Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 44, Number 277, Decatur, Adams County, 23 November 1946 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday By THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. Incorporated Entered at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office aa Second Claaa Matter. J. H. Heller Preaident Alt Holthouae, Ssc'y.Aßus Mgr. Dick D. Heller .. Vice-President Subscription Rates By mall In Adains and Adjoining Counties: one year, 16; sis months, |3.25; 3 months, |1.75. By mail, beyond Adams and adjoining counties: One year, (7; 6 months, $3 75; 3 months, 22. By mall to Servicemen, any place In the world: One year. 1359; six months, $1.75; three months, *l. Single copies, 4 cents. By carrier, 20 cents per week. What we call the “next world" is probably here right now. but most people won't believe It. —-o—o— — We hope the miners have returned to work by Thursday so Hie spirit of Thanksgiving can be one hundred per cent complete. o o— — Maybe they ought to submit the coal strike to UN. Some of the delegates to that meeting have probably had experiences in handling such situations. If the coal strike continues and is supported by other organisations including the railway brotherhoods and the automobile workers, the holiday season this year may be a prolonged and dismal one. ——o o The grand Jury will convene .Monday to scrutinize the affairs of the people of Adams county so it's a good time to check up and to remember that to say “I forget” doesn't help the state of Indiana bring about justice. o o Herbert laine of Detroit has announced he will lie a candidate for the Republican nomination for governor of Indiana In 1948. If he doesn't run any better than he did in 1934 when he ran against Louin Ludlow for the Democratic nomination for congress, he won't cut much figure, o o Several hundred people in this community would enjoy a golf course and are hoping that the proposal recently made to the city council to donate a plot of ground suitable for that purpose and prepared for next years season of this popular sport will be acceptable. It's one of the heat ways known for dean out door exercise. 0 0 The nation Is stunned by the coal strike and what it portends for the future. The results may be disastrous for every one for a week or two will suspend railway service to a great extent, close factories and paralyze business generally. No one seems to know just what should be done but certainly some steps should be taken and soon. o o State highway 27 is to be widened and resurfaced from Berne to Portland and bids will be received

Annoying Disease Effects Tiny Babies

By Herman N. Bundesen. M. D. OF ALL the strange and mysterious disorders which may affiirt the human body none Is more peculiar than one known as Hirerh•piung's disease. Thia disorder seems particularly to affect boy babies, <M-t-nrrmg in male children ten times more frequently than in female, lie outstanding feature is a tremendous over-development of the large intestine. it would appear that the condition is present at birth. As a result of the enlargement of the bowel, constipation begin* to cause trouble within the first few weeks of life and gradually becomes more severe and more constant. The exact cause of the disorder is not known. It is thought that possibly it may be due to a contraction of the muscle* of the bowel which do not relas as they should. Hence the movement of the bowel called peristalsis gradually cawien the bowel to stretch and get longer. Most Prominent Bympteo The most prominent symptom, as I have mentioned abors, is constipation. which sometimes »clually is present at birth. It often U so severe that the bowehi w

ou the Improvemeat m December 10th according to asmonneemest from the state commlaaloa. It will ( add to the safety and the general good of those who uqe thia main t artery of eastern Indiana. The stretch of road between Decatur ’ and Fort Wayne should be nest t on the program and local Interest will aid in securing the best high- '' way to carry the Increasing tnfflc. One-World Health The one worid idea makes for peace, but It also makes for the easy spread of disease. Before members of the American Public Health Association. Dr. Henry 1 O'Brien of the Office of International Health Relations said the airplane can carry contagion from ■ one part of ths world to the other > since a passenger unwittingly exi posed could bring a virulent infec- . tion that would not develop until several days after his arrival in ; a spot thousands of miles from : the contact. Though quarantines i tend to control such dangers, a . sounder and safer technique Is £ a unified world health program I that seeks eradication of disease ' everywhere. He added that The < World Health Organisation of UN - Is dedicated to such an aim. <1 The American people owe much 11 i to members of the Public Health Association who have worked tirelessly and to a large extent with- tl out recognition to raise health b standards In this country. Now " they are broadening their vision ti and their endeavor to Join with health agencies of other nations f to improve the physical well being *' of men everywhere. n 0 c The Dutch Way It's hard to beat the Dutch. The • explosive and delhlte matter of • the East Indies colonial realm I of the Netherlands has been set- « tied by masterful diplomacy. The . United States of Indonesia, which t comprise Java. Sumatra and other smaller islands, will choose their own officials to govern internal i affairs, but the U. 8. I. will remain part of the Dutch Empire with i the Queen as the nominal head, i Joint bodies in the name of In--1 donesla and the Hague will decide I matters of common interest such I as defense, foreign affairs and currency. Foreign business Interests i In the Indies. Including British, American and Dutch, are guaranteed equal treatment with native industry in taxation and civil i rights. Indonesian labor and busti oess administrators must be given I equal place along with the Dutch ! and European residents. ’ The new order calls for adjust- > ments of many difficulties between i natives and the Netherßtndern. r But it is a peaceful, practical comt promise of empire versus native b freedom, a distinctly 2(Hh century problem. The solution by the Dutch of t-helr colonial question Is of - wide interest for the products of o the East Indies are in demand I by all civilised countries.

move only once a week. However, within a few days diarrhea develops and the bowel is emptied. Then the constipation again develops These children do not grow normally. Their weight is below average and they have a pale complexion. Lose of appetite, offensive odor of the breath and vomiting are other common symptoms. There may be attacks of pain in the abdomen, but these usually are not severe. The abdomen is swollen or distended. Os course, an X-ray of the bowel will definitely reveal the enlargement. in the milder cases, according to Dr. Wilfrid Sheldon of England, medical treatment with neostigmine has been found helpful. It is given three times a day and the does gradually increased under the directions of the physician. While this treatment overcomes the eonatipatloa it wiU not reduce the swelling of the abdonun. Surgical treatment has also beeu tried and may be beneficial in some cases. Dr. Sheldon points out that spinal anesthesia, which means the injectiou us a Iqcal lAU> LU® spinal canal. Is also a good form of treatment, la some cases thia treatment gives permanent results. /

i wy ft HOIDX-U* Q I SAVDICS fl BONDS J MM? i 111 1 17

o — © Modern Etiquette By ROBERTA LEE | 0 o Q Should the father of the debutante stand in the receiving line with the mother and the daughter at the girl's coming-out party? A. No. Q. Has a business man's secretary the right to ask a caller's business before she conveys the mtweage to her employer? A. Yes. she has a perfect right to do so. Q. When a man is making his first call on a girl, should he ask to see her mother? A. Yea; of course the mother may excuse herself after a short consersation. — Your Community Fund deserves your support. Give generously.

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SYNOPSIS it wm Neveartrar, aad there wan taw i ftwete al the a-uatete reeert when | Lydia Ache, yeaag ebeartea. wae epeed- , lag het twe weeks' vacatlea. Hawevee, ( the wee barely awan at the attractive Array eapiala wllb the iajered leg whe etadieaely avoided artxlag with the ether geaeta. Bel wbaa Lydia picked ep the ease which he had accidealaUy deepped, iastead et thaahlag her, he ' cheated, **l dea’t weal aayeae te help 1 ■a!" Aheetly after, he heeehed at her I deer te beg tCrgiveaeae aad Lydia ; agreed te aaeet blra te Iba leeage be- ( sere leaah. ( Aa they talked, aba realised the wet ( wm eat ever ter Chriatepher Stark, aar weald It be eadll the bltteraeaa ceeld be erased trera ble eyaa. Abe la etraagely elated that evealeg wbre Cbrie eeggeete a walk, aad the tellewlag nereiag, re ebe watched Mai llrapiag toward bat ever the wladiwept gaM —area, tydie haew ebe wm te lev*. (Mi, whe WM a lawyer before be aalletod, Mie her abate bit ealy bntbar. Alee, wbe wm killed la aettea. Bfoby, Afoa*e yeewg wtdew, aad bee baby tea, have bare Bvteg with Thee, Kirby's raelbar, bat Tbae bad reeeetty ■anted Baphael Lepee-Oea, a wealthy Seetb Aaierleaa. aad weald cere be retaralag te that reentry with Mat “be It recast I've labertted a family." be edded. Teararrew Lydia weald be retaralag te her Jeb aad tbe •■aS apartrarel the chared with bar triced. Betty, he tat, Cbrie had tailed to te(lrate, la -ay way, hie awareaeac ad the grewiag attractive between tbea* CHAPTER SIX LYDIA came into the lounge noiselessly and an electric moment wm prolonged while their glances held. Oh, Chris, why must it end? Why ain't It be only the beginning ? With these people tn the room playing bridge, talking, mowIng about, we are so enveloped in one another that they are like shadows on the wall. It's been Rhe that night after night and growing every night Say it, Chris. Why don’t you say it ? Say it and keep . me ... She Mt on the arm of a chair I and tried to keep her mouth from trembling while she Mid, "I’ve finished my packing. I had very lit- I tie. to do. as a matter of fact" i “You brought your jacket. I j see,* he said soberly. He had no ’ smile for her tonight, only sobriety , and Umreness. "Would you like to ■ take a walk?” "I'd love to.” And as they always did. they , went down the outside steps to- | gather In tbe darkneM, her arm , through Ma, her band upon Mo | wrist | The lights of the Inn were aotne < distance away before be said, i "Lydia, just as the war brought I different gifts to different people, i to Alan death before his time, to others more money than the/Te t over known bates*, huagar, fame. < a aww sst «f values, jttrt so the i

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

o ■ o I Household Scrapbook | , By ROBERTA LEE ! O 0 Care of Meat Uncooked meat should not be allowed to He In Its own juice or It may become tainted. Place the meat <>n a platter with a hollow center that will bold the juice without the meat touching it. Black Stockings Black stockings will not loss their color and have (hat greenish tinges If a teaspoon of strong vinegar ie placed in the last rinse water. Ths Garbage Pall A coat of paint on the hiside of the garbage pail before it is used for the first time will cause It to last twice as long. g The good things of life, Including wealth, are valuable only In so far as they are used.

end of it and tbe bomecomtof wm different for all of ua You couldn't I lump as all together and my we < were going to feel thus aad so. t Our homecomings were as varied i aa our peraonabtlea” I "And the backgrounds from 1 which you spring." i "1 haven’t told you this before." be went at and that hurting , poignancy that she had heard bo- , fore was in hla voice again. “When ( you are tn a hospital you have , something in common with the ] other men there. You've seen bet- , tie and you've been wounded. Your morale la high. Tbe personnel of a hospital ia trained to keep tbe morale of tbe men high. And you think that when you get borne you'll slip right back into the old groove again with no trouble at all Perhaps some do. There to no typical cam. I didn’t" "You’ve beea back some little while then?" "Four weeks since 1 left a hospital In OMfnmia. And the first day when I walked the streets of New York that I’ve known ail my adult life, walking there as I'd longed to do all that time I wae In England and France and Germany before that mortar got me. I felt—aa if I were a ghost Nothing seemed real to mt. My mind was *- 41 SB Mrofjgeo. "You didn't go to your house In Connecticut?" "No. I stayed at a hotel tn New York. I tried to pul) myself together. I went to my office and the senior partner of our Ann told me to take ah the time I needed to rest He gave me something to road and I took it back to the hotel with me and tried to road it But I couldn't read it I found there was something else the matter with me besides a shattered leg." His voice trailed. And never had he seemed, curiously, so far away and yet so stent to her aa now when she waited eagerly for him to He said, "I couldn’t concentrate. It was as though my mind had been shot full of holes, too. ... I mw Theo and her husband and Kirby and the baby. Then I came here to try to organize myself.... The taw te the only thing I know. I’ve loved every moment of my life tn It I had some reputation as a trial attorney. But I can't sm myself limping into a courtroom on a cane, the veteran Inviting pity and getting tn everybody's way. Bo if I ton train my mind to reach back for the knowledge it once had and the power to concentrate. I'll get a job doing research. I m finished as a trial attorney. Alan's dMth was a terrible blow. We were vary close." "The fact oi death ia very hard te accept I know it R was that war with me whaa my mataar died." .......

Nov. 23- Judge Button appoints Harmon M (MIUS «•» m®m«*r «* the board of charties to succeed the late Simeon Fordyce. Rev. B. N. Covert will preach the Thanksgiving Day sermon at the Evangelical church nt 8:30 Thursday morning. Ira Fuhrman buys the E. W. Johnson insurance agency. Grand jury returns three indictments. : queen Marie sails for her home la Roumania on the liner BorenI garta. Decatur Moose lodge starts 30day new member drive. ■■■ —» Troop V met Tuesday night at the Lincoln school. The meeting was opened with the roll call, after which final plane were made for the Thanksgiving party to be held Novemlier 28 at the heme of Mrs. Saylors. Rosemary Hetrick, scribe. The Girl Fronts of troop VII met Tuesday after school. Marte Bromer, president, opened the meeting by leading the girls in the Girl Scout promise and pledge to the flag. The meeting was closed with the Friendship circle. Jaset Smith, scribe. THANKSGIVING (Continued from Page 1) Thanksgiving skits were presented on the stage by Dens One, Four and Hix. Roliert Zwick led in a program of entertainment, including games. Den Seven won a tug-of-war conducted during this portion of the program. Prizes were awarded by H. >l. Kreuckeberg, chairman of the meeting. ' l ' o - For best results In'washing sand from fresh spinach, try using warn water rather than cold.

Be stopped quite stiff aad put his arm around her and drew her eloss to him. For a dreadful minute she did not know whether be was embracing her or merely protecting her from the cold. But the hand upon bar was not impersonal ... "Lydia, you’ve been fight aad warmth aad depth to me these last few days. Light and warmth and depth ... that's you, Lydia. But you deserve a man whole la body and inted. That’s why I cannot—cannot ask you to me. ~," "Why can’t you, Ctartof Fas not afraid." "Because Fm a cripple. Don’t think that that am be Ignored or forgotten. In away, I'll have to build my life around it" “You needn't It's a handicap, that's aIL" "No, it’s more than that my darting, much more." ITe more than that in your mind, Chris,«. Only te your mind, darling ... She mid, “It would never make the slightest difference to ma. 1 can ignore it If you can." "You couldn't if you were L You couldn’t forget that once you had been able to walk unaided and to run. You couldn't ignore the pitying glances and the absurd questions of stupid, thoughtless people who got their Ideas of war from reading In easy chairs. "You couldn’t forget that you can’t hold the girt you love in both arms because you need one to hold the cane that keeps you upright” She felt her heart contract She could have wept But this was no time to cry. She was facing Mm now. He drew her to him with one hand and pressed her against him. Lydia said, “Chris, the rest of the time can be only a few hours ... or the rest of our Uvea. I want you aa you are .. .* a»Y Imm ussma T Irewn usumh mtuek i wyc you. i mjtw you vo muni that loving you has become my new dream ...” "Oh. darling, you’re alive and you're still a part of the world’s heartbeat Life is not an accident There must bo some reason why you were spared when others beside you were not You were spared because there is a place for you, a place to be filled In tbe present and tn the future. I have loved lots of things in my life, Chris, clean air and warm sun and gentle rain, music and books, the sight of a sleeping child, so many things . . . But all of those things that I hare lured have become crystallized in you ... Oh, Chris, I want to look at you now and always and think, ’Here te nothing but what te mine*...” He ktooed her then and It seemed to her that surely there could bo no coldaass anywhere on earth. ' (To Be CMttauagj

■a . AA a! nose men of Decatur were anxius. < r Patrons Meet no ,o *“* port 4 H dub »•* «nd«■• run vim i ivviwy t<> wort wlth ail7mM lB aJ) Held Bv Comoany Avnß Burk »•«"•••"“•« n<> IIUIU uy will puny tary clßb Mnd Ch , mlWf Cnm k* merce. and Roy Price, representing •**•* I?" ,h " *; ,on * c,ub * ** r " «“**’• at th, p£ *• First In Ssnes Is tfSW UaM In Thie Fih/ *** w,r * • w » l 'ded to 2J },{JJ Held In Inis Ulty Introns and refreshments war.- Pr-' s' »SM| to Two The fltwt of a series of patron '**• patron meetings, sponsors l'r». M (UP meetings, being held »>y the local bF the toenl plant, are achednle i .7*' *> iu2 plant of the Kraft Foods company, fw th« near future, one on Dec 5, Pro «,? , : .-it was held Wednesday night at th<- th® high school In WlllshlrK of P. hall In Decatur. Some edu- Ohio, and the other on Dec in. h | catlonal features, as well aa movies. Jefferson high school in Adauw pj*; ' refreshments and door prises, pro- cooniy. V vided the program for some 92 pat- " “ • rons. their families and guests. knltKiifit Riwmlam ,pr »' Xo Ernest Karlen, local plant mana AHIIQUCS UISPIdV I?!’ *» ger, opened the meeting with a ■ • ■' « word of welcome to the group; fol I A [ w L!L;a Lj*" *> lowing which he spoke on the acute |J Uli IXiIiDII 116(6 x.’, S need for Increased milk produc- s„ *- tion. Mr. Karlen stated that the — - Pro slogan, “the need for more milk p; r s. iw '>rtitiH has never been met." was never JlCtUre Ut DeCOtUI -•« more applicable than It is today FoiindCf IS Featured * sM* Home means of Increasing milk — production and at the same time Featuring an autographed p|< availing themselves of favorable tnre of Samuel Rugg. founder of milk prices were ausgmited to the Decatur, one of the most unusual •* group by Mr. Karlen. displays ever arranged In Decatur la tw laJl 1 J. J. Mitchell, representing the has been placed on exhibit at '* Kraft patron service, showed slides the Decatur Antique Shop, in a T!" 4 ' <>t hogs and poultry Itelng fed the newly constructed building on I?’ 1 wl *l »M new Kraft feed booster, Kray lets North Second street. that' hv‘7*" 4, *“'■ Some of the fine lesul'e achieved The exhibit of antiques Includes by farmers feeding Kravlets were early American glassware. Victor e>ts?»"hH, reported on by Mr. Mitchell. lan colored and opaque glass. bri<- v *’» »«iLeonard Kingsley, farm advisor a-brac. handpainted china, bisque in for the local plan*, made a few re- and Rtafforshlre. tit. murka relative to two films, “Farm Antique collectors will find such <"t, ?' r1 inconveniences" and "John Martin Items as parlor lamps, buttons ini* and Bon." which were shown to the jewelry, coins, guns, Indian relics group. The first film. "Farm In- dolls, furniture, whatnots and <’» conveniences." showe I. with a primitive articles such as oxen *- , fJt , V‘ , | * l,tt touch of comedy, some of the has- yokes and spinning wheels, early nrr „t <iut", t ! ards that are present on many American utenails In wood, braas W, farms today. It also stressed the and copper. 4i«na.’r l >nsinf importance of proper storage of Other features nf She exhibit equipment. The second Him. 'John are a quart size luster pitcher with th»»<, rot Martin anti Hon." was produced by fqjvl decorations, mechanical doll ‘W’ the National Daily Products Cor that plays a violin, and various ih>«- -d poration and told a story of the others. ** jd f *t ejsttd importance of 4-H club work, dairy Mr. and Mrs. 8. E. Leonardson «f h»<?snint'‘ Mc record keeping and breed improve- proprietors of the shop, have been , |^ ll > '♦ ment on the average farm today. even carried the antique motif off,'/«n "AT County ageut, L. E. Archbold, Into the construction of the shop, also representing the Rotary club, itself, building It from old walnut trot, n-imwt spoke briefly on the outlook for wood, secured from an old church \ r , M agricultural producte lor the com- building recently torn down near h/i»» n’lmhn Ing year. He stated that the proa- Willshire, Ohio. u'/an/tw peets were good for a continuation They report a growing Interest x' * (th»”how» of the present favoi sble milk prices In the collection of antiques by * whH and he urged farmers to take step* residents of the community In the a to Increase their milk production past five years. * r «", "“"Mf ' '**M to the limit. v tsinrit from tte -t'-wuHM os., ms. i. Killed emES lathman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. As AutO Hlfj Tr«C J"™' “’J*'' *■ »■ Peter B. Lehman, with a show 1 I ttalsnr, to halter la token for having won the Anderson, Ind.. 23—(UPl—Jamcs ( ' , 5/ | ' r ' T / /’’I 1 , ,fr ?*M showmanship contest at the local R. Overman. 30. Bloomington, wss -r - - *<l 4-H club fair In August. killed today when his antomohlls t* rrporttd 1, H. H. Kruckeberg. representing hit a tree on a highway near An- mitHn’’' 1 ' r the Lions club and Chamber of demon. Police believed Overman Rear ■ Commerce, stated that the btmi- fell asleep at the wheel of his car

SYNOPSIS Immw ofc® wm te tore etaeel trew the first weBtesk Nwotefi tete the toe*** 1 "sixths ■■Mills tee where she wm spiefites a betatefi reeolten. It wm the eoree with Chris, bet eeferteaotety, the shell wteeh had sheMerM Ms tef bed etoe Ybsttwi Ms Mtt msOAcboso A teYil" sw SBbo bfby Its new tab his ceruse wm ewe. Ate*. Me only bvether, bed beM kitted te asttoe, end Kirby, Atan’e yueng widow end her telMt M here been Nvtefi wtth Thee, Kirby's ■ether—port et tbe Um at Clurto* bMM M CmmsHml mi 4 yert es the thro at Theo's Now York ayariasset. Bet Theo bed sweetly warried Baybeei Ley— Ona, a wealthy Are «4ak ted»* rwtorwitej w VWM Ctowtetry wNi airo. Oae Sa. alfbt t stere Lydia wm te »*- tern te the sasaO sport— i el obe stored with a friepd, Chris teead eoeraao to te« bse et Ms lee*. '• CHAPTER BEVEN TODAY THEY were leaving Georgia and the sun and the large, now dearly familiar room with the Mbs wails aad the hoaey-ootored furniture. It she could hare wished for a scene of lore and laughter and Intimate companionship and had her wish tome true, she would have asked for no more than this room had given her. Truly here In this room there had been nothing that bad not been paaetanately her*. Chris had gone out to get their train tickets and she. wearing the soft, rose-colored negligee that he had selected from the limited supply in the small shop, was fitting at the desk. She had just finished a letter to her father in which she had tried to explain her marriage. She wondered if anyone bad ever intelligently explained a marriage. People who oeemnd totally unsuited to one another remained married to the end of their lives and seemed happily iiswiri that others thought them unsuited aad worried about them. And how could she In a mere letter tell him of Chris’s keen awareness and hia appreciation of beautiful things? How could she tell him of the talks they had had while they lay close in the warm darkness and she had felt that her heart would burst from gratitude that it was to this man, to Chriatopber Stark, she bad given what internal and external beauty she possessed ? As surely as they were alive-and she felt that no twu people had ever been more al’.vu—just that surely must Chris know that there was nothing of her that was not hi* Sbe could not tell her father and stepmother that she could not imagine why she had been to privileged to be the girl Chris wanted and loved and ried. Her father aad friends bad roi

piled to her telegrame te characteristic fashion. For ber father had written, "As you know, Lydta, I have always given you credit for sound judgment You have chosen that which will endure and I think you hare cboaen wisely. Our highest achievements are not te our work but te our relationships with other human beings. You are a girt with so many qualities ro needed outside the laboratory and up and down the streets of this torn world that, much as 1 valued your promise in science, I am glad Chave chosen this other but no dedicated iife.” Betty wanted a snapshot of Chris immediately and asked when she could come to visit them. The wedding present, she wrote, would have to wait until the next pay day. She was awfully sorry, pal, but she was mighty broke. Wedding present, Lydia had thought . . . As If there was anything she wanted except Chris or needed except him . .. She had heard nothing from Wada. Getting up from the desk she went to the window and drew aside the curtains with a sunburned hand and looked below at the flowered terrace. She did not want to leave Yet she doubted if anyone ever wanted to coifid to th® end of a honeymoon. Perhaps one a reluctance stemmed from the eertalnty of this that had now become a familiar pattern of living and loving white beyond this in the teeming, waiting world were unknown quantities that one subconsciously feared. Her eyes quickened when sne MW Chris below on the terrace. He had stopped to talk with one of the clerks in the hotel and the clerk was giving him what appeared to be a letter. More interred in him than te any letter, she forgot the letter temporarily, the whole of her absorbed in his tall, straight figure. Only when she mw him apart from her did she aee him as a cripple. When she wm with him Sbe forgot it unless by some gesture or facial expression he reminded her of it Her ability to forget, she thought, was perhaps because she had not known him before the war. But she did not beffeve that She believed that to he? it simply did not matter. aouJdn’t he think of it m a hand;sapl Lots of people have handicaps. Chris thought his a McmMi... She touched her wedding ring It was her a wide, gokl, old-fashioned one that she always took with her when sbe went Sway. She and Chrte had been in such a hurry that day they had aot shopped for another and »ne wm juet as pleased that they *** not So that when they had bean i 1

SAIW*, *

. married iu that titOelMlfl • m that utu» Me.’Jwn mfl , her sweater and Art sill • scarf over her Oovq ifiß i the cierryman't vtfihfM ; and Chru in undorx, ■ mothers wedding rtq • there as ape« i to take into the tmtownM She was looking > when he opened tt I her and put Ms mb efl i and kissed the top rftelM I “I have oar ticketiisdraß I be your lari packing <*■ i little while. Tou taw. occurred to me tMt ?w ' nopol i zed you tint ffi i played any golt T« ■ ■ i don't you?" 1 I "Y«, but bow t»Sy jsfl ' want to see. A Ml pNfl , be horrified at m?P» l This was another« I criaes ... A week N* ■ been one when he ■ ' strained voice he .WM his leg Pterriri MJ •■We're not going »•fl* fl there's , I ’ don't mind, darling... g And now another . N If she mM ** play, then he wo«M because he could#! 1 ’ And if ihe playrij* J 1 around, then he w®®* to remember p* * ■ he thought he J he would play ‘ | ... She , J «dd lightly. we re home. B LTo* around Mm. “H own home rithyo® He chuckled. » * yet" „ ■alA! ,, -it will average n* gage. My<*«**Lpll „ e it to to touch y* J™' pgg know it'. » I" 1 self to *n®» •SJeS the house to He smiled. 11 Alan w ' d J Cl .Jg * wrote of the house X i on. SO I changes h>«art** and - And and her mother gs ment in ■ fax’*'ip I m g o,n » , in what I'X*"*, IN "Si M* ln - .2 sUtloo course, the T»