Fellow Twainians, Perhaps, the version referred to is the one produced by John H. Wallace, former administrator at Mark Twain Intermediate School in Fairfax County, VA. His biographical sketch in _Satire or Evasion: Black Perspectives on Huckleberry Finn_, edited by James Leonard, Tom Tenney, and Thadious Davis (Duke UP, 1992), and his own essay in the book ("The Case Against _Huck Finn_) refer to a version he published (_The Adventures of Huck Finn Adapted_, Falls Church, VA: John H. Wallace and Sons Co., 1983). On the last page of his essay on (24), he states that "the story is the same, but the words 'nigger' and 'hell' are eradicated." Wallace ends the essay with these comments: "It [his adapted version] no longer depicts blacks as inhuman, dishonest, or unintelligent, and it contains a glossary of Twainisms. Most adolescents will enjoy laughing at Jim and Huck in this adaptation." I hope this helps. Joe Alvarez Charlotte, NC