Monday, December 26, 2011

Swisher WB11524 Predator 24-Inch 11.5 HP Gas Self-Propelled Brush Cutter

!±8± Swisher WB11524 Predator 24-Inch 11.5 HP Gas Self-Propelled Brush Cutter

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Post Date : Dec 26, 2011 16:34:32 | Usually ships in 2-3 business days


  • 24-inch, self-propelled gas-powered brush cutter with 4-speed transmission and reverse
  • 11-1/2-horsepower Briggs & Stratton mower; cuts undergrowth to 1-1/2 inches diameter
  • Single, fixed hardened 11-gauge steel and steel blade
  • Includes mower, blade, handle, and safety deflectors
  • Non-CARB compliant; not for sale in California

More Specification..!!

Swisher WB11524 Predator 24-Inch 11.5 HP Gas Self-Propelled Brush Cutter

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Friday, December 2, 2011

Install Your Sliding Barn Doors

!±8± Install Your Sliding Barn Doors

If you love barns, you absolutely would want to provide a good barn door. They are a pair of vertical framed material. They are also visible, and usually made but not limited to wood. They commonly have gambrel type of roofing, but of course, the barn doors' construction is the crucial part as they must be wide enough to house a lot of feeds and other farm equipment.

With other forms of do it yourself instructions, here are the most basic instruction to install your beloved sliding barn doors. Larger sturdy doors can also be used on larger barns, but the usual thickness is of 1 3/4" and 3/4"tongue and groove.

With the materials needed, here are the most common tools you should have. You don't need to be too exact with them; anything equal to them can also be usable. Also, the bolts and nuts included in the door, you will need the following items:

1. Goggles and protection gear, level, tape measure, socket wrench, the sliding barn doors and other needed materials (bolts, spacers and other mounting items), saw, drill, awl, wooden mounting board, router, and paint.

2. When starting out, you need a couple of men to do the job. You can hold track of the support of the door to get a mounting board but with a slightly bigger size the track to be installed. The drywall anchors, bolts, spacers are the ones that will hold the track and the roller to be in place. You can alternatively paint the mounting board to your desired color to match the door color.

3. You can now assemble the steel track. With the joint brackets placed according to the specifications of your barn door. You need to cut a track for the width amount needed, this must be double the girth of its door to permit the door to be opened entirely to the size of the actual width.

4. The next step is to measure the drill holes that you need to put the steel track. When they are to be attached, you need to use the awl to create a space for the drill to remove the occurrence of slipping while drilling. Here is the part where you need to wear the goggles as metal will get hot.

5. You will now measure the track, make sure they are aligned with the use of a level. The next is to install the track along with the spacers to the board and use the bolts.

6. Attaching the hanger roller and be sure to follow your doors' instructions, you will now install the bolts, washers, and other nuts. You can get tighten them with the use of a socket wrench. The next is to attach the bottom roller guide and you can hang the door and you're all done.

You can practically save more money if you follow this guide. But be sure to get more persons to help you out to make sure they can help you out on other things. Also, having a good sliding barn door can be obtained along the internet or just canvass well and get a cheaper but sturdy door for your liking.


Install Your Sliding Barn Doors

Germs Toothbrush Discount

Monday, November 7, 2011

Exploring the Heel of Illinois, or I Don't Even Know Where I Am

!±8± Exploring the Heel of Illinois, or I Don't Even Know Where I Am

Exploring the Heel of Illinois or I Don't Even Know Where I Am We had a destination when we started. It was the blue grass festival in Bean Blossom Indiana. This year was special because it celebrated the 100th birthday of the father of blue grass, Bill Monroe. We had attended once before but never camped so we picked a large open field hoping for some peace and quiet. This property used to be Bill Monroe's home and farm where he lived and enjoyed making music with friends and fox hunitng. We followed the bright sound of strumming banjos and guitars to the stage. Soon we were taping our toes and reminiscing about the songs our grand daddies sang even though we grew up in Indianapolis far from the hills of southern Indiana. Dr. Ralph Stanley topped off the evening with his rendition of "Oh Death, Won't You Spare Me Over for Another Year," made famous in the movie, Oh Brother Where Art Thou? We made our way to our tent at about ten o'clock and lay down for a peaceful sleep. Unfortunately the kids on golf carts had other ideas. They were still racing around the field, revving their engines and shining their headlights into our tent when I finally looked at my watch. It read a shocking 2:30 a.m., and we pulled up our tent stakes and headed for Nashville, Indiana and a Comfort Inn were they were doing an audit and couldn't access the computer. We finally got to sleep around three in the morning.

The next day we were on our way to New Harmony a place where the Rappites and Owens had tried to establish Utopian societies in the 19th century, to visit my friend, an artist who paints subjects from the nineteen fifties and architecture along old highways like US 40 and Route 66. Serendipitously she found an old drive-in restaurant on state road 66 and converted it into a studio. We enjoyed seeing pictures of James Dean, Hank Williams, women in full skirts and high heels ironing with their new Steam-o-matic's or admiring their snow white electric washing machines or ranges. One couple danced around the kitchen in front of their new refrigerator looking like they had just returned from the prom. Giant ice cream cones atop tiny restaurants promised relief from the summer heat with no worries about fat or calories. No worries about Chesterfields or Lucky Strikes either. No worries period. Just the promise of suburban bliss or Utopia 50's style.

It is then that we strayed from the beaten path by crossing the toll bridge just a block from my friend's studio across the Wabash into southern Illinois. Here was a different world which we had unsuspectingly entered into the previous evening when we went to hear a folksinger in Grayville. Everything seemed fine if a bit surreal. He sang of a minor league baseball player who spent time in Lynchburg and ended up with a pinched nerve. A few songs later he launched into "South of Solitude" about entering into the labyrinthine roads of southern Illinois and getting lost resulting in the lyrics, "I don't even know where I am," and ending with the lyrics, "I don't even know who I am." We didn't know it then, but we would soon live the song. There were a grand total of nine or ten people in attendance, four of whom were some young German guys not paying too much attention to the singer. We weren't too surprised to see them as southern Indiana abounds in descendents of German settlers and German restaurants. Travelers are never too far from a good sausage and sauerkraut dinner. But here in Grayville the waitresses seemed quite surprised and happy to see them as they actually spoke German and were young and not too hard on the eyes. We found out that they were in town to work in the coal mine for eight days and were enjoying some Grayville nightlife. The singer ended with some Dylan songs and his friend accompanied him on the harmonica. "That's what you get for Loving Me" seemed appropriate to end the set, and the German guys smiled and said goodbye in English.

The next day, at the suggestion of my friend, we ventured across the bridge again following a vintage Airstream travel trailor, which again lent an air of the fifty's, into surreal southern Illinois again to see the Garden of the Gods. We had seen the one of the same name in Colorado Springs and were not expecting much by comparison. But we were pleasantly surprised by the beautiful and strange looking rock formations in the Shawnee National Forest. The wilderness area is over three hundred and twenty million years old and includes over 3,300 acres of beautiful old growth forest. The sediment rock in this area is over four miles deep and the fractured bedrock has created some interesting rock formations that represent various objects like anvils, camels, and mushrooms. Next we traveled south to the Ohio River and saw Pirates' Cave at Cave in the Rock. Two riverboats had been built and had burned here, but now there was only the ferry taking cars and trucks across the river at no charge. As we reached the Kentucky side of the Ohio River, a truck with an oversize load in the form of an earth mover was waiting to board the ferry. We were glad we had crossed in the company of small cars.

We were now on the Trail of Tears which the original Americans had been forced to take when their land was confiscated by the pioneer settlers. In 1830, Congress passed a bill permitting the removal of all native Indians living east of the Mississippi River. For the next twenty years, Indians were marched west to reservations in Arkansas and Oklahoma, including the bands of the Illini Indians in Illinois. In the Fall and Winter of 1838-39, Cherokee Indians were marched out of Georgia and the Carolinas across Southern Illinois to reservations in the west. It was estimated that two thousand to four thousand Cherokee men, women, and children died during this one thousand mile journey west. It became known as the Trail of Tears due to the many hardships and sorrows it brought to the Indians. The Buel Family told the story of their ancestor Sarah (Jones) Buel who moved to Golconda on Sept. 2, 1836. Two years later the Cherokees passed through Golconda. "My great-great-grandmother was acookin' pumpkin an' keepin' an eye on her baby when she heard a strange noise outside. Before she knew it, the front door popped open and there stood two Cherokee Indian braves just alookin' at her....They had smelled the pumpkin cookin' as they passed by, but my grandmother had no way of knowin' that. Finally, she understood what they wanted, and those Indians were mighty thankful when she gave them some of the cooked pumpkin. I 'spect she was just as thankful when they left," she added.*

Our trip in to Kentucky was mostly through farm country so we headed back to Illinois lured by Old Shawnee Town on the map. When we arrived it was not only old but a ghost town. A massive Greek architectural style bank dwarfed everything else in sight. We later learned that it was the first bank to be chartered in Illinois in 1816. It was also the first building used solely to house a bank in Illinois and was used until the 1920s. Someone told us that it had refused a loan to a bank in Chicago when it was first developing, because it didn't think Chicago would be a successful settlement. HogDaddy's bar was across the deserted street from the bank. A sign on the door said closed for the winter, but it was obviously closed for the summer as well. We also learned later that the worse flooding in decades had closed the town down. Two wooden cut-out figures of Lewis and Clark indicated that they had passed through Shawnee town, but they looked as forlorn as we did when we found out HogDaddy's was closed. We drove south out of town thinking we were on the Lincoln trail but ended up on a gravel road. Common sense would have dictated turning back to the main road, but we wanted to see the confluence of the Wabash and the Ohio. We were soon lost in a labyrinth of corn fields. We saw a deer and her fawn in the middle of the road drinking from a mud puddle. We kept turning right when we should have turned left to get back to the main road, but the river beckoned.

Then without warning our engine sputtered and stopped. Walking was out of the question in the heat and humidity. We waited hoping the engine would start but after half an hour, we tried calling for a tow truck. Luckily we were able to reach Triple A, but were not so successful in trying to tell them were we were. "Well there's a corn field on the right and a forest on the left, and we were on Round Pond Road, then Long Pond road, and then Pond Church Road, then Big Hill Road." While we were calling, a farmer came along, and we flagged him down. He was a gift from Heaven as he had GPS and gave us our coordinates. Even more amazing was that he knew the guy we were talking to on the phone personally even though he was in Indiana. They had grown up together and the tow truck guy knew the farms bordering the road where we were. The nice farmer stayed and talked to us until the tow truck arrived. He had some sad stories about flooding in the area causing late planting and ammonia used in farming being stolen by people making meth. We had the feeling that we might not be safe even though far from the big city. An even sadder story was about his son, who had served two stints in Iraq, coming home and drowning while swimming in a quarry.

The tow truck guy soon arrived, greeted his friend, and invited us to climb into the front seat of his truck. He continued the tale of woe saying that the economy in southern Illinois had been ruined by the politicians in Chicago even though some of them had been sent to Washington. He also mentioned meth problems in the area acerbated by the bad economy and worse weather. We again felt like we didn't know where we were, or maybe we had strayed into Mexico. However when we crossed back into Indiana, he cheered up a little naming various industrial sites that we passed such as Marathon and Bristol Myers Squib. Ethanol plants were prospering using the corn we had been lost in. It seemed more industrialized, but not necessarily better. But in his opinion there were more business incentives offered in Indiana and better politicians. He was glad to relate his life story saying he had wanted to be a chiropractor but had opted for nursing. Burnout caused him to go into business as a gas station owner. When his business in Illinois was not doing so well he asked God to give him a sign if he should move into Indiana and start a towing service. That night the roof on his filling station caved in. He now does missionary work every year in Honduras with the Baptist Church where his training as a nurse serves him and them well. He treats people for everything from parasites to gangrene.

These guys from southern Illinois were two of the nicest guys I have ever met and representative of others who are trying to survive in spite of large corporations taking over family farms and politicians passing legislation not favorable to small businesses, and they are retaining their values as good Samaritans as well. We also appreciated the 277,500 acre Shawnee national Forest with its diverse population of plant, animal, and bird life. It provides habitat to several endangered or threatened species and is a beautiful place to visit. It is hard to believe that this area was once covered by a shallow ocean and inhabited by sea creatures before the Mississippian people, the Illini and other Indian tribes, the French, British and finally settlers of English, German, Scottish and Irish descent, and even freed slaves arrived. If we travel to the Ohio River Valley in southern Illinois again, it will be to see Metropolis, the home of Super Man and Harrah's Metropolis casino/hotel.

The tourist industry is big here also because of Kincaid, the home of a complex society which was part of the Mississippian culture. People first arrived in the Ohio River Valley around 12,000 B.C. The culture reached its peak about 1100 AD and a large city was built at Cahokia, near present-day Collinsville, Illinois. Its people built large earthworks and related structures, many of which remain. Mississippian culture regional centers arose throughout the Ohio and lower Mississippian valleys, one at Angel Mounds in Evansville which we would visit later. The rivers were part of widespread trading routes. The French settled in the area in 1757 before the victorious British came to claim the territory. Sometime in the 1830s, Southern Illinois became known as Egypt or Little Egypt because settlers from northern Illinois came south to buy grain during years when they had poor harvests in the 1830s just as ancient people had traveled to Egypt to buy grain (Genesis 41:57 and 42:1-3). Later, towns in Southern Illinois were named Cairo, Thebes, and Karnak, as in the country of Egypt. We were happy to reach Evansville and turn our car over to Pep Boys.

The next day we rented a car and went to the Evansville museums on the riverfront and visited Angel Mounds. From 1100 to 1450 A. D., a town on this site was home to people of the Middle Mississippian culture, who engaged in hunting and farming on the rich bottom lands of the Ohio River. Several thousand people lived in this town protected by a stockade made of wattle and daub. Because Angel Mounds was a chiefdom (the home of the chief) it was the regional center of a large community that grew outward from it for many miles. Roving bands of Shawnee, Miami, and other groups moved into this area about 1650 A. D., long after the Mississippians abandoned the town at Angel. Later, white settlers farmed the land. Much like the Native Americans, they were lured by the rich soil and temperate growing season. One of the families to settle in Southwestern Indiana was headed by Mathias Angel. He had a farmstead on the site of Angel Mounds from 1852 until his death in 1899. His brothers owned adjacent farms, and the land remained in the Angel family until 1938.

Angel Mounds State Historic Site is named after this family. I had participated in an archaeological dig near there while in college at Indiana University. We lived at Angel Mounds and used the Glen Black Laboratory there. WPA workers had excavated at Angel Mounds during the nineteen thirties. Now there is a restored village and a museum. We had photographed the site using box cameras and developed large prints in the dark room. We had used surveying equipment to locate our site in the middle of a field. We found post holes that had been a house, bones, pottery, and even an inscribed stone that looked like a numbering system. Now they probably use modern technology such as digital photography and GPS to find and study the ancient technologies of the inhabitants which included chipping flint spear points, decorating with wax resist pottery techniques, and basket weaving.

We ventured back into Kentucky again to Henderson to see the John James Audubon Museum. He had a fascinating life drawing birds, but left his devoted Quaker wife alone for years at a time and eventually had to declare bankruptcy. He was a dedicated artist and his son later joined him in his passion for recording birds and animals in the wilderness. This museum has a complete Double Elephant edition of Birds of America, the value of which is in the millions. It's on display only one page at a time, understandably. This museum was well worth the eleven mile trip from Evansville. We had to laugh because every place we went on this trip seemed to be eleven miles from the previous place or, if not, a multiple of eleven. Eleven is our lucky number! We picked up our car from Pep Boys and headed home. The windshield wipers came on whenever we used the turn signal, but at least the fuel pump was working, and we were on the road again. My next story may be about all the places our car has broken down and the opportunities it has provided to get to know people in the area proving that older vehicles have their advantages. Road trips in the Ohio Valley are always fun and provide numerous opportunities for enjoying nature, traveling through history and meeting fascinating people.

* Musgrave, Jon, "Southern Illinois history lost on the Cherokee Trail of Tears" from Benton Evening News, (West Frankfort, Ill.) Jan. 3, 1999. http://www.illinoishistory.com/trailoftears.html


Exploring the Heel of Illinois, or I Don't Even Know Where I Am

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Sunday, October 30, 2011

Inside Job - Stillwater Prison & the Day Before Yesterday (A Shannon O'Day Story)

!±8± Inside Job - Stillwater Prison & the Day Before Yesterday (A Shannon O'Day Story)

Inside Job
(Stillwater State Prison) 1961-63

Part one of two

Dana Stanley, born September 27, 1942, met Edward Morrill born August 28, 1930, while working as a teacher's aide in the Dakota County school system...

Forward: Shannon O'Day was the cause Edward Morrill had been sentence to five-years in prison for his affair with a minor, Dana Stanley, during the fall of 1958, and it was now December, 1961. He had served a little over two years, with good behavior, he was to get out in another year 1963, September, and was going up for a board hearing and hopefully be placed on parole, thus, at this point and time he had a parole hearing come September of 1962, one year from this date, and he had told his roommate, he was going to kill the person who put him in this prison when he got out, and the person he told (kidding or not), was Otis Wilde Mather's third cousin, and when his name came up, Shannon O'Day, Oscar Lewis Charleston, had written Otis, to visit him, saying it was urgent. And he did just that, and gave Otis the information of his roommate, inmate friend, and Otis, gave Oscar enough chewing tobacco to last him the year out. But now something needed to be done to stop this potential hazard in the making.

And Otis' plan was two fold. Get him a new sentence, another five or ten years, or do him in. Whichever one was favorable, under whatever circumstances prevailed, in accordance to the time period; and the less people that knew, the better off, to include Shannon O'Day himself.

The Story

Chapter One
The Meeting

"Youall do me this here favor cousin Oscar Lewis and I'll give Youall 0-dollars for you time. Ef-in that be okay with your conscious, and it dont go against your nerve," said Otis Wilde Mather at the Stillwater State Prison, in Minnesota, during his visit with his third cousin, Oscar Lewis Charleston.

They both looked at one another, and Otis pulled out two-hundred dollars, "Ef-in I takes the money the guard here, I mean, the po-lice man, he a-goin' to take it away anyhow, I wish I could buy a-whore, but there aint any here, we'all men here and we can do what women cant I reckon...so give da money to some poor sucker," he said.
"Waht!" said Otis, "Youall sure you wants to do that?"

"How you mean, wants to do that? Jest finds someone who aint got a cent and give them two-hundred dollars worth of those cent's, all right cousin?"

"We'll," said Otis, "ef-in that makes you feel a little better, how about that white girl, Dana Stanley, Morrill got her a baby, and she a-liven on her own in some shack on the levee in that there shanty town down by the Mississippi River, below the cliffs, in St. Paul?"

"Well, I'd like to see a color folk git da money, but poor white is fine I reckon. Waht do he do to her?" Asked Oscar.

"He done treated her like a whore and she waz only fifteen at dhe time, and turned sixteen, then he gits a heart to confess, and gits mad cause Shannon O'Day, he gits the Judge to put him away for five years. Oh I suppose she did her flatiron, but she as poor as a mouse with no cheese. So I'd say if anyone deserves that-there two-hundred dollars, its Dana."

A woman started screaming in the visiting area, some inmate was running around trying to open up his fly, and everyone started looking, and his wife tried to settle him down, and by the time the guards got him, settled him down he had his britches half off wanted to do whatever he could do with his wife, right there and then, and his wife's hands were over her face embarrassed, just shook her head. And a guard said loud and clear, "We got to cut visiting time short today folks-all right everybody leave please."

Otis, hushed up, as the guard pulled the man's britches back up around his butt, and zipped up his front. The guard said to the inmate,

"You'll be walking a tightrope for along time Henry!"

Otis was done talking anyhow, and when he reached the last steps to leave the prison, hearing the heavy metal doors, steel bar doors, clang, and catch the lock, and click as if death itself, burped, close behind him, he took in a deep breath, and let it out slowly. Then he unfolded the money he was about to give Oscar, and put it into a separated department in his billfold. It was that very afternoon Otis visited Dana, and gave her the money on behalf of Oscar. "Do me a favor," Otis, told her, "Write him a thank-you letter, ef'in that aint too much."

She brought a beer to her little kitchen table, and opened it for Otis, "All Right," she remarked, "just give me his full name and how to sent it to the prison, and I'll do as you ask."

Chapter Two
The Decision

Oscar had told his roommate, Edward Morrill, who slept on the top bunk bed, "Every inmate has a right to try and escape, the guards expect it. And I got life, or twenty-years in this cell, fifteen more to go if- I keep my behavior well. Then I am free, jest like that, free. But I aint got fifteen years in me left, I'm forty-eight now, I expect I be dead by then. And I reckon every guard has a right to shoot anyone who tries to leave this prison without the proper paperwork. I need your help, cuz my fate is doom, I aint goin' to run out of her, Im goin' to walk."

Morrill didn't know of course he was being set up, and that he should have known all along he was being set up, because he didn't need to help anyone, he was not getting a promissory note for anything but trouble, but he said, "What is it you're asking me to do?" So he even asked before he had to, what Oscar wanted him to do. Oscar had made sure he owed him a favor, a few black friends were going to blackjack him, threatened to slash his head with whatever they had if they couldn't find a blackjack, and rape him. And Oscar put a scare into those fellows, and Edward was grateful. On the other had, Edward had wished he didn't even know as much already as he did. In fact, if it was left to him, he would have likened to have been locked up in solitary until Oscar was over his escape theory.

"Don't brag; just tell me how you expect to do it? I guess I'm under a small bond to you, I want to do what I got to do and wash my hands of you." Morrill asked, and remarked.

"You don't need to worry any," Oscar said.

"What?" he said. "Why would you say that?"

"I said you don't need to worry, nobody got anything against you and all I want you to do is go into the laundry room, pick up a bag of laundry, from Marcus, my friend in there, and bring it to me in the men's room, during visiting time Saturday, its got women's cloths in it, and my sister is going to visit me, and I'll dress up like her, and she'll say she lost her ID, and I'll walk out of the place dressed like a female before her."

"Yes," he said, "but you're going to be one ugly female." And they both laughed.

Chapter Three
Two Days Later

The Warden called Edward Morrill to his office. "Sit on down," he told him, "listen up" he said, clearing his throat, and then stated (his voice sotto-voce, and curious): "What in the heck did you do it for? We all thought you were of sound mind. That's what your records say anyway, and that's what you told us."

"That's right," Edward said.

"Didn't you know it wouldn't work?" the Warden asked.

Edward got up, wanting to leave, and the Warden said, "Wait, didn't you realize you'd never get away with it?"

"Oscar told me he wanted to escape, but when I brought the bag of cloths into the bathroom, and came out, he was gone, and his sister was gone, and I was standing there by my lonesome." The Warden looked at him; he looked thin and frail.

"Oscar doesn't have a sister, he ought not to have fooled you but he hasn't anything to lose, and when I talked to him, he denied he had anything to do with the women's clothing in that bag, the guard saw you bring it into the bathroom. You would have got out in just another year, and I warned you to keep your nose clean, not to help three-time losers."

"He never had to do that to me," said Edward.

"Well he did it, and you're going to get another five-years added onto your original sentence, so forget about getting out early, you've got until 1968. That's right Edward Morrill, the champion of champion dummies. And I've given you a private cell all to yourself. Some folks just never learn."

"I thought I only had one enemy, Shannon O'Day, I guess I now got two," said Edward.

Chapter Four
Sotto-voce

He, Edward Morrill was different now, as if his youth was going to be warn out before he got out of prison, over a statement he had forgot he even made. Immolated youth and hope had set into Dana Stanley likewise. The leather-toughness that he once had was now physical exhaustion; he had robbed the innocence of a young girl, and set a burning fire to his youthful years. Years would pass; those very same years that he was suppose to have been free. Had Edward had a better lawyer, he might have done better, he had forgot, secrets are no longer secrets once told. That was now. And now he belonged to the State of Minnesota, the Government.

At first he was embarrassed, at what he did, but held some pride, respect for himself, because he hadn't gotten caught at it, and had willingly brought his crime to the attention of the authorities, but he had forgiven himself, but now it had become a kind of reflection of someone's amusement: someone beyond those steel bars, and his guilt, along with that other person's unforgiving guilt he wanted to plant into him, who was trying to make his guilt into shame, someone beyond Oscar to have tricked him, now he felt foolish, and that old guilt came back and had turned into deep shame, hurt and anger.

And now knowing Edward was in for a number of years, more years, Dana didn't feel like waiting, and she didn't want to learn how to wait any longer, waiting and listening, and learning what was going on in the prison, and her child getting older. And so she had gone back to her people, her home with her mother and father, and started dating a gentlemen fellow from Stillwater Township, and she went back to Sunday school. And when Edward would get out in 1968, Shannon O'Day, who was old now, would be dead then, he died in 1967. He, Edward had learned the hard way, justice wasn't for every man and woman alive, it was for the best and richest, and champions of the world. The best the others could do was hope for a chance at it, but not to expect it. America was no different when it came to money, if a man wanted to blot you out, it was a matter of 'how much.' Somehow Edward knew, but didn't say: he talked too much.

5-29/30-2009
No: 2005

Upon the suicide death of Mr. Edward Morrill, in 1966, on the prison wall in his cell, next to his bed, he wrote the following poem:

The Mind's Prison Cell
By Edward Morrill

In my prison cell
An evil knight was born
In a hate sea-roaming
This devil's noble
Unsheathed his sword,
For my sire of old
Once a star
In the heavens...!

And said I, I to my sire
Of old, trapped on land
Slave to the whims
Of this cell in prison...!
Life slowly suffocating
I'll give my soul
To become a selkie
To have power of men
Or a merman or sea spirit
Of various forms, thus...

I shall cast off my skins
And come ashore
As a seal, to a selkie
And with time
This valiant-hearted,
Child of longing,
Chosen of an imp
Shall kill the human
That put me forth
Into this lasting prison,
And return with my soul
For his keeping!

5-30-2009; No: 2614

The Day before Yesterday
((A Shannon O'Day Story) (1916/1966))

Part Two of Two

Chapter Five
Skeptical Shooter

(In a Guesthouse, France, 1916) "What?" The waitress said in German.

"I said where the French compound is? It's getting late."

It was near twilight, he was looking for his battalion, had left The Village of Douaumont, left it the day before yesterday, the battle of Verdun was over, a three-hundred day battle, and he was left to die, but he didn't die, and as he had asked, and the waitress had said: there was some kind of ammo dump at the edge of the woods, several miles away, and so he went in that direction she had pointed out, stepped over trenches, and a few dead bodies still in them, dead men's faces eaten by rats, others with other deformities, he walked by a corn storage shed (reminded him of Minnesota), and then saw a military compound surrounded with barbwire. He headed to the main gate, "Halt," a French Sergeant commanded. A shooter on the tower looking down with a pointed rifle barrow,

"Let's see your ID soldier?" he said.

Shannon O'Day pulled it out of his back pocket, and looked strangely at the man.

"Why you staring at me soldier?" asked the sergeant.

"No reason," he said, but was staring because the sergeant's nose didn't have bone in it, and when you looked at him, you could see right up his nostrils, like a pig.

"Your battalion, or company isn't here, they went onto Paris for leave." Said the sergeant; then he pulled his revolver out, and ordered him against the guard shack's wall, "You look like a spy?" he questioned Shannon, in French.

"Do I talk like one?" asked Shannon, "I'm an American in the French Army, and was wounded and lost, and now I'm healed and still lost. I need a drink of water-please."

"No," said the sergeant. "Just who and what are you doing here, coming out of nowhere? Maybe you're a deserter, not lost but simply done hiding since the battle is now over and want to go home like a hero?"

"About three weeks, I've been gone three weeks, maybe two, I lost count."

"Can I be of any help Sergeant?" asked an officer as he walked by.

"No sir," said the sergeant, "I've got it under control."

"Just so you don't shoot one of our own," he uttered.

Then the sergeant shoved Shannon savagely out onto the thin platform, away from the wall, "Three weeks is a long time to be out there on your own soldier?" said the sergeant, "something smells fishy here!"

The shooter was still looking, halfway aiming his rifle incase he had to bring it back up to his shoulder in a hurry.

"I'm no trader, I was wounded, and some woman in that village called Douaumont put me back together!"

"That's one big cock and bull story," said the sergeant now in English.

From behind them you could hear the incoming whisper of engines in the air, and so Shannon crouched, looked up, the planes looked like two dark long winged ducks, dropping down quickly, the sky was gray and dim, and they were heading toward the ammo dump behind the guardhouse.

"Listen," the sergeant said to Shannon, "...grabs the rifle in the guardhouse and shoot at the plane," the sergeant was too far away, and the plane was now shooting its machine guns madly all around them, and the shooter in the tower could not get a good shot, and he had a roof over his head, and hid behind the tower's wooden frame.
"The mad Germans are shooting everywhichway," said the Sergeant.

Shannon now had his rifle in hand, a soldier came running up toward the sergeant, dived to the ground, side by side, "Don't get in that soldier's way with the rifle, let him shoot," said the sergeant, "take the shot soldier," yelled the sergeant.

The plane dived close overhead, Shannon watched the sky and the lightening tracers of the machine gun, and fired one bullet-a breeze fell on the face of Shannon, with the moon rising overhead, and then you could hear a crash. The second plane emptied its load over the darkness, and missed the main stockpile of shells.

"You know corporal," said the Sergeant, "I realize you had a lot of pressure going into that shot, but next time, don't wait so long."

The stress of the day, and the day before yesterday, was too, too, mush, a certain amount of nausea befell Shannon. He had been anxious to find his battalion, his outfit, and here he found an ammo dump, with a sergeant calling him a spy, and German planes trying to shoot at him.

"Want to know my name, corporal?" asked the Sergeant.

"No, I just want a cot to sleep on."

"Just call me Wes, I'll have someone bring you to the ammo battery, and sorry I called you a spy. Looks like you had a concussion?" asked the sergeant.

"I guess I did," there was a long pause, "can I go now sergeant?"

"Private, go on and take the corporal to the ammo battery, give him a bunk and some grub."

"Yes," sergeant, said the private, "This way Corporal" said the private to Shannon.

Chapter Six
The Door

(1966) The Door

There was a knock on the door, Shannon tossed over to one side, heard a voice say, "Youall a-wake in there?" (A voice from the past.)

"I got some news fer you Shannon!"

Slowly Shannon found his feet, and pushed them over and onto the floor, then pulled him-self up to get up and out of bed

"Sounds like you Otis?"

"Yessum, it me all right, let me in."

Shannon opened the door, "Otis Wilde Mather, what the heck are you doing in town, thought you were down in Ozark?"

"Jes' thought I'd stop on by have a drink with Youall, and give you the good news, Edward Morrill, committed suicide in prison."

"I guess I'm not all that sorry about that, and perhaps not all that surprised. How did you find out?"

"My third cousin done called me up and told me. He's in fer life."

"Hum...m, sounds a bit suspicious to me, like he was keeping an eye on him for you."

"I heard you talking in your sleep, getting those damn nightmares again, or what Youall call them things-nowadays?"

"Nightmares is good enough Otis, just plain old nightmares, sit on down, I got us some good old corn whisky, if you got the time?"

"Yessum, jest like old times, that waht I like 'bout yaw Shannon, you never change."

Written 5-30-2009
No: 406


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