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John William Tuohy lives in Washington DC

Case solved: Jane Doe #40 no longer.



Judy Gifford would have been 57 years old today. She was 14 years old when she died in San Francisco in 1976. A teenager named Donald McIsaac found the badly decomposed body while digging for turtle eggs. His dog discovered a hand protruding from the sand behind a pumping station. The body was buried six inches below the ground. Judy had been strangled to death and had been buried between four to six weeks before she was found. She was wearing gold earrings and a Timex watch and a gold chain with an owl pendant was in her pocket. She was fully clothed. Other than that, the police didn’t know who she was, so she became Jane Doe #40 for the next 40 years.

Police later established that Judy had moved to San Francisco in the summer of 1976 to live with her father, his wife and her two half-siblings in Park Merced. Then she disappeared and her young brother William was told that she had returned to New Jersey to live with her aunt, Ogee Gifford, who had previously been caring for her.

Back in Southampton New Jersey where Judy came from originally, the aunt never changed her phone number in case her niece ever called. Some twelve years later, Judy’s brother William, then 18 years old, visited his aunt in New Jersey and learned that Judy had never returned to live with her. Shin, who lives in Maryland, called the New Jersey State Police and reported Judy’s case.

New Jersey State Police detectives worked with detectives in San Francisco for two years in using DNA samples from collected from Gifford’s aunt when Judy’s half-brother, William Shin, reported her missing to the San Francisco police Department. To confirm the ID, Judy's aunt gave the police a photo of her niece wearing the same pendant.

“Just your average girl next door”

 

"My life could have been a lot fuller. You know, I was never really super-happily married, I didn't have a big family that I wanted, I didn't get to experience . . . I don't know. I've always thought of myself as just an everyday kind of a person, and I made myself into a 'star' and that's how I had to live. But there also comes a time when you've gotta say 'Thank you, goodnight.' I'm a little bitter. I think things should have gone differently in some instances that didn't. But you know what? I had a great run, I had a good time, and a lot of people are making a lot of money off my name. Maybe I'll open up a geriatric home for old porno stars." Marilyn Chambers




Marilyn Chambers, one of the world’s first and last porn stars was born Marilyn Ann Briggs and Marc Lane in Westport, the youngest child of William Briggs, an advertising executive, and Virginia Briggs, a nurse. For all given purposes, or at least based on what the public knows, her early life was comfortably upper middle class and mundane. Her older sister and a younger brother followed a normal, predictable path into adulthood and Marilyn’s early years were similar. She graduated from Staples High School, where she was a cheerleader and a member of the Staples Players, the schools above average acting troupe and landed parts in several school musicals. She was also an accomplished gymnast and champion diver at the Patterson Club.

She began to skip classes and journey down to New York to audition for acting and modeling jobs. Against all odds she was hired to play the role of Robert Klein's girlfriend in The Owl and the Pussycat, a big dollar film production starring Barbra Streisand and George Segal.

The Wilhelmina modeling agency picked her up and got her a photo shoot as the young mother of an infant on the box of Proctor & Gamble's Ivory Snow, which sold itself as "99 44/100% pure" and more work came from Clairol and Coca-Cola.

At 19 Marilyn Chambers looked like a girl who had the world on a string, but all was not well. According to friends, her home life was empty. Her parents were deeply involved in their own lives. She was alone a lot. Her father was a womanizer who carried on openly with several women including a neighbor. He eventually left his wife for the mother of one of Marilyn's classmates but remarried again after the other women died from a brain aneurysm.

Marilyn began to unwind little by little. In her junior year, she was tossed off the cheerleading squad for drinking. She became desperate for attention.

"She had” an old boyfriend recalled “an overwhelming need for attention and great gobs of it. I mean, she just doted on anyone who paid any attention to her at all. And, of course, it was inevitable that the male animal was going to look at something so young and nubile. Anyway, we went to a party one night, and she went off with somebody else, and that was pretty much the last time I was with her."

Her role in The Owl and the Pussycat got her an actors card in the Screen Actors Guild and in 1971 Marilyn and friends from Westport drove out to California where the films are made. Marilyn found her way to San Francisco

What probably brought her San Francisco and not LA was a film she had done in 1970. Chambers got a role, a nude scene, in a legitimate if low-budget film, called Together. appearing under her real name, Marilyn Briggs. The film was directed by Sean Cunningham (Who later did Friday the 13th and Spring Break) and was filmed primarily around his house in Westport.

Reportedly, the porn producers Artie and Jim Mitchell saw the film, were knocked by Chambers wholesome Cybil Shepherd looks and offered her a film they were planning called Behind the Green Door. They also changed her name to Chambers. The fact that she was already The Ivy Snow Girl, seen on hundreds of thousands if not millions of soap boxes, was extra icing on the cake.

In Marilyn’s version of what happened "I moved to San Francisco thinking it was the entertainment capital of the world, which it is indeed not." She met Doug Chapin while he was playing bagpipes for money on the streets. They married just a few weeks later. There were no other film offers after that and Marilyn held down a series of odd jobs that included topless model and nude dancer in a men’s club. One day she answered a casting call advertisement in the San Francisco Chronicle for a "major motion picture" being made by the Mitchell brothers.

She said that at the audition she realized it was a part in a pornographic film and was about to leave when the Mitchell

noticed her resemblance to Cybill Shepherd and talked her into taking the lead role in the film, which she did after negotiating a contract for $25,000, plus a percentage of the profits. The film cost about $50,000 to make and grossed well over $25 million, although Marilyn saw pitifully little of that cash.

In the film, she played the silent role of a woman kidnapped and forced to perform sexual acts with men and women. She was 19 years old when Behind the Green Door was released to sold-out theaters. Only a few months before Deep Throat had been released shooting Linda Lovelace to dubious fame. It was the beginning of the short-lived, so-called, Golden Age of Porn. Ivory Snow sales went through the roof.

A high school friend who was visiting Chambers in California right after Green Door was completed recalled "When I walked into the apartment, she said, 'Come here, I've got to show you something. And she opened this envelope with the proofs of the Ivory Snow girl and the check she had gotten, and she said, 'They are gonna shit when they find out what I'm doing.' They put those boxes on the shelves literally when she got that check and she went out and bought all of them from her local grocery store. I mean, she had boxes of Ivory Snow until she died. I think she knew it would be a huge controversy."

Procter & Gamble replaced her photograph immediately.

In 1974, at the height of her of porn popularity, Chambers divorced Chapin and married Chuck Traynor, who was recently divorced from Linda Lovelace. For the next ten years, Traynor acted as her business manager and agent who took half of her film profits as a commission.

Traynor had an awful reputation in the business, most of it gained from his former wife, porn star Linda Lovelace who claimed Traynor stole her money, placed guns to her and viciously beat her although Chambers never reported any bad behavior from him.

Traynor did make attempts to bring Marilyn closer to the mainstream. In 1976 he arranged for Marilyn’s Playboy shoot and in 1976 she had some limited exposure with the disco single Benihana.

In 1979, Marilyn was chosen to play a role in the mainline film City Blues, about a young hooker defended by a down and out lawyer, played by the magnificent actor Rip Torn. The film was to be produced and directed by Nicholas Ray (Rebel Without a Cause) but by then the 68-year-old Ray was too addicted to drugs and drink to complete the project.

A year before that Jack Nicholson and Art Garfunkel (Below) brought her in to talk about a role in Goin' South. According to Chambers when she arrived for the interview Nicholson and Garfunkel asked for cocaine and wanted to know if her orgasms in Behind the Green Door. Furious, Chambers stormed out of the meeting, or so she says.

She was briefly considered for a lead part in Hardcore, opposite George C. Scott, but the casting director determined that she was too wholesome looking for the part.

"I thought,” Chambers said “that there was a chance to cross over. Boy, was I wrong."

"The paradox was” she added “that, as a result of Green Door, Hollywood blackballed me, [Green Door] became a very high-grossing film...But, to a lot of people, it was still a dirty movie; for me to do anything else, as an actress, was totally out of the question. I became known as a porno star, and that type of labeling really hurt me. It hurt my chances of doing anything else".

In 1985, while making public appearances, she was arrested twice for allowing audience members to touch her with their hands and mouths during her show. By then Chambers was well on her way to becoming addicted to alcohol and cocaine. Five years later she married William Taylor, part-owner, and driver in a freight trucking company. The couple met in rehab. They divorced in 1994.

By 2000, Chambers world was completely changed. Chuck Traynor was dead from a heart attack. In 1991, Jim Mitchell shot and killed his brother Artie and went to prison. He died in 2007. She still made porn films, but the big dollar days were over, and Marilyn was forced to hustle work as a nursing assistant in a retirement home.

She signed autographs at porn conventions and to keep herself in the public eye, Chambers ran for Vice President in 2004 (Personal Choice Party) and in 2008 (Boston Tea Party)

She would spend almost three decades battling alcoholism and drug addiction and waiting for her chance to break out into legitimate film. She and her third husband, Bill Taylor, shared custody of their 17-year-old daughter, McKenna Marie Taylor, and to be closer to her, Marilyn leased a mobile home outside of Santa Clarita, where McKenna was living with her father.

Money was tight. Years before she had bought dozens of boxes of Ivory Snow that pictured her on the cover. Chambers signed them and sold them on eBay. So, using the name Marilyn Taylor, she took a job as a clerk in a local car BMW dealership making about $1,200 a week before taxes.

There were no men in her life. “I felt” a girlfriend of hers said later “that a few people in the later years took advantage of her just to say, 'I just slept with Marilyn Chambers,' and led her on and then blew her off, and she was hurt, really hurt."

Just before she died Chambers auditioned in New York for The Deep Throat Sex Scandal, a play about the making of the film, Deep Throat, and its obscenity trial. She was hired on to play the role of Shana Babcock, Linda Lovelace’s best friend who constantly advises the Lovelace character to leave the abusive Chuck Traynor. Marilyn planned to quit her clerk's job at the car dealership after she got another part, in a small part in a low-budget film, Solitaire, playing the role of a Rhode Island cop. She wouldn’t live to see the finished production.

On April 14, McKenna Marie Taylor, Marilyn’s 17-year-old daughter from her third marriage to trucking executive Tom Taylor, found Marilyn’s body in her trailer in Santa Clarita. A brain aneurysm killed her. She died alone and had been dead for at least two days before she was found. She was 56 years old, ten days away from her 57th birthday.

A memorial service was held, attended by at least 200 people, most of them from the Alcoholics Anonymous and Narcotics Anonymous groups she belonged to. A few days after she was cremated someone apparently broke into Marilyn’s trailer and ransacked it. Files, her will, and jewelry seem to have been taken. Aside from a $20,000 life insurance policy for her daughter, Chambers died broke. Her mobile home was returned to the dealer; her economy car was nearly worthless.

Her ashes were scattered at sea.







Mister Sycowski

 




In 1934 a dapper character named Abraham (Sometimes he referred to himself as Alex) Sycowski showed up at the Polish border claiming to be returning Pole from the United States. The Poles refused him entry because he lacked a US passport or any other solid identification.

Sycowski then went to Paris where police reported that he had set up an opium/ morphine trade ring however he fled to Austria in 1935 before he could be arrested. However, the Austrians locked him up because he had entered the country on fake Canadian passport.

While awaiting his trial, Sycowski spread a story that in the United States underworld he was known as "Kid Tiger", that he had been a bootlegger in Chicago with distilleries in Canada. He said he was close friends with Al Capone and Jack "Legs" Diamond and that he was sitting on several million dollars that belonged to them which he was guarding in deposit in an Amsterdam bank. He eventually he added to the story by saying he was a half brother to New York goon Benjamin “Bugsy” Siegel.

Another rumor had it that Sycowski had financial connections to Mussolini's Fascist party and was underwriting the Dictators army in Africa turned out to be at least somewhat true. And he did have money. Border guards found $2.5 million in Jewelry and about $5 million in Swiss francs in his luggage.

The little that is known about Sycowski is that he was born on July 13, 1892, in Wielgolyn, Poland, the son of a Jewish feldspar. The family moved to Chicago in 1898 and he may possibly have been a booze smuggler.

While it was all very interesting, the Austrians locked him up seven months, after which he was booted out of the country for Romania but the Romanians refused him entry. He did manage to sneak into France and lived in Paris for a while until he was deported in 1937 to Gdańsk in Poland. After that he disappeared from public view, never to be heard from again. He was more than probably executed by the Nazi’s.

 

Words writers should use

 


Jubilate means "to feel joy or great delight." It is an old-fashioned synonym of rejoice that still brings a smile to those who encounter it.

Adventitious comes from Latin adventīcius, meaning "coming from outside," which, in turn, is from advenīre, "to arrive." The verb is the source of other English words, including advent, adventure, and avenue.



Try it.

 


Just keep showing up. Most people quit. 



The Sad Tale of the Hilton Sisters

 



Daisy and Violet Hilton were conjoined twins (joined by their hips and buttocks; they shared blood circulation and were fused at the pelvis but shared no major organs.)

who leaped to fame on the vaudeville scene and were the subject of a series of exploitation films like Freaks and Chained for Life. It was believed that an operation to separate them would certainly lead to the death of one or both of the twins.

The girls were born in England in 1908 to an unmarried barmaid who exhibited them in Europe while they were still children, and toured the United States sideshow, vaudeville and American burlesque circuits in the 1920s and 1930s.

The mother, who believed the girls birth defects was punishment for her wicked ways, called the girls “The monsters” and sold the children to her employer, a mean hustler named Mary Hilton. Hilton put the girls on display in the read room of her tavern and charged customers two cents to see where the children were conjoined. A number of Hiltons various boyfriend and lover, whom the girls were required to call “Sir”, physically and emotionally abused the pair.

Hilton took the girls on tour across the US. According to the sisters' autobiography, Mary Hilton, their road manager, along with her husband and daughter kept the twins in strict control with physical abuse. “When we displeased her” they wrote “she whipped our backs and shoulders with the buckle end of that belt."

When Hilton died, while on tour in the states, the twins were “bequeathed” to Mary's daughter Edith and her husband Meyer Rothbaum, a former balloon salesman. The twins referred to the Rothbaum’s as their "owners," who never, ever, let them out of their sights, even sleeping in the same room with them at night. If the girls complained they were threatened with being left on their own or with being institutionalized. In their early shows, the girls appeared with other freak acts like “The Turtle Man”, “The Human Block head” and “The Monkey Girl”

As teenagers, in the 1920s, they appeared on the vaudeville stage with mega stars of the day like Charlie Chaplin and Bob Hope. At the height of their success, the sister were earning $5,000 a week, an incredible amount of money at the time, but the Rothbaum’s stole every cent the girls earned. A court inquiry later showed that the act made $3,800 a week and that the girl, on record anyway, were paid $100 a week, although the sister argued that they never even that small amount. The Rothbaum’s argued that the girls travelling expense and school tutors cost an amazing $100,000 a year, or about a million dollars today.

Finally, in January of 1931, the sisters fled their captures and sued the Rothbaum’s to get out of their contracts and demanded $100,000 in damages, arguing that they had been sold into bondage and that the Rothbaum’s had cost them an estimated $2 million dollars and the court agreed. An accounting of the girls earning was done under court order

Once free of the Rothbaum’s, they dyed their hair blonde, wore tighter, shorter dresses (Although they now wore different outfits from each other) and went on the road as "The Hilton Sisters' Revue". When vaudeville died, they hit the burlesque circuit.

The sister could be charming, warm and witty and easily attracted a string of lovers. The girls allegedly had dozens of affairs. Since they had no physical privacy between themselves, the magician Harry Houdini taught them how to mentally tune each other out while one had sex and the other didn’t. One of their messier affairs was with a married man had them dragged into an ugly divorce. Daisy tried to marry the musician Jack Lewis, (or possibly musician Maurice Lambert) but 21 states refused to grant him a marriage license.

In 1932, the twins agreed to appear in films like Freaks, but they were aging, their act was old, and they began to struggle to get by. There was a publicity stunt marriage in 1936 to a gay actor named James Moore and another publicity stunt marriage to gay dancer Harold Estep, in 1941.

In the 1950s they opened a snack bar in Miami, but it didn't survive and in 1951 the sister starred in another exploitation film called Chained for Life.

In 1961, the girl appeared at a drive-in Monroe, North Carolina. Their tour manager took the money for the appearance and left the sister there, penniless, to make it on their own. With no other choice, they took a job at a local grocery store, the Park and Shop. The store manager put them behind a counter to weight vegetables and had the counter rebuilt to fit their physical problems. The store employees pitched in and bough the girl three dresses since all they owned were stage clothes. The sisters rented a small cottage from the church they attended and otherwise settled into a peaceful routine.

On January 4, 1969, after they failed to report to work for several days, the girls boss called the police who entered the sister tiny apartment and found them both dead from the Hong Kong flu. Daisy died first; Violet died between two and four days later. They were dead on the floor over the heating grate, possibly huddled there for warmth in their final hours. They had just turned 60 years old.

A few weeks before they died, a fan asked the girls if they would like to his collection of photos of them from their days on the stage. 'No,' they said, 'we want to forget those days, forever.' "

TIED UP FOR TOMBSTONE by W. C. Tuttle A cowboy story

 



“Lodestone, you flea-bitten, long-eared ancestor of a jack-rabbit, take a look at the best place the Lord ever made, and rejoice with me.”

Lodestone wiggles his ears, kicks at a hoss-fly, narrowly missing my head, and looks with sad eyes down at the city of Piperock. Then he goes to sleep. Which shows that a burro ain’t got no finer feelings.

We been away for quite a while—me and Lodestone. We pilgrims up the Bitter Root range to where old Blue Nose sticks into the clouds, crosses over and pilgrims back the other side, all of which takes up several months, and don’t net me nothing but blisters and blasphemy.

I misses “Magpie” Simpkins a heap, and I welcomes the day when I can shake the hand of that long, loose-jointed hombre. Magpie is one of the leading citizens of Piperock, and until a few months ago, my pardner.

When I left to make my fortune he was setting there in his office—Magpie is the sheriff—and wondering how he can square things with the populace to get reelected.

He’s of the lodge-pole type, and wears a goodly length of hair on his upper lip. He pleads with me not to leave him but for once in my life I turns a deaf ear to his siren voice, and herds my burro out of hearing.

Piperock ain’t what a stranger would call a paradise on earth, and she don’t qualify for the milk and honey, but she’s a man’s town—all up and down the street.

Me and Lodestone pilgrims through the dust up to “Buck” Masterson’s saloon, and I goes inside. Buck and “Tellurium” are there, and they welcomes me like a lost brother. Buck salutes me with the proper ingredients, and we exchanges pleasantries.

After we sort of gets used to each other again Buck hauls out a sheet of paper, and smooths it out on the bar.

“Take a look at that, Ike,” says he. “There’s something new.”

I sizes her up. It’s what resembles a newspaper—in some respects—but I can’t seem to read it none to speak of. The label across the top resembles this—

TOLIP KCOREPIP EHT

The rest of the page is smears and blots.

“Looks like a Russian proclamation, Buck,” says I. “Where did it come from?”

“Right here, Ike; that ex-pardner of yours published it.”

“Magpie?” I asks, and they both nods. “That’s his first edition,” replies Buck. “He took over the office when a few of the local boys ran the editor across the border for slandering the community. That paper invades this here country about a month after you leaves, and she runs high along until the editor gets a call to uplift the community. Yesterday he beat the posse across the line, and Magpie gets out his maiden sheet. This here feller speaks feelingly of lawlessness, and even goes so far as to make personal remarks about our morals. What he said about the town of Paradise was awful.”

“Is Magpie still sheriff?” I asks.

“Uh-huh,” admits Tellurium, who ain’t friendly with Magpie. “Abe Anderson was running against him, and had a grand chance to win, but Abe’s old weakness crops up and spoils things.”

“Abe seen a chance to run off some Circle Star cows,” explains Buck. “He runs foul of Magpie and three of the Circle Star punchers, and when they gets through convincing him that, ‘Thou shalt not steal,’ he ain’t in shape to use votes. Magpie races alone and is elected by five votes.”

“Well, well,” says I, “a few months sure does change the map. I’ll go down and see if that benighted son of a lodge-pole don’t need some help.”

I prods Lodestone down the street to where I sees a sign, which proclaims there’s a newspaper office. I hitches my rolling stock and goes inside. Magpie is there. All I can see is the bottom of his boots, the seat of his pants and his elbows—the rest of him is behind a newspaper, as he leans back in a chair, with his feet on the table.

I leans against the table and rolls a smoke. He glances at me, switches his cigaret over to the other side of his mouth, and goes on trying to read. I say “trying to read” for the reason that he’s got a paper he printed himself.

Pretty soon he yawns and lays the paper across his knees.

“Ike,” says he, “that’s some paper.”

“Some ink, too, if that’s anything to brag about,” I replies. “When did you learn to write Russian? Maybe it’s Chinook with the blind staggers, Magpie, but anyway she’s a terrible language. What does them big letters at the top proclaim?”

“That? Huh! The Piperock Pilot!”

“Won’t the letters run the other way, Magpie?”

“I reckon they would, Ike, but how in —— am I going to know what she reads? It’s a danged sight easier for the public to read the print backwards than it is for me to read the type thataway. I’m glad to see yuh, Ike.”

“Still follering the line of least resistance, eh, Magpie? I’m glad to see you, too.”

“Accumulate anything on your trip, Ike?”

“Wood-ticks, fool-hens and a growing conviction that rich rock is scarce. How’s things at the sheriff’s office?”

“Tolable, Ike. Won by a narrow majority. I reckon if Abe had ’a’ lived we’d needed a recount. Lot of folks voted for him after he was dead.”

“They would,” I agrees. “Lot of folks around here ain’t got no more ambition than to vote for a corpse. How comes it you’re a editor? Has all the bad-men died off or has a moral wave hit Piperock?”

“I always been a critter of circumstance, Ike,” he states, unfolding his long legs, and easing his gun handy-like. “I always been a disciple of advance, and I’ve worn all the skin off my shoulder trying to give the wheels of progress a lift. At times them wheels have slipped and sprained my immediate future, but I never peeped.

“When this here misguided editor fades across the horizon, me, being sheriff, appropriates this here plant and opines to run it as a public institution. There’s twenty-five sheets of paper left and one can of ink. My first edition takes twelve sheets, and I hereby claims that a man, without no experience, what can rise to the occasion and put out a paper like that is a credit to the community.”

“Didn’t you have trouble finding all them letters, Magpie?”

“Trouble? Say, the ends of my fingers are so tender I can hold out my hands and feel the sun slide behind the hills. The next publication is problematical, Ike. I’m short of material, but I only figures on one more issue. I got a article set up, and I can’t publish until the time is ripe.”

“Something special?”

“Uh-huh. ‘Tombstone’ Todd’s obituary.”

“From Wilier Crick?” I asks, and Magpie nods.

“Uh-huh. Him and ‘Cactus’ Collins comes over here to help elect Abe Anderson, being as Abe was a relative. When Abe departs this here vale of tears they up and proclaims they’re a pair of howling wolves, and that they’re a permanent fixture around here until such a time as they lays me on my back and gestures over me with a spade. Awful pair of gobblers, Ike.”

“Why not an obituary for Cactus, too, Magpie?”

“He’s hiding out until such a time as his stummick is normal, Ike. He horns in on me yesterday, and gets pessimistic to my face. I’m busy on that obituary and don’t like to be interrupted, so I beats him on the draw, accepts his gun as a subscription and induces him to eat a bucket of paste. Awful smelling mess, Ike. I’d opine that as far as my future horoscope is concerned his lips are sealed.”

“Thirteen sheets and one obituary will be something to print,” says I. “Has Tombstone made any advances?”

“Once. I was standing over there by the window, holding up one of them dinguses what contains type, when a bullet comes along and hits her plumb center. She collapses right there and ruins things. Some of that lead type enters my bosom, and for the space of a foot square on my manly chest I looks like a smallpox patient. This idea of being a man of letters ain’t no prosaic pastime, Ike.”

Just then “Scenery” Sims darkens our doorway. Scenery is knee-high to a short Injun, and his voice hankers for oil. He looks mean-like at me and Magpie, and chaws some industrious. Pretty soon he expectorates copiously on the floor, and orates—

“Want to quit taking the paper.”

Magpie snaps out his gun and covers Scenery.

“Get down on your knees and wipe out that —— spot!” snorts Magpie. “What do yuh think this is—a corral?”

“I—uh—” begins Scenery, but the gun don’t waver, so he takes the handkerchief off his neck, and scrubs our floor.

“This is a newspaper office, Scenery,” states Magpie. “You can’t start your oration with a cloud-burst in here. Sabe? What you got against the paper, and why for don’t yuh wish it no more?”

“I can’t read her,” he squeaks. “She’s too backward to suit me. Of course I—uh—well, send her along, and I’ll—uh—do the best I can. I got to go now.”

He slips out with his hat in his hand, and lopes off up the street.

“That’s business, Ike,” laughs Magpie. “I’m going to make ’em like it.”

“When yuh had the drop on him yuh ought to ’a ’collected in advance for another year,” says I. “You sure need a manager, Magpie, for The Piperock Pilot, Limited—to thirteen sheets and a death notice.”

“Howdy, gents,” states a voice at the door. “Is this the only newspaper in town?”

That person is a novelty in cowland. He stands there, exuding perfume and prosperity from his Sunday clothes. We looks him over, from his shiny shoes to his hard hat, wonders at his pink cheeks, which match his necktie, and both nods.

“You answers your own question, stranger,” states Magpie. “We sure got a monopoly on all news hereabouts. Want to subscribe?”

He ambles over and sets down on a stool and looks the place over. He takes off his hat, balances it on his knee, and produces some sheets of paper.

“What’s your amusement rates?” he asks. “Half-page—maybe full.”

Magpie rolls a fresh smoke and studies the feller.

“Well,” he drawls, “the person who operates here ahead of me makes a fixed price of three dollars for six months, but I don’t sabe no case in which he split the size. I don’t guarantee to amuse nobody. I’ll be honest with yuh, though. This here paper is on its last legs, but I’ll danged near guarantee one more issue, and if yuh hankers for it I’ll put yuh down for one copy at four-bits.”

“You misunderstood me,” he grins, “I mean advertising rates. I’m ahead of ‘Uncle Tom’s Cabin.’”

He puts his hat back on his head, and shuffles them sheets of paper:

“We are bringing to your town the greatest aggregation of stars that ever glowed over one set of footlights. Two Evas, two Topsies, three fee-rocious bloodhounds and eight—”

Splang!

The side window spills its panes over the place, and this person’s hat flips off his head, and lands in my lap, while a chunk of lead bores a neat hole in the wall behind the stranger. He freezes right there.

Magpie slips his gun across his lap, settles down a little lower in his chair, and lights his cigaret. I hands the hat back to its owner, and slides my chair a few inches further back.

“Eight what?” asks Magpie.

“Ca-ca-cakes of ice,” he quavers, examining his hat. “My ——! Was that a—a—bullet?”

Magpie nods and scratches his chin.

“Bullet?” he wonders again. “Did—did somebody shoot at me?”

“Nope,” says Magpie. “At me. What yuh going to do with the ice?”

He looks at Magpie for a minute, and then gasps—

“At a—a time like this?”

He tucks his hat under his arm, sneaks to the door, and goes around the corner so fast his coat simply cracks.

Magpie slips his gun loose and spins the cylinder, hitches up his belt and yawns:

“Ike, I ain’t got nothing to prove who it was but I has the feeling that Tombstone is going too danged far. There’s such a thing as personal animosity, but when yuh bust into a man’s business and cause him financial loss it’s time to start a probe. That show person was about to help us pay our overhead expenses, but now he’s gone gun-shy.

“I hereby deputizes you to operate this here plant, while I fulfils the obligations of my oath concerning public nuisances. You got plenty of ammunition, Ike?”

“I ain’t no editor, Magpie,” I objects. “I can’t even sign my own name so folks can read it.”

“Sign mine,” says he. “You’re editor pro tempore. Sabe?” And then he slips out of the door.

I looks around, casual-like, places my .41 beside me on a chair, and sets down out of line with any window or door. It’s warm in there, and there’s a funny smell about the place. I had several scoops of gall and wormwood in Buck’s place, and the combination woos sleep in copious gobs. My sombrero slips over my face, and I sleep.

Sudden-like I wakes, and believe me she’s a rude awakening. Somebody kicks the chair out from under me, and proceeds to knead my abdomen with their knees, toes, fingers, thumbs and head. When that part is over they turns me on my face and rakes me fore and aft with a pair of long-roweled spurs, while they links their hands in my hair and hammers my forehead on the floor. When I ain’t got more than a glimmer of light left in my system they seems to draw aside and rest.

“There!” I hears a voice state. “Next time yuh prints your danged newspaper you’ll please leave my name out. Sabe? I ain’t no shepherd, and my shirt is as clean as yours!”

“‘Dirty Shirt’ Jones, you’re an assassin,” says I, weak-like.

He pulls my hat off the bridge of my nose and takes a look at me.

“Ike, I’m glad to see yuh back,” says he. “When did yuh get back?”

“Today. Are you the reception committee?”

“Me? Nope. I’m an enraged citizen, Ike. I mistook yuh for the editor.”

“No mistake, Dirty, I’m him.”

Of course I got that .41 in my hands when I makes that statement, and Dirty don’t make no demonstration.

“Take it easy,” I advises. “I ain’t the one you’re sore at. Magpie is the regular editor but he’s down at the jail.”

Dirty chaws for a few seconds, and hitches up his pants:

“Much obliged, Ike. Sorry I licked yuh thataway. Yuh see that paper orates that the population ought to get sanitary—whatever that is. He states that a dirty shirt designates a shepherd—dang his hide! Well, Ike, I gives yuh good afternoon.”

“Good afternoon ain’t much to give a man after you’ve give him ——,” I opines. “But I’ll take it, Dirty, old-timer. I reckon I’ll need everything I can get before I goes to press.”

I sets there and complains bitterly to myself about folks who don’t keep up to date on news, wipes the worst of the ink off my face, and goes back to sleep.

“Slim” Hawkins woke me up. Slim would make a good running-mate for Magpie. He’s built in the same proportions. He’s had a few drinks, and is as serious as a owl.

“Ike,” says he, “take a look at my eyes and see if they’re all right.”

“Little off color but pointing straight, Slim. What’s wrong?”

“Somebody drops a paper at the ranch today, and when I tries to peruse same I finds that I’m left-handed and cross-eyed. I’ve suffered a heap, Ike, and while I hopes for the best I fears the worst. I’d hate to go around looking at things backwards thataway. Might as well learn to read Chinese. Where’s the educated party what operates this here newspaper?”

“He’s—” I begins, but an apparition which I deciphers to be Dirty Shirt, comes in the door.

He seems to have met disaster. His hair has been pawed down over a pair of black eyes, and over his head and under one arm hangs what is left of a framed map of Montana, which adorned Magpie’s office.

He feels painfully in his pockets, takes out three silver dollars, and lays ’em on the table.

“Dirty Shirt Jones—three months,” he states, slow and sad-like.

“Your subscription expired?” I asks, and he nods.

“Uh-huh. I reckon. Everything else has.”

“Better take back some of it,” I advises. “This here paper is about to cease. One more effort cleans the rack.”

“I know,” nods Dirty Shirt. “Keep the money and send me a copy. If Magpie can edit like he can fight I’ll covet that copy.”

“Keep that frame to put it in,” says I. “You met the editor, did yuh?”

Dirty squints at me, adjusts that frame to a easier position, and rubs his sore eyes.

“Met him!” he snorts. “Met ——! We mingled!”

Dirty weaves out of the door and points up the street. Slim looks at them three dollars and then lays three more beside ’em.

“I don’t sabe the game, Ike, but I’m matching Dirty’s ante. I don’t know what Magpie’s argument is, but anybody what can make Dirty Shirt pay three dollars for a left-handed newspaper must have something besides conversation.”

“But Dirty Shirt was sore,” says I. “He came down to lick the editor.”

“Me, too, Ike. I came with malice in my heart but I goes away plumb meek. Dirty Shirt licked thunder out of me once, so I’m three dollars thankful that he met Magpie first. Have a little drink?”

“That’s the first United States I’ve heard spoken since I got home,” says I. “But I can’t leave the office alone. You go up and have one, and then play editor while I goes up. Sabe?”

Slim comes back in a few minutes, and holds down the place while I pilgrims up to Buck’s place. Me and Buck and “Half-Mile” Smith leans on the door and discusses local conditions.

“Show troupe in town,” states Half-Mile. “Came in on the stage. Seven or eight people, two colored persons and some dogs. They got a drum and a lot of horns, etcetery. I’d opine we’ll have some music.”

“I love a good show,” says Buck. “The last good one I seen was at Silver Bend. They played Shakespeare. Had a ghost and I was just drunk enough to enjoy it.”

“Give me a drink, quick!” pants a voice at the door, and into the place comes “Ricky” Henderson. He takes a long drink out of the bottle, and leans against the bar.

“Suffering surcingles!” he pants. “I’ve sure had one job! That or’nary hombre, Tombstone Todd, comes into my place a while ago, and climbs into a chair.

“‘Young feller,’ says he, ‘my hair and whiskers are too noticeable, so I admires to see ’em on the floor.’ He hauls out a six-gun, lays it across his lap, and leans back in the chair. ‘Young feller,’ says he again, ‘a razor what pulls is an abomination and a barber what uses one is flirting with the undertaker. Let your judgment be your guide.’”

“Was he satisfied?” asks Buck.

“I’m here, ain’t I?” grins Ricky. “But I wouldn’t do it again for a million dollars.”

“And you with a razor in your hand all this time, and his head tilted back?” wonders Half-Mile, aloud.

Ricky stares at Half-Mile and considers the remark.

“I seen a colored brother with a razor once—” began Half-Mile, but he happens to glance towards the door.

We all takes a look.

“Speak of the devil and—” murmurs Buck, but the colored person at the door bursts into profanity that would shame a professor from a mule college.

“Why didn’t yuh come back, Ike?” he wails. “Sus-somebody sneaked in, hit me over the head, dud-dragged me into the back room and poured a can of ink all over me! My ——! It won’t never come off! He said he wanted to make me eat some paste, but he couldn’t find it. Look at me! All inked to ——!”

“Gosh!” exclaims Magpie from the doorway. “Ain’t that too danged bad! That’s the only can of ink there was left.”

“Too bad, eh?” howls Slim. “I wish I knowed the name of that hombre.”

“Did he speak feelingly of paste?” asks Magpie.

“Uh-huh,” agrees Slim, drawing figures on the bar with his inky finger. “He sort of choked over the word. He ——”

“Hey! Sam!” yells a voice at the door, and we observes a stranger in our midst.

It’s sort of dark inside, but he seems to know what he wants. He ambles straight up to Slim, and grabs him by the arm.

“You slew-footed, wobble-jointed son of a cannibal!” he yelps. “Where’s them pink silk underclothes of mine, eh?”

Slim Hawkins is slow to anger, but when he does get to going he’s hard to stop. He climbs under and over and through this stranger like he was searching for something, and when he gets through this feller ain’t got nothing on but a look of wonderment and one sleeve of his undershirt. Slim looks over the pile of clothes on the floor, and shakes his head.

“I can’t find ’em,” he states, serious-like. “Furthermore I don’t admire to be called a son of a cannibal, Mister Man!”

The feller braces his hands behind him on the floor, and shakes his head like he was trying to collect his thoughts. He squints at Slim, and then explodes:

“My ——! You ain’t Sam!”

“A slight inquiry would have saved us all this search,” says Slim. “Who is Sam?”

“One of my company—my Uncle Tom.”

“So?” drawled Slim. “You with this here ‘Uncle Tom’s Cabin’ outfit?”

“Yes,” says he. “I’m Simon Legree.”

“So?”

Slim picks the gent up by one leg and an arm, carries him out and dumps him right into the street without no clothes on.

“There!” yells Slim, as the stranger hits the dirt. “I’ve read all about yuh, Mister Legree, and this is one colored person yuh can’t run no sandy on. Sabe?”

This Legree person don’t linger. It’s about two hundred yards to Holt’s hotel door, and he negotiates the distance in the time it takes Slim to shoot six shots into the dirt behind him. On his way he meets “Cobalt” Williams. Cobalt steps to one side to let him past, catches his spur in the dirt, and sets down. It spoils his aim, he tears the knob off the door after it shuts behind Legree. Cobalt gets up and comes on down to the saloon, shaking his head.

“What yuh trying to do—kill him? Yuh danged fool!” snorts Slim.

Cobalt had reached for the bottle, but he turns to look at Slim and his hand drops. He pushes his hat back and stares at Slim and seems to swaller with difficulty.

“Ex-cuse me,” he says, sort of to himself. “No more Paradise hooch for mine! Mike Pelly said it was a hundred and twenty proof, and this proves it. First I see a naked man running around the main street, and then I meets a colored brother what looks like Slim Hawkins. I’m through! Sabe? I’m going home—me!”

He ducks out, gets his bronc at the rack and points out of town.

“That’s what I’d call a temperance lecture in ink,” opines Magpie. “As editor and a man of letters I congratulates yuh. We can hereby reverse that old saying, ‘He who runs may read’ and make it, ‘He who reads may run.’”

We inaugurates a poker game and plays until almost dark, when sudden-like we hears the sound of music, and stampedes to the door. Here comes that show bunch down the street, and stops in front of the old Mint Hall. They got a banner what proclaims there will be a show tonight, and “Mighty” Jones is packing the banner, with his chest stuck out like a fool-hen after a feed.

We cashes in and goes over to the band.

“When did you start to be a actor, Mighty?” asks Magpie, but the feller what Slim took apart steps between Magpie and Mighty and peers at Magpie’s star.

“Pardon me,” says he, “I see you’re the sheriff.”

“You’re pardoned, and I congratulates yuh on your eyesight,” replies Magpie.

“I’ve lost my dogs,” says he. “Somebody must ’a’ stole ’em.”

By this time most everybody in Piperock has congregated around. Music sure is a magnet for folks and dogs.

“Pick out what yuh want,” says Magpie, indicating any amount of canines, circling around through people’s legs. “Losing a few dogs ain’t no disaster around here.”

“Mine are valuable dogs,” states Legree, in a loud tone. “Trained dogs. Our show can’t proceed without them dogs.”

“Name, age and description,” says Magpie, hauling out a little note-book. “Also any distinguishing marks and brands.”

“One bloodhound, crossed with St. Bernard and collie; color, yaller; named Violet.”

War-hoo-o-o-o!” howls a dog up the street.

Yeo-o-o-o-ow!” yells somebody. “Look out!”

There’s a sudden movement at the far end of the congregation. I sees a bronc turn a handspring, a pair of cream-colored broncs leaves their halters at the hitch-rack, while they comes over to visit us, and Violet is no longer a lost dog.

Violet is about the size of a he-wolf, and she seems to think she can outrun the string of tomato cans which are tied to her tail. She goes through, under and over that crowd, and what she don’t do to us is left for that pair of broncs and the buckboard. A million dog-fights start right there.

Me and Legree are close together and the confusion seems to bring us close to each other. We hits the sidewalk together and I’m underneath. A couple of rotten boards break, and yours truly disappears.

When I recovers sufficient-like to peek out it’s about all over. Every bronc that was tied to the rack is gone, and part of one rack is missing. Most of the crowd is on the far side of the street, but our side is still well represented. Two local dogs are still hauling at each other.

Dirty Shirt Jones’ head protrudes from the side of that big drum, and his right arm is wedged straight up, making him look like a drowning man what is going down for the last time.

Mighty Jones has got one boot through the mechanical end of a big brass horn, while from inside the other boot protrudes that banner, with the proclamation missing.

Magpie is lying near me, with both feet through Wick Smith’s picket fence, and he’s still studying that little note-book.

“Was that last one Lucy or Hannibal?” he asks, slow and deliberate.

“It—it don’t make no matter,” says a weak voice, “they’re all gone past anyway,” and the man who got his hat punctured in the newspaper office rises up from behind the fence, and tugs at the brim of his hat, which is hanging around his neck.

I goes out and helps to cut Dirty Shirt loose from the drum, when up comes one of Holt’s kids.

“Mister,” says he to the show feller, “I seen a man tie them cans on your dogs.”

“Give the sheriff a description of him,” says he, excited-like. “I offers ten dollars reward for the conviction of the persons connected with the dastardly outrage.”

“Cheap enough,” agrees Magpie. “Did he have a long mustache and long hair?”

“Naw. He didn’t have no hair on his face a-tall,” replies the kid.

“Must a been an outside job,” proclaims Magpie. “All the men in Piperock wear hair on their faces, except Slim Hawkins, and he wears ink.”

Me and Magpie pilgrims home and uses up a bottle of hoss liniment.

“When yuh going to get that Tombstone person?” I asks, after we finishes our supper. “There ain’t no sense in leaving a critter like him loose, Magpie.”

“He’s a ornery hombre all right, all right,” agrees Magpie. “He ain’t so dangerous as he is plumb mean, Ike. He’s shot at me several times, but as he ain’t hit me yet I reckon he’s trying to scare me. Must ’a’ been Cactus what painted Slim with the ink. Me and Slim are the same build.

“I sure wish that Tombstone could live long enough to read his obituary, Ike. She’s a bird. I sure dug deep into my soul for that stuff, and I surprises myself with what I writes. Them two is sore over the election. They opined to be deputies under Anderson.”

“That paper must ’a’ printed some truths about folks,” I opines, and Magpie grins:

“You said something, Ike. He sure did ride folks. Yuh ought to see what he said about Paradise folks. I reckon they’re just about starting to boil over down there.”

“Didn’t you print yours right soon, Magpie?” I asks. “Seems to me that it’s a weekly.”

“Uh-huh—comes out on Friday. Yuh see I had to change that day right off the reel, ’cause if I had any hangings to attend to it would interfere with the paper. I looks into the future, Ike.”

“Well,” says I, “it don’t make much difference now, being as the ink is all gone.”

“That’s so. I wish you’d ’a’ stayed there and ’tended to business, Ike.”

“And got all inked up, eh? I never did have any luck, and if it had ’a’ been me somebody would ’a’ come in and helped Cactus find that paste jar. Too bad the show got busted up thataway.”

“Uh-huh,” yawns Magpie. “We ain’t had a good show for a long time, but I don’t admire a show what depends on three dogs and eight cakes of ice. Let’s hit the hay.”

That night somebody comes down and paints a skull and cross bones on our door, and it makes Magpie sore.

“I’m commencing to get riled internally, Ike,” he states, when he views said works of art. “You go back and hold down the newspaper, and in a little while I’ll show yuh the scalp of this artist. Rustle around and see if there’s any ink left.

“I got that obituary all fixed up left-handed, and she’s cached under a soap-box behind the printing machine. Don’t jiggle it ’cause she’s fragile as ——! I left that page just like she was for the other paper, but I got a place in it what fits this here masterpiece of mine. If Tombstone should make a mistake and hit me yuh won’t need the obituary. Sabe?”

“Uh-huh, I’ll just run the rest, Magpie. It looks like a bundle o’ crape anyway.”

“And Ike,” he reminds me, as I buckles on my gun, “yuh take that type stuff and put it inside the press. Sabe? Then yuh take that roller thing and pour on some ink, roll her over the letters, slap on a sheet of paper and twist that handle down hard.”

“You furnish the news, Magpie,” says I. “I’ll hold the wheels of progress for Tombstone Todd.”

I goes up to Buck’s place, and settles some elixir under my belt, while me and Buck talks over the humdrum existence we’re leading.

“Dirty Shirt is still going around with his right hand up in the air,” laughs Buck. “Reckon he’s flagged every one in sight.”

“How’s the show outfit?” I asks.

“Right miserable, I reckon. All of ’em except one left on the stage this morning. That exception—a colored person—mistakes Slim for a blood-brother, and being as Slim ain’t back yet, I’d say they went quite a ways. I never seen fast black fade the way that person did.

“That other colored member didn’t have much to say this morning. He was packing one of them slide horns in the band last night, and when the buckboard hit him he sails right into Pete Gonyer. Him and Pete holds about even until Pete gets his hands loose, and then he winds that horn around the feller’s neck so many times that we has to lay that colored gent across an anvil and cut it loose with a cold-chisel.”

“Seen anything of Tombstone Todd or Cactus Collins?” I asks, but Buck says:

“Nope. Somebody ought to puncture that pair of Jaspers, Ike. I figure there’s only one critter what is meaner than Tombstone Todd, and there’s a bounty on his hide. I ain’t been drunk for six years, Ike, but when Tombstone Todd stops enough lead to make him a spirit I’m going to celebrate. When does Magpie aim to exterminate said human coyote?”

“Magpie suffers from softening of the heart,” says I “but him or Tombstone is due to hunt the hereafter right soon.”

I leaves there, and pilgrims down to the newspaper office, but I don’t walk right inside. Not me. The Harper tribe ain’t skittish of trouble, and my nose ain’t a stranger to powder smoke, but I’m cautious.

I Injuns up to the back window, flattens my carcass against the wall and peers inside. I ain’t taking no chances. Sabe? It’s a little too early to open up, and the sunshine is nice and warm. Everything is peaceful-looking around Piperock, so I sets down there on a box against the wall, and communes thusly:

“Ike Harper, you sure do live in the best little town on earth. Peaceful and quiet—no hurry or worry. Plenty of time to live and no questions asked. What if I am a editor? It sure is worth while to live simply and quietly in a community where brotherly love is the motto and where peace doves nest and suckle their young.”

Sudden-like I hears the dull rattle of many hoofs, and down the street comes a lot of men on hosses. They completes a picture of a peaceful Western village. There ain’t no boisterous or unseemly language as they ambles along through the dust—just the jingle of bit-chains and the squeak of saddles.

They don’t look like they was going far, ’cause they don’t seem to have no baggage. One of ’em is carrying a big bucket, and another seems to have a bundle in his arms.

They swings down towards me, but I merely yawns. They stops in front of my office, and dismounts. I reckon it’s my chore to go out and get ’em to subscribe, but I don’t do it. I got enough subscriptions. They must ’a’ thought the only way to get into a newspaper office was by main force, so they picks up a piece of lodge-pole, and knocks the door down.

Comes one shot—no more. Out of curiosity, more than anything else, I sort of leans forward on my box and takes note of what I can see. Out in front the crowd sort of surrounds somebody, what ain’t got no clothes on. I don’t hear much conversation what ain’t profane, and pretty soon I sees some feathers drift away on the breeze. Two broncs are linked together with that pole, a bundle what looks like a mighty buzzard is straddled the pole, and they all moves away as quietly as they came.

I watches ’em go away, and then I yawns some more and enters the sacred precincts of The Piperock Pilot. I hunts all over the place until I finds a can with a little ink left in it. I looks under the soap-box and finds that obituary. After considerable trouble I deciphers same, and this is it:

EPITAPH ON TOMBSTONE
He was a bad man from Willer Crick.
His bluff was good but it didn’t stick.
He shot at the sheriff till the sheriff got sore,
Now his boots leave tracks on that beautiful shore.

I wipes the tears off my cheeks when I reads it. Magpie said he had put his soul into it, but I never knowed before how deep Magpie’s soul really was. It’s a hy-iu composition, but I got a better idea. I takes it over to where them lead letters repose, and reconstructs the thing a bit.

I ain’t no poet, but in a time like this a man’s spirit guides his fingers. I works for an hour, trying to make the blamed things stand up long enough to be read backwards, and I’m sore enough to kick a baby when Magpie shows up. He looks at me and grins, when he sees what I’m doing, and rolls a smoke.

“One of ’em has left, Ike,” he states. “Hank Padden rode in a while ago, and said he met Cactus Collins on his way to Willer Crick. I’ll get Tombstone before night. Sabe?”

“Them is noble resolutions, Magpie. You know how to make this stuff stand up while she leaves her message on paper?”

“Sure. What yuh want to print it for, Ike? We ain’t got no paper to waste.”

“Magpie,” says I, “a editor likes to see his stuff printed. I got a old piece of paper what will do for this.”

Magpie sets the stuff in a little oblong affair, rolls on some ink, lays on the piece of paper, and twists down the handle. This is how she looks:

TAR ON TOMBSTONE
He was a bad man from Willer Crick.
On his birthday suit grows feathers thick.
Feathers and tar instead of a grave,
Mistook for an editor ’cause of a shave.

Magpie reads it all through. He sets down on a box, rolls a smoke, and reads it some more. He walks out to the door, looks around, and comes back.

“Who?” he asks.

“Paradise folks, Magpie.”

“Did you see him in here?”

“Uh-huh. He was laying for us.”

“Pshaw!”

Magpie takes his gun out and looks it over, sad-like. He stares at the door for a minute, and then—

“What’s the notice on the door?”

He walks over and looks. Somebody has printed a notice and pinned it on that busted door, and she reads like this—

THIS PAPER HAS QUIT FOR KEEPS

I went back and got that can of ink, and a stick, and I signs it—

TOMBSTONE TODD

“What for, Ike?” asks Magpie. “What did he have to do with it?”

“Come back here, and I’ll show yuh.”

I takes him back to the table, and shows him a line of lead letters setting there on the table. It’s the biggest in sight, and they reads:

EPITAF FOR MAGPY SIMPKIN. BRAVE
MEN AND DARN FULES DON’T SKARE.
HE WAS A DARN FULE MAY HE
REST IN PIECE

We walks almost to the door, when Magpie goes back and gets that stick and the can of ink.

“I’ll give him all the credit coming to him, Ike,” says he, and underneath Tombstone’s name he prints—

EDITOR PRO TEMPORE