee! a whole herd! a prospect along the river; and a 2! r ap P ? of hippos!” he muttered. “That's! while I'm gone, you can mako a try|# with even single pound of ——_——— what the holes mean at stringing nuts on some of this unsightly fat NO OPEN SHOP | ANYWHERE. On Plugs The foremcst hippopotamus was| leat fiber.” headed directly for hi HW k To the Editor: 1 hear a great Ad a . eaded directly for hin . HE United States, greatest horse raising country in the him. He san He did not wait for protests, {deal of talk in favor of the “open ‘ ; ‘ . down almost flat, and crawled back| Swinging his club on his shoulder, | —————— ————|shop.” There s not anyone in world, barring Russia, finds itself obliged to mount its|around the turn in the path. Once} Senne the country who believes in the 4 a ,, (certain that he was hidden from the as ‘open shop.” cavalry, down on the Mexican border, on “sub-standard” |heasts, he rose to his feet and/f > , a a fagitean dataed be F ele Big tial ah See Even the gentleman from Fv horses, because tl as. bi ‘a by European] hastened back thru the jungle erett who js running for the 16-| purchases of standard at More incompetency or neglect| He was oe Ag Mago Hf the publican nominadoa for governor | Be 4 ts i ae rit ahtie spot whe o had left Winthro: doe t believe in the open ¥ Or _short-sightedne Take your choice and Miss Leslie, when he stopped shor : na | a and stood horitating itt correctly informed, he ; ie “T can't do it.” he muttered; is a member of a large firm who { can't tel her poor ail nan | employ a great deal of labor. The a ———— ~ jut he turned and pushed thru|/ interests of himself and associate: é YOUR HONOR, I'M CHARGED with . Ns . bd : Ce ecteaio renase wire) eee aay the last screen of jungle, and start (he thinks) ‘equire the “open 4 DOLLARS 10% woRTH OF wee CUT. THE ed towards the palm under whieh | : shop.” But they want a tariff REAL TOBACCO CHEW--WiLL LAST Twig] he had left his companions Guard the Greatest Gitt— | (“closed shop”) on lumber. They have lumber to sell | The same with the vessel own. ers They want the “closed shop” AD LONG AS 108 w They | TOBACCO were not there A call from Winthrope directed! ¢] | his gaze more seaward. The two} SO, were vated t wide a fall y Don't Pay Exor' Peles for themselves They want the] ar ss Lewlic had a la ound ' p open shop” for the men | , NCLUDES object raised to her lps. Win reins cuca amar oe If this country would change the | thrope was waving to him herical lenses navigation laws so a8 to admit} Cocoanuts!” he yelled. “Come acle oF eveniass |) forelgn bottoms (open shop) to do on! pe aks {]| mestic commerce whet a howl ¥ °, ~ Come and in - OMORROW Three of the palms had t ‘first aid for estipate would go up The Panama canal is run on DO NOT DESTROY YouR BYE. NG POOR that plan and we see lots of critt- jclam of President Wilson for al overthrown by the hurricane, peer when Blake came up, he found the | ss in tr es ground strewn with nuts seized tho first he came to; fol | “Will Resinol Ointment really BARR lowing it Winthrope held out one already|| stopthis dreadful itching andclear ; This country cannot manufac opened. He snatched it from him.|| my eczema away?" Bg Bg ture dyes in competition with ICH tobacco makes a world of difference — there’s and placed the hole to his swollen|| **Madam, if you only knew as visionn are in one ‘riage many (after, the war without ji ‘i ‘ | lip: N had o ed yOu ino! 0 ag r sight ar closed shop) satisfaction in store for the fellow who breaks OF daisies a hevsgishers plants | death) Lae 2 aap ee They are real “foxy.” They over to W-B CUT Chewing. Tuck a little bit of TMP ateeoyen ieauld nee dene yes as veans’ exremience, [cok a tariff 40 that they can pay a nibble into your cheek and learn what tobacco s satis- CHAPTER It lb Aeoatl wee tc ar wice Uaatiy te dado a ita espe Be nel fe ee rien ~ Baron H. S. De Malaus: faction is—that’s Surprise No. 1. Notice how long one | The Re-Ascent of Man stops itching immediately and suon U. ‘S. OPTICAL CO. open shop’ void paying it Will Tell His Waxperionces little chew lasts—that's Surprise No. 2. Rich tobacco and the touch of salt that keeps bringing out the rie are what make the big difference Something doing for dealers thet oarry W-B CUT—100 « pouch, Mode by WEYMAN-BRUTON COMPANY, SO Union Square, New York City | They spent that night in a tre removes €very bit of eruption.’ | Blake's sight of the hippopotams | | Resinol O' convinced him that the island wag|| thatitcan bev inhabited with the usual wild ant mals of the tropics, and tho even @ tree was not proof against an It looks like e pretensions. H. ©, CROCK t 908 4th Avo, Seattle Option spect Matinees 1:0 to & venings 60 to 11 Vrogrem Afternouns seme... 10 hanges Wednesdays and Sundays |. If you have something to swap, IIst It In Star Want Ads. CERO De