Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 40, Number 147, Decatur, Adams County, 22 June 1942 — Page 3
PAGE THREE
ii.r gB WEDDING i ■B ■ as been tnad< ■B ■ ■!.<• :>ppr..« b- ~, Miss Margaret Port Wayne. Bff'. ,nd Mrs. I) F HB ' ’" t ' ,rn ' l:us mB ■• t, ■. (f >n< l . son of mB. •• .-i ii.ii". also of gB The marring IB a. future and jSB <ke Hit ir hot: . mV v • ■ < d M ll*. Fort m 8.,... i Mon’, holo list o fscr. ice i>r ' •*'•:•'" r,r • la ' week. . i..\vnship hom< m !;• ■ .dh : ' ■• < I«.< k All iniiii- , .. be piC-SCUt. tudy club will of Mrs Victor Thursday rt<n Jock. gB- -r ri.-d Kuhn and Bucchley and ■ it McKinley. O ■ •-- Folgcr Hoilo■B •' :> • ■ Ohio were th>|B| ; ’.’ i Mrs. Rov Kuhl. ■> a ■ • ,» Crystal Lak. '.asoan mark Father's Day ■ i fi.'luS. 1.. Mo.-han of Li expert! <d to .■ I. cabin Svl ' City, the la.-t <■•' £9 it Mrs. Meehan lair Gene Stra’-
W'' ’*’! I • w < “v y gfe%» II a Mk W®® 1 r THAT THOSE WHO FIGHT MAY EAT | Governor General Visits mI ■ - - K '•>#■& :-4fa ■™ " M g^ : .«,„. * , $jL K* SUh . f JE- !g ’ |l "WRa |||f * jK |r>'%/ ■P*** Med **- -••*—*" JR lt *ien* and hia *'** ””" Hr** ywmer general. *• * M they **** <** flrt * E***. •* (town at Windsor. were <- Ei** *► ***•** s “• “” ■ p ' fM the vte.t.>n tat a K'B****’^. Bto> aM brelge, ■ t maatiMßl botMttuy .y- *
CLUB CALENDAR Seclety Deadline, 11 A. M. Fanny Macy Phones 1000 — 1001 i ■ Monday Pythian Sliter. Tempi* Meeting, ; K - of P. Home, 7:30 p. m. Tuesday [ . Root Township Homo Economic. Club Meeting and White Elephant , Hair. .Monmouth School. 1:30 p. m . | Civic Section Picnic Suppep Hanna-Nuttman Park. 6 p m Church Mothers Study Club. .Me- ■ I thodi.t Church. 2:30 p.. m. I _ Rebekah laxlge. f. o. O. F. Hall, t 7:30 p. m. Wednesday St. .Mary's Twp. Home econoi mica Club. Bobo School, 1.30 I P- m. World Friendship Omid, Miss , Sanna Kunkel. 7:30 p. m Red Cross Sewing Project, Legion Home. 1 to 4 p. m. I'nion Township Home Bionomics Club, Mrs. Chalm< r Barkley. 1:30 p. m. Thursday ■ ‘ Regular stated Meeting of the i' Order of Eastern Star, Masonic. ■ I Hal! 7:30 p. m. St. Pau! Ladles' Aid Society, ' .Mrs. Floyd Smftley, All Pty MeetI Ing. ■ j Rurnlistic Study Club. Mrs .’ | Victor Ulman, 8 p m. • Friday Red Cross Production Center. I American Legion Home, 1 to 4:30 I ton-Porter. will lie accompanied * by her two sons. James and John ■ latter she will l>e joined by her ’ I two daughters. Mrs. Daniel Thomas and son Toni of Los An--1 geles and Mrs. Swanton Dalton ‘ I and daughter Jan of Phila--1 delphia for a family house party ! Mr and Mrs. Frank N. Wallace of Fort Wayne will also join the 1 party. Mrs Wallace was secretary tc the late Mrs Porter. There will be a regular stated > meeting of the 1 Order of Eastern ■ I Star at the Masonic hall Thursr day evening at seven-thirty o'clock All members are asked to • be present as initiation will be
Leave for Service with U. S. Army ■lb * i * ' acrl VC * ■£ €v* r? mLwww SBF 1 1 MMMBB | I *.« L 3 1 w Mb ' IMIHii i f kß_ lUi M ■ ■ - , i IB * b <9 K -- B '■ ■■'' Bw U B. ■. H isntf ir. i V B ISr W Bl Jk ■' SB | T Hub S » S ■ Sa ■ Above are pictured the mt n who left last T hursdav for service with the U S Armv from the local selective si rvice board. Twelve of the men were rejected The others were accepted. They arc: First row. left to right: Robert Woodhall, Herman Lyons. Robert Brodbeck, Oscar Lengerich, Chalmcr Lee. Glenn Goldsberry, and Franklin Rayl. Second row: Wendell Macklin, Waveland Fwher, Dick Moses, Ins Lehman. Charles Leonard. Ornell Schindler, and Joshua Lister Third row Thomas Adler. Edwin Kiefer, Earl Harmon, Walter Tumhleson. Harold Blythe Fourth row: Harold Stauffer. Danii l Christen. Keith Banta. Solomon Eicher Calvin Magley Robert .doran Fifth row Robert Y.-ike Raymond Miller. Edwin Kauffman. Robert Martin, Charles Marks, and Harrison Fennig. Buck row Edward Kirchner. Art Miller, Harry Ellenberger, and Jen me Steiner.
held and one member will become affiliated with the local lodge. NORTH MMOM (Continued from Pag" 1) - — Saturday and the North Oregon coast lies within an easy day's sailing for such a vessel. The first attack on the American mainland was made February 23 when a Japanese submarine surfaced off the Elwood oil field, 12 miles north of Snnta Barbara, Cal. and fired two down shells at rigs and storage tanks Damage was restricted to one rig and placed at; only *SOO The coastline of Northern Oregon. between Astoria and Seaside, is desolate. There is a Ifl-mil'-stretch of sandy waste between i Warrenton and Seaside, two miles wide in parts, and the shells prob- < ably landed there The coastline also is black at night for there arc no towns along the Itt-mile stretch, and seaside towns in Washington and Oregon were dimmed out at the suggestion ; of the 13th naval district last night BOY SCOUTS ATTEND (Continued Psge !> Brown. Red Flaming Arrow Bill Bolling- j er. leader; Don Leichty, Richard Cottrell. Jack Reynolds, Bill Whittrcdge, Blue. Troop (H ifubert Feasei. leader; Royle Bollinger. Lyman Hann. Kenneth Roop. Dwight Egh-y. All five other Berne partrols Eagle Wolfe and Crow patrors of tnx p 8H and ’he J«< kal and Wolf patmlr of troop H7. were awarded blue ribbons. The camporcy closed with a pot luck dinner, attended by the parents. Sunday noon. Locals Dr and Mrs Roy Andress • daughter Irene and the Misses tabby Macy and Mary Jo Butler 1 enjoyed a visit to the Area coun- ! cil Boy Scout camporee. which | 1 was held from Friday night to , ' Sunday atfernoon at the Speed- ( w>> Fort Wayne They were | accompanied home by their ».n ( Bruce and Norman Leonardson. ( Miss Janet Schrock has rel-t.n-ed to Chicago after spending Father's Day with »* r J’ ar * nU ; Mr and Mrs. W P Schrock of South Second street Tom Ailwein and his mother j Mrs F G Ailwein have returned to Gibson City. ni . after a week .nd visit here with Mrs. Tom Ailwein and baby daughter . M mV£. Ailwein of CWe. Und. Ohio and Mr and Mrs j D ,ck Shaw of Shelby have returned to their homes after a week end visit with Mr and Mrs Frederic Schafer of *«< *-«« and other relative. "d ! friends here. Farming W‘«* Merer Cho ** r cat. « P»-Fam-the Ko4lozx lastltgt • Os Aal > /**,,, 'MI Wilk tractors, a**®" 4 ' ReHegx laatitate t"« ; tM , * — »- The iaatlta’e point--orktai l»e of a longer thsn horse N*« needs no spare parts, and P™ £reZ»i'*r. AaorteM ia»rtmo«ts la Cbl—total SJTt.g—.—*•
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Films Bicycle Violations
Films Bicycle Violations flanta Boss. Cal. — (PPI —Chief of Police .Melvin Flohr Invited a large number of students of the Santa Kona high school to attend a movie preview. The film consisted of actual motion pictures of traffic violations on bicycles by his guest*. They promised to be careful in the future. o East Buffalo Livestock ....East Buffalo. N. Y., Juno 11 — (VP) — Livestock: Hogs 300 and steady; good and choice 200 to 220 11m. 14.75; trucked In 170 'o 230 lbs. 14.25 to 14 50; cattb- 200; steers 12.50; cows 25 cents lower, vealers 200 and steady; god and choice 315. Sheep 200; lambs steady: springers *ls top. Indianapolis Liveatock Indianapolis, June 1! — H'P) Livestoik: Hogs SO—; steady to strong; 100 to 400 ihs. 14 to 14.20; 100 to 100 lbs- 12.05 to 13.75; cattle 700; calves 700; steers 12 to 13. mostly: good cows 10 to 10JI0; vealers steady to weak al II to 14.50. sheep 250; spring lambs 50c higher at 15.50 tup - —— 0 — Idaho Potato for Mama Pocatello. Ida H'Pi Joe Howard grew a potato in the form of a perfect victory "V". lie sent it to the governor of Maine with the message: "Tell the state of Maine that our potatoes keep up with the times. - o— - - - firrat Falls. Mont. H'Pi The traditional Itusy Iw-e let M mtana apiarists down this year by producing only 10 per cent of the state's demand for honey. Montana beekeepers are depressed because the war has Incrased the price if honey. o Will Preserve uid Letter Carmi. HL, —< I'Pl -School officials will put a small copper box found in a recently razed school in the cornerstone of a new school building. The copper box contained a letter wrltti-n by a Dr. Dsn! I Berry, dattd U7O. the l»Oth year of V 8. imiependence. —a Best Leather in Army Shoes Sacramento. Cal. —H’PI Gov. Colbert L. Olson foresees that even walking may have to be mHoned. As chairman of the State Council of Defense, he has been notified that SO per cent of ail lopgrade leather soles must be set . aside for military needs-
stir smoothimo stak« h***, I Ifcawa 1 iMteqaik fiwi CtMBM ia It colon ifod | Kohne Drug Store
Bcw and Arrow for Emergency H Mound city Mo ll'Pl -Chief 11 of Police <>. F. Hagan and th<- mem- • | b-.re of th. American Legion are i' preparing for the day when all billI lets will go to the army Both le- • I gionntilres and policemen are prac- . tiling daily with bows anil arrows. > which the la-gli n purchased for ' the emergency. —o ——— ■— Elected Chle* fer 48th Time .Marshall, Minn H'Pl The of- | i fii i- of fire < hies app ars to be a i life-time job for Albert V Ik. who I at the age of 72. has been rei-lect-ed chief for the 4sth cimsecntiv. year. He was a member of the city's I first fire department organized in s l*9b. . j o Gcnd Neighbor Fire Fighters Corcoran. Cal H'Pi Tills city dcvisid a "go <1 neighbor insur- ■ uiu c" system for property outside > the city limits. A fee of llu for ' residences and *25 for businesa . bouses within a half mile of the , City limits will Insure the s- rvices of the city fire department tor a . y.-ar. . o Olive Oil Is Precious Freight Htrathmore. Cal., -(L’P)--Tho ; most valuable car of freight eve: • shipped from thig city was recently i | consigned to New York City I’ coni ' slated of HO.ixio pounds of olive oil valued at *3«i,o<N). The soyte-an first cam- to American farms in l'!* M as an agricultural crop introduced in the I'nit-«-d States In l*'»l, from th- Orient, it was grown only tt garden* as u curiosity Today, soylxian production is nearly Hhi.ihhi.iiou bushels a year and factories produce soybean oil. cake and meal with an annual output of * 1.1.!H»> mio, according to the Census Bureau. —. i .in o ■ —-——— More children were born m July and August than in any other months during 19W, according to the Census Bureau. Infant deaths Ten highest ill !>»•< ember »nd January. however, and maternal deaths touched their peak in Mar-h. o - Annual produ< tlon of rzsors in I'tilled States factories includes IM.4SO.tMH* safety razors. 74“.600 dry shavers. 7S.MM* straight-edge and others, according to Censes Bureau figures. Yearly produit.on of safety razor blades amounts to nearly two billion. i1.!»05.77t*.244A ■ —OFreight car loadings for the week ended April 19 totaled 705.451. an Increase of 12.8 percent I over the same week in 1940.
ROOSEVELT ( HUH IIH.I. (Continued from Page 11 naval and air,” Early said. "Any one of these meetings is ' purely part of the whole and there is no need to put on the rec- ! ord or feature any one of them." Early added. "That is the reason why the situation as far as you are concerned is what it is o— - Till BIN GOES Ol T (Continued from Page 1) other sheared off the steam pipe nn th<- new 5/100 KW turbine The latter is useless, however, in any event, since the boiler stoker hooked to the turbine is torn down for repair A governor on the 1.000 KW turbine was torn off. Onlv the 2.000 KW turbine was available, if anything. tn restore power and light c to the city, and that after hours .of wnrk. Pieces of the turbine. which normally turns at 3.000 , revolutions per minute, wor • strewn all over the interior of the plant and some outside on the lawn. Before it broke loose its RPM's were likely up far in 'the thousands, plant workers said. Candles, lanterns, gasoline and kerosene lamps became a premium in the city a few hours after the incident. Informed that the service would not be restored
O- J- 11. _A 2w JAMES HILTON nfiTWSt / •ssywigKg;
f rwArrm rirnrrT FTvYj "Good night, Undo Charles," Kitty said and left the library. As he went back to the shelves he hesrd her footsteps fading through tho house—no longer s child, that was true, but she still scampered like one. He searched for a while without finding anything ho wanted to read. Nineteen twenty-five was another Improving year, tho yesr of Ix>camo, the false dawn. It was a year perhaps typical of the twenties in its wishful optimism backed by no growth of overtaking realism; another sixpence off tho Income tax, another attempt to harness a vague shape of things to eome with the even vaguer shapes of things that had been. For the publie would not yet look squarely into that evil face (publishers were still refusing "war books ") and few also were those who fearctl tho specter might return. Tho England hoped for by the majority ot Englishmen was a harking back to certain frugalities of the past (lower and lower Income tax, smaller and smaller government expenditure) in order to enjoy more and more the pleasures of the present! ths Europe they dreamed of was a continent in which everybody placidly "saw reason, while cultivating summer schools, youth hostels, and peasant costume festivals in the best tradition es Hamps’ead Garden Suburb; in exchange for which the City would make loans, tr»<le would thus he eneouraged, and taxes fall sUll further. Mixed up with this almost myrtle materialism was the eager, frightened idealism of the Labour 1 arty (both the eagerness and the fright earns to a head a year later, in tho General Strike); the spread of tho belief that the League of Nations never would be much good nut was probably better than nothing, a belief that effectively converted Geneva into a bore and anyone who talked too much about it into a nuisance. Meanwhile a vast and paralysing absence of hostility gripped Englishmen from top to bottom of tho social scale, not a " n principle but a oiub... s« through Indifference; they were not speast the League of N«t>"n«. th ' J not egainst Russia, they w ere not aeainst disarmament, or the 1 reaty ,f Versailles, or the revision of the treaty of Versailles, or the working elassea, or Mussolini — who had, Xr all, ma<le the Italian trains run on time. Their favorite gesture was to give credit to ("You’ll find a good many of those Labour ehsps are quite decent fellows"') ; their favorite conclusion to M argument the opinion that, Ah well, th.-se things'll probably right them selves in time." opinions the pootvs«r Ln*'*"* l ‘“f phys.c.l shape and limited expression. By 19-5 ‘ main features were apparent, arterial roads along which the •P cru ' Utive builder was permitted to put , jp hi. fiOO-pmind and re- ; create th. nrobie- th* read, the* wives had been to solvo, ( the week-rod trek to the eo-tssnH ( country threugh the bottlenecks as | Croydoa and Msidenhcsd; the, of tho huge m<'W coach, and ( the nsush.oommg of outer suburbs ( until London almost began | the sprawltog coast towns left off— , while ia beokehops J" 4 , 1 *"! "*,£l ' rage was for Michael Arlen and ( Noel Coward, two men whore deft < wehestr.t.on. of nerve, without , smotmna. < achieved a success that mum na«e , Increased even th«r own dis. a- , t In tb:x same year. IMS. ’ made a profit that could have paid a « Zmaff dividend ea the 1 rtareo; test Charts, chore am to* j M despite oppcala a" 4 Ptoteste I the fsmtly And « l>*’ ‘ Lydia died of Kdget had Kitty r»« herself • n S“<* 4 “ * young man named Malte* ' sham, who preached Commuwam at < ixmdoa street corners and taad brew I to Ruaetw. For ata moaths aha «re < swept by a» rethuaiaam which com- i I SU Fbad* 4ba te-Uf. b* |
I before tonight, possibly not for I days, citizens were busy making ’ preparations for the enforced I "blackout.” Workers at the G E am: other , plants i f the city shut down al I most immediately swarmed to i | the city plant to learn of the damage Not a business or industry escaped the crippling blow ‘ of the incident. The Daily Dem Jurat staff made plans to print its copies of the paper in Berne—its press and printing machines bogged down. The Democrat war. printed in r I the- Berne Witness shop and will 1 be printed here until service can be restored at Decatur. Pai * of the type was set at the Witne and some of it at the Economy Printing Concern. Business houses burned lanterns and lamps throughout the dav one in which even Mother Nature failed to aid citizens in their plight and kept the sun hidd< n (mm view. A city Are truck was commandeered by plant workers to ! pump water from the cooling tower pool to the boilers so that when the machinery was repaired the boilers would have water Traffic was kept to a minimum Since most service stations are equipped with electric driven pumps, they could not dispense, | gasoline to autos. Dairy and ice cream plants, as well as meat markets, confcc-
somehow <fWl not repertaffy dtemrt • Chudes. He saw her onec carrying a pictorial banner with Wai (they s called him Wall in a May Day pro- ( cesalon; when he met her eome t weeks later he chaffed her gently ■ about it, saying that workmen on t banners always had enormous fists, . whether for fraternization or for assault and battery he eould never bo quite certain—maybe both. Ho smiled as ha said It, but she aud- " denly flew Into a rage, accusing him of being a eaward who took refuge 1 in cynicism from the serious Issues ‘ of tho world. “And don’t tell me I'vo tost my senao of humor. I have * —I Iran io I have. There Isn't any room for humor In the world re it ' ia today. And it’s that English ’ sense of humor, which everybody ' boasts about, that really prevents ' things from being done.” "You're probably right Rut think ’ of all the things that are better left undone." "The dsy will eome when men ‘ may be trifled for laughing.” 1 "And that will also bo tho day ' when men laugh st killing. - She went out ot his office, banging ' the door. He did not see her again 1 for several months - till after the General Strike In 1924. One day she rang him up on the telephone, “Uncle Charles, may I come and talk to youT" “Os eourre. - He was about to a«ld an Invitation to lunch when tho receiver was banged down at th« other end. Two minutes later sho camo bounding Into bls office. “1 rang up from just outside. T thought you might not want to see me after our last meetlng. - "I don’t think I should ever not want to see you. What's been happening to you all this whilet” "Not much. Hui I've gut my sense of humor bar k." “Where's Wai?" “He's gone to Russia—for good. You know I really arlmirt him. He has tho courage of what he believes, a a_ a* X. — — aXAI.
he’s going to become a Rurelan citizen if they let him. Ho wanted me to go with him -a* his wife, but I just couldn't I'm weak—l couldn't live in a liule cubicle and learn a new language and wear rough clothe*—l'd die of misery, even if I really loved him—which I'm beginning to do'ibt now that be', gone. I saw him off at Tilbury and felt awful, end then I went tn a little pub near tho docks and a fellow was standing In tho doorway, playing a mandolin and singing with his mouth all crooked^—you know the way they do, —and inside the bar there was a workman sitting over a glass of beer and looking up at tho other man with a funny sort of ad ding expression, samo as you see people looking op at the Madonna in Catholic pieturea, and presently he said to mo, quite casual, as if he'd known me for years—‘Gawd, I wi-h f eould do that’... and I wanted to laugh “”4 cry together. 1 know FM never
leave England as long as I bee. re here I am—end Wai's ia Moaeow ’ Nineteen twenty «<» went by. the year of tho General Strike, and Germany's admission to tho League of Natiorta. of aa Imperial Onfrrence and trouble In Shanghai; of large socialist gains 1a municipal polls throughout England; and of Hit. ler’s ettmb towards power la (tormany. Trade remained good; the stock market pushed up Rainier's to twenty-five chillings in errtleipation of a dividend which Charles again declined to pay Nineteen tweatyaevea brought riots la Vienna and executions in Russia: while for once Englishmen found themselves suddenly end astonishingly *«*>»• something—they were agehwt tho Revised Prayer Book, pr-po-ed by the Church Assembly sad eeat to the House of Cemmore to be voted on, according *• tho curious English custom by which a political majority decides the dsgmatie beliefs es a religious adaority. And during the next yrev. IK the House of Commons agate turned dowru the Revised Prayer Bret e» if it treewadeuely ssattered. But this flurry of agairet-here was aeon and Eng shmea. tatdudtng Members of Parltomowt. relumed their benevolence towards most thing, that eamtewd to haypea throughout the wertd.
Monday. June 22. 1942
tioneries, groceries and the like were faced with the problem of ket ping foodstuffs from spoiling. Monroe Is Down The town of Monroe and the scores of rural hom< s serviced by th< Decatur plant were “down” also. Residi nt: then" were confronted with the same problems that faced Decaturites. Bank Vaults Locked Business at the First State Bank was curtailed wh'-n employes were unable to op n vault doors ■ -controlled by electric time locks.
If you suffer MONTHLY [FEMALE PAIN? which makes you WEfiK.CRANKf NervousIf at such times Iflt B you're annoyed by P\ ~- cramjis, hi-adachrs, 1L • M. backache, dl trcsy IMMB of ' irregularities.'' a bloated feeling. periods ol the bhw-s - due to functional monthly dlsturbancestry Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. This famous liquid not only helps relieve monthly pain but also tired, nervous feelings of such days when due to this cause. Lydia Pinkham's Compound is one medicine you can buy today made tally for nonu n taken regularly It helps build up resistance against such symptoms Fol-
h Awl m rest same yenr 11RSI j Bridget had another baby, her r fourth, and Kitty got herself oo- > gaged again, to a young man named • Roland Turner, who had advanced r ideas about the "cinema,” and wae i understood to Ixj working on a sco- , nario or something or other that he r hoped to sell for a fabulous price r to somebody or other, but was oth--9 erwise romantically out of a job—- - romantically, because ho wasn't ell- > gfblo for tho dole, yet managed to > run a car. • "And I suppose If he rffd draw • the dole and enubln't run a car, that i would he prosaic?" Charles queried r when she told him. ’ “You still think I'm a snob, don’t 1 you? Rut I'm not—it isn't that at I all — I'm ju’t lost In amazement. > because he always dresses well and goes to the best restaurants, and > has a sweet little studio off Ebury ’ Street—! don't know w*rre he gets the money from, but I do wish you • could find him something to do. “But f don't want any scenarios ’ today, thank you.” "Not that, ot course, but ho can I do all kinds of other things—write i and paint, for Instance —he dree ' marvelous frescoes, at least they • aty the one he did was marvelous, but most of it eamo off during the damp weather. ... Ho can paint machinery, too." "Unfortunately wo don’t paint our machinery.” "Pictures of machinery, I mesa —he did one for an exhibition, symbolizing something tut I'm sure ho could do a serious one, if you sranted IL Don't you ever have illustrated eataleguea?” Charles smiled. “Suppose yoe bring him tn lunch?” They met at the Savoy Grill; Roland Turner proved to be rather tall and thin ("lissom" waa almost the word); hla clothes were Impeccable, with just a faintly artistic note in hi* silk bow tie; his manners were perfect and his ch'dcee
' of food, delicate; even his talk waa [ sufficiently intelligent and modu- , fated to what Charles felt to be an ’ exactly d<t>rn u.e«l m> an between ’ Independence and obsequiousness in 1 the presence of Big Hu ines*. Immediately after coffee the youth mentioned an afternoon appoint- ! rnent and .tecomusly bowed himself out. leaving Kitty and Charles together. Laughing, she «ald: "He’s g-t no appointment, he's just being tactful—giving me a chance to do tho Don't • you • think • he's • wonderful stuff." Fhe paused for a few seconds then added! ’Will, don't you?" “He's a very personable young man. and if you like him, that’s the main thing." “prrtonaHtf Vhat exactly de you mean by that?” “Attractive." "Are you sure It's not sometklM nice to say about someone you don 1
car* fori “Not at aR. f Ilk* him all right, and if there'* anything ho could do that t wanted dona, l*d bo glad to giv* him th* job." “Ho wan wondering about St*urv ton—Jo you think 1 could take hhw down them to too Undo Chet?* “With what in mind T" "Tour* *o «u«pidoua, aren't you 1 Well, he haa idea* about land* ■capo gardening. ... Os eouree bn know* Chet and you aren't my real uncle*." “I don't eee bow be knewa that, onto** you told him. and I don't eee that it matter*, anyway." “I hod to tell him— Indirectly. Teo toe. Mother discovered him flnt of all—in Mentone He wm •toying with aomebody than* and they danced a lot- Mother and him, t mean I think *he rather Cell foe htai. becauae when he camo ee to London the had him to atay at the teawto with e*e to a cert of chaporan. Wo worm t etl ret ted at ail in the beginning, but I began to bo awfully aorry for ban when I *eae hew bored be wo* with Mother. Be haa nice fooling*, you know I Coat think he'd have found it aaoy to ewitch ever it obe'd reoliy been *W ■nklmv** (To be continued) •wwwn w now euawi
