Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 153, Decatur, Adams County, 28 June 1952 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday By THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO, INC. Watered at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter Dick D. Heller —— President A. R. Holthouse Editor J. H. Heller —Vice-President Chas. Holthouae i-...... Treasurer Subscription Rates: By Mall in Adame and Adjoining Counties: Ono year, 16.00. Six months 13.26; 3 months, g 1.76. \ By MaP, beyond Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, 1700; 6 months, |3.76; 3 months, |2.00. By Carrier, 25 cents per week. Single copies. I cent*.
Wish~we were smart enough to invent a means of canning the extra summer heat or about thirty ’ percent of it and dosing it out during the winter months, , ——o ——o [ * Candidates for congress may re* ! gret their decision tb £nd all con- ; trol except in “critical defense housing areas.” People are funny and ifit doesn’t work right will be a- grand old yell about i election time. o o_ — A British judge ruled the other day that “wives like automobiles J might depreciate in value over the years,” and the Miami Herald adds: “We don't know very many i husbands who don’t also fray a little at the seams with passing years." ■ ■ ■ 5 ■ I '■'-r. . 0 0 . < The Appelate court of Indiana has sustained the decision tfof Judge Myles F. ’ Parrish of the Adam^ l circuit court in his decision that the Shock estate is exempt from taxes on the her quests to Masonic orders.. Mark up another one for Judge Parrish who consistently decides cases the way the law and the evidence directs., ' . \ , When you sit at a desk and the persperation pours on to the T-rpapers you are W’orking op r its /hot, but we think of the boys in camp or in Korea, of the men who work in the fields, the factories, on the highways or in other places where there are no fans or j other methods of checking the j heat and w'e hesitate to object or find fault. ft could be worse. , ’ ’I ' ■■ ■ v ■ -O o — 4 An elderljr resident of Clearwater. Fla., Walked into the office of the county judge a day or two , ago and turpei| in his 1952 driv- J license because it wasn’t safe for him. to "drive, admitting his fcfees were poor. and the traffic bothered hihi. That took courage and wisdom. Few of us will admit the faults of age but perhaps we should, for driving a car these days is a hazardous busiChose who have all their wits and senses. ' ' \ ' V —° —■ Among its many other assets, Decatur is fortunate in having a
4 i s -—-- Automobile Stolen Here Last Evening A gold metaAc colored ’4B Hudson sedan was reported stolen sometime last evening while is was standing in front of the home of Vaughn Hilj yard of 624 Jefferson street. ? ~ The owner. Charles Wagdner of . route 2, Decatur, said that the- car had very bad brakes arid he had (' given it -to Hilyard, a mechanic, to Jake to his garage to repair, Brr fore Hilyrird took the,‘car to the garage, however, he took it home to have and said when he - came out of his house the car was ■— ! 5
Eyes Need Protection From Sun
By HERMAN N. BUNDESEN, M.D. SUNGLASSES are usually not dark enough to give adequate protection. Research has shown that the darker the glasses, the better they protect the eyes from •\ the ill effects of sunlight. ~ It, is said that if the eyes of a person wearing sunglasses can be seen by a person looking through the lenses, then the lenses are not darK enough. Retina Loses Sensitivity If a person exposes hirriself to too much bright sunlight without the protection of dark glasses, - the retina of the eye loses some of its sensitivity. This is the part of the eye that Receives the light impulses, and therefore the sharpness of vision is impaired. * The effect is usually noticeable I right after the eyes have been exposed too long. The person’s \ adaptation to the dark may be 5 X slow for days or even weeks as terward, and may be an Important cause of both industrial and automobile accidents. According to the same re- . searches, neither the ultra-violet nor infra-red rays from the sun k are the cause Os this type of
number of strong Christian churches, with outstanding Minislets. This fact is borne out by the weekly attendance at all lobal churches. The Decatur Ministerial association is regarded as one of the strongest in northern Indiana and everyone of Decatur’s Pastors is a hard working salesman of Christianity. Today the need for strong Churches is apparent and each Sunday thousands in Decatur turn' from their daily toils to enjoy the soothing words and: music of wonderful religious programs. A town can’t ge| very far out of line, when a vaat majority. of its citizens are -regular Church attendants. * Go to thfe church, of your choice. I Advice To Daughters:— Thomas Jefferson, bbrn April 13, 1743, was not only l/a great Statesman, but a man personally devoted to his. family. His wife died after ten years of happy marriage and all his life lie depended much on his elder daughtgir, Martha. Here is part of a letter to her, advising her how to help a • ■ i' i■ t' F'V ■ younger sister: 1 s“Teach her above all things to be good, because without thaJt we can neither be valued by others nor set any value, on ourselves. Teach her to be Always true; nol vice is so mean as the want of truth; "and at the same time so ! useless.. Teach her never to be 'angry; anger only series; id torment ourselves, to divert others and alienate their esteem. And teach her industry, and application to useful pursuits. I will ven- . ; ' ' . > ture to assure you that, if jou inculcate this in her mind, yoiu will make her a happy being in hiefself,' a most friend tb you, all the world.j "In teaching her thesb depositions of mind, you will be piore fixed in them yourself, and render yourself dear to all your acquaintances. Practice them, then, without ceasing. If ever you find yourself in difficulty, and dojubt/how to. extricate yourself, do whit is right, and you will find it. the easiest way of getting out of /he difficulty.”
missing. The license tag number on the car is J A 4832. i ! ' Slight Damage Done As Vehicles Collide Damage .to the' extent df \ s!<•<» was caused y'esterday after, the police report states, Robert C. O'Shaughnessy of Decatur tried to pass John Meyer in his city light department truck at the same time Mayer was about to make h turn. The mishap occurred at Mieber 13th streets. I* \ • U - L'-.-J Trade in a Good Town—Decatur!
blindness* Both light and dark glasses absorb these rays adequately. Too great amounts of visible solar radiation — light — are thus responsible for the damage to the eyesight. _ Vision Reduced ' • Many times, after exposure to sunlight, vision is reduced by dnehalf its normal value, and even more. Thus, night driving, after a day at the beach without sunglasses, can be very dangerous. The loss is mainly ih dark adaptation to vision, and night vision is extremely retarded. It thus seems advisable to avoid excessive exposure of the eyes- to sunlight, and to wear dark sunglasses to minimize the effects of solar, radiation on the eyes. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS F. G.: What causes the blood to thicken and is there any help for it? i / Answer: There is no such thing as thickening of the blood. There is a disorder, known as polycythemia, in which the red cells beCome greater in number. ’ An examination of the blood will determine whether or not this ' | condition Is present. I ■
Manhattan Girl Is Miss United States 1 Miss Universe To Be Named Tonight LONG BEACH, Cal. (UP) — Jubilant Jackie Loughery of New York, today polished her Miss United States of America gold cup and worried a little over 29 loVely foreign girls with whom' she will compete tonight for the title of Miss Universe. The pert red head from Manhattan won the United States beauty title Friday night after a nip-and-tuck battle with Louisiana’s Jeanne Thompson. She said she was “awfully glad” New York woli because “New Ybrk is where Brooklyn is and I'm rdoting for the Brooklyn Dodgers. \ The , five-foot\ tour-inch beauty paraded her IOS well proportioned pounds before the 10 judges in both evening dress and bathing suit before she wah finally judged the winner in a re-vote to break a tie with, dark-haired Miss Thompson. Miss Loughery has a hip and bust measurement of 34 inches while her waist narrows to a trim. - Lutheran Church Picnic On Sunday The annual church and Sunday school piVnic of Zion Lutheran Church will be held Sunday afternoon, beginning at 12:30 o’clock, at St. John’s Grove, six miles north of Decatur on U.S. Highway 27. A carry-in basket dinner will, open the picnic with coffee, pop, and ice cream furnished by the committee: Mr. and Mrs. Phil Sauer, Mr. ahd Mrs Henry Krueckeberg, and Air. and Mrs. Aaron Weiland. Games and contests for the children of th& Sunday school will be supervised by the teachers of th© various departments, \Gerhard Schultz, as general superintendent. A special feature Os th4 afternoon will be a tournament softball game between the lads of Zion Sunday school and the St. John’s parochial school. This will be one, of the tournament games to determine the winner among the Lutheran schools of Adorns county. Members of Zion Liit'heran and their friends are invited to bring their basket lunch and spend Jlije day in fellowship. Arrested On Request Os Military Police On the request of military police of Fort Wayne. Wayne Bennett, of Bluffton, was arrested by city police yesterday and hel/ for m p.’s who will charge him with being AWOL from camp. Os Japanese serving terms for war crimes, s:', I had been paroled by occupation authorities as of April 15, 1952. . \.
aBOOK/CRIME |&/ ELIZABETH DALY ‘ Dbliibuted byKir-.it Featuie* Syndjcit*. J £♦. a,, ; ■ , , W . -.A'..... .A Al. ....
' ; ' CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE MRS. ORDWAY spoke, rather loudly for her: “Are you saying thht that child’s husband Wasn’t lame, and wasn’t Gray Austen at all ?” ] Nordhall rose. “Perhaps Mr. Gamadge would stay a while and explain. The sergeant and I have got to run. You’ve done us a big favor, ma’am; now if you’ll let some people come up and take your sworn statement ...” “Delighted. 1 know these two relatives of mine won’t let me go to court, but I don’t see why I—” Mr. Ordway said: “Out of the. question, as you know.” Shaking hands with Nordhall, he remarked that things seemed to be getting a little lively on this quiet residential block. “My son and I witnessed a most extraordinary sight when we were getting home just now; it almost looked as if the two elder Austens —I hardly know them 15y sight myself—had to be forcibly removed from their premises by police.” “That’s so, sir. Mr. Gamadge will tell you all about it. It’s his pinch, you know.” Nordhall and the sergeant quickly left the room. Morning sunlight was finding its way through the leaden panes pi the northeast window in the Austen library; Gamadge, having arrived by appointment, was sent in unannounced by a Norah whose face nad sagged into whit looked like permanent lines ot chagrin. He stood\at the doorway looking at Rena and Mr. Dabney, who sat at the center table over lists. Rena saw him, got Up and came to him, reached her arms around his neck and kissed him. “My orphan.” Gamadge returned to the table with her, arm in arm. Mr. Dabney smiled in approbation. “This is Mr. Gamadge, Mr. Dabney. ’ He—” “I know.” They shook hands. “Literature brought the young person and myselt together,” said Gamadge. “Books, if not literature, unite us still.” He laid a flat package on the table and began to take
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Ji JUNE BANK STATEMENT J
0 — ; 0 1 f Modern Etiquette i BY ROBERTA LEE 0 i Q. a secretary is taking dictation from her employer and he receives a personal telephone call, should she leave his office until he finishes hH conversation? A. If his conversation sounds very personal, she’can leave the office quietly—qnless her employer motions for her to remain. Q. May a girl accept a cedar cllyst from her betrothed , before she receives her engagement ring? A. This is quite ih.ll right, i ! Q. Is it proper to liush your plate away front you oh the. dinner table as. a signall that you have, finished that course? . - A. Never, When you put down your knife and fork, it is evident! j’ou have finished. ~ ) , j . . a p j Household Scrapbook j | BY ROBERTA\LEE j •— .i v T'j 0 Bleaching Sheets An easy, but effective, way to bleach sheets is to stretch them on the lin'e and each time the sun dries tiiem turn the hose on them. This will save the trouble of. fixk*imr them down each time ,tp wet them. ■ Sagging Cane Seat If the cane seat of a. chair iti slightly sagged, it cart be tightened by washing it with hot water, and then drying in a hot sun. Potatoes ' Dice left-over potatoes, add a creamy white sarnie, and combine this with other leftover cooked vegetables or hard-cooked eggs.
ott tne string. “So 1 am given to, understand,” said Dabney, “and I am deeply interested.” I ' “I thought you might be.” Gamadge took the paper off his parcel, disclosing an old book catalogue; he said: “And since you have been so kind to our friend here ..." Mr. \Dabnoy was a tired-looking little old man, but he had plenty of professional authority left in manner as well as in voice- “My dear sir!” he exclaimed. “‘Kind?’ This lady has been victimized. So has the Austen estate, which I think I understand you to have rescued in a most spectacular-—” “Just chance.” “Very well. You rescued it; but for you we might have lost fifty years of income. As it is, we have only lost three years and ten months of income, and in fact hot all of that. Bayles at least had saved something, which will be restored to us, in due time. But this lady—we can’t compensate her. I don’t call her small effects, her clothing and some articles of jewelry, adequate compensation. And yet she insists that thjs inventory she has made must go to the appraisers; and that she can’t take the stuff out of the house. Really! I have discretionary powers.” “If you can’t bear the sight of the things, Serena,” said Gamadge? “sell them and put the money towards your law costs.” “That indeed,” said Mr. Dabney, “would be poetic justice.” \ She said: “I could do that.’ “And if you have discretionary powers, Mr. Dabney,” Gamadgewent on, “I hope to goodness you’ll put a value on the books upstairs in the sitting-room and let me buy the lot.” “The bank will certainly agree with me that if you are willing to accept any such inadequate fee —” .“I a c.c ep t it,” said Gamadge eagerly. “Then that’s settled.” Mr. Dabney made a note. “You will receive them carriage prepaid. As for our
o —0 | 20 Years Ago I TODAY 0— i « June 28 -4 Valuations in Adams cojtnty dropped $8,.390,(AJ0 over 1931. The Citizens Telephone company issues notices to stockholders that no dividends will be paid this quartet. Trucks driven by William Parent a city .electric lineman, and Arthur Lengerich, collide. Both mdn and Alpert Rough, who was rid-, ing yyith Lengerich, were painfully injured. Paul: Graham, Leo Ehinger, Lloyd Raker and Erliie Stengel are elected delegates to\the- American Legion state convention at Kokomo July 30 and 31. Miss Gladys Kern, of Decatur, is attending the University of Kentucky during Che summer term. Senator Tom Walsh, of Montana is elected chairman of the Democratic national convention. ; r 2 L >. CO INSERVICE Jfcjb . AndreCvs Discharged Albert Andrews returned to the states June' 14, after serving the past 40 months in Hamburg, Germany. with the army, lie received his discharge in Kentucky several days ago. His parents, >lr. and Mrs. Ell Andrews, reside at 608 Short street in Decatur. If you have someining to sftll or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad. It brings results. \
responsibility" — ne signea neavny —“1 don’t; know. But concerning forgeries, we could only think of him as his own verification, with the Austen' family behind him.” “And wiUi Gray Austen behind him, out west.” “So I hear. A strange outgrowth, al! this, from a decent old New York family. Rackets, I understand, and the woman had lost het position in that library for some ■- extraordinary reason connected with morals.” "Bayles came of a good New' England family,” said \ Gamadge, “settled in Illinois. He wa s £ misery to his relations from the day he was old enough to shirk a jot; and lie himself out of the consequenceS. The air force was the only outfit he ever made good inj and he quit when he could —toe much work there, as he freely says. I suppose he and Gray Austen were natural affinities. But you’re not the only girl who feK in love with him, Serena: he had plenty of charm, it wasn’t all your imaginative sympathy.” t "He seemed so sad and lost.” "He was. That brace of Austen’s did it:'\ it caught you, but it had caught him. He says now that the only profession he could have followed with any pleasure was acting, and thei war did him out of it.” “I should say he had exercised his abilities to the full in private life," remarked Mr. Dabney. "That poor boy Pedersen, who came on to see His hero again and couldn’t be allowed to hang about for the purpose—will these people manage to involve Bayles in that crime?” “No, they can’t. Apart from my testimony, there’s Jerome’s impersonation of him when he committed the murder. Nobody could possibly think jthat Bayles would like that, but it was a necessary part of the plan from the start. He was' accessory after the fact, of course, against which the police have his voluntary statement, made rtot much more than twentyfour hours later.” ZTo Be
tgnirn 1 ’ Court In Vacation The Adams circuit court is now in I vacation, that is, no decisions cap < be made tn equity cases, only en- I tries can be made on the court f record indicating motion, denials ( and some other legal processes. The court, therefore, convenes each < Friday to keep entries up to' date j and set cages for the September : term. The following entries were 1 made yesterday: : i John H. Kable vs Mildred Acker, complaint to foreclose mechanics lein; case is continued to October 23. Nora Lucille Mitchell vs Robert J. Mora, complaint for damage caused in auto accident: answer filed denying certain allegations set forth in the complaint; also filed cross complaint. p, Leona Zimmerman vs Irene Hlrschy, complaint to partition real estate; court orders deed delivered to purchaser on receipt of full pun chase Lester Morningstar vs Dorothy Morningstar, complaint for divorce * charging cruel and inhuman treatment, Ed A. Bosse appears for plaintiff. ' \- Marriage Licenses William Lehman, 207 and Carolyn Lewton, 19, both of Decatur. Etigene L. Hoggue, 23, and Donna Horner, p 2, both of Akron, O. I y Fireworks Display \ At Zollner Stadium FORT WAYNE, Ind. — There’ll be fireworks in more ways thaJi one at Fort Wayne’s Zollner Sta- , dium on the Fourth of July. The tempo of the annual fireworks show has been stepped up this year to a point \vhere the 19p2 demonstration will he the biggest display.in the history of the hiss lory of the stadium' New, brilliant features have been added and it’ll he Zellner’s noisiest Fourth. Coieaturing the fireworks display Will be three gagmes in the world’s industrial softball tournament, which the world famous Pistons, are hosting for the week-end. i The fir>t game starts at 6 p.m. the second at 7:30. And then the gigantic fireworks display is scheduled, starting at approximately 9 p.m. After the conclusion of the tireworks display, the third game of the evening will he played. Tickets are on sale in Fort Wayne at the Zollner Ticket Office, 1027 S.. Cadioun. Mail orders are accepted. . / Trade in a Good Town—Decatur!
ChAPTER THIRTY “AND when," asked Mr. Dabney, his ©yes on the catalogue in Gamadge’s hands, “are we to have that statement from you?” "I haven’t made it to anybody else," said Gamadge, "you're the first to, hear it." He looked at Serena and smiled. "Two thin books, much of a size: one a report of a trial, the other the judge’s summing-up; they were fastened together, you know, they belonged to each other. And the summing-up was printed in two columns in fine type—plenty of reading matter there.” Mr. Dabney wrinkled up his forehead, and Gamadge laughed. "I was puzzled too," he said. "Yes, it puzzles me; but I can’t quite—” "Nor could L And I couldn’t even ( decide what was puzzling me. Because of the old books only one of them seemed to stir a memory, and that wasn’t the trial but the other.’ And it wasn’t so much what was ih the Other, as what its format was. That’s as near as 1 could get.” j Mr. Dabney, his eyes fastened on Gamadge, shook his head. * “A week ago yesterday," said Gamadge, "Miss Austen honored me by catling. Quite naturally, they all wanted to know how the police were getting ' along with their investigation of the murder, and wanted also to know how hard the police might work on it. She lamented the vulgarity of the press, she said that if the boy had been important there would have been columns and columns about him; and added (her mind on hazardous > publicity): ’Far too much.’ , “They do far too much, was her thought. But what registered itself in my brain was first the columns and. columns of fine print in that summing-up, ’ and then the thought that compared with the trial, any trial, the summing-up was too long; far too long, longer than— ’’ Mr. Dabney put up a hand; "Wait. No. Yes. No.” j\ i , "Well, you’re a lawyer,” saidT'Gamadge, "but this case was tried, and another case was tried and summed up, many years ago. I’m a book man in an amateur kind of way; I see and handle and read about all kinds of books, and my interest in trials is you might say a reader’s 'lnterest, Miss Austen unlocked a compartment in my brain which held the memory of the longest summing-up in legal history. There was a celebrated case—only it \wasn’t a murder case; there was as a result a trial for i perjury; and the summing-up of that trial —” Mr. Dabney stood entranced; he said in a wondering voice: “No wonder Bayles didn’t care who read what murder cases!” “And no wonder I went wrong,” said Gamadge, “with all those murder cases and trials and crime
Muncie Escapee Is , Arrested In Ohio MUNCIE. Bid UP — Slippery Delbert Sizemore, 36, Muncie escape artist, faced charges of auto banditry and armed robbery today following his capture in Barberton, Ohio. Police said Sizemore, who escaped from the Delaware County iail twice this spring, was driving a stolen car >hen nabbed Friday. He did not resist, although he carried a loaded .32 caliber plitol.
great new novel-. the W J THE STORY OF A MINISTER \ who had to LEARN A LITTER LESSON-THE HARD WAY! Young, attractive Paul Lennox appeared to be a lucky man. He was loved, honored, seemingly happy as a minister. But he found he had to learn true meaning of faith, and it was a difficult lesson only he could teach himself. The story of «’ ♦his struggle makes THE WHOLE ARMOR a rev ardin*i rec , *'"'erienr« ''ou won't want to miss. BEGINS MONDAY IN DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT
novels in the book shelyes.” tential danger to him, and so do Rena asked: “Not a murder the others treat her. They never case?” let her alone. She’s in it with "No. Here you are.” them, too, and she’s a simple not She leaned over to read the item very well educated character who aloud: can’t take it.” 4 The Summing-up of the Tich- —” borne case. "So he instantly jumps to his “That was the bound book,” Ga- conclusion; but you persuade him madge told her. ’"The other book, that he has been wrong. He’s calmthe Tichborne Trial itself, was the ing down; and then what do you case involving a fraudulent claim say? You say you want to leave to an estate. The Claimant lost, him; that he doesn’t really need and was then tried for perjury; as you. ' he never got his hands op any of y "What can he, In his state, think the estate\ funds, he couldn’t' be of that? He can only think that tried for embezzlement. - you mean he isn’t really lame at , "You remember when we talked He rushes out to consult his about forming a company, Rena, accomplices, and he locks you in. to pay for your divorce suit? That “But then Jerome, who has more rang a bell; the Claimant, in the discernment than Bayles where,. Tichborne case, Orton, had a bunch people are concerned, laughs him of stockholders behind him, back- out ft - y ° u couldn’t possibly ing him with their shillings and carry such a suspicion, much , less half crowns, poor things.” such knowledge, for a day without "Another thing might have-ah showing that you had it. Bayles -rung a bell,"’said Mr. Dabney, mus , t up and let you out and exhilarated by a chance to match apologize before you get it into Gamadge’s historical information. your head tbat so ™* hin g * “The main strength of the Claim- Wr .?”\™ th PT J* ant’s case rested on the astound- fl “But ne finds that you have ing fact that the lost heir’s own « ow "’ So . n °7’^ r °T te 4 ,1 s him ; mother recognized and accepted the thing is to behave as innocent the pretender. Or thought she People behave, but Without running recognized him, or”-Mr Dabney ri ' sk s os pu , ttin £ e^ Capta \ n smiled—"pretended to do so. She Gray Austen into the limelight, didn’t like the legal heirs, This Consult a private man and let him fellow Bayles seemed to have fam- ? nd he L“ °/ ily backing too,” he L „ Not kmd P H vato “It rang no bell,” admitted Ga- man 0113 Gamad & e seems to »*•" madge. “What got to me at last “Very likely," Mr. Dabney was Miss Austen’s reference to agreed, “this young lady will have •columns and columns,’ coupled no difficulty whatsoever obtaining' with her phrase: ’more than you’d annulment of her so-called marexpect.' Those little books, and riage." Rena’s ption, had been in my “And another thing that clinches mind for more than thirty-six °ut case,’" said Gamadge brightly, hours, and —such is memory.” “I’ve talked with Dr. Wolfram. Do "I had it all in my hands on Fri- you , kn ° w ’ he’d never exainined day afternoon,’’ said Rena Bay es’ knee? That he explained, « 1 , would be a surgeon’s job. Bayles “We can now analyze the scene had turned ove * to Wo i fram all that took place on that Friday x . ray r tg other records afternoon,” said Gamadge. “We which Austen had brought can follow it from beginning to h him from the military end The man had had a Rouble h ital California. Wolfram shock when he gave you that mur- lsaued mcd|cation> tonics derous look; he was half out of t 0 k B lea feeling his wits with terror when he locked fit ~ r < thnt (ioor. First he saw the report to Rena> Mr . Dabney of the Tichborne trial in your asked . „ Have plftns £or hands, caught the title, and knew futu d what it was. It’s a very famous ’ case, and has often been referred Well, she said, and her face to and described in memoirs and flushed slightly, “that nice old lady collections. He may have read across the street, Mrs. Ordway, about it or only heard about it- Corns’ grandmother, you know, but ne knew it. At first, obsessed has invited me to spend a few as he Was—Jerome said so, yoti weeks with her at their country i qmember—he was sure you’d P^ ace * t ra going and I m taking caught on to him." Gamadge Aby me.” paused. “I half think he may have "You’ve met her then?’ Gahad an excuse for jumping to that madge asked. conclusion.” “No,” Rena explained, "not yet, i "I never— ” began Rena. but I’m dining with the Ordway "No, but his first wife may have family at their home tonight, found him out; wouldn’t that ex- Gram is putting on a quiet little plain her better than any explana- party for us!" tion we thought of before? She "The mills of the gods,” Gacouldn’t bring herself to leave this madge laughed, as t£ e y made man who turns but to be a crimi- ready to leave the Austin house nal, and who doesn’t even care for forever'. her. He treats her now as a po- (The End£
SATURDAY, JUNE 28, 1952
1940 Ford TUDOR : - ■ V ; - Very Good Condition * Dick Mansfield t MOTOR SALE 222 North 3rd St.
