The First Time I Met Dr. Thurston
The first time I met Dr. Thurston (expert on men’s feelings) was on a rainy Sunday in late fall, sort of a miserable day. Still, Dr. Thurston was wearing jeans shorts.
“Are you not cold in your jeans shorts?” I asked.
“No,” he said. “I am not feeling cold. I am not feeling that.”
We went to a breakfast place. It was 9 A.M. but they had a band playing. Couple of guys on trumpets and another guy playing a pump organ that had been shoved awkwardly into an alcove by the bathrooms.
Dr. Thurston ordered pancakes. I pretended to look over the menu (for effect) but ended up ordering pancakes too. See, I knew all along that that’s what I wanted. I could feel it.
“I’m going to text you,” Dr. Thurston said suddenly. He removed a lime green flip phone from the pocket of his jeans shorts.
“Why? We’re right here, talking to each other.”
“No, it’s better this way. Is your phone on vibrations?”
“Yes.”
“This is going to be great, it really is.”
I felt the vibrations through my pants (they were jeans, but standard-length jeans). I removed my lime green flip phone from the pocket. The face said, “Incoming text from Dr. Kevin Thurston- Expert on Men’s Feelings.”
I opened the phone. The text read, “DISCOVER FEELINGS.” It was all in caps, just like that.
“Thanks, Dr. Thurston, I guess I will.”
“Don’t delete that text,” he said. “Even if you get a new phone, make sure to send it to the new phone before canceling service on the old phone. I want it to be your first text when you get a new phone. Even if you have to do it while you’re standing at the counter of the phone kiosk. Just make sure, alright?”
“Ok, Dr. Thurston- will do.”
He drummed his fingers on the table.
“Listen, I’ll be frank– I’m a little concerned about that text,” he said. “You will do what I said? Because, frankly, I’m looking at you and I’m not seeing a guy that’s good at things. I’m sorry, but you needed to hear that.”
“No, really, I will.”
“Promise?”
“I do.”
The pancakes came then. Mine were runny in the middle. They had also run out of syrup suddenly.
But Dr. Thurston’s were good. “Best I’ve ever had,” he said. I believed him.
Keebaugh Delights Partygoers with Cowbell
LANKVILLE ACTION NEWS: YES!
Lankville Daily News investigative reporter Zach Keebaugh surprised partygoers last night by deftly playing a cowbell, sources are confirming.
The event, sponsored by the Danny Madison Company and held in honor of the soon-to-be-released “Madison Head Calculator” took place at the Casa Montecristo (an elegant reception hall).
“The Madison Head Calculator will allow for hands-free operation of all features on our wildly-popular “Reckoner Exactra 2.0” said wunderkind inventor Madison, who spent most of the evening testing alkalinity levels of various pizza cheeses. “We are particularly pleased with the design of the Head Calculator,” added Madison, “the contours are modern and innovative, which is what you would expect from our products.”
After dinner (mostly pizzas that were not part of Madison’s experiments), several guests began dancing to tunes spun by DJ Humphrey.
“That’s when Zach repaired to the middle of the floor and began playing the cowbell,” said a participant, who refused to be identified. “It was definitely the finest cowbell playing that I’ve seen since Dennis “Cowbell” Linkous tore up the cowbell charts back in the eighties.”
Keebaugh, clad in a fashionable white dress shirt and orange paisley tie, noted that the cowbell is “part of [my] personal ethos.”
“I believe in [the cowbell],” the journalist averred. “It’s totally my shit. Anybody else that comes along [to challenge me] will get pimped. Just the way it is, yo.”
Keebaugh treated onlookers to nearly 30 minutes of cowbell-playing.
“It was pretty much masterful,” said another participant, who was later arrested on a firearms charge. “It pretty much stopped everything going on in the room. Except for Danny Madison. He kept on with those experiments of his.”
Keebaugh said he plans to continue his impromptu playing of the cowbell in the future.
“Oh yeah, the peeps, man, they love it. You gotta’ give the people what they want. You gotta’ put the asses in the seats, yo.”
The Madison Head Calculator will be released in mid-April.
Distant Farms Machinery Auction: April 13th
Distant Farms in the Lankville Greater Outlands will be holding a machinery auction on Thursday, April 13, 2017 beginning at 4 PM. Take Route 71 to Route 33, use the Outlands Overpass (exiting on left), go through THE TUNNEL and then make a quick right onto Rural Route 5, making sure to cross the first set of railroad tracks but NOT the second. Make another left at the fence post, go through the signal light by the shuttered linen store and the farms will be on the left just beyond the hedge maze. Look for the mailbox labeled “The Cravitz Family”.
SELLING: Lankville Harvester 1021 tractor, 38″ rubber; Miltons/Binders 4040 tractor, 30″ rubber, needs tires; Vitiello and Company 574 decorative ham harvester; Neptune 8N w/ high speed trans but no tires; Huge Trojan 166 payloader with no tires; Lankville Harvester 570 baler with heads, hydro tension control, applicator, & 55 kicker; Miltons/Binders 770 chopper (no tires); Badger 3310 chopper (tires removed); Lurking Murderer Harvester 6000; Lankville Harvester 711 1 row chopper (2nd row extra); Lot of (2) Huge Trojan 439 haybines; Lot of (2) Neptune 658 manual rakes; Habawnik Gourd Caresser 625; Fehr AJ600 ledder cobalts; (3) Pendleton SU wagons but no tires, 2 need augers; Steel bsket wagon; steel basket rack; steel basket; steel work pants; steel jumper; steel hop cords; Stoltzfus 52′ feeder wagon (no tires); Mueller 1800 gallon bulk, #52118-A; plus bars, hand tools, signs, rods, pins, folders, misc parts and more!
Bath Times with My Father, Gump Tibbs

By Shane Tibbs
Gump Tibbs is many things to many people: beautiful pig, Kingdom Witness, drunken lout, gas station aficionado, sweaty pig, hardware store loiterer. The list goes on and on. More recently, he became something even more special to me: father and exclusive bath partner.
How he sweats so! And teases our kitten, Señor Mittens!
“Where are your papers Señor Mittens? I should like to [here he passes out for 5 to 10 winks] I should like to … repurrrrrrrt you …”
He becomes wild with laughter, flapping his arms against the water.
“Papa, you are making a mess,” I squeal.
“What a delight!” he bellows, lighting another cigarette.
I didn’t know my papa most of my life, because, as an infant, I was traded at the Lower Regions’ Super Flea and LaundroVoid for an ant farm.
“They were an industrious crew of laborers. Most impressive,” Gump says, “but merciless, like your MOTHER! And, I should like to add,” he adds, losing his train of thought.
Gump didn’t trade me, he says. It was my vile mother, he says.
“The biiiiiiiiiitch,” he exclaims whenever she comes up. “The nefarious harlot sold my son and absconded with my heart! Evil Jewessss!”
My papa knows about ALL of the races.
“You musn’t speak of her so,” I cry, secretly enjoying his wickedness.
Then he dips his thumb into his gin and smears the burning liquid across my shivering lips.
“What do you say, son? Go get my keys and we’ll go for a ride – a joy ride, my boy.”
This means we’ll go out searching for Brian Schropp. How I hate him!
One day father announced on Lankbook that I was his son. It was a happy day because I just knew I wouldn’t have to share bath times WITH BRI ANYMORE.
“You beautiful pig, father, our bath times mean so much much more to me now!”
“What a delight!”
The opinions of Shane Tibbs are not necessarily the opinions of The Lankville Daily News or any of its subsidiaries.
Is Duking Safe? A Zach Keebaugh Investigation
Listen up, yo. I know you’ve all been reading a shit TON about this whole duking business that’s been running rampant like a nun in a cucumber patch. You’re probably asking yourself, “Fuck, yo, is it even safe to go outside without getting my dumb ass-self duked?” Well, thankfully, your boy Zach is here to break it down for you. That’s Zach as in, Zach Keebaugh, Investigative Reporter, straight up.
First thing I did was head right on down to the Mild South Peninsula police HQ to talk to my man Detective Gee-Temple. This flatfoot has been the “p” in police in Lankville ever since I was in Dampers.
“Let’s talk about duking. Now, what the fuck is duking?” I probed.
“Well, Zach, duking is basically the act of dropping a sandwich on top of another’s sandwich as a sign of frustration or disrespect. It’s a street term.”
“I’m street, cracker. I’m street.”
He looked at me for awhile and then continued.
“Anyway, Zach, what we’ve seen all over Lankville lately is an upsurge in these so-called duking incidents. And, as of this moment, we have no leads or suspects.”
A pretty little secretary in a pink pantsuit suddenly brought a box of old encyclopedias into the gumshoe’s office.
“Zach, I need to check on these. I’m sorry but our interview is now over.”
I was onto something like a boss, no question about it.
Next thing I did was go interview this dog by the name of Pat Alvarado over in the Outlands. Ol’ Avocado, as I started calling him (he didn’t like it at all, but fuck it) had been a victim of a massive duke down at the Pizza Disturbance. “I was just eating a turkey club and this old guy duked me with a meatball sub,” he recalled while smoking a cigarette in a darkened room. “It was…it was a mess…it was horrible. Nobody should ever have to go through…”
This ninja started crying then but I kept the probe going hard to the net.
“Listen, so what did this duker look like, man? How can you let some old codger duke your shit like that?”
“He was…probably about 65,” he said, pausing to take a long drag off the cig and a big swig of some cheap wine. “He came out of nowhere, man. Just absolutely out of nowhere, man. He duked me and then…he was gone.”
“So, it was a duke and run?”
“It was a duke and run, Zach. A duke and run.”
Ol’ Avocado lit one cigarette off the last and started fingering a steak knife so I figured I’d better head.
The psychology department at Lankville State Easier University was my last stop. That’s where I met Dr. R. Shawn Stanley Blyleven. Yep, that’s what the big ol’ fancypants gold plate on his door said.
“What’s the R stand for?” I probed.
He casually watered a nearby fern. “Does the R bother you?”
“Nah, nah, fuck that noise,” I said. “Zach K doesn’t need any kind of trick cyclist. Tell me about this duking shit, yo. You seeing duke victims in here or what?”
“This is a university Zach, so we don’t do any therapy here. But, yes, duking is beginning to show up in the literature. It has traumatized a lot of people in Lankville. How do you feel about it?”
“I’m investigating the piss out of it. Otherwise, yeah I feel alright. Not as good as I’d feel if I could get some cutie to let me stir the paint, if you know what I’m saying.”
He looked vastly confused.
“Well, now, Zach. Obviously duke victims are likely to suffer long-term effects and…”
I interrupted.
“Yo, is duking limited to just sandwiches. Like, can I duke a guy with a slice of pizza?”
“If it’s slice on slice then, yes, it’s considered duking.”
I scratched my chin and stared earnestly at the fern.
What’s the takeaway then? Will duking become an epidemic or just an isolated incident perpetrated by some derelict galoot? Who knows? But take your boy’s advice on this one and take it to the bank– don’t be cavalier about eating your sandy in public. Protect it and maybe you can protect yourself– protect yourself from getting duked.
Zach Keebaugh won a trophy for this report.
Shane Tibbs contributed to this report.
Whatever Happened to Dr. Nickelbee?
In 2016, noted Lankville therapist Dr. Nickelbee ran for president on the Green Sanity ticket. Two months later, he lost his Lankville Psychiatric Association license under circumstances that remain unexplained.
Where is he now?
I did some poking around and found the former therapist holed up in a pay-by-the-week motel, operating a fledgling internet cat-related crafts business. His story:
Dr. Nickelbee limps to a fast-food restaurant every morning where he eats two large pancake meals from styrofoam containers. “Even though I eat in, I always ask for the containers,” he says, slathering the cakes with seven packets of syrup. “The reason for this is that I can use the styrofoam in the cat-related crafts business. You have to think ahead, you know.”
Back to his room by eight, Dr. Nickelbee checks his email for orders. There are none. Now–the waiting game.
“I have my boxes ready to go,” says the disbarred shrink, pointing to a dim corner of the carpeted room. “There’s some bubble wrapping there, some labels. Then the crafts themselves are in a storage bin down by the weeds. You know, down there.” He points vaguely to some distant craft arena.
I ask him if he is not upset about losing his license. “I had a good run,” he says, vaguely. “I had a good time sitting in those offices, having meaningless folders brought to me by tanned women. But, that’s all over now.”
He checks his email again. Still no orders.
“We have ceramic cat paper weights,” he says, for no reason. “So, if you find yourself in a situation where you have a lot of papers flying around but you also like cats…” He stops. He looks vaguely past the cheap curtains towards an enormous gravel lot that was once a drive-in movie theatre. There seems to be nothing behind his initial enthusiasm for cat-related crafts. There seems to be nothing behind those large brown eyes except sadness. He is a man bereft.
Another check of the email. Nothing. In fact, other, older messages seem to have suddenly disappeared. He reloads the page and the site crashes altogether. He suddenly throws up some half-masticated pancake into a wastebasket.
“I use this thing called spummail.net. It only costs $0.99 a year. But it’s unreliable. I’ll have to wait two hours now before it reloads.” He wipes the edge of the wastebasket with a damp towelette.
“I think I’ll probably take some hard decongestants and a nap for awhile,” he declares. He flops down on the unmade bed, watching the computer and its laborious machinations. A loud humming suddenly fills the cramped space.
The man that was once on top of the psychiatric world suddenly falls asleep. It is only 9AM.
***
Who is “Dr. Nickelbee”? A complicated question with even more complicated answers.
Nickelbee was born in the Northern Hill Island Area though he is quick to point out that his parents were 100% Lankvillian . “My father was permitted to travel between Lankville and the Islands,” he reveals, after finally waking from his decongestant stupor. “The reasons for this are unclear to me to this day. My father sent the family to Lankville in 1992 and two years later he was viciously murdered before he could join us. The details are murky but it appears that he attempted to purchase a pair of extremely wide shoes, an argument ensued and that he was knifed to death by the clerk. We got a letter in the mail saying that.”
“Saying what exactly?” I ask.
“That he was knifed to death by a shoe clerk after attempting to buy a pair of very wide shoes. Ever since then, I have had deep resentment for the Islands and when I was wealthy and could afford many globes [at one time Dr. Nickelbee had seventeen], I was always quick to place a blue piece of construction paper over the islands so that it appeared to be ocean. I called it the Lankville Ocean.”
Dr. Nickelbee’s email has finally reappeared after many hours of loud humming and strange warning boxes. There are no orders.
“My father taught me about business. He taught me to save large sums of money by hurting smaller people. He also taught me to deprive myself of things until I had a lot of money and then to spend it on ridiculous things, like cars, loud rugs, education. These were his life lessons.”
The good doctor repairs to a small hot plate that he produces from beneath a knot of soiled blankets. There is a styrofoam ice chest as well and from there he brings forth a box of “Steak-Om’s”.
“Steak-Om?” he asks. I want one desperately but I can tell that he is only offering out of obligation. I say no and he seems terribly relieved. He begins warming the frozen steak panel over the hot plate.
The day is half-over.
***
Dr. Nickelbee has fallen asleep again and burned his Steak-Om lunch. He reflects upon the loss as he turns over the now empty container, almost as if he hopes that, magically, more frozen compressed meats will appear. “The last two months have been all about loss,” he says. Then he adds, “I fear I may have catalepsy.”
It is now late afternoon and the sky has turned a slate-hued grey, reflecting the mood inside the spartan motel room. There are still no orders for cat-related crafts and the computer has become an electrical beacon of hopelessness. “The sky over the Northern Suburbs was similar to this,” he ruminates. “If I had the power, I would crush the Northern Suburbs and its people,” he says, dramatically. He suddenly collapses into the yellow and brown curtains, snapping the rod straight out of the wall. An errant screw shatters the blinking computer screen. The lights in the room all go out for some reason.
I transfer Dr. Nickelbee’s quaking body to the bed. Strangely, no further light seems to be transmitted through the curtainless window; indeed, it appears to be growing darker by the second. I stare down at the former therapist’s aging face and see now that he has vomited. I turn his limp body over and the vomit seeps into the carpet.
I momentarily leave the room and purchase a bucket of chicken and a 48-piece biscuit. When I return, Dr. Nickelbee is standing over the useless computer. He has removed his vomit-stained shirt.
“All of my shirts are now stained with vomit,” he says. “I was waiting for a sale so that I could do laundry,” he explains. “But, I see that you have purchased chicken and biscuits.”
He produces a quart of cheap liquor and I realize now that he intends to take part in the repast, whereas I had intended to eat the meal all on my own. I reluctantly allow him two breasts and two biscuits. He breaks down in tears and then becomes suddenly loquacious. A certain vigor has returned to his cheeks.
“In Lankville, we say that no amount of misfortune can negate a bucket of chicken.” He tears into the flesh. I eat my portion of the bucket voraciously, so that there be no excuse to share any further. Still, the doctor poaches several more biscuits. “In Lankville, we say that the biscuit helps to temper the spirits.” Somehow, I suspect he is lying, that he is making up these proverbs to gain more of my dinner.
The sun has now gone down over the hills.
The Heartbreak of Alcoholism
Important Opinions
My name is Gump Tibbs and I am an alcoholic.
Twelve simple words that, when placed together in a sentence, constitute a most profound confession. A confession not only to yourself but a confession to the world.
I have driven into hedges, through fences and into hammocks. Sometimes, the hammocks had people in them. Sometimes, people eating lunch. I have drunkenly driven tractors down highways, drunkenly stolen lawn gnomes from private yards. I have run over trash cans and then dragged them for miles and miles– entirely unaware that sparks were flying all around me, metal against blacktop.
And then dawn comes and with it, a renewed sense of purpose– a commitment to the tenets of sobriety, of rosy-cheeked probity and of ethical decency. The feeling is short-lived. I begin a debate with myself about the idea of time. Time as merely a state of mind. “Civilization decrees that 5:25 AM is “too early for beer,” I have convinced myself. And I have decided to rebel against such conventional wisdom. Five hours later, I would find myself offending patrons at a tire shop or driving into a house on a suburban street. And yet I always dreamed of a society free of the bondage of alcoholic beverages. A society where the sun shines always.
Recent studies suggest that 71% of the adult population of Lankville are alcoholics. Most of The Lankville Daily News staff are alcoholics. Our President is not an alcoholic but that, of course, is simply a factor of him being asleep most of the time.
There are over a million alcoholic beverages produced in our country and several million more items available at hardware stores. What chance does the poor soul have in this bacchic buffet? What chance, I ask you?
Join a Temperance Society, Kingdom Hall or yacht club today. Help combat the heartbreak of alcoholism.
The opinions of Gump Tibbs are not the opinions of The Lankville Daily News or any of its subsidiaries.
Notes of an Old Man Who Lives Alone

By Luman Cans Harris
“Where did you work as a young man, Luman?” the visitor asked.
It was Baxterson. He lived next door. Occasionally, he wandered over and we sat at the kitchen table in the fading light.
“I worked for the Frostie Company. Do you remember them?”
“No.”
“Root beer. I worked in the bottling plant.”
“Sounds stupid. Like something you made up. I would have known about them,” Baxterson said.
“They went out of business. They never did well anyway. The owner, Mr. Frostie, suffered from several mental illnesses. But they did give me a nice pension.”
“Bunch of lies. Bunch of god damned lies.”
It always went like this. Baxterson not believing anything I said, always getting aggressive about it. I wished he would leave.
He got up and went over to a giant microwave oven that sat atop the fridge. It was ancient, barely operable– I didn’t use it often.
“What kind of stupid thing is this?” he asked. He fiddled with the knobs (it had knobs).
“Listen, Baxterson, I need to start thinking about getting to bed.”
His shoulders suddenly slumped. “It’s only nine, Luman. You wouldn’t believe the evening I have planned for us.”
I sighed. Everything hurt. I was beginning to worry about cancer. That would be the kind of thing that would happen to me. Some rare form of cancer. Nobody would find me for months.
“Excuse me a minute,” I said. I went to the bedroom. It was dark in there– the last bit of summer sunlight had faded. I put a fan on and reached into the bedside table, felt the cool steel of the old Child Scouts hunting knife. I had kept it all these years.
I came back into the kitchen with the knife extended in front of me.
“LEAVE NOW OR I WILL CUT YOU!”
He laughed a bit. “What are you trying to pull Harris?”
I lunged at him– he dodged and the knife went into the fridge. “GO ON, I TOLD YOU I’D CUT YOU.”
He turned into the sink, stumbled and then took off towards the door. I listened to his footfall down the staircase.
I undressed and got into bed with the latest Dean T. Pibbs novel. The premise was that some terrorists attacked a large carnival. It seemed promising.
Everything seems promising though for an old man who lives alone.



























































LETTER SACK