Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 48, Number 203, Decatur, Adams County, 29 August 1950 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
Hr DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT > NMMM Bvery Broalng Mrcwt Bute? By TMB MCATVR DEMOCRAT 00. Ibcorporotod Baton* at tte Demur. IM, rut Otte* n Bnate Ctan Matter Dick D. Halter Proukteat A. *. ffoltbouM — M«<* J. H. Hallar Vlee-PreuMunt C. B. HolUteaaa — Traaaarar Rtefttete* ...... By Mali ta Atem aa4 Adjoining Coutlaa: On yaar, $4; Bta aioaUa. W»; 1 mouth*. Sl.Tfc. By Mall, buyoad Adams ate Adjolalng CauUaa; Ou yaar, f?M; • ■oatha, $3 .H; 1 Bontka, |>.M. By Carrier. M eaato »ar week. Marla coMaa. 4 caata.
Aurtut humidity caa bo as etlfi Uac a» any jungle brand. o o ■ ' British Limeys have arrived in Korea to join UN forces in the drive to barl back the Communist hordes from the north. Trainto fight In terrain similar to Koreat they will be given the opportunity to show their stuff as defenders of liberty and freedom. Our Git have been taking the brunt and deserve relief, for the cause of freedom must be defended by all freedom loving nations. —-o o The new silos at Central Soya Company are going skyward and hundreds of people watch the interesting r lipdorm operattoa of pouring concrete for the huge storage bins. Already dotted with great concrete Intsallatlons that form an Inspiring industrial shyNne at the north edge of the city, tl.. construction of 2P more silos will fill out the line on the west side of the site Decatur is the •or bean capital of the midwest. o— —o — The coffee houses of Vienna, long celebrated in tong and story, seem to be on U y way out. The War's effectk ha / made their operation next t< hrteposaiblv. says a report from ie city known as the-home off the waits Habitues ot these cafAs once bad seemingly endless Uane in which to alt at eating, drinking, amt' dis--1 • .i-slnn everything under /he sun. Now peniisd .on a storf. today's customer gobbles bur hamburger, gulps his coffee, arfd ,ijs off about his business, g victim of the attack bar h.rjrit o— Ts/fcl >rean war Ins put an etui to the talk of disbanding the U.S Marines, or incorporating that unit In one of the other rnlidik divisions tin the i--m trary Congreuaman Vto.-n wai" an additional appropriation v> build tour companies of Marine, and equip the units with 26 "Str W]u triMbns. The Marines are typically American and wherever they go. ttetnemy ■<> soon learns that tl 1 * W have arrived The countrv wili/t-.o doubt favor* the Vinson projuisal. for many believe that tbe (Marine.- should be organiz' d IwdAujinped as a seperatc fight htg' unit.
Tw< Methods of Treatment for This Disease
By Herman N. Bundesen. M.D. 1 WbKRE »<■ hav.- mor< than one metlusl <>f treatment for'the same’ dlr'.kee. it is i problem for' the do. thrift- select the ope which will he best in the individual ease. p».>4e differ in stekipsias In health, and their fea'tions tn health and heir •rear-tlbns to treat inent vary Moreover qi die ease itself .an lie caprii-fb'is take inn one turn in this person* and' ... — next. This is partj< ularly true of .golter In -m<iiit'“"lfis:.i:H e* surgery is st! vised hut there <r*- maiii *p-_ when niedi. aj ri• a 1 nent may lie better * Surgery' i- generally 'rntmmended »n<n thy ' gutter or en Istgemelif -of- Ht»- thyroid-Kland Is ranging kv.rnptofW* (if pressure. IS lan... O, Unaik-hllv I: '..is ftp . ip.’ Oiv.-' urc. a ,ra.*id liiiV- ,/■ Ji. ; if! a '.olc tiivr.itd i* • Beyssary; when a tar.rir L* present in the thyroid gland.,<»r when other tiinmj - are ineaenrTvtiirtj' 'may lead to. <am er Cnder , jiroper siirgii al lOtidittoiis, the results, of goiter operatlomi are iiMfally good Few patients less than one ortt of 10*1 , s-i-■ •ot:‘. to the. operation - There is •seldom*»a re. ifrwi'ee of the enlargem'nt of the' thyroid , gfand after ~nrgi al reinoyal-vJ .those - ares tn wbmha tnxir- goiter 1 T* present. , I
The trains are running under control ot the army, but with private management doing the supervision. It doesn't seem that the strike should last more than a few days. Chances are that the trainmen and yardmen will receive an adjustment In hours and wages, following the pattern laM down by General Motors and other industrial concerns. The strike was headed off by government seisure of the roads, after th< unions voted te walk-out this week. The country must keep its trains moving and it appears that we have outgrown railroad strikes, even if the alternative is government control of the roads. o o Jobs may be plentiful and the pay may be high right now, but high school students should continue their studies and complete their course The Junior year In high school is probably the most", enjoyable for the boy or girl. Tttey have all the thrills attendant all upper classman la addition/to the happy anticipation of becoming a senior and gradualimpftay. Life is made up of a few pleasant experiences. one of whK'h is graduating from high sclpxd. We have good schools and rite opportunity is here for the alpM youth to continue his Studies/There will be jobs after graduation from high school and the* youth with the round-out training will have the best "in'' ' to get on the p«yt£jl. — - p.-.. 0 ~ The death of John Yager removes a»citlgen lang active hi the business lite anti growtn of f»*catur Eldest Son of the late Leopold Yager. a pioneer furniture and cask" build- J in this city..the. family for tnOr? than a half-ten tliry operated the *1 ager Furni turn Store, latir changed to Yager Brothers. T-> the older residents the name Yager ,is almost, synonymous with the furniture found in their homes today lifted with -neral local business epti-rprl'-- ; member* of this pr- niipent family saw' the city emerge from a cobbled-stone main u> its pr> >• lit prosperity and progress. Tile lone xurviVt r ■ .1 the family. Leo Yager, is now - in of *Ho- board 7 of. the Citizrn-- Telephoii'- ('o m p.a uy. after solving .'JH years as president -f that rapidly grow, .g and alert utility ■
!' Io » c goiter, tlo-re is all Im reuse in dm speed witii 'which the limb'-uses' oxygen', as weU_«r an increase in the rate of th" heart, beat, excessive swealinu. ! and kiss of weight. Operatiun for the (infection of a toxic goiter results in ap ini prominent of tin appearance of the neck but perhaps in one out of. every five cases, if does hot result in complete clearing of the evmiitoras ...f ti.e toxi. goij: At times, these gland* may need to :.e re-o;iefafed Tin drug tre.itnut.t, of the got:,'er .patient Jias react,.-d a degree of (fulness in re. ent. y ears whii h . makes it. an effective alt- rnatetnetiiod of irealniiqit to sifrgical removal, llefe tin 1 iiiost 'popular .drug Is pro|>i 1-i ly.mrtti it. ■which of ' |>e. ial value tn patient* with •uevev ly loyv. gattwwhu are peso* nrsi-xl . l ev- Ttio »| rug tnuy -i** idfntiiistered iislefinitbly without harmful effe't-J Sonih tm percent of .pdtlehts' given propyl- or methyltbioiirardl ~an h« expected to'inc prove bv their use alone Other dr tigs, such 'as iodine or .railioimtt . Ire iodine have been used with adrantage in pertain types of goit er. w. ! QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS i -1 fan a mol. change ■ uloi without it's adim 'amin •" Answer, ft possible fn r ' tliej moi. to .hangs color without tt*| being rauqer.
ROUND TRIP TICKET ON THE GRAVY TRAIN - TsJJ FMrmsßMMßtt 11l, 1 i ~i I reODdCTtON mW 'is# K'J/' ~~ KCvTY"
| Household Scrapbook | By ROBCRTA LBB | Lettucu The. leaves of a head of lettuce will not tear and will part In perfect condition If the core Is cut /ff with a aharp knife, and then the lettuce is held under the coldwater faucet, allowing the water to run into the hole made by the knife. » " Lace Curtain A torn lace curtain can be mended by ironing a piece of starched net over the hole. This is a better method than stitching or darning It, , ~ Never Wring Bilk Never wring silk, but allow it to hang .loosely .to dry let line the water drip Sjlka should always be dried in the shadeg—— - 0 | Modern Etiquette | i j By ROBBRTA LBB 0 — —■--.-j, — ; 01 Q What diitle-j are assumed I'v j Un- maid of honor at a wedding'* _i A Sin* adjusts the bride s veil j and tram, holds her bouquet dur ;
A. FOX Dnlnbvftd by King F««rvrß» iynifttufe
CHAPTER ONE THE TOWN was called Tamerlane. ana this was its only indivirtuality, tor It wu all the towns of all the prairies, a flat and dusty clutter ot buildings, vain-glorious anth taise-tronung. Horses nad Known Tamerlane; they bad stirred the dust ot its single street and gnawed the hltcnralls and left their droppings to gather files. Cattle nad Known Tamerlane, loo; they nao spilled northward from the graged-out Texas plains and butted at the wooden porch supports ot a raw new town as they had been nazed through to Montana's thousand hills And men . . uncurrted men. given to thick bullhide chaps and the promiscuous use ot Colonel Colt's invention. They were here yet. the horses and the cattle and the men; but their sun was setting. A man who had known all three before he nad turned his nands to other things could find a sadness in the sight of Tamerlane after the years, and It was thus with young Dr. Brian Ivca A railroad had fetched mm to the end ot an aimless spur, a stagecoach nad covered the last miles, arid be stood before the stage depot in the afternoon's neat, seeing horse and tops men who Jingled their spurs along the planking, but seeing, too, the calico and the demm of people who broke the sod. Some inward thought brought a bleakness to his eyes, but his sigh was an acceptance of -Urn change, and in Ahis moment he was wise and kindly and tolerant. At ms feet sat «is carpetbag and his instrument case; he had brought. no more than these, and they held the last decade of his life locked in them. He had not been one to lay his hands on worldly, goods, and even the Prince Albert coat, accepted garb of the professional man ot his day, was worn thin at the elbows. The cost gave him an added tallness—he topped six feet and Was inclined to stoop —but it was his face that people remembereq. lls wasn't handsome, tr it .people coyld p it-Uicic Lrust-m him. and sometimes those Wish thought they had km.wn him before remembered photographs of the young Abraham Lincoln in hie Springfield years and realized where the resemblance lay. His eyes were gray and grave, his hair brown and unruly; and the razor wax a ha Mt with him. The coach that had brought him had wheeled on around to the wagon yard, and there was no one here to meet Ivei Retd expected that. He picked the two hags from the pfanking and headed towarj the livery stable—he could rent a buggy -but he took his time, letting the low n soak into mm. letting the
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Ing the ceremony, and lifts back her veil. She may carry the bridegroom s ring if it's a double-ring ceremony. She i* also one of the two witnesses to sign the wedding . ertifleate. Q. What is the proper form to use for sending out announcements of a birth? A. This may be done by letter, card, telephone or telegram. tj Should soup be djshed out from a serving bowl on the dinner table or should it be served from tiiesk'itcheh? A. Soup should be served from the kitchen. J i I ■■■ ,■ I sue, .r. ■■— II ■■■■■ ■'W ■—' 'I 1 I ■' 20 YE AUS AGO TODAY t ————4 . August 23 The state o.t, ,IA diaua sends Adams lounty a bill lor |2\«W for costs incurred' In securing right of pays-on state roads 15 and 27. Two burns and a chicken coop destroyed by fire when the George. Lultemeier car backfired and ex- , ploded as he Was backing the Lautomobile out of. his garage. Loss l. was; il.uuo k W. Bocker of Mt. Olive. 11l .
on, remembered things make their impact. He walked unrecognized; he nad expected that, too. But when be saw a man seated on the edge ot the board walk, hia feet a tangle before ne said, ''Hello, Charley,** making an experiment ot It. , ' Here was the town derelict, a gnarled and useless man, but one who nad tune toe remembering, and Charley lifted his red-streaked eyes and looked long ana nard and said. **lvea . . . Brian Ivea,* aa though not believing It. But Ives had paced onward. Abreast of the Oriental Cale, he looked back and saw that Charley was lurching diagonally across the dust of the street; Charley bad found something to make thia day different from the days before It; Charley had newa Ives smiled; and because he was a man whose thoughts always turned inward, he told himself that he’d been childish. He got to the livery, and there was no one tn Ila shadowy depth: the horses stood listlessly in thetr stalls; the air was heavy with the smell of them, and this was somehow reassuring, this finding the stable unchanged. He lingered here, a man In a quiet, timeless eddy; beyond was the street and the steady current of reality, and he stepped back into It reluctantly. A wagon rolled along, a man and a woman upon its scat, a horde ot children in the box behind, seated gingerly amidst the cargo. Spooled barbed wire glinted In the sun. Across the street came three men, all of them long-striding, but at once only one counted, and he was in the lead He was young and clean-shaven and golden blonde; and Ives had never seen him before., Ho, wore wool pants and a belted six-shooter, and his hat was a cowboy's, though not so broad-brimmed as most; yet he was not of the ranch breed. How Ives knew thia he couldh't have Mid; perhaps it was the walk of the youngster. He looked like a man with business on his mind, and hie, eyes were on Ives, but he had not called out. so Ives put his back to him and headed along the street. He was abreast or the Congress Saloon and across the street from the drug store when the youngster Aid. "Hold up a minute, Ives!** Ives stopped and turned around and said, "Yes—?** "You came in on the stage a while agof” the youngster sent He, too, had stopped, taking a slouch,wise stand and hooking his thumb* in the gun-licit; and trie stance was so affected that f mad" l.»s smil". Yet there was ii danger m this youngster. It lay
Is here to start hla duties as teacher In the Zion Lutheran parochial school. John Duff of Hartford township painfully injured when struck on the bead by a falling pulley. Twenty of the 54 who graduated last .May from the Decatur high school plan to attend colleges this tall. Harve Rice, well known mall carrier, is enjoying a week's vacation. / Estate Cases In the estate ot Fred E. Schulte, the appraiser reported claims of 42.547 against the estate of |35.•03»1 which includes real estate valued at fIS.OPO. S 3 shares x>f Holthouse-Schulte stock, a savings account, and government bottds The Charles K Miller estate, fixed at 112.23 H by the appraiser, tocluiliug a lot in Preble valued at tS.SUii. has claims against it tor 41.125.63. _/ Claims of I«.to<i.-i6 were filed Malusl the Sarah B. Briggs estate, according to the Inheritance tax schedule. _ - ’ The estate was appraised at |14.Igx 79. including a lot In Geneva valued at 41.50 P. The Arlhur D. Suttles. Sr , estate was appraised at 116.305 23, with claim, of $1,524.25 against it. The rotate Included two lots in l>ecatur valued at SIOO each. The Nathan C. Nelson estate of $13,466 36 had claims amounting to $1.317 41 against It. The estate Included fT.3mi in real estate. The Sophia Weber estate, valued at $23.165 62. Including a TariiT near Ptehlc valued at $10,650. had claims of $1,932 17 filed against It. The net value of the Elisa Roth estate was fixed at $7,006.16 to be -divided between 13 heirs, Including ,12 children and' one grandchild A si hednle to determine inheritance lax -was filed for the Harry Wilmer N'eunischwander estate and given to the county assessor The final report on the estate of Otto Boertter, by administrator Hugja lloerger. .for $2,444.35. was i .-.rdefld returnable Sept 21. The Graew *E. Waller ,-staie. valu' d at $.:4.93S 2«. will 1,.- divided ; tipially among three hvir« Itoty rt Jk Walters. Helen Donovan, and toiruthy laigh. her children Each i will-receive $11,444 t»9, less s9»i 44 i for inheritance i«x J The adminhtrator of the Jacoh E ■ Henwhen estate received permis- ■ Mipu ($t the court to well privately t at not !e«* than the aiiacKßed value. tin |>. ixmai pjopern «»( the ••>rate. valutd ar #2 un hiding houao
deep in nis eyes; they were coldly blue and too old tor hla years His companions were older men. both of them tn Mb overalls, and one had a ragged beard. They might have been wearing taffa proclaiming them farmers. Ivea knew again that only the youngster counted, and Ives set down ms bags, wanting bis nands free, and remember, t: »n that the only gun he'd seer o. ned was locked inside the carpetbag. He said, "Yea, I eame tn oa tbs stage." “It leaves again this evening," the youngster said. “Be on IL" Ives mads bis votes placid. "Couldn't I'stay until tomorrow T" The youngster’s tacs softened— Ives had wanted to ses it tt would —and then the steel waa la ths boy’s eyes again. “Tonight,* he said firmly. “Be sure about that." Ives thought: aero «is. Already, and wished tor Ms gun again; and then he saw the fourth man. He wax aeroea the street, lounging tn the ehade of a doorway a few buildings up from the drag store, a square-cut man wtth a brutisn hunch to hla shoulders. This sort of maneuvering waa older than grass And Ives had known the pattern before he’d known the Latin that went into a prescription: and a silent laughter was m him, and the bendiness of crowding danger. And perverseness, too. He placed the flat of Ms palms against the chest of the youngster and shoved him hard Into the anna ot the two behind, and at the same time Ives went down to one knee, expecting the man acroas the street to start the shooting. « . The youngster rebounded from the two who'd caught him, a heady anger tearing all thinking out df him, and a man tn a window above the drag store said then, "Break it up, Cory!" His was a voice out of nowhere, the unexpected, the sixth ace m a stacked game; and the youngster, Cory, Stopped. In his wild lunge and looked up: end so did Ives. The window framed a face that might have been a rising .moon, round and fat and jovial, the eyes lost in folds ot flesh, the Ups wide and rubbery and grinning: but It was the shotgun that Ives saw first The man behind tt said again, "Break it up, Cory! This old Parker is loaded with wagon bolts and broken bottles, and they'd have to bury you in a basket” And then, with equal affability, "Howdy, Doc. Welcome home." Ives said. "H< 110. Stoll. You're certainly in the right place 1 at the right time!" (To He Contlnuriif
hold t<»ods worth 1275.15. * The personal property of the David Levy estate was fixed at M. 317,50. The personal property ot the Octe C. Shimp estate was appraised at $2,725. The Edwin M. Ray will was prie bated, leaving the estate, after costs tor Nines* and funeral, to his wife. 00 his children it bis wife preceed«4l him in deatih. Marriage License* James Keel and Kathryn Kuelil. of Lima. Ohio. Junies Dierties, route 1. North Judson. O’, ahd Norma Clayton. Erie, Pa Milton Habegger, Berne, and Pauline L. Nussbaun^ route 1. Monroe. Cletus Shaffer. Fredrlcktown. 0.. and lit tty Turner, Mt. Gilead, O. Peter P, Scliw-artx. route 2, tiehevitj and Mary S. Wickey, MouTbe. Ru hard Hayhow, Tiffin O. and Shirley Fromm. Chillieotke. O. Dan W. Highlen. Fort Wayne and Helen Brandyberry. Monroe. Confirm Smith For Intelligence Post Gen. Smith To Head Intelligence Agency Waahlngtoti. Auk. 29 — (l’P» — Walter Bedell Kmlih. a one-tim* 1 Mugging (oot-sohlier who moveei through the ranks to lsecouie a lieutenant general, was ready to day to assume couirul of the ten tral intelligence ag«*n< y. The sup* r-hr ret CIA, which coordinates the activities of ail gov ertiment intelligence units, presented a new challenge for the 55 year-old Indianapolis horn ca r<*er eoldier tVho was war lime < hipf-of-staft to lien hwighl l» Eisenhower and later di<i a three year atint as ambaaeadur to Moscow He was tHfuipped with, a brilliant ret old'in the trenches of . the nation s hot and cold war as well .aa a Mittare jaw, « ihu< h ed ~tnuiai h uk ei and a hbarp 4*nough to star the h'on curtain An army colleague once dew rib; ed the “Beetle’* a« “touyhcr than a IS-niintile crk or a 35-ceot steak ' He added. ->< •He s just a son-of a Kun who always gets tbines'-done ” t’rewideiit Trutuan appointed Smith to the intelUgencp P"<t ini/’' thiin a *»■< k ago. The f n ate niijlii iHv.l ih»' , yesterday The CIA was established hy uon gre*a in 1947. It itwy-dinales the inienigeruc activities of all emrnent .igen<le« and gives .ihe Information to (he proper aeemy Critics, in congress and elsewhere, aay the .agency should have
■SHunus < Dr tin an |w« return* to ra.tnrr>an«. tAir.tiei town ot Us Old wm. Carraom*. unct nt« oenriactbr. needs nun >a ornwe-1 to *®ot otK“ or otanoe giant Cory txmd MO Marco MUt, ao <M •dquawtaoca. uiterodMC CHAPTER TWO CORY picked nis nat from where it nad ta'llen, and his gaze held the pl led-up Hatred of Uivxv past tew momenta. He looked at Ives and •mm, "I’ve been pushed before. I’ve Always found the time and place to push badk. That goes tor you. and It goes tor Colonel Carradlne, when you see him." i'ft’&Aaid. “I'll tell him that." Cory turned on his nccl and strode away, the two wordlessly following after him. Ivea looked tor the squarc-cut man th the doorway: he had vanished. From the window, Stoll said, “Come on up and pass the time of day. Doc. You remember the lay-out? The stairs are at the back of the drug store." —- Ives said, "I'll And therm" He came across the street and entered the drug store; here was something out of ms own way of lite, and in the cool darknciur'bf the place ne again found the old and remembered, and something else as well, something that erased what had happened just aow. something that said: "You are Brian Ives, physician and surgeon, a man who knows only the violence wrought by others, having no personal part in tt yqursclf." . A clerk, pimpled and adolescent, was behind the counter, and to him Ives nodded, skirling the shelves and knowing what they held without looking. T’ragxlan Worm Powder, for horses. Sal-Vet. the cow remedy. Dr. Shoop’s Rheumatic Remedy. Thus could the needs of the three be attended to; and there were the bottled medicines and the varl-colored glass jars with the ingredients that made up Into pre-w-riptionx. Ives swung past these and ascended the stairs, and Marco Stoll met him with a plump hand extended and said again, "Howdy, Doe. Welcome home." The living quarters of the man were over-turnished and repulsive with mohair, a marble-topped table centering the room with a chessboard laid out: but it was the man, Marco Stoll, who filled the cramped space. He wasn’t tall, no more than five feet Seven; but his girth was enormous, and be crowded his clothes and waddled when he walked. He waved Ives to a chair and took one for himself and said, "Whatever fetched you back here. Doc? It-'s been ten years, hasn't it?" "Ten," Ives said. "One year
r - — TO-"aßßteMtejlllfr-f < a * i 4i«' .fWr*-■ AT A noncnON POINT along th* Naktong River In Smith Korea, CpL Henry S. Little, at Afbury Park, N. J., checks with headquarters via ; a field telephi-ne. Hu buddy, CpL Gordon Witt, of Balitmore, M I.; check* a 30-caliber machine gun. Note that the bridge actins the vital river la intacL (Dcfcru* Department-Photo from futomationnf'
known more ami *-*l*l more - about the North Koreas itivaai'in Delrmlanto reply that < IA in telilgem-e re|M>rter> were jourate They com plain 11ml th'- m tormatiou wan mi»int*iprvt< it by other government agem ie» Smith wa» born to IM- He joined the national gua'-l a» private when he was 15 and ttan«-fi-rrid lo the regular army in 191/- He ilbt not attend- Wot Point and never went t" coliege But lie rose ftatin major to th-n-e---star general In World War 11. List Examinations Under Civil Service Telephone engineerß. «pe<daii»iA, auditors, ami loan appraiser* may apply foi civil service positiona at 14 *WM» to ft.iOO a year, th* C-S civil service commission announced jkMi ay. —— Most of flu* jobs will require | constant moving throughout the -bjt’ntted Stare- ’No te«t I fojr Hi e■’ jo I**-. > * *•.-tA-.‘ I *<Ql * i lege work and pi'a« ik.i! applies . lltvii is iw for most «•( (tic TpoFftions. especially previous tehtTfron*' work Fiirth»’i; inform r ion : may be obtained from Koi»eH bprimnger at the Decatur pm( . <<i •
knocking atxut. One year reading medicine under a preceptor who took a fancy to me in Wyoming. Reading medicine! Most of my tune was spent with a broom. Two years in me.tlcal school -The last few I've been practicing tn Ore6 on " * “Like that country?" Ives alirugged. "It's something like Montana. Only the sagebrusn grows higher. And there are lava caves And the mountains and the prairies seem to blend into one." He looked through the open window; ne could see across a rooftop; be could see the shadowy lift of the Sombra Hills, and not until then waa he glad to be back. Stoll burrowed deeper, into his chair. "You've built up a nice practice?" "It takes In a lot of country," Ivea said. "I'm «■ saddkdiag sawbonea wiM»a;>ends more time riding than coyZtjig pulses And aometimea T tahb my pay In potatoes" <4.lc fAjLXtoil's eyes on the shabby rtirfce Albert, and his thought was that; he wasn't tooling. this man; Stoß could read wtiat there waa to read, and Ives said defensively, “I like it. A city practice would stifle a range-reared man." "Yes,” Stoll said, "you had elbow room on the Hammer, and that would tiax's become habit with you. Yin: didn't say why you came baiek." , There was Stoll's question again: and into Ives came a faint animosity at this persistence, and the.first speculation aa to whether more than curiosity prompted IL He looked at Stoll with U'man's eyes: Ives nad been a fifteen-year-old when Iqpt, he'd seen Stoll, and he saw that there was a greater depth to Stoll than he'd previously perceived. The man had the twang of cattledom tc his speech, yet he WMs using another language now. and Ives guessed that Stoll had still a third for the talking a man does within himself. He recalled vaguely that Stoll had long ago been a cowtipy; ho had come up from Texas with the great, mffiix, and that scempd. incongruous when you tried picturing Stoll on a horse. Stoll's question still hung In the air, and Ives was remembering that Stoll bad likely saved his Ute. •Tana sent for me." he said; Stoll raised his eyebrows: they were dust-colored, giving him a naked look. "So— ?" he said and waa deflective for a moment "She comes in sometimes. It's through her that I kept track of you." He smiled. "And now It's Doctor Ives." "I had a little trouble getting used to it myself," Ives said. "Tana told you of the tfoubls?" Again that fsxnt animoxitv touched Ives' nerve*, but he said.
TUESDAY, AVGUST 29. 1950
Mamie CaHtnl Meeting. FelhtWcrafl s>•'gri-'-. Tue-t'lay. Aug 2’.>. 7:3# p m 2"2t2x Harold F .Mnmrna. W .it. rirks Film The Best / Smith Rexalt Drug Store 1 Phone 82 • f | * KANE )£ .WALLPAPER- n) >T 158 S. SECOND ST. yl Now Is The Time To Start Thinking ai'Otit Lfdd weather and • * permanent ant; freeze. GAY’S MOBIL SERVICE 13th and Monroe Sts.’
"The colonel is getting bld. And cantankerous. Tana thought 1 could be of help to mm. Yes, Mie hinted ot trouble." lie gestured toward the street. "Appar'enHy she kn< w what she aas talking about. Who was that young nre-eater ?*> “Cory Lund," Stull sai t “There are a lot of heaters along the upper Sombra. An oldster who |o. a-i though ne stepped right out ot Uie Old Testament is the leader ot them. Elisha Lund..-He believes that a soft aniAer turncth away wrath. Young Cory, his cub. hasn l lived long enough to learn that." "He bad me rigged good and tight," Ives said- "Across the street was a square-cut fellow with a pair of shoulders that would do credit to an ox." Stoll frowncit "That would be Brale. He's a saddle-1 um wh” drifted In. 1 can t txdli vc he'd besitting in on Cory's game." “Old Charley recognized me earlier," Ives mused. "He went hi:ging It to spread the woril. I suppose that's what set this Cory prowling for me. But how do I count in his scheme ot'things?" "Colonel Carradine is...crowding the nesters. Doc. It's the ’oM, oi l story of big rarei r - I rancher, eketpt that <~| . i can't see that hla tight is lost fvre It starts. W uihmgtoh—furs grown tired of the antics of big' operators who think they're kini i of the earth becauas-Xhcy haj’pene 1 to be hete first. The day of the open range is over. The law favors the covered wagon over the chuckwagon any day. But Cairadue ; talking ot importing gunmen And making a wholesale clean-up. I It could be Johnson County all over again. Carradlne should have learned a lesson fr< in Wyoming." Ives mud slowly. "So that’s what Tana was worrying about." Stoll said. "You don't n-.ee a thing to Colons! Carradlne, Yes, he raised you, arid he educated you after a fashion. But >i bitter bread he gave you to cat, And you Just about-worked your way, through medical school. All the lyip you ever got from him you phid for in sweat before I“>U left Hammer." ’ Ives said sharply, .**You seem to Know a great deal about it." Stoll gestured toward the window. "In my hours off. I sit there. I are wMt goes on in Tamerlane Quite a name for a cowtnwn, isn t it? There’s! my balcony seat *to this section bf the world. The fest, of the lime I'm behind a counter. People talk. 1 listen. And I alway ; , had my cyf oa you. I.w; Mayd< I tclt sorry for you when you were • yoiingetfr Mhsl?*’ were r. ,>rui watching I'm proud nf pv /To /;« CoMtiUujftJ
