Dewsrralic, Waid Bellefonte, Pa., April 5, 1929. BREAD UPON THE WATERS. Notwithstanding the fact that he was forty and fat—that is, fat for his kind, which is generally thin, as becomes men whose youth has been spent in the saddle, and despite the further fact that he was unmarried and had never been known to be in love, Bill Garford was known throughout the length and breadth of the soverign State of Nevada as a romantic figure. Americans are given to crowning with the halo of romance men who, from lowly beginnings, have fought their way to leadership in finance or politics. Bill Garford was not aware that he had ever extended himself in the battle to win the unique position he occupied. In fact, he never thought about it at all and accepted, as a matter unworthy of comment, the fact that practically half the pop- ulation of Nevada, which the last census sets at 77,000 in round figures, claimed with him, if not a close friendship, at least a familiar ac- quaintance. Muckers in mines, swampers in dance-halls, sheep-herders and mil- lionaires quite naturally called him Bill and borrowed money from him, and were amazed and indignant if he questioned their credit, which, by the way, he seldom did. At least never questioned the credit of those who had no credit; as to the others, he found it much simpler and more con- ducive to the joy of existence to cut a twenty-dollar “quick touch” to five and promptly proceed to forget all about it! Bill Garford was the son of a cow- man so unimportant that he could afford no wages to Bill—hence at fourteen the boy had left a lonely dis- trict school to hire out as ler with old man Starbuck's Diamond S ranch at fifteen dollars a month. In time he developed into a toprider, whereupon he was advanced to forty dollars a month and the confidence of old man Starbuck, who consider- ed that when Bill should get his growth he might make a first-class riding boss at sixty-five dollars a month. One day old man Starbuck and his boys drove three thousand head of three-year-olds down the railroad at Winnemucca, and when the cars had been loaded Bill Garford had manag- ed to induce old man Starbuck to ad- vance him a hundred dollars on ac- count of a season's wages. The old man didn't want to give it, but Bill pleaded that he had to buy some new blankets and overalls and some heavy underwear and tobacco and have a tooth pulled by a traveling dentist then in Winnemucca. So reluctantly old man Starbuck gave him the money and forced from him a promise that when his money should have been dissipated in the customary delights of his kind he was to be a good boy and ride dutifully back to headquarters. The boss was a human old chan. He had been young once himself. In Winnemucca Bill had dallied with the flesh-pots according to his times and the company he kept. Hav- ing no further use for money except to spend it quickly and go home, he tossed his last twenty-dollar bill on the Double O of a roulette layout in a house where the sky was the limit. He accompanied his action with the cryptic remark that he supposed he might as well be broke as the way he was, anyhow. He won! A disbeliever from child- hood in the frequency of miracles, he gathered up seven hundred and forty dollars and “went south” with it. His horse was in a livery-stable and he started for that stable, intending to mount and ride back to soda biscuits, fried beef, beans. black coffee and old man Starbuck. But fate decreed oth- erwise. Half-way down to the livery-sta- ble a coal-black cat started across the street in front of him. This was bad. He made a prodigious spurt and, despite his high-heeled boots, flanked that cat and forced pussy to cross behind him. Half a block far- ther he ran a nail through the worn sole of his right boot and upon seek- ing the nail discovered that it pro- truded from a shoe formerly worn by a mule. Mules have, fortunately, long narrow hoofs, so young Mr. Gar- ford experienced no difficulty in in- sinuating this shoe in his rear over- alls pocket, as a sort of luck piece. He continued on and met a man who owed him two dollars. Bill was too proud and not quite cheap enough to mention this fact to his debtor, al- though the debt was five years old, but to his surprise the other not only mentioned it but paid Bill the two dollars. For interest he offered to buy Bill Garford a drink and as the young man turned to approach the nearest saloon he was gratified to ob- serve the new moon over his left shoulder. “I'm smeared with luck,” he decia- ed—and ordered a short beer. Then he bought, the amenities thus having been observed, he bade his debtor good night and hastened back to that gambling hall. Not for him, however, the roulette- wheel where his luck had first mani- fested itself. In this game the per- centage in favor of the house is much too high and manotonous even for persons imbued with the sublime faith in their infallibility which was Bill Garford’s portion this night. Garford gravitated toward a faro ‘table in a distant corner and was for- ‘tunate enough to find a vacant seat. No tyro, he, at faro. The bulk of wages earned in six years riding the range had gone to pay for Bill Gar- ford’s education in thie fairest and most fascinating of gambling games. He bought a stsck of browns ard played the limit. When he rose from his seat about noon the follo day he had the faro dealer's check for twenty-thousand-odd dollars. i In those days a man Kept his word, even at the cost of considerable in- convenience and personal sacrifice. Bill Garford had promised old man Starbuck he would return to head- quarters, so to headquarters he re- turned. He finished the rest of the beef round-up with that twenty-thou- sand-dollar check in his pocket, and then, with the feeling that he was playing a mean trick on Starbuck, he asked for his time. The latter was so shocked at the request that Bill jumped to the conclusion it was going to embarrass the old man to have a sight-draft-drawn on him that way, so he hastened to reassure him. “Im just quittin,’ Mr. Starbuck,” he explained. “I'm not askin’ for my money. You send it to me when- ever you can spare it an’ that'll be 0. k. with me.” “You tarnation imbecile,” old man Starbuck rasped, “what you aimin’ to do now? Have you figered the probabilities o’ starvin’ to death once you git off'n the Diamond S range?” Bill said he had figured on it and added the information that he plan- ned to go into the sheep business. Terribly scandalized, old man Star- buck begged him not to think of it, to remember his father, who although an unimportant person, bovinely speaking, had nevertheless managed to stagger along to the end of a long life without bringing disgrace upon the cattle industry. “I know just how you feel, Mr. Starbuck,” Bill replied. “Nobody hates sheep more’n I do, but still folks eats mutton an’ if it wasn’t for sheep I reckon you an’ I'd have to sport overalls on Sunday an’ wear our chaps to bed on winter nights. Sec a sheep has her uses, Mr. Starbuck.” “I'll be shot if I'll give you any money to invest in sheep,’ old man Starbuck stormed. “’Tain’t a kind- ness for me to let you have your way, even if you have got the money comin’ to you.” “Money ain't worryin’ me none, Mr. Starbuck,” Bill replied, and mounting his pony he rode sorrowfully from the Diamond 8, while old man Starbuck warned him, in torrid language, against the advisability of permit- ting himself to be caught with sheep on the present speaker’s range. The previous year had been a dry one in California and the rainfall that year had been approximately half of normal. All of his life feed and its availability had been the principal subject of conversation wherever the men of his world gathered, and Bill Garford knew that two years of short rainfall were spelling worry to Cali- fornia cattle and sheepmen. So he went down into California and pur- chased, at three dollars a head, five thousand ewes said to be in lamb. Although distrusting sheepmen on principle, he had to take their word for this; and being a Simon-pure cow-man he neglected to “mouth” his ewes, with the result that the sheep- men ran in about a thousand “gum- mers” on him and another thousand old ruins with bad feet and wrinkled necks. When some well-meaning mar- plot called Bill's attention to this he merely smiled and stated that it had to be a pretty poor sheep critter that wasn’t worth three dollars. ' He shipped his sheep to Nevada. A heavy snowfall on the upland des- erts that winter had conduced to pro- vide good herbage in the shape of the nutritious bunch-grass that grows around the stunted sage, so Bill Gar- ford helped himself and inquired mot into titles, although he did avoid the Diamond S range out of respect to old man Starbuck. He excused him- self for his mendacity towards others on the ground that all sheepmen are natural grass thieves and no] €x- pects anything better of them. “Might as well have the game as the name,” he decided. He had an eighty percent crop of lambs instead of the hundred and twenty percent. he had been led to believe he would receive, and when the lush green grass had been crop- ped low his old “gummers” failed to thrive on the tender tips of the sage, ‘and gave up the unequal struggle al- most to a sheep. His barren ewes he sold at a profit, however, and his lambs netted him nine dollars, so, despite the errors of his initial trade, he profited both in cash and exper- ience. He told himself that an education ‘wasn’t worth while anyhow unless one paid for it. The next time he bought ewes, however, he cast a jaundiced eye on wrinkled necks and bad feet; he looked into so many sheeps’ mouths, seeking teeth that weren't there, that for all his youth- ful bhardihood he commenced to feel like a sheepman! In five years he had $100,000 in cash and got out of the sheep busi- ness for good. It was in his mind now to buy a bunch of good feeders, lease a ranch and get back into re- spectable society again. But the cat- tle business was in the doldrums, so Bill drifted over to the new boom mining-camp of Tonopah on the off- chance that he might get aboard something good there and take a ride. Following a quiet prowl of about a month he climed aboard Ton- opah Extension, Tonopah Divide and Lucky Strike and waited for his stock to soar. When it had soared a million dollars’ worth he unloaded— and a month later occurred the panic of 1907. When on a train, traveling sales- men never place their pocket-books under their pillows when they retire to rest. Experience has taught them that they are heir to human frailty and may leave the train without res- urrecting the pocketbook ! So they cache and pocketbook in one of their ‘socks and hide the sock under the pillows, for while one may forget his pocketbook the chances of forgetting his socks are exceedingly remote. Bill Garford’s faith in human na- | ture had been shocked but not shat- | ‘the Nevada banks with two thousand dollars’ of his money in it. Thereafter he never trusted little country banks with his ; main account, but carried that in the largest and financially strongest bank he knew of iu San Franisco. Con- ntly when practically half of a > crashed in the panic, Bill Garford, like the astute traveling salesman, had money in his sock, so to speak, and took a year off while the United* States of Amer- ica adjusted its currency problems, and did a most remarkable thing. He engaged a tutor and started to catch up on his neglected education! By degrees he ceased to employ dou- ble negatives and knew the reason why they should be avoided in polite society. He trained himself to sound his g's and learned cube root and square root and plane geometry and could bound the peninsula of Yuca- tan. He knew the capital of Florida and became so enamored of word analysis that he took another year off to run words like manufacture to their Latin liars—manu from manus, the hand; facture from facere, fac- tum, to make. Manufacture therefore meant, to make by hand—and Bill was deter- mined, in the homely phraseology of his frontier, “to make a hand” at something better than sheep and COWS. He took a trip around the world on the interest of his million-and- odd dollars, qguarreled with the food, grew homesick and returned to Ne- vada in time to buy in the wreckage of the Nevada State Bank with its six branches. Ever since 1907 the state banking commissioner had been | trying to bury this corpse. Bill re- vitalized it and with a million dollars’ capital became eventually what he was on the day Uncle Jimmy Breeze blew into his office—to wit, a roman- tic figure. However, a truce on Uncle Jimmy for the present. The activities of Bill Garford from 1910 to 1924 are worthy of more minute presentation. Albeit he had lifted himself by his boot-straps and might be presumed to have discarded boots for the con- ventional foot-gear of bankers, some- thing old-fashioned in Bill's make-up forbade the total amputation of things he had held dear in the days of his youth. He still wore boots with high heels, under the legs of his trousers. And they were handsome, hand-made boots. And he still wore a soft, wide- brimmed, gray felt hat and soft shirts; when he traveled he felt more comfortable if he carried a short-bar- reled, heavy-caliber pistol in a shoul- der holster under his left arm. He was still interested to a remark- able extent in grass, horses, the cat- ‘tle and sheep ‘market, mines and min- ers; although he liked to make mon- ey as a sporting proposition he had little real appreciation of the value of it. While the necessities of busi- ness forced him to figure interest, in his heart ‘of hearts Bill Garford look- ed upon interest—that is, to a friend —as a form of legalized extortion. For a yellow dog Bill Garford would do something. For a friend he would go the limit. The tale is told that when he had been establish- ed as a banker some thirty days, old man Starbuck came creaking into his office, sat down uninvited, and talk- ed grass and Teeders and cattle thieves and beef prospects until noon, when Bill took the old man home to luncheon. Just about the time the bank clos- ed old man Starbuck gathered his courage in hand and confessed that he'd like to hawe a little accommo- dation. The fact that he had not hitherto had an account with Bill's bank offered no bar to Bill's consid- | eration of the lean. He said: “Well, I imagine we can acocommo- date you, Mr. Starbuck. How much do you require ?” / “About two hundred thousand, Bill,” said old man Starbuck without the flicker of an eyelash. “Want to buy the old Dabney ranch. It’s been foreclosed on mortgage an’ I can git it for the principal of the mortgage. Mebbe I can get it for a little less than the principal of the loan. It adjoins my present holdings.” i “I know the Dabney ranch,” Bill responded prompily. “TH let you have the money.” “Thanks, Bill. I reckoned you would,” said old man Starbuck. _ Bill summoned his cashier. “Let Mr. Starbuck have two hundred thousand dollars, for five years, at seven per cent.—no, let him have it for six. He's an old friend of mine. I used to punch cattle for him.” “I'm sorry, Mr. Garford,” the cash- ier answered, “but we can’t let Mr. Starbuck have the money.” Bill Garford’s eyes narrowed. guess this is my bank, isn’t it?” “Certainly, but the state banking commissioner has som to say about it also. Under the law you cannot lend any individual that amount on your present paid-up eapi- tal stock. The amount of your paid- up capital stock limits the loan to Mr. Starbuck to one hundred thou- “1 ‘sand dollars.” Bill and old man Starbuck looked at each other. “Bill, this is sure a blow to me,” the old man declared. “I'd figgered for certain I was goin’ to git that money.” “You'll get it, Mr. Starbuck. The bank will lend you a hundred thou- | ‘sand and I'll led you another hun- | j dred thousand personally.” .ranch and forthwith gave Bill a check | banking Old man Starbuck secured the loan with a first on the Dabney wages for upwards of ten years. In those fourteen years—1910 to 1924—Bill developed into that which he has already been declared, to wit, a romantic character. The oro: | banker in the world, yet he to build up his banks and waxed rich; wherefore he was accused of being a wizard. He dabbled in shrewd cattle deals, in sheep deals, for the money he had owed him for} tered during the five years that had |in ranches, in mining properties. elapsed since old man Starbuck had ceased to ride herd on His destinies. About half this time he spent in the main bank in Reno; the other He had met some very low sheep- | half was spent wandering over the men and once a bank had collapsed - State, of whose resources and possi- ‘money in your banks ee EA ET rn a NT EEE bilities he had more definite and ex- act knowledge than any man in it. He knew the catle and sheepmen’s problems and . sympathized with them; if they were on the square, if they knew their business, if they weren't quitters, he would go far to favor them. People declared that luck was with Bill Garford because he deserved to be lucky; that he was a human being and the best fellow on earth. In 1924 he motored over to the Dabney ranch to ascertain why old man Starbuck was three years behind with his interest—and there he met old man Starbuck’s daughter, Olive, more familiarly known as Ollie. Bill was just turned forty and Ollie was twenty-four and fair to look at. So Bill went back and paid his own bank, out of his own account, the in- terest old man Starbuck owed on his ancient loan Also, he decided that since he would have to take the old Dabney ranch over for the loan soon- er or later, it might not be a bad idea to take Ollie over with it! There was but sixteen years’ difference be- tween their respective ages. Bill looked at himself long and earnestly in a pier-glass, decided he didn’t look a day over thirty-five and commenced to diet. When he had taken off thirty pounds acquired as a banker he was as lean and youthful as in the days when old man Star- buck considered he might make a first-class riding boss—whereupon he made another call on the old gentle- man. appearance, played the cottage organ for him and baked him an apple pie. He broke all the speed laws in the State on that three-hundred-mile drag back to Reno, because he was in a hurry to clean up a lot of ne- glected banking busiess and pay an- other visit to the Starbucks. He had stated that he would have business in | that vicinity in about three weeks and might drop in on them. When three months passed and he had not put in an appeartnce, Ollie, who had inherited some of her father’s reso- lution, drove the old man’s shabby old roadster into Reno and casually called at the bank to reproach Bill for his neglect. Unfortunately, Bill was down in San Francisco, but his secretary told Ollie she would tell him who had called. When Bill Garford returned to Reno and learned what he had miss- ed he put his head down on his desk and closed his eyes in pain. So Ollie had grown tired waiting Zor him to call and had called on him instead. : Well, it was too late now***Yes, too late. If she ever wanted to see him again she would have to drive onto Carson City, where the State peni- tentiary is! He was roused from his sad reverie by the advent of the superintendent of banks, who entered uninvited and sat down opposite Bill. ly Bill shoved a humidor toward him; when the official had lighted his cigar he put his feet upon Bill's solid Amer- ican-walnut table and for a long time stared out the window. Bill said nothing. He was drawing a subtle comfort from the othér's silence. “Well, Bill,” the latter said pres- ently, “I wired you to come home mn a hurry. Do you know that your bank’s capital is badly impaired ?” “No, I didn’t. And what's more it isn’t” : “According to your records you are right. Your books are straight enough and I've counted the cash you're supposed to have on hand and it’s all there. There hasn’t been any crooked work. No reflection on your integrity, Bill’—the vision of Car- son City penitentiary faded abruptly from Bill's mind—* but a lot on your ahility as a banker.” “How come?” “You're loaded up with frozen as- sets in the shape of pretty full loans on cattle ranches and cattle; the cat- tlemen all over the country are broke and the bank will have to foreclose to protect its stockholders. “I'm the stockholders and I ain’t— I'm not—yelling so’s anybody can hear me, am I? my dummy directors holler? I pay don’t I?” “A good many other banks are foreclosing on ranches—and when this foreclosing business is finished. ranches in this State, as in other cat- tle States, are going to be mighty cheap. You see that, do you not, Bill?” he asked. “It sounds reasonable,” Bill Gar- ford admitted. “I know the cattle business has taken an awful licking the past five years, but I've got faith in it still if it’s handled right. It's bound to come back. That’s why T've been easy with cattle loans. When a fellow’s been a cow-man he can’t help sympathizing with & cow-man who has played the game fairly and is down and out through no-fault of his own. I'm a hard hombre to stam- pede where by friends are concerned.” The superintendent of banks look- ed at him with affectionable interest. “God made only one Bill Garford and then He broke the mold,” he thought. Then aloud: “Bill, I'm a hard hombre to stam- pede where my friends are concerned, but—I have a lot of friends with and it's my duty to protect them. You're ca to put up a ‘em good salaries, ' open notes, unsecured, that can never be collected. You're carrying secured notes with the security worth thirty percent of the loan; you're carrying notes secured by mortgage on real estate—and the real estate is yours for the asking and you won't ask for it because you know you can’t sell it and you're afraid of the taxes. Bill, you've got to put your house in order In fact, while you were awey I put it in order for you. When I finished I found your bank's capital was im- paired to the tune of about two mil- lion dollars—and unless you get that two millions into your reserve mighty soon I'll have to shut you up—all seven of you.” “But that'll make a crook out of me in the eyes of the public—and my friends. Every depositor I've got, al- most, is a friend of mine.” “The trouble with you, Bill, is that you set altogether too high a value on Ollie remarked his improved | Mechanical- What right have | ADEN FAA RT Rat ne ERR, that negligible human emotion known as friendship. It's a good deal like gratitude, which some fellow once described as a-lively appreciation - of favors still to come. » “Bill, you're a romantic figure in the ‘social, political and economic life of this thinly populated state. It is still a frontier state and you are still a frontiersman—thinking straight, talking straight, acting straight. You've never been mean or small or unkind or unsympathetic. You have hundreds of babies named after you. “You've grub staked more addle- brained old idots who think they're prospectors than all the other rich men in this state combined. You've settled more quarrels out of court than most lawyers. Why, even blank-- faced Washoes and Piute bucks smile when you hail them—and squaws call you Bill. Stray dogs come into your bank to say howdy.” The official rose and stretched forth helpless hands. “Bill, you tender-hearted idiot, I love you like a brother, but unless you can dig up two million dollars to make your depositors safe, I've got to smash the biggest, finest, simplest, truest gentleman in a state where they still continue to breed men. And the bigger they are the harder they fall.” And quite unexpectedly the man sat down and commenced to weep like a lubberly boy. When he could master his emotions he looked at Bill Garford and said: , “Well, William, what’s the verdict ?” “I haven't any more two million dollars in cash than a jack-rabbit !” the honest Bill replied without a split second’s hesitation. “I've been stay- ing with the baggage, and all of my private fortune is sort of out on in- interest among my cow friends and some fair-to-middling sheepmen.” “Do you collect the interest ?” “Well, not lately, I must confess.” “Been pressing them for it?” “Yes, I have. More than usual. I have to do it by correspondence, though. I've given up calling in per- son, because then they lick me. Make me feel like I owed them money in- stead of the other way round.” “Some time back when I pressed you on that Starbuck loan, you got the money from the old man. Does he owe you anything personally ?” “I didn’t get the money from him. I just paid his loan and took a chattel mortgage on his cattle to cover the advance. He owes me about a quar- of a million now—interest and princi- pal.” he'd never pay a note he could renew by paying the interest. He's got about twelve thousand head of good cattle that ought to bring a fair price now, if they're fat—and I am informed they are. By and large, the lot ought to average thirty dollars a head, even on this sorry market.” “But if I close in on old man Star- buck and take his cows,” Bill protest- ed, “he’d be out of business for fair. I can’t ruin him at his age.” He thought despairingly of Ollie ! “Then he'll ruin you, Bill. Let’s see what else you've got that can be sold or hocked in a hurry.” ‘They went over 'the list of Bill's private assests and when the task had been completed the bank examin- er knew that nothing stood between Bill Garford and a mililon dollars in quick money except a lot of old-fash- |ioned sentiment and a soft heart. He decided to force issue. creditors and simultaneously have the bank close in on its creditors, that two mililon dollars can be in your , reserve fund in ninety days,” he de- cided. “If you'll get busy at once I'll play the game with you.” { “And if I do not,” Bill quavered— for the first time in all his forty years. i The bank examiner drew his fing- er across his throat and gurgled ominously. { “You mean that 2?” “Surest thing you know. Myself, I never did like the board and lodging ‘at Carson City.” It was Bill Garford’s turn now. He ‘commenced to weep silently and spar- ingly. His great heart was broken. “You're the biggest fool and the worst banker I've ever examined !” dreadful scene. In about an hour Bill Garford’s sec- retary came in. “There’s an old pros- | pector outside and he wants to see iyou, Mr. Garford,” she announced. “He says you'll remember him right well. His pame is Uncle Jimmy Breeze.” | “Did you tell him I was awfully busy? I'm ‘fraid Uncle Jimmy wants !a grub-stake.” “Yes,” her employer sighed, “and if I don’t see him today he'll be back to- morrow and every other day until he gets what he’s after. Send him in and I'll get it over with.” ‘Miss Ollie Starbuck is also wait- ing to see you. She arrived before Uncle Jimmy Breeze.” “Oh, side-hill gougers and great snarling cctawampuses — I mean catawampi !” He looked so desper- ately pathetic the secretary's heart went out to him. “I can get rid of her,” she suggest- ed. “Yes, I know, but I can’t. I'll pull myself together. Send Miss Starbuck in in five minutes.” He was Bill Garford again when Ol- lie entered. “Welcome, Miss Ollie,” he said. (“Won't you set—I mean sit?” Mss Ollie sank into the chair he in- dicated. She was a direct creature, least he says it’s that, but I have con- fidential information from the ridi ends with him.” “When a man gets past sixty he ought to leave that to boys, Miss Ollie. Was there something you want- de me to do for him— or for you?” “Thank you, Mr. Garford. You an- ticipate things sc promptly you re- duce my embarrassment to less than about three thousand two-year old “Well, the old man’s square, but “If you close in on your personal * | the other shouted, and fled from the 4 i passed out the note. like her father, and came at once to. the milk in the cocoanut. “Dad's down . with rheumatism,” she confided, “At | 100king at each other, mildly amused ‘now but a bit pathetic just the same. steers that are fat enough for mark- et right now, but the price is only five cents: and he thought “it: would be’ much more to his advantage to hold them over until spring and put about two hundred pounds additional on them. He thinks that sort of stuff might bring eight cents then. But he'll have to buy about a thousand tons of extra hay to carry them through the winter and he asked me to run oyer and see if you'll let him have seven thousand dollars to buy the hay. i Bil Garford’s face froze in a horror. As Ollie had been he had sensed the touch mouth had gradually sagged while his eyes dilated. Both is, all three of these organs no mained immovable, while his usually ruddy, bronzed countenance com- menced slowly to assume the ripe: color tones of an ancient cheese. . Ollie Starbuck’s face flushed and then paled as she looked at him. “Oh, Mr. Garford,” she cried, “is there anything the matter with you? Are you ill? Can I get you something—" He shook off his creeping paralysis: and raised a protesting hand. I haven't seen a great deal of you-- not half enough to warrant my pre- sumption in addressing you by your first name —but the fact is I only had: to see you once to love you and every time I've seen you since my tempera- ture has jumped a degree. Just now it’s at the boiling point. You hear me? Ilove you. I'd do anything for You. Do you believe that? Ollie’'s sweet face softened, her brown glances sought the rug. “I—I well, it did occur to me that you: might be more interested in calling at. the ranch to see me than to see Fath- er. Father thought so, too. He said: you were up to something and I'm glad you were—Bill. The whole state- loves you so I'm sure I can’t be blam- ed for following suit.” He leaned across the table, took. her brown, firm hand in both of his: great hands and kissed it tenderly. Then he said, quite firmly and dis-. tinctly: “Ollie, Sweeheart, old J. B. Starbuck hasn’t any more credit with. the Nevada State Bank than a road- runner. Heney, a banker is talking: to you now—and a banker has so many folks to think about that he- can't play favorites. You understand, don’t you Ollie 2” Ollie bowed her head gravely. “I. don’t care to listen to the banker Bill,” she answered. “I'd rather hear- the man.” “The man has no money to lend: your father—and a little while ago the banker whispered to the man to. tell you to tell your father to sell those three thousand two-year-olds at. the market and bring me the money,. P. D. Q. The conditions are such that time and extra hay are topics we: can’t discuss. Realizing that I love- You and want you worse than I want salvation, and that you love me and; would marry me in a pig’s whisper, it becomes my horrible duty to tell you. that I'm going to bust the tribe of Starbuck high, wide and handsome. Yes, Ollie, I've got to close in on you. folks. I've got to ruin. old J. B.— smash him, rub his.nose in the dirt. —old as he is and square as he is and. big a fool as he is. riding a disre-- spectful cayuse at his age. When I take over his range and his COWS, cin. I take the Starbuck family over also, and care for you both the rest of: , your days?” She shook her head. slowly, thereby: scattering tears over a wide area on. the polished top of his solid: American: walnut table. She was like. old man, Starbuck—resolute and independent.. “No, we're not yet ready to.acce) pti charity, Mr. Garford,” she said final- ly. “Close us out if it’s business, but don’t mix sentiment with your busi- ness.” , “If you only knew how much sen-- timent I'm mixing with my business: you wouldn't call me Mr. Garford, when I'm plain Bill to you,” he plead:- ed. “I'm closing in on a whole re-- muda of cattle and sheepmen, start-- ing today. Im on the round-up. again: and your father is in the corral: and! .cant escape branding and earmark- ing. Ive got to do it or my banks willl close their doors and windows,and or- _phans will curse me from here to the: t Utah line.” “You'don’t have to brand and ear- mark the Starbucks, Bill. We'll con-- tinue to be mavericks, if you please.. J know my father well enough to: , Speak with his authority now. Those three thousand steers are yours and! whether you sell them or elect to buy hay for them and carry them: through till spring is your affair, mot ours. You don’t have to close in on us, Bill. You've been a mighty good friend while you could afford it and now .that you can no longer afford it we're ,Smart enough to understand. You can have the remainder of the cows and a deed to the ranch whenever ‘you send for either.” She smiled wan-- ly. “We've never been sued, youu know.” | “I'll send for that deed and those- cows when I have to and not a second! Sooner, Ollie. Meanwhile, I we'll carry those steers until think s v {Pe not say anything to Pe 4 I thousand dollars,” “Did you bring his note with you, Miss : Starbuck? J. B. had a stock of the . about this. He’s old and he needs his: sleep.” He pressed the button on his: desk and the cashier came inn. “J. B. Starbuck is good for seven. ke announced bank's note forms on hand in case he ever gets caught short.” Her eyes wide with wonder, Ollie The cashier fa- vored Bill Garford with a severe look and departed, leaving Bill’ and Ollis- “Come here, Bill Garford,” the girl" boss to the effect that my lunatic par- ' commanded presently, and * while he ent tried to bust a colt that swapped | Was coming to her around ' the table, she pulled down the shade. Then she took his leonine head in both arms: and pulled his face against hers. “You're not licked, Darling,” she- whispered. “Tell me you're not.” “I'm licked, Ollie. But—they - haven't counted ten over me—yet.” “Well, when they've finished count- one-half of ome percent. Dad has ing Bill, and you don't know where - (Continued on page<7, Col. 1.)