Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 194, Decatur, Adams County, 16 August 1952 — Page 4

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DjECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday By I THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO, INC. filtered at the Decatur. Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter I Dick D. Heller;President A. R. Holthouse —.Editor Heller —? Vice-President Chas. Holthouse —Treasurer Subscription Rates: By Mall in Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, *6.00. Six months |3.25; 3 months, $1.75. By MaP, beyond Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, *7.00; 6 months, $3.75; 3 months, 82.00. By Carrier, 25 cents per week. Single copies. * cents. Berne's Centennial:— There is cause for joy and celebration in Berne, for that hustting city is observing the one hundredth anniversary of the arrival of the first settlers who selected the city’s present site as their home in a new country. This happiness over a community birthday is not confined to Berne. It extends throughout Adams - County. This newspaper and citizens of Decatur join m extending congratulations to friends and neighbors in the remarkable city of Berne. State recognition of Berne’s Centennial will be given Monday when Gov, Henry Schricker makes an official visit to the city. ' Outstanding in many respects, Berne is noted for its civic-minded citizenry, their love for home and . church and devotion to these fundamentals in community life. And as the poet said, “Music is the voice of the soul,” Berne’s heart beats in joyous tempoAfor it excels m the love of music and splendid choral organizations. The city is dotted with beautiful flower gardens, modern and attractive homes, all of which attest to a prosperity recognized as one of the most abundant in a city of its size in the United States. J ) Three nationally known furniture factories contribute immensely to local employment and Berne’s national fame as a furniture manufacturing center. Adams County is healthier and better because of Berne—the second largest city in our county. , Again, we Wish Berne a Happy Anniversary and another century of progress.

The average citizen who admires Gen. Eisenhower as ah army general, begins to realize that the former NATO Commander is a'novice in politics. \ Other nearby community events scheduled for the closing days of summer and early fall are the festival alt Monroeville, Sept. 18-20 >au£ the Bluffton street fair, Sept. 23-27. The Indiana State Fair will I run from Aug. 28 to Sept. 6, with the Van Wert Fair sandwiched in during the first week in September. FiiW goers take'notice. >'••••. $ . . . Shoppers turned out in great number for lhe Friday Dollar Day bargains and merchants ~ report \iie of the busiest days of the yeabqn retail trade. The shopping event advertised through this neWspapehsplus extra coverage in a 30-niile Urea and buyers came in droves. These special bargain events ,are popular with the pebple and serve to bring new . friends to the Decatur shopping center. / 0 0 Donald Klaus, a soil specialist with practical experience in farm’o’ 0 - . L_o | Household Scrapbook | ; I ’BY ROBERTA LEE 0— o Moths In Carpets Rock ammonia, dissolved in boiling water, is excellent for removing moths from darpets. Use four ounces of the ammonia to every quart of water. Apply with a flannel, then go oyer-the material with a v€ry hoi iron. Kitchen Table Fasten the oilcloth to the kitchen work table with flour paste. - r j instead of tacking it. This will prevent wrinkles, wiH be more

Treating Outer Ear Infection

I _By HERMAN N. BUNDESEN, M.D. "~WE have all seen the red, swollen, or scaly eats that bother so many people. This condition results from an, infection of the outer ear, which includes both the part we can see and the passage leading to the eardrum. For a number of years, doctors have thought this Infection was due to a type of fungus. However, careful studies are pointing more and more to the fact that the primary offenders are bacteria, and that the fungus infection comes on later. i’ Middle Ear Infection The real cause is thought to oe a type of bacteria caUed pseudo- ' monas. Usually, a bacterial infection itself is caused. by an in- > section of the middle ear, which is in back of the eardrum. SomeI times, however, the outer ear ini lection may be due to a disturbance of the oU-rsecretlng glands I of the skin. This condition is ; known as seborrheic dermatitis. An infection that can be traced to the oil glands is often cleared iip with a special shampoo containing the chemical, selenium disulfide. This treatment has helped 80 per cent of such cases. • Usually, the head is wet thoroughly with warm water and the

ing in this country, ,told members of the Rotary club of the headway made in Israel in reclaiming land in that age-old country. Through the Marshall Plan and the Mutual Security Administration jjome of the eroded land has been Restored in Israel. The Jewish farmer is one of the hardest working tillers of the soil in the z world and from a four acre tract of land can raise enough to support his family, plus the maintaining of a home. In certain instances and areas, land production has stepped up from an average of four percent of requirements to twenty percent of the needs of the people, The United States, through President Truman’s Four Point program, the plan to help backward*countries, by furnishing farmers with modern equipment and the “know-how” in fanning. Colored pictures were shown of irrigation projects and the transformation jof desert wastes in the reclamation programs carried on in Israel, a new country set up in' the settlement of the Jewish-Arabl dispute. Mr. Klaus is convinced that the program is working wonders for a needy people. ’ r durable, and will look nicer. \ _ , ' ■' ■'■ IPositions Available Under Civil Service Earl Chase, acting secretary of the civil service board, has been advised of vacancies to be fillcdin government service. These positions include air technical intelligence specialist, librarian, adda’bssing machine operator and other positoins of'a clerical nature. Information' aiid application for appointments may be obtained at the post office. I . v : v t

Shampoo then applied to the scalp. This is repeated every two to three weeks. However, this treatment should not be used except under the direction of a 4 physician. V [• Acetic Acid Usecl If the scaly ear is due to a bacterial infection, one-half to two per* cent acetic acid is helpful in clearing it up. This is the same acid which is present in vinegar. In certain severe infections, it may be necessary to use antibiotic drugs. However, before any type of treatment is started, a definite diagnosis Os the cause should be made. This can usually be done either by a laboratory test of material from the outer ear, or by direct physical examination. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS F. H. M.: Is it possible to gee jaundice from a blood transfusion? ' Answer: Liver infections, due to virus, may be transmitted by blood transfusions. Many times this occurs from three to six months after a transfusion is given, and the person is very severely ill, having high fever, chills, an enlarged liver, and I jaundice or a yellow-colored skin.

Increase Nosed In Benefit Payments Social Security | Benefits Higher < “The number of beneficiaries receiving monthly payments under the old-age and survivors insurance program has \in6rease<| by almost 12% since January 1, 1952, in Adaius and seven other northeastern counties of Indiana,” ChOatian H. W. Luecke, manager of; the Ft. Wayne social security office, stated today. ’ This increase is due largely, to the new method of figuring benefits provided by the 1950 amendinentk which give a higher benefit payment. Then too, many workers who were newly covered by these amendments are now insured for the first time. New claims received dfiring July were almost four times the number received during June. 1 The report for July is as follows: Account number cards issued, 1173. , ’ Assistance to employers on wage record reporting, 257. T* . ' New claims filed, 596. Beneficiaries served, 658. General inquiries served, 1552. A total of 4236 persons were served by the Fort Wayne office during the month, The Fiprt VVhyne office is located at room 305, in the Federal Building and is from 8:30 to 4:30; Monday through Friday. Part time offices are maintained in Angola, Auburn, Berne, Bluffton, Columbia City. Decatur, Huntington, Kendallville, and Ligonier.

ft : o I Modern Etiquette [ '( ’ J BY ROBERTA LEE | 0 .. 0 Q. What is a “canape,” and how should it be A. It is an appetizer, usually consisting of a piece, of fried or toasted ; bread topped with caviar or some other delicacy, and garnished some other delicacy, and garnished. It is pronounced can-a-pay, with accent on final syllable. Q. Should t a wife refer to her busband as Johnson” when with friends and acquaintances? \ , j A. No; she should say ‘‘my husband.” or call him by' his first name. Os course? when speaking to a servant or employe, she should refer to him as “Mister.” Q. What would be the correct way for two unmarried sisters to register at a hotel? A. They should register— “Miss Jane Wilson, Miss Wilson, Detroit, Mich.” All Willing To Give MOUNT WASHINGTON, Mass., UP — All 34 residents of this tiny town turned out the same day to have their blood typed las part of the civil defense program,

&l]aqic I

\ SYNOPSIS Beautiful, calculating Eire Raymond , seemed always to get what she wanted. Now it was a New York divorce and a large money settlement from her husband- Assuming the name of Romley, -£ve returns to the smA 11 town of I’hurstonia. Here Nance Ireland, adopted daughter of the Ireland family, plans to, marry their s o n, handsome, young Dr. Jeremy Ireland. CHAPTER THREE “A PAINTBRUSH in one hand and a sandwich in the other,” Eleahor groaned resignedly as Nance went upstairs. “She’ll work herself to a frazzle, Hattie, and be a hag in her bridal veil.” “She’ll look wonderful, Mrs. Ireland, and you know it," Eleanor smiled. “It’s incredible, isn't it, Hattie, how she has blossomed out? Remember when she first came to us, all eyes and bones ?” “Yes,” Hattie said. She was gathering the breakfast dishes and stacking them on the tray. “Yes, I remember. Skinny and shy and scared of her own shadow." "She’s changed amazingly*" “All she needed,” Hattie said gruffly, “was love.” |L' “It has been so easy to love Nance.” Eleanor’s eyes were thoughtful as she snipped off a dead bloom here and there from the African violets on the sill. . Hattie, resting the loaded tray on a chair back, stopped beside her. “You’re thinking,’’ she accused, "of—that other one.” Eleanor nodded and abstractedly plucked off a fresh bloom. “I’ve wondered, Hattie, what became of her. She was so beautiful.” Hattie’s scornful little sound conceded to beauty something leks than skin-deep importance. . Eleanor thought, It’s difficult, sometimes, to be sure one has acted wisely. Time blurs the sharp edge of Issues, gives them objectivity. One acquires a broader perspective. . . . “I’ve never been quite sure, Hattie.” Hattie made a deprecating murmur. "You did the only thing possible, Mrs. Ireland.” “Did I, Hattie? I wonder. I’ve often questioned my patience, my lack of wisdom. I can look back, now, and ask myself if I had done

~ THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

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ASk IMSCRNMM . In Hospital \ Mrs. Charles Rhoades received word from her husband, who was admitted to the army hospital in Kentucky, where he ils stationed. His present address is US 55268771 Ward 83, Old Potomic Hospital, Fort Knox, Ky.’ Pvt Rhoades is serving with the ‘ 3rd armored division. O o 20 Years Ago ' TODAY o— — o August 16 — Two garages on the Kunkelhan farm northeast of Decatur are destroyed by fire with loss of S6OO. , The 44th session *of the Mennonite conference for the central district will convene at Berne tomorrow. * A; son is born to Mr. and’Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh at Junglewood, N. J. C. L. Walters is named by Governor”' Leslie ‘to be judge of the 26th circuity to succeed tlie late Dore B. Rrwin. '■ ■ ■ Elmer Ralston has his left foot broken in two places when a car driven by a Ms. Long of Elkhartruns oyer the lad’s foot as be sat on a curb on South Second street. Marion Feasel, Vernon Hill, Gerald Strickler and Charles Cloud go to Anderson to attend thd basketball school.

this, br that, might it have worked out?” / , “No” said Hattie with conviction. “She Would have broken your heart” “Did I break hers, Hattie?" "She didn’t have a heart!” < Eleanor smiled with affectionate indulgence. “You’ve never given my conscience a chance to prick, have you? You and Sam.” “Just don’t think any more about her,” Hattie counseled grimly, as she carried the tray to the kitchen. \ s Hattie was right, Eleanor told herself firmly. She had done the only thing possible. Os course she had! But she was faintly alarmed at this belated need for self-vindi-cation. Upstairs, at the mirror, she settled the absurd halo of veiling and cornflowers on her head and studied the effect judiciously. A little too young, but Sam hated the dowager hats and she had faith in Sam’s judgments. It was Sam who had climaxed those weeks of wavering and indecision by saying, “Det the child go, Eleanor.” Those words!' Eleanor visioned once more a child’s face blotched and swollen by weeping, ravaged by penitence and misery which would have been Eleanor’s undoing had she hot by then known them as false.’ She heard in the room the tear-thick echo of the child’s voice. “Give me another chance, Mrs. Ireland. Just one more chance. I’ll be good. I promise rn be good.” “No,” Eleanor said, not aware that she spoke aloud. The imagined face hardened. ‘Til get even'with you,” the voice screamed. “I’ll pay you back. I’ll make you Wish you hadn’t turned me opt . . Eleanor, a rather pretty woman in her late forties, took fresh gloves from her drawer and drew them on, her mind already on the pleasant walk to the dressmaker’s as she went downstairs and out of the house. i From her studio in the attic, Nance watched her go. She was sharpening a pencil which was, Already needle-sharp. Stalling, she thought, amused. Why do authors ! and artists, always ?

Baruch Cites Waste Os Past Six Years Charges Government Wastes 80 Billions SAN FRANCISCO, UP — Bernard Baruch, elder statsman and adviser to presidents, has charged the federal government with wasting “$80,(TOO,090,000 in the\ last six years by inflation and incompetence.” Bbruch began a trip today to’do. tiorna Valley where he will be hondred| in’ Northern California’s redwood enipire on his BjUid birthday. He arrived here Fridaiy. i= He would not discuss any of the problems faciijg the nation exempt tb offer the opinion the present administration had wasted sßo,\ OOOpOO.OOO, \ On the subject of politics,' thd silver-haired statesman said, ‘’when the time comes for me to Say something about politics, I’ll speak my mind without hesitation?’ 0n his birthday, next Tuesday, Baruch will be honored With a •birthday bench” beneath thfc world’s tallest tree, towering up\ war 4 365 feet, in a,redwood gr-ove Dyerville, Calif. \ j £)qdicated to Baruch by the ftedwood Empire .Association, the bench will bear a bronze plaque saying the statesman’s “stature is that of these redwepds.” Lbve and joy are the greatest healjingj, forces.

It was a pleasant room, excellently lighted, designed primarily for work, although there was a fireplace and a wide circular couch, a leather chair grooved by body contours, a fat, fringed hassock. When we build our house, she thought, I shall ask Jeremy to insulate the attic and duplicate this room for me. He will, because he knows how much I love this. On the walls were framed pictures 5 with her signature. I All in black and white. When' she was fifteen, an internationally famed artist had been in town with an exhibit of his paintings. The art teacher at the' high school had shown him some of Nance's work. His comment, “Unusual talent," had sent Nance soaring along the Milky Way, until his “Lord, what a clumsy hand with color!” had driven her in panic to an optometrist, who had informed her she was color blind. fit had narrowed her field to etching and Nack and white brushwork, but within the enforced limitations she had achieved a measure of success commercially. The whimsical and fanciful Imagery of her work had brought her a ready market in illustrating juvenile l>ooß-s« 1 > ‘‘lsn’t it wonderful ?” ; s|ie’d said to Jeremy when she signed her first contract with the New York firm. “I’ll never have to really grow up! m get paid for putting on paper all the dreams of childhood!” . Her talk with Eleanor this morning had awakened in Aer mind the dreary years when only an over - busy imagination had made supportable her vast loneliness. Sometimes she was a princess in pearl-embroidered velvet, with a satin-clad court to do her bidding. Mostly she was a child with- two parents, four grandparents, a baker’s dozen of brothers and sisters, and scores of uncles and aunts and cousins. And always she was beautiful, with plump but-ter-yellow curls and assorted dimples and eyelashes half an inch long, so that one of the couples who came to the Home would surely want her for their very own child. _ (To Be Continued). "A-rfe

APPOIVTMKNT OF Ao. 4N06 Notice Im hereby Riven, That the undersigned has been appointed Administrators of the estate of Veronica K. Wolpert late of Adams Coun--BoiyenteaSe<1 ’ The estate ,s I ,r * ,babl y LOUIS A. WOLBERT . ' ’ \ EDWARD J. WOLPERT Administrators VOGLEW’EDE & ANDERSON August 15. 190. \ AUGUST 16—23—-30. LEGAL NOTICEOF PUBLIC HEARING Notice is hereby given that thje Local Alcoholic Beverage Board cif Adams County, Indiana, will, at il P.M. on the 9th day of September C.S.T., 1952 at the Commissioner Is Room, Court House in the City of Decatur. Indiana in said County, begin investigation of the applications of the following named persons, requesting the issue to the applicants, at the locations hereinafter set out, of the Alcoholic Beverage Permits 'of the classes hereinafter designated and will, at said time and place, receive information concerning the fitness of said ajp plicants, and the prppViety of issuing the permits applied for td such applicants at the premises named: 15. P. O. Elks No. 993 (10264) (club) 357 N. Hecond St., Decatur, Indiana, beer, liquor, wine. 1 | Car-1 H. and Martha Mies, 10019 (restaurant), 262 N. 2nd st., tur, Indiana, beer, liquor and wide SAID INVESTIGATION WILL RE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC, AND PUBLIC PARTICIPATION IS REQUESTED. INDIANA ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE COMMISSION, By John S'. Noonan, Secretary. Bernard E. Doyle, , Chairman. > AUGUST I\S, I \ . NOTICE OF SPECIAL MEETING Notice Is hereby given to the taxpayers of Adams County, Indiaba that a special meeting of the County Council of said coiinty will be held at the Auditor's Office in the Court House at Decatur. Indiana Monday August 25 and Tuesday, August 26. 1952 at U»:00 A.M. The Council will consider- the following additional emergency Appropriations and any other business that may come before k - - '\ I COUNTY Item No. 103 c Treasurer 6% $ 300.00 Item No. l<»3a Sheriff, Special Deputies 100.00 Item No ~. 200 Attendance , i Officer, Telephone 125.00 Item No. 213a .Co. Agept. transfer to Item 600 165.00 Item No. 200 Assessor Oper. 250.00 Item \No. 250 Circuit Court Operating V 25(1.00 Item No. 118 Root Twp. Deputy Hire ‘ . 80.00 Item No. 119 Twp. Trustees Additional Salaries 40Q.00 HOSPITAL Item No. 101 b Hospital Manager 1200.00 Item No. 600 Properties 1850.00 HIGHWAY I.tem No. 103 p Truck, Tractor Diesel o’per -.... 5500.00 Item No. 200 Operating, Gasoline Tires, Repairs .. 3300.00 Item No. 301 Stone 5000.00 Item No. 313 Transfer to Stone No. 301 4890.00 Taxpayers appearing shall have the right to be heard thereon; after said appropriations shall be made ten o'r more taxpayers feeling themselves aggrieved by such appropriations may appeal to the State Board of Tax Commissioners for "further and final action*.thereon by filing their petition therefor with the Comity Auditor within the sthne fixed by law and the State Tax Board will fix a. date fors>hearing in tliis county. ! - By Order of Board Os Commissioners of Adams- County. THURMAN I, DREW, Auditor Allams County, Ind.

Trade in a Good Town—Decatur! ■__ — ... ' SYNOPSIS Beautiful, calculating Eve Raymond seemed always to get what she wanted. Now it was a New York divorce and a largo money settlement from her husband. Assuming the name of Romley, Eve returns to the small town of Thurstonia. Here Nance Ireland, adopted daughter of the Ireland, family, plans to marry their son, handsome, young Dr. Jeremy Ireland Once* long ago. Eve had been adopted by these Irelands, but because of her wicked little ways, they had returned her to the orphanage. Tais rejection had ertibittered her, and now she means to seek revenge. CHAPTER FOUR REALITY was cruel. Each morning, when she brushed her teeth in the bathroom with all the other little girls, under Miss Simmons’ supervision to see that they stroked up and down and not crosswise, Nance would take a quick peep in the mirror to see if yesterday’s dreams, by some miracle, had come true. Knowing, of course, that they hadn’t. It became a recurrent nightmare, being dressed in her best and brushed and combed and paraded in the reception room, knowing that it was just as hopeless as it had been- all the other times. No one wanted a wispy-haired, bony little ten-year-old. Until that always-to-be-remem-bered day. L » “This one,” Eleanor Ireland had said, and Nance had braced herself for disappointment because they couldn’t mean her. But they did! “Oh, Sam,” Eleanor Ireland had said in the lovely voice which was more richly warm than all the imaginings, “this one.” The matron had concealed • a start of astonishment, then hastily recovered herself to assure Mrs. Ireland that the child was extraordinarily well-behaved and nicely mannered. But Eleanor Ireland wasn’t listening. ’ “Her eyes, Sam,” she’d said softly to the man with her. “Do you see? They’re hohesL" v So Nance had gone on the train with the Irelands to Thurstonia, to the big gray stone house on Carver Street. To a room of her own and the lovely nightly lullaby of willow branches strumming her window’ In the dark. And Jeremy for a brother. i There must be.a destiny, she thought, that shapes our lives. Otherwise, Td never have known Jeremy. Jeremy had been fourteen when she came \to be his sister. He ignored her at first, not from intentional unkindness but because a ten-year-old—and a girl at that!— was an exasperation that simply did not fit into the rich and busy intricacy of his days. But Nance, once the first shyness was overcome, began chipping

'Cooks' Corner' By Mary R. Thaman Roasts For Two Meat roasts which often come cheaper by the pound than chops and steaks are sometimes overlooked . by the woman who cooks for two or just for herself. She may think a roast too much meat. Even when coking on such a small scale there are &ieat roasts which make good choirs. These roasts are small and can often be used in varied ways to avoid monotony. A small pork loin roast of 2% to pounds can provide at least two different pork dishes. Ask your butcher to cut off two or three chops from the end of the roast for one pork, chop meal. The roast itself provides savory roast in moderate amount. Another pork roast which makes a not too large meat buy is smoked, boneless shoulder. : butt. This cut is generally roasted at 325” F., about 45 minutes to the pound. For added good flavor, Remove roast from' oven one half hour before it is done, garnish with cloves and brown sugar, then finish roosting. A one-rib beet roast also suits yery small family needs. Leftover

... SOCIALITE MINOT F. (MICKEY) JELKE (wearing sports jacket), heir to a margarine fortune, is shoWn in custody of detectives who brought him 1 to police headquarters in New York along with 24-year-old Sjdvia Eder (turning from camera), who was found in Jelke’s apartment. Jelke was detained in cdnneclicn with a vice cleanup. He is 22, win not come into his inheritance till he is 25j, but receives S2OO a month from a trust fund. Detectives found a gun in his $l5O-a-month apartment and another gun in his big convertible parked outside, (International)

away at his indifference like a brisk and determined little woodpecker, and soon he was magnanimously riding her on his bicycle’s crossbar to the lake for swimming, and allowing her to sit by the hour on an overturned barrel in his garage workshop. She found the courage to talk back to him when he asserted the authority of seniority; to think up vigorous and insulting retorts to his jibes ... always with the delicious awareness of being privileged to treat Jeremy as other girls treated their brothers, with casual rudeness a shield for love. Nance was a freshman at high school when Jeremy was in .his senior year. By the time he went away I to Medical School, Nance was happily absorbed in her own interest and friends, and scarcely missed him. When he came home at vacations, she jeered affectionately at the swaggering medical terms he flaunted, and he hooted disparagingly at her offhand confession that she was going to be a commercial artist . And suddenly, when Jeremy was interning at the Thurstonia General Hospital, and Nance had signed the first of her contracts with ROlph Hilliard, the gulf of years between them was no longer there. Nance was twenty and Jeremy twenty-four, and each acknowledged respect for the other’s work, ’’v j"' \ One day Jeremy announced, with a look of genuine amazement, “Nance, you’ve grown beautiful!” “You’re beautiful, tob,”\she said lightly. “I’ll bet you leave a trail of swooning nurses in the hospital corridors!” “No,” he said, soberly surveying her. “I mean it. What have you done to yourself? You used to be an owl in pigtails.” "If it’s comparison you’rp after," she grinned, “here’s, one for you. You were a heron, with long, thin legs and a scrawny neck.” She shrugged. “I grew too tall for pigtails. I’m almost as tall as you. Let’s measure.” They stood back to back, and Nance flattened her palm on the top of her head. Her fingertips came to Jeremy’s ear. He laughed. ‘Tve still got a few inches on you, pipsqueak.” He turned and looked at her, so steadily that Nance felt warmth in her cheeks although she did not know why. The moment passed as Jeremy twisted his fingers in her shoulderlength hair and tugged. Nance squealed "Ouch!” and stampeded up the stairs after him as he ran, laughing. Transitions are often sudden and overwhelming. It was so with Nance and Jeremy. They were In

SATURDAY, AUGUST 16, 1952

Shew are delicious when dropped in hot gravy and just i heated through. Hash apd stew are other possibilities for leftover beef. Next time you buy meat, don't overlook the merits of small roasts. They're economical for small families. • Hearing Set Daniel C. Lantz etal, vs the Bern'e-Freiich school; hearing bn permanent injunction set for submission October 14. Custody Continued -I Weldon L. Sprunger vs Helen M. Sprunger? complaint for divorce; matter of custody of children continued until September 4; also » both sides agree to let the three minor children remain with their mother until August 17, when they are to be returned to a grandparent, Mrs. Menno Set For Hearing Decatur Co. of Jehovah’s Witnesses vs Board of zoning appeals 6f city of Decatiir; Witnesses suit to show cause why writ of certiorari should not be issued them — thus penhitting them to build- a church oh the plot of ground in question—is set for hearing on September 8. Trade In a Good Town —Decatur

the conservatory. Sam and Eleanor were dining out, so they were alone. Outside, occasional passing footsteps crunched brittlely in the snow, and the glass-walled room was filled with the ethereal pinks and mauves of the January sunset. Jeremy knocked out his pipe and glanced over at Nance. b “You’ll ruin your eyes,” he remarked, “in this lighL” She put down her sketchbook. “I’ve finished,” she said. “Anyway, I was just doodling." She stretched her arms luxuriously over her head, then let her hands fall relaxed in her lap. “I love this time of day, don’t you?” ‘ “ ’Mmmm, when I have time to sit like this and enjoy ,iL” "You work too hard, Jeremy." ‘That’s funny, coming from you.” She smiled. “I expect it is. You love your work, too, don’t you?” “Life’s not going to be long enough for all the things I want to do." “I know.” She nodded. “That’s the way it should be, don’t you think? Always something just beyond one’s reach. It gives a point to heaven, doesn’t it? An eternity to finish up all the unaccomplished odds and ends.” “Ask a shoe clerk or a street sweeper if that’s his idea of heaven!" "Oh, well, it’s mine.” “Let’s see,** Jeremy said, reachring. for her sketchbook. She was oddly reluctant. “It’s just doodling,” she protested. He grinned. "Most art is, to me, especially the abstract.” He looked at what she had drawn. And suddenly he was laughing. “You and me.” He chuckled appreciatively. ‘The owl in pigtails and the heron with a pipe. Nance, the likenesses are uncanny!” He frowned. “But you don’t look like this now.” “Nor you,” she said lazily. He was gazing at her with a look that grew in intensity. Suddenly he hent to her, his weight supported by a hand on each of the arms of her chair. “Nance,” he said. She did not move. The bush of dusk was in the room with them. Jeremy said, ’‘Nance. AU this time, you.” As naturally, as astonishingly, as that it came to them. She was in his arms, aware of underlying sadness at something in this moment forever ended, yet with joy springing in her at this that was just beginning. -- “AU this time,” Jeremy Repeated in awe. “Nance, did you know?” “Not until now." “You’re sure, aren’t you?” “Yes ... Yes, Jeremy.” Smiling, Nance ran from the room. . . (To Be Continued).