Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 46, Number 121, Decatur, Adams County, 21 May 1948 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except fizndsy By THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. Incorporated Entered at the Decatur, Ind., Poet Office a* Second Class Matter I. H Heller — Preaident A. R Holthouae, Secy 4 Bui. Mgr (Mck D. Heller .. Vice-Preeidest Subscription Rates By Mall In Adams and Adjoin tog Counties: Ons year, fl; Six ■onths, 13.25; 1 months, |1.7». By Mail, beyond Adams snd AdJoining counties: One Year, |7; I months 13.71; 3 months 11.00 By carrier, 20 cento per week. Single copies. < cents. Dewey and Stassen have come to the end of the Oregon Trail. 0 0 High school graduates will learn that the world has changed for them, but in their case the opportunities offered in America should make life rich and happy for them Tom Breneman, the Hollywood Breakfast director, left an estate valued at more than *250,000. He worked bard for It. used up his energy, but proved that it paid to bring cheer and smiles to the other person. Q O If the city installs parking meters as a means of increasing income, the ordinance should also limit parking of cars to one hour in the shopping district. Many would take advantage <J desirable parking apaces if they could drop a few nickels in the meter and remain there all day. Such a plan deprive shoppers of a place to park. o o Through the Decatur Community Fund, equipment Is being purchased for the playgrounds In the city. The fund Is supervised by Walter J Krick, superintendent of schools and his committee, the allocation being made by the budget committee of the Community Fund. The new equipment and resurfacing ot grounds, should add to the childrens vacation time happiness o o — There may be a reason for delaying repair of the sewer opening on North Second street. In front of the Mies parking lot. but the back-up water is becoming stagnant and something should be done For several years the catch basin or main sewer line has not drained off the water and presumably it is < logged beyond ordinary probing. o b The corn is going into the ground and farmers are taking advantage of the ideal weather. Tractors are running day and night and much of the crop will have been planted hy the end of the week.
Disorder with Many Remedies
By Herman N. Bundeatn. M. D. WK can. of course, never have too many remedies but. when it comet to urinary tract infections, ft would almost seem as if in these the doctor has too many to < hoose from. This duplication of medicines, however, is more apparent than real because it Is matched by the number of different kinds of germs -which can cause trouble in this ares, some of which will be overcome by ote drag but be impervious to others Thus, the beat treatment can only be decided after the tyipes of germ* causing the infection have been identified Perhaps the oldest drug used in the treatment of infections of the urinary tract is known by the long name of henamethyleneamino -which is useful in controlling infections due to certain types of bacilli. This substance is active against germa only when the urine is acid Then. tdo. Its usefulness is further United by the fact that in certain cases It may cause bladder irritation when employed over the jmriod of time —lB to it days needed to get rid of the infection Another time-tested remedy is called mandelic acid It. also. Is effective against infection with sertain types of bacilli, but it. too. must be used when the urtne Is add i'nfurtanatety. the amadelic add often causes »i<kne»a at the stomach aad vomiting when it is used over a period of days or weeks , i J The sulfonamide drugs have I proved quite satisfactory as art i nary antiseptics They also work I well against many bacteria called cocci ae well as noma bacilli. The ’ •nlCoMMide drag known as sul- t facataaride appears particularly <
Purdue agricultural authorities state the moat favorable time for planting hybrid corn la at hand and so far farmers are way ahead of last year's seeding program It will be remembered that extremely wet weather last year prevented planting of many acres. Clara Booth Luce, former Connecticut congresswoman and wife of the publisher of several of the country a most successful rnaga sines, favors Senator Vandenberg as the Republican candidate for president. In an interview the glamorous Clara said that the Michigan Senator had worked harder and above partisan politics in the field of foreign affairs Four years ago, Mrs. Luce made the keynote speech in the convention that nominated Dewey. Her preference for candidates changes with the styles. 0 0 John Watkins. Bloomfield publisher. swells the list of candidates who seek the Democrat nomination for governor. Announcement of his candidacy was made to a group of editors. A veteran of both World War I and 11. Publisher Watkins has a wide following throughout the state. Political writers predict that If he is not Dominated for first place on the ticket that he will be a running mate with Henry Schricker, in the event that distinguished gentleman Is nominated for governor. Johnny Watkins could give Senator Jenner more than a run for his money. o o A woman in Knoxville. Tenn, some about the pruapec t of exwho went to sleep in 193*. woke up the other day. She found the World quite a changed place, said she noted many differences, among them that young girls have more freedom now. What a lot she has escaped' When she dozed off. Prime Minister Baldwin was struggling with a kingly romance that forced abdication of Edward VIII. gave England its present king. President Roosevelt was seeking bis second term. Hitler's troops occupied the Rhineland. The Spanish Civil War began. The next year marked the Munich Pact; Hitler's absorption of Austria; the disappearance of Amelia Earhart; Japanese occupation of Canton and Hankow. The world rocked in 1939 with the Russo-German pact In August; Hitler's march into Poland in September Through the war's dreary >ears the woman slept Ahl Beau tiful sleep.
valuable, not only because It is a good germ-killer, but also because It is not particularly tonic. It has the further advantage of being rapidly eliminated through the kidneys. and thus gets into the urine in high concentration. Penicillin is quite effective against urinary infections due to Staphylococci and Streptococci Sometimes the urinary tract Infection is due to a combination of germa: that Is. there are both cocci and bmrilli. In such instances. the penicillin may not be effective because bacilli produce a substance which destroys the action of the penicillin In these cases, it is suggested that both penicillin and sulfacetamide be used. The drugs are continued for a period of from seven to nine days. It is rarely necessary to carry out the treatment for a longer period of time. When urinary tract infections occur with such symptoms as pain, burning on emptying of the Madder. and fever, a careful study mutt be made to determine the type of germa causing the difficulty; then the doctor will decide just what treatment may be employed most effectively QUKBTIONB AND ANBWBRB M. 8.: I am twenty three years of age. I have noticed a sudden, rapid growth of hair on my arms sad legs What is causing this? Answer: The enact cause of superfluous hair Is not known, although it is presumed to ba dbe'to some disorder of the glands of is ternal secretion A thorough study by a phveictaa a o«Id be advisable to determine whether or oof any glandular disorder is present
PENETRATING THE POLITICAL IRON CURTAIN
■ 5k & ~ """
I Modern Etiquette I By ROBERTA LEE | 0 ff Q When a young man becomes engaged, is it all right for him to tell his friends before it has been announced. A No; the announcement should always come from the bride-elect. He should not tel) it even to his young woman has announced it intimate friends until after the formally.
BY KflY HAMILTON OiaMSeUd hr («g fMtwvi S/od.<»fo
CHAPTER ONE THE LAST ot the Dclacourta aat in a deep armchair by the window of hia study. H:s bands lay quietly upon the arm rests ot smooth, mellow leather: bls bead was turned slightly so that he could gaae out through the leaded casement windows to the formal garden below. Two gardeners were at work uncovering the beds, but, though there was nothing to be seen—no flower or bud visible as yet—there was the promlsa of beauty to come. A shimmer of green lay uncertainly upon the smooth lawns, and in the distance the bare branches of the trees had a reddish tinge. The young man in the ehair noted these things Always, he thought, there was a continuance ot life, and though the towering elms and maples might fall or rot, there would be myriads of seedlings to spring into growth, to take their place. Not so with the Delacourts. Today he was alone, the last ot his Uno. He had known It would happen some day he had known that a heavy responsibility which be could share with no one would some day be his. But he had not thought it would come so soon. It was not going to be easy to be one of Jie country's wealthiest men. He had a sudden, devastating realization of how little he knew of the world; of bow sheltered and secluded his life had actually been. Not his fault, surely, nor his grandfather's But It had left him fearful of taking his place at the head of the Dclacourt fortune. There was a light Up on the door. "Come in," he said, without moving. "Biggy ?’’ “Yes, Mr. PauL They’re here.” The young man got up slowly, his eyes fastened on the butler’s face. It was a pleasant middleaged face, a little mottled-looking at the moment, and red about the eyea He thought to himself, with something akin to fright, This bi the only friend 1 have Bigelow, the butler. "Is Jessup here? But of course he would be," he added at once. Jessup had been his grandfather s confidential secretary. There would be Jessup's secretary, too, taking notes quietly in a corner, and there would be Adiey, the lawyer, and a couple of juniors trom the flrm. And represenUUves from the various eharittes to which his grandfather had doubtless left large sums. There would be no one who had really loved the oid man, except tumsclt And Bige low. The butler looked out of the window to where the two gardeners still worked at the wet leaf mold. "Will you be staying here. Mr. Paul?” he asked. "Or will you be wanting a smaller place? You always said .. ”1 know. But for a while 1 don't think I'll do anything but try to get oriented. There to so much I'll have to learn." They creesed the study together. There was so room is the huge rambling mansion which Paul Andrew DetaMurt Mtosd better than Ums. Hto drawing table was here ■th."i iiig psißt cupbcNurd, And all his architectural and art books—rows upeft rows ot them on either •id* ot, tbt ptetnnt vhiu nuuitcb p.eee. Chintz-covered chairs and a comfortable desk completed the picture. » ..
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Q. After a death in a family, should the calls of sympathy be ret ifrned ? A. Such calls are not returned, since the family is in mourning and is not making social visits. Q. Is it proper to speak to a man by using his last name only, such as. "Good morning. Smith"? A. No, A person of good breeding will always say, “Good morning. Mr. Smith." , 0 The modern hippodrome, or indoor circus, began in Paris in 1845.
The two men did not speak as they descended the stairs together. They did not need to. For aa long as Paul Andrew had lived, he had known Bigelow's friendly presence. From the Ume he had been a toddler, and the young footman had carried the lonely little boy pick-a-back and played with him in the pantry. Twenty-eight years. They were waiting for nim in ths library. It was a beautiful room, but so large that formality stole some ot Its charm. They sat around the central reading table, and their heads turned to watch him come In. Paul Andrew, the last of the Delacourtx Mr. Hadley was solicitous—needlessly, Paul Andrew thought There was a queer concern in the manner with which he seated the young man. "Take thto chair. Mr. Dclacourt . . . Have a cigarette?” A nervous desire to please which sat oddly upon his heavy, pompous face. And Jessup, an irregular He twitching the corner of his eye. his forehead wrinkled with distress Was this what It was like to be suddenly tremendously wealthy? This unwonted cars, this solicitude? He took the cigarette, but he did not light it. He sat back in his chair and waited. There was a sudden, strange hush before Hadley began to read the will The calm before the storm ? Paul Andrew wondered for a moment But he knew his grandfather too well—there would be no storm. Large bequests to charity, a generous remembrance of those who hsd given him service, and the residue—his. What would he do with so much money ? It was a career in itself to learn to handle it with intelligence. And It was not the career he would have chosen if be could have helped himself. The lawyer’s voice bad been droning through the first part of the document, and ho bad nut really been listening. “’ . . . to Walworth Jessup, who has been my faithful assistant for many years, an annuity of ten thousand dollars for the rest of hia natural Ufe.’" The tic to Jessup's eyelid became more pronounced. His mouth twitched, and he cast one wildly distressed glance at Paul Andrew. Why ? But the voice continued: “ 'Fifth: To Clarence Herbert Bigelow, my fnend and butler, an annuity of ten thousand dollars for the rest of his natural life’ ” Good oid Biggy! The butler's hands were shaking a little, and hia lips trembled with emotion. Biggy had really served Che old man, had really been fond of him. Now be could spend the rest ot bis days to comfort In the bouse Paul Andrew had built for him. A seHteh thought streaked acrons the young man's mind. But then be wont be here, be realized wtth sharp dismay. I'U be truly alone if Biggy goea The list ot charities was long, and the bequests tn some instances completely detailed. Paul Andrew's mind drew away trom the room and all it signified, and went beck into the past—to Happier days He couldn't remember Me mother, of course, because she bad died when he was born. But he had a faint recollection of bls father—a thia, sad man with a drooping mustache, sitting la a wheelchair. He had been four *ben hia fathor EnaUy to th# off of the wounds be bad received la France, but he had always remembered him aa d geaUs aouL
i Household Scrapbook By ROBERTA LEE 0— ff Boiled Powder Puffs Soiled powder puffs can be renovated by washing in warm soapsuds. scrubbing the bad spots with a fingernail brush. Don’t lay out flat to dry. or it may sour. Instead, pin It to the sunny side of a window curtain so that the air can get at it. Beef When buying beef, see that it is firm, the lean parts bright in color, and the fat free from blood stains When the meat Is cut the juice should be a bright red. Cracked Eggs The contents will not leak out of cracked eggs if a teaspoonful of salt is added to the water. , p May 21 — Henry Ward. 29, died Saturday night from burns received while using kerosene to start a fire. Thieves steal clothes, a watch and *7 cash from the Jacob Longenberger residence in Monroe. Colie Meyers. of Columbia draws gun and fires shot at sheriff Hollingsworth. The officer returns fire, wounding Meyers slightly. The man confesses robbing the Longenberger home. Alton Hower buys stock of the Kolter grocery. • Clarence Nachtrleb of Dallas, Tex., and Robert Nachtrleb of Toledo, 0., arrive for a visit with their sister, Mrs. Roy Archbold. Mrs. Fred Patterson is called to Terre Haute by the illness of her brother. Charles E. King. Gout is more prevalent in England and Germany than in the Vnited States.
The picture of him on his bureau showed a rather dashing young lieutenant, with dark hair in a sleek pompadour, and widespaced laughing eyea Bo different trom the man in the wheelchair, whose eyes were often glazed with pain, whose hair, above the bigh, anguished forehesd, usd uneven streaks ot white in IL It was with some obscure desire, perhaps, to come closer to his father, that he had worn his own dark hair the same way, had cultivated the same rather old-fashioned-looking mustache. It waa his grandfather who had been the active one in those days —s dynamo of energy who yet managed to spare a half hour from every busy day to spend wtth the little boy. When ns had outgrown the nursery, and Mrs. bisk, the housekeeper, had replaced the succession ot nurses, they had grown even closer. Perched on his fat pony, he had ridden every day before breakfast with Andrew Dclacourt, and when the weekly tour of Inspection was made of the grounds, the HtUe boy trotted on eager feet beside him. "Grandfather and 1 are going to start a new greenhouse." he would inform Bigelow, “and we're going to raise orkrids." Or 'Grandfather and I found a bird's nest under the box hedge. There wss an egg to It—with speckles on it!" Those early years his grandfather had not used the New York house at all. commuting instead from the great sprawling mansion in the Bernardsville hills. It was more important, in his mind, to see that the last of the Delacourts had a good start in life »han It was to keep a constant tye upon his numerous financial interests. When Paul was six he was to go to school. Public school, his grandfather had decided. “You've got to rub up against people." he had informed the UtUe boy. talking to him aa If he were his Intellectual equal, "and the sooner you start to life, the easier it will be tor you to get along with them. Always remember that the other fellow may be as good as you are —I don't want you growing up to be a snob." All through that long summer Paul Andrew had lived with the promise of school in the tall. Other children! Other boys! How ne had craved their companionship, and how he had shrunk trom It, wondering It he would fit in. U he would be accepted. He had hardly noticed when the family doctor gave him his usual physical examination early in September. But he had heard with a real shock the news that he was not to go to school, after all. "1 wont to go to school!'' ne had cried. "I don't want to go away!” pounding on bis grandfather’s knees. Tbe old man bad looked strangely grey, his usual ruddy color faded. He had not answered tbe boy. He had looked at the doctor. "You're sure?” ne bad demanded. "Poottlva All tbe tests show IL And the X-ray. But I'm sure, too, that we've caught it m Ume." "1 don't understand itl It cant be tbe milk, surely; that's thoroughly tested. And Ma food. We've watched everything eo carefully. 1 euppoee I shouldn't nave hept him up here winters—l could have opened the Florida bouse just as well—but I waatof. to have him with ma” iTa to ContiMutl .
Senator Taylor At Terre Haute Tonight _______ 1 Police Protection Asked For Meeting Terre Haute. Ind.. May 21 — (CPI Police said todav they ex ped "rcattered rowdyism" but no | 1 serious trouble when Sen. Glen | H. Taylor makes his fourth Indi ena speech on the Indiana StAte . Teachers' college campus here tonight Taylor, third party vice presidential candidate, spoke last night at South Berni and Wednesday night at 14iri Wayne. There was no disturbance at either speech, i Tuesday night in Bloomington, however, an open air meeting In a public park was interrupted by continuous heckling by collegeage youths. Officials of the Indiana Citizens for Wallace organization asked police here for “protection" after a Henry Wallace enthusiast was painted and thrown in a lake' on the campus of Rose Polytechnic, about two miles from here, yesterday. Mrs. Jessica Rhine, executive secretary of the Hoosier Wallace group, also called Gov. Gates and asked for state aid. The governor. at Indianapolis, said he had received no request for help from Terre Haute or Vigo county authorities and would take no action. The Rose Poly student, Bert Weinstein, said he was "cuffed around” while he was attempting to sell tickets to the Taylor speech. A sign announcing the speech was torn from a school bulletin l>oard, he said, though he had received permission from school authorities to post it. Dr. Donald Prentice, president of Rose Poly, said there was "nothnig we can do" al*out the Weinstein incident • Terre Haute police chief Cleon Reely said that he would assign three extra police officers to the meeting, but he did not anticipate any trouble. At South Bend last night. Taylor told his audience that "congrass must keep the door open for peace." He charged that the "bipartisan SYNOPSIS tkprralon cloudto Paul Andrew Datecourt', thoughts during the naUln* ot Ma law Orandfaowr-a will aa Uw last of «w P.larourt,. inc bus, tort-ja, would now n, SI, and ha would novar know trtadom trma It, rraponWhiiniM Ho rorallod his loaolr childhood atwrtly atur his parents death, whan 111 haalth had made It ImpnMirda tor him to attest puhtic mMmU as his beloved Orand father bad wisely planned. CHAPTER TWO IT WAS after that Paul Andrew had been sent away, with a male nurse and • tutor. First it had been Saranac, and later Switzerland. He knew now, of course, that the spot on his lung had healed quickly, but the canker of fear in his grandfather's heart had remained. Young Paul Andrew never did go to public school. His life became a rigid regimen for health, and it was not until he went to college that he finally met the "other boys” he had always longed for. College had been a horrible disappointment Outwardly at ease, for his training had given him at least a perfect semblance of poise, he had been inwardly miserable. The "other boys" had met him, looked askance, and turned away. Why? The question rankled within him for a long Ume, until he had answered it to himself with some satisfaction. Because he was better prepared? Because the studies over which moot of them sweated were easy for him, after his long succession of brilliant tutors? Because he didn't know the latest catch-words, didn’t wear the current sloppy clothes? Because he didn't know any girls? Because be was heir to the Dclacourt fortune? , It came down to that in the end —that and the fact that he did not know how to make the first moves toward a friendship. Oh, there were plenty of hangers-on—boys who were over-eager to help him get hia room in shape at the dorm, or who offered to show him the ropes. Hut they were the boys he didn't want to know, the boys who. even to his inexperienced eye, were taking him on for what they thought they could get out of him. He didn’t want those, and when it became known that his allowance was a small one, and that his grandfather was adamant on the subject of debts, moat of them dropped away. Only those with a thought to the future and pcaaibte valuable ’’contacts” remained. And so his college years had been, if anything, lonelier than the years which had gone before. It was possible to be very lonely indeed in a large university, tn the rni'ist or nuiiui cub or potmtiwi companions. He had dug into his studies, had finished the course in three years, but thia had not endeared him any to the others, either. “'... aad this sum shaß be dispersed by a Board of Governors, which shall be elected by the. SUB <m the charities. His mind made a lightning transition back to the high nzthged library, Bed to the past again. He had been happier la the architectural course. There he had beea able, occasionally, to feel that be wae welcome ia the intense discussions of art, that they Lad forgotten who be was. bow rich hie family wan Ho had held his own wtth them there, and they had respected hum Once Red Henshaw had asked torn to a "brawl” at a
domestic program of reaction" eq t)> ~ . MF had caused :h« rejection of r u ,. ahl| '"*’»** sla’s peace offers also att VM — 0 Twenty million dollars from the sale of surplus U S property in M , a ’'">♦ *tjMo China is to be sent hi educating ...... . , '«>l »l!| students both in China and In ihi.i . 4 • i|V,l| i:» spw. country, the government announced ® recently In an agreement reached i between the two governments, and HjjpS r \meric an educational foundation: H was set up in Chirp to carry out! ■ >* A |W* the program. ’ A ■ ■ K to I Up and At It J 'Jh FIV V The 4 H duh of Blue Creek town- • E ship met Monday evening at the . risrht* il-i KKimsey school. The meeting was ground g * opened with the president. Rose * B ig ■ Haudenbush, leading the group tn ’ “ a * a singing several songs The pledge J* ruction art to the flags was then given, after e x P'ritntfl Em which fifteen members answered teachers. roll call with a favorite fruit. Bonnie Roe, Mardle Manley. IkVf'ATi'n B Shirley Fox. Pauline Roe and Rose R g Haudenbush then gave a demonstra- AVIATION Is, tlon of whipping cream A bubble i .. ' ** gum contest was later held, won by 21/ , ‘ w , **7*' Eh Bonnie Roe 2 MW ' M 224 >’* Jf Delicious refreshments were serv- jgg-
the CARPENTERS the ELECTRICIANS the PLUMBERS the PAINTERS are all huNy at Decatur's Newest Food Market Watch For The Opening Soon!! IXJWN TOWN IN l>K< ATI l< Where Will It Be? YOU WILL KNOW SOON!
friend's apartment in the bohemian quarter of town, but Paul Andrew had felt like a fish out of water and had left as early as he dared. Was this what he had beea longing for. be asked himself? It was about that time that his grandfather had decided he should meet some girls, and had Insisted that he accept Invitations for the social season in New York. But that experience had been no happier. There, all too plainly, he had realized how the Delzcourt money set him apart and made him fair game for any mercenary minded female in the Bocini Register. It had been a salutary experience, In away. He had certainly learned to fend them off. to escape gracefully, to be completely and everlastingly noncommittal And nowhere had he really lhad any fun, except here in his own home, with his grandfsther—older now. but as companionable as ever —and Bigelow. The butler was his confidant many times when be would have hesitated to speak of things to his grandfather; the gobetween In age as well as in understanding for the two widely separate generations of Delacourta Now, suddenly, and with a finality which could not be altered, he stood alone. Now. for the rest of hia Use, he would have to be wary where he longed to be eager, silent where he longed to speak of what lay in hia heart, suspicious where he longed to trust Jessup, be was sure, would stay on—for a time, at least—aad help him to find himself in tbs maze at Dclacourt affairs. But after thpt he would have to choose a man to take his place, a man in whom he could place complete confidence, aa his grandfather had placed confidence in Jessup. He would have to learn so many new things, not the least of which waa the necessity of making instant and important decisions. He wondered, sadly, if he was capable of it aiL .. to be set up to the form of three committees, to handle . , BtlM on the charities. Even the war years, when he had hoped he m:ght find himself at last, had proved to be the same as the rest Hie grandfather had sat in heavy silence when he announced his intention to volunteer. He had said nothing to deter the young man, but Paul Andrew had known his mind was dweUiaff cn the fate of his only am. and the years of sorrow and suffering after tbe last war. A It bad been a real shock when he was rejeeted. BwneMw—aL though the ailment had altered the whole picture of hie Ilfs before — he had forgnttra the scars Upon Ms lung. For two days afterward, he had shut himself up ia hie room while a fierce, taaer despair tore at him like a physical pein. Then bo bad osmo out quietly, and offered Ml serriees for what they were worth to hie g-andfatbsir. > "There must be some place, to one of your enterprisaa whore I eaa 4s a good job,” he had said wtth a dogged air of resignation. There had been, of course. He was moved twice to the fir* year, then settled in a central architectural odke which was established to tahe care eff the expanding DetoHc had ne'er wanted to dMtgk factories, but M put Ms whole effort into the work hist tossaraa
Not that hr had realty kapiH them, hr < orrected been only a drsfto!r.*n »! figdE later an assist Sat to om f fiH real architects And then ended The ne<d fnr raff! usM Hion was over And Paul IdsH waa out of a job ■ He had been idle now to tol He knew that, and h. tod mH to roaming ttia couotrysdi k« restless mood If h« MbH money, he would hare pat nl building, but he didn't tow .It waa funny, r<ally, to bttuisl I to all thia wealth, and to Sal none to work with. But bt MH spent most rd hia ver? l* al H . allowance through the jtaaaiH his war salary wai mafi He had saved very tattle. ■ Mr. Hadley s voice atopp«4M| he looked tip in aurprtM MkH finished? No, he stlk told toss ■ in his hands The aleace ptol ; and Paul Andrew u» the Wil around the table turning Miskto 1 rection. He sat up draqfrta. »j ; Hadley must have reaehd»| part that pertetoed to hia ] The sik nee was weighted expectanc v Theo Mr. ’ cleared his throat, ato* *l»| pers a lilUe. Or waa it, Pto »| drew thought suddenly, d* ■] ’ handa trembled? ■ ■ " Twenty-third- To ay ’ beloved grandson, Pad ■ Deiacourt. I give, devise, I • queath, the sum ci Bye tM»to| ' dollars, to be [ resented to to»| i mediately following the ■ thia, my last will and ... Twenty-fcurth: I and empower my exeevUra ■ 1 tribute the residue ot I I follows: . . I It just didn't regider » • Nothing but the word I ' It was confusing. i residue being divitoi W’jl : these percentsges to F> , I ! charities he bad named residue. He frowned * I pimlsment. i It wasnt until look of miwrabte ■ the Idea began to 0 ’ turned his head ■ ting in shocked ! SJhtatlves of th* 5 studiously svmdmg . ley’s fa« w» wet I i ration. a. the W* ! ; sand doßsm’ W> * t ,Xr M** to turn his grandfa^r^! , him Mke this? . whirled through b“ , tently. Ws« U ! Set there bad i akHhlng I 1 “la I **l -**• c * m< 1 wouM mw—** ! “ISS J ' £ erf** fFe to
