Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 213, Decatur, Adams County, 10 September 1953 — Page 11

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 40, IBM

Hamburger Sentence NEW HAVEN, Cohn., UP—Earl Eastman walked int<> a restaurant wolfed down 12 hamburgers, then told the proprietor i* w** broke. He went to jail tor |5 days.

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Kansas Plans For Big Nitrogen Plant Fertilizer Plant Planned By Co-op LAWRENCE, Kan. UP—Taking form in the lush lowlands of the Ka>w River valley of eastern Kan* sas is a 415,000,000 nitrogen fertilizer plant -r- the largest single project ever undertaken by farmer* through their co-operatives. Completion is scheduled for the summer of 1954. The plant, being built by Consumers Co-pperative Association, which serves 1,700 members co-ops of nine midwestern states, is designed to produce annually 83,000,000 tons of ammonium nitrate, 13,200 tons of anhydrous ammonia (liquid) and 13,200 tons of 40 percent nitrogen solutions for use in mixed fertilizers. European Component* Interest in the plant, which .will occupy part of the 374-acre site east of Lawrence, began with realization of nitrogen .fertilizer’s efficiency in increasing cifop yields—pips its scarcity and high price. A demonstration farm is being developed on that area of the tract which will not be needed for the fertilizer plant. The farm will provide demonstrations of what various kinds of fertilizer will do to improve crops. "Some of the major units of the plant will come from Europe. The highly technical non-moving parts of the nitric acid plant (burners, heat exchangers, vessels, towers and others) are being fabricated by a Hamburg, Germany, company. They are scheduled for shipment here about Dec. 1.

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Co-operative Distribution The Messer air plant, which “fractionates” air, separating it into nitrogen, oxygen and other gases, also is being made in Germany. \ The ainmonia-synthesis unit is being fabricated in Italy. Here the interhational aspect deepens. The unit involves a patented process owned by a French firm, the Casale process, and there are French engineers on the job in Italy. American firms are, of course, supplying vital sections of the: plant. An Olean, N, Y. company will furnish the compressors for the nitric acid unit. The CooperBessemer compressors and gas diesel engines for the ammonia unit are being built at Mt. Vernon, 0., nad Grove City, Pa. K The plant will take nitrogen from the air—air, water and natural gases will be its raw materials. The output will be distributed to farmers through their local co-operatives. Safe Deposit FORT WORTH. Tex., UP — Martha Hayes left her billfold on a balcony seat while attending the Central Texas Conference at the* Methodist church. She found it the next day exactly where she had left it —money and all. If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Add. It brings results.

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,— \ ■ B ' ■ -A % Wk wlßil * Jk * IIL v« nHk'- La ' ; I PIRMf i > n| JP*4 M * <: hdfl W®-. w fl sfefc- ; « \ WB fl fl „'' 4 K '' ■ » FOLLOWING A MEETING (above) with the President in Denver, Secretary of State John Foster Dulles (right), tells newsmen President Eisenhower reassured him about his foreign policy views and expressed no displeasure “whatsoever” at Dulles’ recent remarks about Trierte, the German elections and India. (International)

Juke Heist COUNCIL BLUFFS, la., L’P — When a storm knocked out electricity and plunged Lane’s Case hrtu 1 twriHiWß. "wumwue '■ipma* 'Utt • the back panel of the juke box and took |2.

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CHAPTER THIRTEEN i I s BENDING low, Manning held the lantern close to the ground. In this manner he circled. His inryestigation took him up the trail to the ridge between the coulees, and then he came back to where Laura waited by the creek. **l think I’ve got it,” he said, the tracks run all over each other. A horseman came here, ’ left his mount up on the hogback and walked down to Packrat. The t two of them climbed the ridge together afterwards and rode oft on the hor«e. w " J •‘Torgin,* she said firmly. He shook his head. “Torgin was in town.” ° I his men then.” > "Maybe.” They climbed back into the other coulee, but here Manning swung southward, saying, “Come along.” They trudged the coulee to its far end, where Manning had left his tethered horse. He led the mount back and put it in the wrecked corral He set down the lantern, not really needing It for anything but close-up work with the moon so bright, and lifted enough of the poles back into place so that the corral would hold. This did not take him long. Laura watched him silently. He said, “You could have done this sund kept your team here. 1 * “I thought of it,” she said. “The team’s better off where it is. That way, if someone came upon the wagon and horses, they still might not have found the dugout. But if they found the horses here, they’d wonder who was in the dugout.” “Smart enough," he conceded. He went inside the dugout and put the lantern on the table: he sloshed the lantern absently to see how much coal-oil remained. ' Enough. i “That man Ruxton?” Laura asked. “Is he your partner?” Manning grimaced. “He was for a while tonight. He’s after the bounty Weils Fargo put up for that holdup-man. I don’t think Slade Ruxton trusts anyone very tiur.” “And do you?” ' !■ He shrugged. “I’m sorry I bit and scratched you yesterday.” She made her blue <syee soften, but he guessed her contrition was genuine. “X thought you were Torgin’s new man. We’ve heard that there is one, tmt he never shows in town. Hi < - ’X ■ - ■■iJ ' , '

Hot Coffee DETROIT, UP —. Edward Tewsley and his wife were presented a resolution of appreciation from for serving 500 cups ot coffee to firemen who battled a five-alarm fire near their restaurant.

"Fellow with a pair of blue eyes like ice?” "I've never seen him, not close anyway.” “You believe that I’m Cole Manning don’t you?" “You look like the statue, now that I’ve had a chance to study you. And we’ve known you were coming. Yes, 1 believe you. Why don’t you go back to the Marias where you belong?" “Why don’t you tell me why you framed it up with Ma Hibbard to bust Packrat out of jail? I’ll bet the whole scheme was yours." "You wouldn’t understand.” “Try me!” She shook her head. “You work hard at being a very grim young man. I think I know, just from having read the papers, why you’re so determined to break that old case. You want to stand higher than Flint Manning. I didn’t know him, of course, but I’ve heard Gramp talk about him. 1 don’t think you’ve got enough rawhide to outdo your father. And that’s why it sours you just to think about him.” This appraisal struck close enough to home to anger him. “And you’re a very smart young lady Vvho thinks she can go skylarking around breaking people out of jail. I don’t know whether to turn you over my knee or haul you back to Mannington and lock you up." She canted her head and smiled at him. “And what evidence have you against me, except your own word?”* J He thought about that with exasperation until a bigger thought grew from the first, and he snapped his fingers. “I’ve got it!" he cried. "I saw a glimmer of the truth when Slade Ruxton told me you were Doc Brownlee’s daughter. If Purdy got dragged off, to Slash 7, Torgin will try to make him talk. It’s evidence Torgin wants. If Purdy can be made to admit that you engineered tiis escape, then Torgin can put Doc Brownlee over a barret You \ see, I know that your granddad stands between Torgin and his packing-plant ‘‘'Thorne" ■ i \ “How do you know that?” He grinned. “I eavesdropped. I put my ear to a keyhole while Torgin was trying to intimidate Doc.”

Surgeons Will Hold Meeting In Chicago 1 Most Important In Surgeons' History | CHICAGO, UP—'More than 11,000 surgeons and other medical specialists will 1 meet here OcL 5 to 9 for what is billed a* the biggest and most important meeting of surgeons in history. The meeting, 39th annual Clinical congress of the American College of Surgeons, will offer attending doctors post - graduate color television programs, medical courses, forums, panel discussions motion pictures and exhibits on new surgical procedures. The congress will have its headquarters in the Conrad Hilton Ho- ' tel. Surgical procedures demonstraj ted at Albert Merrit Billings Hospital on the University of Chicago campus will be televised to the t': headquarters under sponsorship of a Philadelphia drug laboratory. Harold L. Foss, president of the College of Surgeons, will speak on the college’s growing obligations and responsibilities. New President Sir James Paterson Ross, vicepresident of the Royal College of Surgeons of England, will deliver • the Bth Martin Memorial Lecture. 1 At a on the closing 1 evening of the congress,» Dr. Fred r. W._ Rankin of. Lexingtoq, Ky., will - he installed as president' of tWe J | college for 1954 ’and will speak on

She nodded. “You’re right, as far as you’ve gone. And now what are you going to do?” His grin broadened. “We are going to get a good night’s sleep," he said. “You in the bunk, and me here by the doorway to make sure you don’t walk in your sleep. When we’re fresh as a pair of mountain flowers, we’U go riding. Once I’ve got you safely locked up tn the Mannington jail, I’ll pay a little business call on Mack Torgin and show him my bright new badge. After we’ve discussed the weather and the crops, I’ll ask him if he wishes to continue obstructing justice by holding Purdy prisoner. Then I’ll point out that he can relieve himself of a burden by turning Packrat over to me. Howrdoes that sound?” She shook her head; she looked very tired. “You’ll keep hunting and hunting, I know. Till you come to the end of the trail. And then It will be too late for you to see that you should never have started.” “What kind of riddle Is that?” "Cole, go back to the Marias!” “Better get to bed,” he said. He left the dugout and went to the decrepit old barn and found the blankets Packrat Purdy had used. He gathered these up. By the time he returned to the dugout, the lantern had been extinguished, and he heard the soft movement of Laura in the bunk. He was stirred by her nearness and thought this an odd thing, remembering that she was a part of that invisible wall that barred him everywhere in the Bootjack. He spread the blankets by the doorway and shucked out of his boots and chape and unlatched his gun belt. He climbed into the blankets and lay In the darkness and said at last, softly, "Laura?” “Yes?” “Why don’t you tell me why it was so important to get Packrat out of jail? You wanted him gone before I showed up to talk to him. Isn’t that it?” She sighed. “Maybe it was because Flint Manning and Doc Brownlee were very good friends long ago.” "What’s that got to do with it?" A long silence. Then: “Good night. Cole.” \ /To Be Continued) _____ L ■ . i

“The Responsibility of a Heritage of Idealimn.” The subject of the speeches by Foss and Rankin indicated that they might take note of a growing rift between the College of Surgeons and other medical organization* — notably the American Medical Association —in a controversy over medical practices. Several outstanding members of the college have drawn criticism from other physicians for issuing warnings against “ghost surgery’’ by surgeons unknown to thf' patients and against physicians who receive kickback fees from sun geons they recommend to par tients. . I. - jl-.r If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Add. It brings results.

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PAGE THREE-A

All In The Family ELLENSBURG, Wa*h., UP—Mr. and Mr*. Roger Martin of Seattle were having an argument a* they drove through here. She got out of the car and signed an assault complaint against him. His SIOO fine was paid—by Mrs. Martin. Trade in a good Town — Decatur If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Add. It brings results.

1951 FORD Custom 8 Tudor / - .Heater A Radio , $1295.00 SAYLORS