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June 20, 2025 30 mins
Set in a frontier military post, this series explores the lives and duties of cavalry soldiers. It portrays the challenges and camaraderie of life on the frontier.
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Yes at the Galla.

Speaker 2 (00:32):
Fort Laramie, Fort Laramie, starring Raymond Burr as Captain lee
Quinn's specially transcribed tales of the dark and tragic ground

(00:54):
of the wild Frontier, the saga of fighting men who
rode the rim of Empire, and the dramatics story of
lee Quince captain of cavalry.

Speaker 3 (01:18):
Around her neck, she woreal ribbunge. She you wore it
in the winter, and the merriment to me and when
the as.

Speaker 4 (01:29):
Was ene enough lover who was parr.

Speaker 3 (01:34):
Way farway far away, who worried for.

Speaker 4 (01:39):
Her lover, who would far far away race.

Speaker 5 (01:45):
There's a certain amount of spirit in you, Phoene. I
can't say it's anything.

Speaker 1 (01:50):
I warmed to, but spirit it is.

Speaker 4 (01:54):
And there's a certain amount of spirit in you too, Mary,
whether you've been driving them bottled of mine right right.

Speaker 3 (02:00):
There seems to me.

Speaker 5 (02:01):
Fortification Phoene. And uh.

Speaker 4 (02:05):
Ah, defense you talk like you already joined up.

Speaker 5 (02:08):
Ah a gift of the creative mind. I see myself
riding forward with the troops, dodging an arrow. Here, a
bullet there, guidans flying death, defying.

Speaker 4 (02:22):
Have you ever been on a horse, Mariwelling, you dare.

Speaker 5 (02:26):
Ask that of the man who played Richard the Third
for three one hundred and fourteen stirring performance, not to
say memorable.

Speaker 4 (02:34):
Just how many bottles of my snake poton have you
in days?

Speaker 3 (02:37):
A horse?

Speaker 6 (02:38):
A horse?

Speaker 4 (02:39):
I than them for a horse?

Speaker 5 (02:44):
Ah, the remarkable alixa Phoene. You notice a new depth
and resonance to my tone?

Speaker 4 (02:53):
Oh? I cautro her mind down in Colorade. Have got
a brand new voice from drinking my mixture. Used to
better at a calf said took six.

Speaker 7 (03:01):
Bottles to turn the trick, But today they call him
whisper and ruggle.

Speaker 1 (03:05):
Ha, you're trying to alarm me.

Speaker 4 (03:08):
Cured his callouses too, at him clean off?

Speaker 3 (03:12):
Yep, Ah, cruel fortune.

Speaker 5 (03:16):
Did you see that, Phoene? The bottle slipped through my
careless fingers.

Speaker 4 (03:20):
I seen you pitch it out. I don't think you're
brave enough for the army Mariweather, who bosing?

Speaker 8 (03:27):
Whoe?

Speaker 5 (03:28):
Girl?

Speaker 4 (03:29):
These too?

Speaker 1 (03:30):
Girl?

Speaker 9 (03:31):
That's the way.

Speaker 4 (03:33):
Now you're decided?

Speaker 7 (03:35):
Are you.

Speaker 6 (03:37):
Imposing sight?

Speaker 10 (03:39):
Young fortress?

Speaker 7 (03:40):
Once we cross that bridge into them gates, we're down.
The case is Merriwether.

Speaker 4 (03:44):
You ain't decided on army life, you better climb.

Speaker 5 (03:46):
Down off in this wagon right now, country above heart Phoene.
The fire of the patriot burns bright within me.

Speaker 1 (03:54):
Drive on.

Speaker 10 (03:55):
I long to rejoin my old regimen.

Speaker 7 (03:58):
You long for a bell pull of food, dislike me
to the colors Phoene, right on, Get up pool.

Speaker 4 (04:06):
You girl at the gallup pole. If you can write,

(04:34):
fill out the forms there.

Speaker 3 (04:36):
If you can't write, but you can talk, tell me
I'll fill them out. If you can't write or talk,
we don't need you.

Speaker 5 (04:43):
About my uniform colonel who said that I spoke quite
clearly and distinctly.

Speaker 3 (04:50):
I believe.

Speaker 8 (04:55):
You.

Speaker 3 (04:57):
What's your name, mister Grenville? Met you some kind of
funny man?

Speaker 5 (05:02):
Mister, I dare say, I'm not without humor, not to
the point of buffoonery.

Speaker 3 (05:08):
Mind you stand up, mister he well you want to
make that? Yes, sergeant, Why yes, sergeant, I believe I do. Now,
what's your name?

Speaker 6 (05:23):
Granville?

Speaker 3 (05:23):
Marry your real name? Mister, I suppose I must. I'm waiting.
It's a.

Speaker 10 (05:33):
Batkin, sergeant, Arnie buck Arnie.

Speaker 3 (05:37):
Buckin Boh No, now that sets me up.

Speaker 8 (05:41):
Ernie Bunk.

Speaker 4 (05:42):
Why didn't know such a name? Arnie Buckin?

Speaker 3 (05:45):
You another funny man, mister, ain't heer as funny as
he is.

Speaker 7 (05:49):
I had done little slatter hand in my time, but
I never produced no Grandville marry whether out of an
army buck army buckiner, nous I.

Speaker 5 (05:57):
Be subjected to this ridicule? I say, is this the
reward of a patriot? You two together alas we are,
but only in these last dark days where it.

Speaker 4 (06:06):
Come from me having a hard goal. Sergeant, I'll let
him join my act, you might say.

Speaker 5 (06:10):
Singing he was down on his Oh, distortion, pure distortion.
Allow me, sir, you're.

Speaker 3 (06:15):
In now, wait, just you wait, or I'll allow you
a sight more in my ear.

Speaker 11 (06:22):
I tell you we get ourselves some strange ones in
this army, But I swear you two come right close
to the limit.

Speaker 4 (06:27):
You ain't saying we can't get in?

Speaker 5 (06:30):
And has his right, sir, and pressures. Among them is
the right to heat his country's called ones. Stand to
the colors, man against all enemies, follow them to mess.

Speaker 3 (06:37):
You're gonna stop, mister well, I must say, uh, yes, yes, yes,
all right, I will do this one at a time.
You what's your name? Peenie phoenis fiend? Where you from from?

Speaker 4 (06:55):
You got a home?

Speaker 7 (06:56):
It's right outside the door, Sergeant posing me. We got
this little way and regan wherever we light at sundown.

Speaker 4 (07:02):
That's home.

Speaker 3 (07:02):
Poesy, you married indeed or indeed?

Speaker 5 (07:07):
And may I say, sir, no couple whatever more ideally suited.

Speaker 11 (07:15):
Oh, I.

Speaker 12 (07:17):
Beg pardon, Sergeant Pose, He's my horse.

Speaker 7 (07:20):
I used to work the river boats Mississippi anywhere from
Saint Louis and New Orleans, dance and singing minstrel work.
Since the war, I got itchy feet to come west.
The last four years I've been over the most of
it too.

Speaker 3 (07:31):
For down, you're a actor.

Speaker 5 (07:33):
I must protest in the name of the spoken word,
the ancient art. Call him what he is, but do
not degrade my honored profession.

Speaker 4 (07:40):
I run a little medison show, Sergeant.

Speaker 3 (07:42):
Oh.

Speaker 7 (07:43):
I got pots and pans and calico, but mostly I
entertained polks into buying a little tonic I put together.

Speaker 5 (07:48):
If you must put a trade behind his name, inscribe
the words low comedy. But in deference to the drus
in the name of Edwin Booth and Morris, barrymore Ye
and Granville.

Speaker 4 (07:59):
You're spoiling for the guardhouse, mister.

Speaker 5 (08:02):
If best to serve my country more, then yes, shackle me, cut.

Speaker 10 (08:07):
From me my tongue.

Speaker 11 (08:08):
I'm toying with that idea, Captain, quincer, Sergeant. The idea
is rig that is outside a horse and wagon.

Speaker 4 (08:17):
Captain, is there's something wrong?

Speaker 3 (08:20):
Are they?

Speaker 6 (08:21):
Your horse is ailing?

Speaker 1 (08:23):
Better?

Speaker 6 (08:23):
Say to it?

Speaker 4 (08:24):
She ain't it?

Speaker 3 (08:24):
Not for too long? She ain't.

Speaker 6 (08:26):
The corporal of the guard will give you a hand,
show you where to move that rig. Now, go on,
I sure will allow me to introduce myself.

Speaker 3 (08:34):
Go help your friends.

Speaker 5 (08:35):
Oh, I dare say he's equal to the task, while I,
on the other hand.

Speaker 10 (08:39):
Mhm exactly, Sergeant, what is that all about?

Speaker 1 (08:49):
Guys?

Speaker 3 (08:50):
And I ain't that something? They're answering the.

Speaker 1 (08:52):
Call to the colors?

Speaker 10 (08:54):
Captain?

Speaker 11 (08:55):
There what well you could put another way? I guess
there's stuff Iarbon had dead?

Speaker 8 (09:17):
How many new men out there, Captain and be company?

Speaker 6 (09:20):
Twenty?

Speaker 8 (09:21):
Pretty sorry? Sight must have hit the bottom of the
barrel a.

Speaker 9 (09:24):
Long time ago, made Jim. After that we scraped it.
What you see out there is after scraping.

Speaker 6 (09:36):
One two? What do read?

Speaker 12 (09:41):
What?

Speaker 4 (09:45):
Wow?

Speaker 6 (09:51):
They can't mount the sergeant? Time made, Jim.

Speaker 8 (09:59):
I've seen an up Captain. We've got plans to lay out, Yes, sir,
we got out there leave pretty good.

Speaker 9 (10:12):
Cross section of what's coming into the army these days. Major,
it's still a question, what's that dregs, failures, fugitives, men
running from the law, from women, from work, men running
from themselves.

Speaker 8 (10:26):
Just before they blow their brains out they join the army.
Is that what we've come to?

Speaker 6 (10:31):
They can still stop bullets and arrows.

Speaker 8 (10:33):
I don't expect talk like that from you, Captain.

Speaker 6 (10:35):
It's straight talk.

Speaker 8 (10:36):
I don't see that. We'll talk about it inside. Oh,
sit down, Captain, Thank you sir, men who can stop

(10:59):
bull and narrows. Since when did you start feeling that
way about the army.

Speaker 6 (11:04):
I'm in the army.

Speaker 9 (11:05):
That's how I feel about it. I didn't get here
by accident, Major, I meant to that's all. The Army
is how men feel about it. It's good or bad
on that feeling.

Speaker 8 (11:17):
These new men, I didn't see any sergeant Gorses among them.

Speaker 9 (11:21):
Gors is a thirty year man. He's like me, doesn't
know any better or any worse.

Speaker 8 (11:26):
Now, what does that mean any worse?

Speaker 9 (11:29):
It means we didn't try anything else and fail. Some
of your new army out in that parade ground joined
up out of plane hunger. Their feeling for the army
is it's a place to eat, get clothes to wear,
and cut the sleep on.

Speaker 8 (11:42):
Maybe the armies at fault. If this is all we
can attract, we must.

Speaker 1 (11:46):
Be to blame.

Speaker 6 (11:46):
Fifty cents a day and all the jerky you can eat.

Speaker 9 (11:50):
Sure, the armies at fault, but the kind of trooper
you want isn't up for a price. That feeling I
was talking about, it's.

Speaker 6 (12:01):
Not something you can buy.

Speaker 8 (12:03):
I hope it's something we can cultivate.

Speaker 3 (12:06):
We're gonna need it soon.

Speaker 6 (12:09):
Yeah.

Speaker 10 (12:10):
Pete Hazen's report and the wind River area, Shoshone, Ah
and the Sioux.

Speaker 8 (12:16):
Hazen says, crazy horse let a few dog soldiers into
the Shoshone encampment about a week ago. It's all in
the report, but they're power owing about something.

Speaker 9 (12:25):
You haven't had a patrol over there since early last
four They had a bad winter in the snows.

Speaker 10 (12:30):
Worse than years now.

Speaker 8 (12:31):
They've melted those range peaks will be a lot more accessible.

Speaker 6 (12:34):
We shouldn't have any trouble with good scouting, and Pete's
the best there is.

Speaker 8 (12:39):
We'll have to do without him. He's been sent up
to Montana Country. Won't be back for at least a month.
You read his report and study the Wind River range maps.
We may have to move before the month's out.

Speaker 6 (12:56):
I hope they learned to mount by then. Have to
do the best week can, captain against dog soldiers Major,
we'll have to do better than we can. That mean

(13:26):
making a camp on the Big Horn River, and that
roots no good for us. Come in, you're busy, captain, Yeah,
I am, mister Sabags.

Speaker 3 (13:40):
Still with the maps.

Speaker 10 (13:41):
Huh, still with him?

Speaker 6 (13:44):
Oh? What's that? More reports than wind River? Oh?

Speaker 3 (13:48):
No, sir, it's something I thought you want to see though.

Speaker 9 (13:54):
Winter Garden Booth Benefit for the Shakespeare's Statue from Friday evening,
November twenty fifth, eighteen sixty for Julius Caesar.

Speaker 3 (14:04):
I was there, Captain, you were, yes, sir, that's the playbell.

Speaker 10 (14:07):
Yeah, I see it is.

Speaker 3 (14:09):
I've never forgotten it.

Speaker 11 (14:10):
He was here before I went to West Point, but
I had enough sense to know that I was experiencing
one of the rare moments in the theater. You see there,
Junius Booth played Cassius, Edwin was Brutus.

Speaker 6 (14:20):
And John Wilkes Booth was Mark Anthony.

Speaker 4 (14:23):
Yes, sir, of course that was before he.

Speaker 6 (14:27):
All right, it's very interesting, mister Sabots, But you don't
know why I wanted to show it to you yet.

Speaker 4 (14:32):
Look who played.

Speaker 6 (14:33):
Kasker Casker, mister Granville Merriweather.

Speaker 11 (14:39):
Well, well, well he's here, Captain. He's joined the army.
As a matter of fact, he's in B company.

Speaker 6 (14:44):
He's been in B company nearly three weeks now.

Speaker 11 (14:47):
Yes, sir, I know, except that I didn't realize he
was the Granville Merriweather. And a while ago I got
to looking through a bunch of old playbells and I
ran across this. Well, he's played nearly all the Shakespeare, Captain, he.

Speaker 6 (14:57):
Still can't mount a horse, mister Sibots, I know, and I.

Speaker 3 (15:00):
Don't understand it.

Speaker 11 (15:02):
On the stage he moves with the greatest ease and grace,
for instance, and Duell's on the stage.

Speaker 3 (15:06):
Of course, I've seen him shows.

Speaker 10 (15:10):
Oh you said you were busy, didn't you?

Speaker 1 (15:12):
I said I was.

Speaker 3 (15:14):
I wonder, Captain. Maybe if I work with mister Merriwether
on his horsemen.

Speaker 6 (15:18):
You make a trooper out of him, you do for
a meddle. Oh, tell him to make out his learning
for a part.

Speaker 11 (15:27):
That might be the best approach tell you the truth.
I'd like to meet him and talk to him anyway.

Speaker 6 (15:32):
Uh, you talk to him, ask him if he ever
played the part of Kit Carson, Kit Carson Captain. Yeah,
we could use a good guy.

Speaker 12 (15:56):
Right he You know, poosey girl, just stritchly good.

Speaker 3 (16:01):
You ain't up to more.

Speaker 4 (16:04):
Showing me a little huh.

Speaker 13 (16:06):
Well, it's not that I ain't please coesy girl, You
got any idea what happened to me if they found
me out here this time of night? Matter of fact,
they found you around here at all, Aden, You work good?
You come along now, I'll blanket you. There's oats and
water waiting. You need you taking cold girls, you need

(16:34):
this blanket a sight more than I do.

Speaker 11 (16:38):
Here.

Speaker 4 (16:38):
You go, now, get to your eating.

Speaker 12 (16:42):
I'll stand watch on you.

Speaker 3 (16:43):
You just don't learn much, do you, Phoene do what?
Oh it's you, sergeant.

Speaker 4 (16:55):
I swear I'm just no hand to see at night.

Speaker 11 (16:58):
You seem good enough to leave posy around the corral
letters straight, oats and water. You see good at night,
Phoene much black you're saying so, sergeant, But you don't
hear real good though night or day.

Speaker 4 (17:09):
Well, now there's where I have my.

Speaker 7 (17:10):
Real trouble sergeant here, And oh, I sure hope I
didn't miss nothing important.

Speaker 11 (17:14):
You miss tattoo again, Phoene. That's going on two weeks running.
You miss tattoos.

Speaker 3 (17:18):
Now, that's bad.

Speaker 8 (17:19):
I know it is.

Speaker 11 (17:20):
You missed hearing me tell you to get rid of posey.
You missed all them warnings about stealing oats and buying
stalled space from the stable.

Speaker 3 (17:26):
Detail with that tonic of yours?

Speaker 4 (17:28):
Do you think it's wax, sergeant, all clogged up there
in my ears?

Speaker 3 (17:31):
You think that's a cause? I just think one thing
about it, PHOENI, I think it's all behind you. You
do one thing.

Speaker 11 (17:39):
We're moving out in the days, So now if you're
out on patrol, I just don't see you stealing back
here every night ten in the posy.

Speaker 4 (17:46):
That puts a crimp in it.

Speaker 10 (17:47):
All right?

Speaker 11 (17:48):
Another thing between now and then, your time's liable to
be more occupied. You might even say confining. Do what
you're gonna be in the guardhouse?

Speaker 14 (17:57):
Still in PHOENI, Oh, ain't you gonna wash up?

Speaker 4 (18:19):
Merriweather?

Speaker 5 (18:21):
I am a saintly man, seenie, and cleanliness is only
next to godliness.

Speaker 4 (18:29):
And I've been next to you, you've been two days
in that McClellan, A little of.

Speaker 14 (18:33):
This sweet water won't hurt you.

Speaker 5 (18:35):
Now, sweet water, your ignorance is boundless as always.

Speaker 1 (18:40):
Phoenee, Oh no, ain't youo smart?

Speaker 4 (18:43):
This is sweet water, every single drop of it.

Speaker 12 (18:45):
Sweetwater River, that's its name.

Speaker 6 (18:47):
What's in a name?

Speaker 12 (18:49):
Oh, bod indeed, what's in a name?

Speaker 3 (18:53):
Ah?

Speaker 4 (18:55):
Cut right between the two ranges and sweetwater? Does the
Granite mountains to the north and down that way green mountains?

Speaker 6 (19:01):
You travel with Lewis and Clark.

Speaker 4 (19:03):
I presume, well I've been during there. Every place there
was me and posing.

Speaker 5 (19:08):
We sold our little tonic all over, I say, Phoene
the elixir. You brought a few tankards with you.

Speaker 4 (19:15):
Oh it's all gone, Merriweather. What you didn't swell down?
What I didn't use to buy stall space? Why that
sergeant just plane took prisoner.

Speaker 10 (19:23):
But the formula you you you can make more.

Speaker 4 (19:25):
Formula you use the right base. You can add what
you will. It's no matter, Yes, sir Merriweather. We put
some riding in the last couple of days.

Speaker 7 (19:34):
We can't be more in a day from the wind
river rang the right base corn liquor when I can
get it now, to get to wind River. They must
figure on cutting up the Biaver Creek, follow next to
the little poopo ad gean end of the basin from
there at least, Why is that what I do?

Speaker 5 (19:49):
Yes? Yes, now, but suppose I can't lay my hands
on the quantity of corn liquor as you call.

Speaker 7 (19:54):
It as everyone calls it, that's its name. But that
being the case, learn a lesson merriweather. Any fruit will
ferment left alone.

Speaker 4 (20:03):
A brilliant foenie, brilliant observation.

Speaker 10 (20:08):
I'll remember that.

Speaker 7 (20:09):
You go far enough up through that basin, you can
see cow elk and their young feeding on choke cherries.
And right alongside these have to be black bears drinking
from the screen, yes, sir. And where it's swampy like
is not, there'll be moose graising.

Speaker 6 (20:22):
You know what you're talking about?

Speaker 9 (20:24):
Peenning, captain, sir, Yes, sir, captain, you got a uniform feening, Yes, sir,
I sure have it.

Speaker 4 (20:33):
It's right over there, sir.

Speaker 5 (20:34):
Put it on, Yes, sir. I'm glad you spoke out
that way, Captain. The man might chill merrywell, then right here.

Speaker 9 (20:44):
Sir, report the sergeant gorse Tell him, I said, you
were to stand pick of duty tonight, yes, sir, and
the rest of this duty.

Speaker 6 (20:51):
All I want to hear out of you is yes, sir, Yes, sir,
move out.

Speaker 9 (21:07):
You'll draw extra guard duty when we get back to
Fort Laramie Phene. A man assigned to tether horses isn't
supposed to take a bath first?

Speaker 6 (21:16):
You know this country? Or were you just out John Meriwether, Oh,
I know it, sir.

Speaker 4 (21:21):
From the basin clean up to the ice.

Speaker 6 (21:22):
Fields, travel it by horse?

Speaker 4 (21:24):
Did you part time? Part time leading posy?

Speaker 12 (21:28):
The going steep?

Speaker 4 (21:28):
You get up in the range itself.

Speaker 9 (21:30):
Say I want to follow wind River to where it
joins the Green River. And then I beg, pardon captain,
Well you can't do that. What you said, wind River
don't join Green River?

Speaker 1 (21:40):
No worse?

Speaker 6 (21:41):
All right, you know this is shoning.

Speaker 4 (21:44):
I traded with fair when it.

Speaker 6 (21:46):
Struck me to you don't like them?

Speaker 4 (21:48):
Well, there are people, some it is rotten, and some
suits me. Fine. I traded fair with him that suits me.

Speaker 6 (21:53):
You joined the army to get back at the rotten ones?

Speaker 4 (21:56):
No, sure, that ain't one. Why then I joined the
army so as I could eat greg.

Speaker 9 (22:02):
I got some maps, some scout reports in my tenth PHOENI,
you've got a job of reading ahead tonight.

Speaker 4 (22:10):
Well, I ain't the best reader in the world, Captain.

Speaker 6 (22:12):
Then I'll read them to you. Nothing says an army
scout's got to know how to read.

Speaker 9 (22:37):
You going by map or instinct, Captain, by map instinct
and Feenie. If he's right, we cut forty miles off
our old course. It's a heart pull on the horses.

Speaker 6 (22:47):
Posey made it under full pack.

Speaker 3 (22:50):
He's your soul on, Phoenie, ain't you, Captain.

Speaker 6 (22:52):
Gotta be? He's as near to a scout I got.

Speaker 9 (22:56):
We got a rondevous point with him over this ridge
as forage there and water, And that's by map instinct
and Fenny, Yes, sir, how does it look to you, Sergeant?

Speaker 3 (23:16):
Like Phoene knows his business?

Speaker 1 (23:18):
Captain, Now let's go down.

Speaker 11 (23:32):
There's a horse yonder, Captain, over by the strange, I said, Pheeny.

Speaker 4 (23:50):
My candy hoped. I'll ask till you showed up. Captain.

Speaker 15 (23:55):
How bad is it, Phoenney, I'm full of hold and ripping.
Ain't nothing you can do except listen while I got
the breath.

Speaker 10 (24:06):
I'm listening.

Speaker 4 (24:08):
It's a big camp. Captain must be a thousands shone, half.

Speaker 6 (24:14):
Of them wish Asians. Reports had crazy horse and dog
soldiers and.

Speaker 4 (24:18):
More moving in from the north all the time. That's
a lot of soup. If you need all the army.
You've gotten him some.

Speaker 10 (24:28):
And my blouse, Captain, and I'll get it.

Speaker 4 (24:33):
It's a mad the best I could grow. They're in
a box canyon. You can get them good if they
they put.

Speaker 10 (24:43):
Thank you, Phoene, Pheney, you better stick around. We need
you real bad.

Speaker 4 (24:49):
Hey can't oblige you. Captain liked whom.

Speaker 6 (24:54):
And I you want something?

Speaker 10 (24:57):
Feenny, Yes, Sir.

Speaker 1 (25:02):
May Weather, mery Weather, Phoenie.

Speaker 4 (25:14):
You stay tune, Captain, he'll need a witness and willing
him something.

Speaker 5 (25:25):
You always get in trouble alone, Phoenie, without me, you
bungle everything.

Speaker 4 (25:35):
You want to come along Merriweather.

Speaker 3 (25:39):
And dying.

Speaker 10 (25:41):
Uh comics don't die, Phoene.

Speaker 6 (25:47):
They don't know how.

Speaker 10 (25:49):
No true sense of tragedy.

Speaker 4 (25:53):
You you get posey Mayweather treat good now, h I wont.

Speaker 11 (26:04):
Mm hmmm.

Speaker 5 (26:06):
Mm hm.

Speaker 10 (26:09):
Peenie, Peenie. He can't answer you now, a trooper.

Speaker 6 (26:22):
What kind of an.

Speaker 5 (26:26):
Exit line was that? You?

Speaker 6 (26:30):
See?

Speaker 3 (26:30):
I I told you.

Speaker 8 (26:34):
Even on a curtain.

Speaker 10 (26:34):
Speech, m hm.

Speaker 4 (26:38):
Hm hm h raid this is my best performance.

Speaker 9 (26:47):
Maybe it is merry with him, Maybe because you're not
play active.

Speaker 2 (27:11):
Fort Laramie is produced and directed by Norman MacDonald and
stars Raymond Burr as lee Quin's Captain of Cavalry, with
Vic Perlin as Sergeant Gorse. The script was specially written
for Fort Laramie by Kathleen Hite, with sound patterns by
Bill James and ray Kemper musical supervision by Amarigo Marino.
Featured in the cast were John Dayner and Parley Bear.

(27:34):
Jack Moyles is Major Diggett, and Harry Bartel is Lieutenant Siberts.

Speaker 6 (27:55):
Company. Tension dismiss.

Speaker 2 (28:11):
Next week, another transcribed story of the Northwest Frontier and
the troopers who fought under lee Quince, Captain of Cavalry.

(28:32):
For the younger members of the family, this is an
ideal time of year. Schools are and they have plenty
of time to play and be with their friends. Perhaps
it's not quite so easy for us grown ups, who
are thinking ahead to the time when our children will
be ready for college, wondering whether we'll be ready with
enough money to pay their tuition. Instead of fronting sign
up with a payroll savings plan where you work. Start

(28:53):
buying those safe, profitable United States savings bonds regularly. Start
now to invest in your future security and the security
of your country. Yeah.
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