:35:00
You'd eat it. You'd fight
for the bones too.
:35:04
Have you ever
eaten a dog, Mr. Russell?
:35:06
Eaten one
and lived like one.
:35:09
Dear me.
:35:17
Mr. Russell
obviously feels sympathy
:35:19
for the Indians' plight.
:35:21
If you're a humane man,
you do.
:35:24
But you have to live on
a reservation like San Carlos
:35:28
to see that caring for them
:35:30
is not a simple matter
of giving them food and clothing.
:35:32
My name is Favor,
by the way.
:35:34
I happen to be
the Indian agent at San Carlos.
:35:37
As the agent,
I see all the problems
:35:40
the Interior Department
is faced with...
:35:42
natural resentment
on the part of the Indians,
:35:45
their distrust,
:35:46
their reluctance to
cultivate the soil.
:35:48
They live where
they don't want to live.
:35:51
That too, which can't
be helped for the time being.
:35:55
Do you happen to know
someone at San Carlos?
:35:59
Most of them.
:36:01
- You've visited the agency?
- I lived there.
:36:06
I don't think
I recognize you.
:36:08
Did you work for
one of the suppliers?
:36:10
No. I worked
for the police.
:36:14
But the police
are all Apache.
:36:37
Whoa.
:36:40
Delgado's station.
:36:42
- Mendez!
- Well, who else?
:36:46
You can wash at the bench
near the kitchen door
:36:48
and follow the path around the back
for the other things.
:36:52
- Still got horses?
- A few more days.
:36:54
Then change them for these.
:36:56
I thought you had closed down.
:36:58
That's a long story.