Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 211, Decatur, Adams County, 6 September 1952 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT '' . p^l ‘ Bhed Ev ery Evening Except Sunday By JL Jt JHB MX3ATUR DEMOCRAT CO, INCf ’ > ‘ Tu”nt v* 8* £ > ?n atQr ’ lDd -’ Poßt Office a » Second. Class Matter i ' I r w Sf er -—-—4— President W-Jf £°^ ous ® --7— — [Editor 4 1 Chas. Holthouse JL— Tr|dsurer .. | , a ,^L¥ a,u to-Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, $6.00; SU months, 13.25; 3 months. $1,75. T . 7 • - U ’ beyond Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, 17-M; 6 months, $3.75; 3 montos. $2.00. > < By Carrier, 25 cents per Week, j Single copies, 5 Cents. I ““— —-——- - '■ J—4... i.. ; _J J ■ 7,ft 7'-7 \ ;.7 V.' A 'I \ .. .'- 'jd k

May ihe change** in weather, bring an end io polio. 9 '. 7’77:7 J A manufacturer is planning to bring oiitfa low-priced car that . “will do mer a hundred.” The next invention should be directed toward a driver who can travel at a hundred. i u It . ‘ ? 7 ! 7 P►■ Uj ” i j j‘ Sthere is one advantage in Jieing a presidential candidate.? A friend chicken dinner will tbe r 1 serve'll Gen. Ike and Gjov. Stevene sonin Minnesota when they at-, tend the plowing .contest. : ■ . o O- X— ; A $1,000,000 fraud. in\a nationally known finance I has been uncovered. To get away with that much money, the company must-have devoted too much time checking the other fellow, while ignoring its own boqkkeep--1 icg department. 7 4 7 Israel; the little country parti- ; ■ ° tioned in Palestine as the new 1 home of the Jews wa? admitted to . the United Nation* in May, 1943. Jerusalem is (the capital, although a move is underway to make an international city and capital of Tel Aviv, largest in the newly * formed republic. The World Almanac' gives population in 1951 a*; 1,230,000 Jews, 120,000 Moslems, 35,000 Christians and 15,000 Druses. Formerly under British rule, a U. N. mandate was given to move out of the country anid today Israel is the world capital of the Jewish peop Vpie. Headway has been- made in running the new republic and in agriculture development, follow- < ing an arpiistice with fjhe Arabs, , who at one time largely inhabitated the small country. Recognition of Israel was also given by Aj the United States Congress. —o— ' Ike Approves:— "the opposition frequently attacks the administration’s foreign policy and hurls diatribe at President Trttman hnd Secretary dl State Acheson, tor formulating these policies. \ ~ , . _ P—7. \ i ■ • ■ 7 ,?~TTowevdr, all! political are not opposed to the world relation holK-ies. In fact Gen. Dwight Eisenhower,; Republican presidential •’Candidate, who defeated Sen. Taft tor the ndmiiiatjon, practical- '' ' ■ ) ! ly endorses the Truman program. In bis jo-point speech in Phila- ’ S 1 ■ . ' ■ i > .■'A. ...i. L-.. ;

■ 's ; i ' Adolescent Health} Problems ; .

By HERMAN N. BUNDESEM, M.D. EVERYONE Who has the privl- . < leje of raising a child wilbhave a teen-ager on his hands sooner or later, and will have to face the . problems of adolescence. , It takes a special effort to understand the abilities, limitations, arid health problems of the adolescent, even though every one of t " iis one® passed through the stage ■4 himself. *ij ; V Tn adolescence, a (person is beitwixt and between. He is past childhood, but too young for adulthood. The adolescent is not a child, riot an adult, but a young ■ person going into adulthood. p Health Neglected The (health of an adolescent is very,apt to be neglected by parr entsi (not intentionally, but through Ignorance. Most, adolescents have lost the benefits of the they had in early | childhood. It Is importarit that i . they be re-vaccinated and imj * munlzed against tetanus and diphtheria. i i It 13 also necessary for these | ’ young, people to learn the value j of proper nutrition. There is hardly any other {time of life ■ when the body is more in need of the right food, and the young person now has it in his power to cause great and serious damage to himself through wrong I eating habits.- ~ \ .1 Ache May Appear I This is also the stage when ache (pimple?) of the face is very common. This condition may be due to changes in the glands of internal secretion and should have ' * ■■■ I I ■ "re x.

Gett. Eisenhower, took • th| same stamd on foreign policy 2 Ils, Is followed by tht’e administra- ; ttn. Be ■ ‘“Allies in Europe, iSouth 4meri.ca; the Middle East,!Asia ahd.Af- , 4 . ' • ■ ■ ; ' I ' * ‘J I ■ $ rica are necessary for the sUrviv- . al of our system. 1 ? i | And Gen. Ike alsoipledged! “Unwavering support ojj the united Nations.” i j The Taft fqiloweih might say • tha’it Eisenhowlr is wrong, bi|t Ike l> wouldn’t change the’Truman foreign policy if he had the choice. | / o -o4— Growing With Decatur Gbmbined with today’s edition Os; Sils newspaper is a magazihe setfton that gives a word picture of‘tie phenomenal grpwth of Central|soya Company aihd McMillen Mills during the past 18 years in Decatur. L ' •' , Tiled, GROWING -WITH DECATUR, the 16-plages Os the attraddvely printed a|id designed supplement, tells a pictorial story of t£e magic growthjof these industries from 1934 to<th4 pfesetit. -■ • i ‘ < ' It tone views the. diipiiyutive pic- : turejof the first officje aiid plant, and fthcn. studies the j aerial view ot tie vhsf plant as |t stands today,! one realizes thpt it is the world’s largest processor of sbybeant \ ' W|.lh pn Open House j rogram arranged for |iiext Thinhday, visitors twill ie J VpMrtedl <*>n, a s tour throigh the in observance! of tbe completwjin, of extensive Jidditions, buildings, Ard electric power plant, which round-out -the 'Howerihg city, of-silos.” Completion of this Construction ■ pit>g|am. fulfills dteam of the Company's founder, /ijale W. Mc.j^lillefi,,Sr./whose achievement in industrial development is recog- . hiked throughout the United Stated. ■■ i s i ‘ - Thib niagazine section Is issued by tijis newspaper, in ‘cpoileration with j(’» ntral Soya Company, and ■ We proudly <,•»■! our retnij rs’ di-, , tfiiti|i'. to the picturb ipnges of this Extraordinary industrial, enterprise that .has jcqnt ributed grea to Decatur’s progress. AiX w< ‘ salute the m 11 and women of Central Soya iCompany and McMillen Feyd Mijls! tor their contribution in makinj; these enterprises blossom ih rational O | A , g| l Mr

the Attention of a physician if it appears. ? \ i A targe number df psychiatric disturbances occur in young people. These often follow failure in scribal, differences between child and* Barents, failure -to mature properly, rebellion against discipline* by elders, or antagonistic - feelings toward parents. Any one of tt»ese situations or others can ' bring on a serious mental dis- ' order, which is not uncommon In adolescence. ; .Most of these meritai upsets look inore serious than they actually are. A good family physician |cah usually straighten out the situation if he has a chance to talk with the young person arid with the parents. I A young person should be ericouxaged to compete in athletics. More guided exercise, bather than tare rest, is prescribed tor the y or girl who tires; too ’easily because of poor physical shape. A self-centered and neurotic adult may be the result of too many adolescent restrictions, i Remember that during adolescence the adult personality is formed. It should not be Ippked 1 rupdn as Just a passing l phase, but as an important stage in per- ; sonality and characterformation. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS P. S. S.: I have heard that the ; eyes remairi the sama size from the tirrie one Js bom. li this true? Answer: This is not absolutely true.i During the first few } of life, the eyeballs grow to their ; - normal size. However, ; riiost j growth of the eyes is completed - at the end of the first decade of life." Lal ■ ' r. ■ _ " \ ■ . . ' : . v C’ • I• ■ * \ I - , . -I I’ > ■ I ■

O k 20 Years Ago f f| TODAY | o p September 6 — 1 Public and parochial schools bf Decatur open with 1,354 piipils registered. Luther Whitfield? 32, la Negro from Columbus, Ohio, found guilty of assault with felonious latent and sentenced to 1 to 10 yeprs to prison. [ Contract awarded Ed Gaffer and John Debolt to' paint the court house tower for $l3O. ; Frank Javien of Chicago purchases the Decatur \Country {ilub property from Paul- Schulte. Foxx has made 51 home rims is still hoping to reach Babb Ruth’s 60. . ' V - I Thomas Gallagher, receiver for the Holland-St. Louis Sugar company,and Mrs. Louise Huber Detroit are, married here by Rev, Franklin of the Methodist church- - V ' ■ ' 0 — —J p I Modern ft/quehe I I BY ROBERTA LEE - 0— - r - ■.■ * Q. When one is unable to ate tend a formal social function to which an engraved Invitation han been received,.how should thb regrets be worded ? \ A. “Mr. and Mi's. Thomas Brown extremely regret that a previous engagement prevents their accdpt-j ing Mr. and Mrs. Robert Whitney's kind invitation to a dinner on [Saturday, twelfth.” ; Q. How should a servabt; hold A dish when presenting it to a guest at a dinner table ’ ’' i ; |A- The plate or | dish should bb‘ flat on the palm of the leftband, and presented to the left ;»idb of the guest. (J. What wrfuld be a qaf® d ® c < sion if a inah is in doubt as tb’ tin* selection of a glft'for a girl? A* Flowers are never out of Tlace. \. ' ’ ' 1 .: \ T' I , : ■ t '. - .. >■ . jOi&SrW Ray In Germany Mr. and Mrs. Leland Rby of 918 4dams street, have received word that their son, Cpl. Nfed L. Ray, has brrfved safely in Germany. i j New Address*: ij-f N Glen E. Fegley’has the following address: S.N. 332-4*40, N.A.Sj Hobby Shop, Norfolk, v|j. He is ihe son of Mrs. Gten Fegley of thip I . 4,,. _—

ffUlaqic I, J; ' ELSIE MACK ■

chapter twenty-three EVE OPENED the door to them. “Nance!” She held out both hands in a pretty gesture of web come, then glanced at Rolph. The] bright smile became fixed. But only for a moment. She turned gravely to Nance and waited for the introduction. V ( It was revelatory. There were things in Eve’s past she was keep* Ing quiet! Whatever else it was, this was not an honest marriage, Nance felt a surge of pity for Jeremy. She hadn’t known she would be sorry for him, and the emotion, crowding out everything else as he got up and came towards them, helped her through the difficult meeting. ... “Jeremy, this is Rolph Hilliard}” , The men shook hands. '"You’re looking well,” Jeremy said to Nance. •"‘You, too.” The polite amenities. Jeremy didn’t look welt He looked too finely drawn, and a nerve i ticked at his temple. And 1, Nance thought, have lost five pounds by | kit’s bathroom scales this morning. The silly things you said to fridge discomfort! |l I But Eve looked wondehful Her hair was a glossy cap, her eyes . brilliant, and she had on a long black dress, strapless to show off her shoulders. A little too formal, Nance thought, but if Eve knew, didn’t bother her. ® Eve motioned Jeremy to unfold a card table, brought ash trays, two decks Os cards, a silver bowl Os mints. i Cards did away with intimate talk, Nance discovered. You could lower your eyes to study your suit Without being too obvious about avoiding another’s eyes. You could put everything out of your mind but the meticulous arrangement of hearts, diamonds, clubs, spades. I(6u could add up honors, weigh kings against aces, compose your mouth behind an upraised fan. Oh, cards were a definite ally! ? : Nance was Eve’s partner. Eve was an excellent player, although her voice and! movements suggested boredom, Nance thought. ’ Then, when Nance was playing dummy, she saw it. So deft, ?o quick, that Nance told herself an instant later it was an illusion. But that three of diamonds had not been in the dummy's hand! Automatically Nance had counted the cards played, and that three Os diamonds made fourteen of the suit. From somewhere, making it seem to have come from the dummy, Eve had produced it. Nance felt uicomfortable. Ji | i;i Rol>h trumped a club with the: jack of spades, Eve overtrumped

’• L- ;i h f i : . - • i 1-1 ■ DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

j! 1 i i FAIIING BAROMETER! - - C - ; 11 It Wff iI 'i 1-± ; .1 u !— B JE ft B I ' JU j 1 : • - ■ ' ■ • '''7 ' '' " 1 ! 1

■ 1 ? Real Estate Transfers ; Herinah L. Heimann etux to Harman F. Kraft etUx, piart Out lot 92 ih Decatur. Tifeld I Jauregui to Emanuel & Antonia Jauregui’, inlot 184 in Decatun ' ’ i ■ - 'I-'. Cyril H- Becker etux to John W. iiejery gtux, ialot j 49 in Decatur. Bill C.; Shook fetux to Injogbne McFarland, inlot 9|H in Decatur; Imogenp McFatland to' Bill C. Shook ejtix, inlot &91 in Decatur. RolandjH. Miller etux tb Ameßa M. Holthbuse, part out lot 110 in Decatur. . , Emilia lA. Tonnelier to Virginia MJ HarvCy, east part inlot 52 in Decatur. ■ > i , . Marriage Licensee ’ Jludy Tenney, 46, and Norman Jean LeWik, 21, both bf Canton, O. <k>ttlieli Yenney, 41, .Cabton, 0., and Helen Eileen Lewis, 22, Navarre, O. ■: i- ’ . Lowell, E. Shaffer, Rockford. 0., and Shirley Ldcptle, IS, Decathr. i I v Enos Sschrock. 18, Berpb, and Pearl Ilu’ser. 17, Monroe. Kansas; \a wheat state, has produced 3,214,692,b00 baTrelte i c>il *orth $.1609.183,000 since 1889, when i.obo barrels gushed from the first ireU. •

with the lace, and finessed Jeremy out of the queen of spades, thus smothering the men out of a good trump trick. Nance thought, hatching.; She had her bid. She needn’t r have cheated to get if. Nance glanced at the others. Eve’s face was impassive, Rolph’a unconcerned, Jeremy’s . . - Jeremy knew!; Jeremy had seen Eve manipulate the cards; . . Eve mdrked the score, Rolph dealt a new hand and they played on. ■ At eleven-thirty, the telephone rang. * • F Eve answered It, to the small alcove Off the living room. Nance heard her -say, “I’mterribly sorry. Doctor: Ireland is not at home.” Jeremy’s chair tlp pe d as toe jumped up. He was across the room in three strides, and had the receiver from Eve. He was saying quietly, “What is it? Yes . , . I’ll be right oyer.” Eve, I shoulders pressed against the wall behind him, frowned. She said sulkily, “You don’t have to take every night call, Jeremy.” “I Can't pick and choose my hours, Eve.” \ [ i ■' She pouted. “It’s not fair.” J Jeremy got his bag. He said to Rolph and Nance? “Sorry, you two. It’s an emergency." And to Eve, “Don’t wait up for me, darling/' His hand touched her shoulder a moment, and then he went out. Eve flung herself crosswise into a big chair. "I get awfully tired Os playing second fiddle to a scalpel.” Nance did not reply. Rolph said overcasually, “I saw you switch that card, Eve.” She looked abashed for a moment, and then she tipped back her head and laughed. "Bridge is deadly! I thought I’d stir up some exr citement. - Why didn't you expose me, Ralph? I’d love to have seen Jeremy's face!” H v “Jeremy knew you cheated,” said Nance. “He saw yoti." “Oh f”; Eve said, 1 and looked at her. "ton, too?” \ Nance made a movement of weariness. “I think we’d better go, Rolph. ■ I’m tired.” “A drink?” Eve said, uncapping a decanter. Nance" shook her head. Eve poured one for herself, and made no move to keep them longer. Outside, "It was awful,” Nance whispered. "Did you see Jeremy’s facej? And afterwards, that telephone call. Why did .she say he was out? He hates dishonesty. And Concerning his work, of all things." "Then he’d better put a stop to Eve taking his business calls,” Rolph said dryly. ' !

, u?. ; ■ ; j : ; . Quarter Century Club Oh Annual Outing A number o| Decatur members of the General I Electric- Quarter Century club are attending the 38th*anhUal outing of the club at Camp LimbbrlOst on Oliver Lake, today. ,Aii. all-day program has been arranged and With ideal weather greeting the day J. a large qroiwd ip expected. A number ot events will be staged during the day. Service pins will also be awarded to veteran members. | Scheduled Meeting Monday Postponed 'j The manufa tiirers’ group of the Decatur Chamber ot Commerce will ;not hold its scheduled meeting Monday nobn, it wws announced A conflict in speaking date.*! caused the postponementWnlto** Ford; secretary of the Chamber oTCommerce, stated that the P r <»babjy would meet a week from Moday, September 15, I-ut that mem hers would be notified. * • —M • / •. > ' • Three times as» many school busek were mads in 1949 than any otlrefr type of bus. i - . \ _______

Nance shifted kneasily on the leather upholstery. “Is she in love with him?” | “what do you think?” “1 don’t know . . . Rolph, I'm ' scared! What wffl she do to him?” "Nothing that you can stop,” he said. "Jeremy made his choice. It’s up to him. And It’s no use offering advice. 1 tried that, just once, with Steve—and got my knuckles rapped.”! - \ "Yea, Jeremy would loathe interference." Nance frowned. “Perhaps, if he loves her enough, he'll overtook the small things.” But she knew, that to JSremy cheating at cards and untruths on the telephone were not small things. Nor 4 were they to any person of integ- | rity, I | • i ■ • On Monday morning, they drove back to New York. Eleanor said, “You’ll come again, soon?" with such p 111 fu 1 i hopefulness that Nance, holding her tightly, whispered, "Soon, darting.” She mustn’t let Eleanor see flow it would hurt, always, coming k back. Nor Eve. Eve would be ejlated with the power to keep Nance away from her home, j ■ | Weil, I won’t j let her, Nahce thought. Even if things han’t ever be the same, Eve needn't know. At least I won’t concede her that tri-. umph. ■ z ' : Ahead of him in the thin drizzle of rain which froze as it fell on the hospital steps, Jeremy saw’ Ephraim". Henry, chairmatn of the hospital Aboard and—despite the age gap of a couple of decades—one of Jeremy’s close friends, J Jeremy moved gtogerly but with speed along the j ice-coated walk, called, "Ephraim If* Abreast of the older man, ne said, "Weather like this will fill the emergency wards. 1 can expect to work halt the night, I daresay." ] i Ephraim Henry nodded. At the street he turned right, away from the hospital parking lot. “Not driving today?” Jeremy asked.' ' JI Henry said gruffly, no. “I caught the noon radio newscast. Drivers warned to stay off the roads. So I left; toy car In the garage.” He added, "I don’t want to be one of your emergency cases.” "I’ll run you home.” “Thanks. The walk will do me good." : ■. h \.J J- 'v " “Not if you slip and fracture some bones.” Jeremy grinned.' ’("The roads are sanded; they’ire safer than the sidewalks. Come along.” He'felt resistance in the elder man’s arm, although, shrugging, Henry allowed himself to be led over to Jeremy’s car. j (To Be Continued) •W’ 'J ■ KJ J'- I I ~ ’

At Stake Tuesday heavy Vote Seen in i Wisconsin Primary MILWAUKEE, i UP —Wisconsin votejs will decide Tuesday whethej Joseph McCarthy will conhis Reds-ib-gevernment attack#. i ’ '■! 7 i I McCarthy, ex-mjarine and selfstylbd two-fisted fighter Consnunism. stakes h|S pbl|tical futufe on the qutepme of the brimary. T : 7' ;' Mpre than 1,000,000 voters will mark their ballots, climaxing one of :jthe strangest bitterest campaigns to Wisoonsto’g turbulent political history.. 'S|pCarthy’s chief GOP opponent is b small town lawyer is using a new type of radio cam'paigning. [ . . battle raging about McCar|hy has swept throng! feotb poli|ical partie# ajhd has come out. to' street corner oratory, in newspaper editorials, radio speeches, in thousands of booklets, pamphlets and \ folders. It has swirled ‘#tound the. heads of both presidential nominees as partisans try to ijget them to take definite stands. It includes, the,] work 'of two boh* gressional comrrittees—-one investigating McCarthy, the pther probaccused by McCarthy. ’lOl6 average vjbter is' moro than a l|ttle confused about the' spec|f| details of [many of McCarthy charges, feut he’s got deficit! opinions on whether the senatdif ib right or wtang. Candidates sos other offices in Wisconsin's primaty -t- state, congressional and legislative —have tdlMed more aibotat McCarthy than their own qualifications. ‘ than : $70,000 has been spent in thb banhaigfi with tbouof dollars coming from otoeir, spates. I. Tl|e bitterness has reached its pea#, but the, fight has been goiqg ton since 1950 when , McCarthy fi|rs| charged th#re were cardCommunists in the stajte department. -1 \ F|)m there he imoadeped his #ttacHj to include retary o? state Dea# Acheson, g anibassador-at-larg’ffi Philip <J /Jessup, OWen Lattimo», and Marshall. has these men Ihave ?U. g. foreign policial so that it follows Russia’s rather'than our o||n. He /toiaintains injt because of the actions of men “we have been ||sing the w|| against Communtol® at the rat» of 100 million peopl< a year fb&the last sixi year B- T'H - ' “Regardless of whether our de--7 _l7 < ’ r' 7

B CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR THEY hadn’t grpe far before Jererfiy abruptly discovered that he making all the overtures at d that fle wasn’t making ?adway. All- he got from ‘ man was a grunt here, a nod or headshake there, was puzzled. He thought, a’t have ta work this hard conversation with an old set that was exactly what he whs doting. Talking Against a wall which he finally and peluctantly adtnitted as hostility.*. Butt why? A month ago he’d sat to orija bridge game asthe club, with Ephraim Henry a jovial partner. Jk month ago he hadn't had to strain like this. happened,? Why this Budded: brusque- , hbsst ! I | Jeremy felt balked. He>ad never deliberately s o 1 i Ci t e dFEphraim Henry’s friendship |jt<or thßeventual advantages it might irißplve, although he’d have been foolish not to be conscious of then£" Jeremy despised the sort of teaming he’d seep In some of his dSleagues, who’Juse anything, evfcft friendship, as a means Os stewing into Andrew Carlton’s • place when he: retired at the end Os the month. \ Ephraim Henry, as chairman of the board, had influence. ’No doubt of that. But Jeremy, muyh as he’d like tb be chief of staffi had pot sued -for special favorsr through friendship. He’d alwayp admired Henry as a man, in much' the same way gs he admired his father, and for tnp same qualities Sam Ireland possessed, straightforwardness, courage, integrity. : J J : , Whit was wrong tOday between theml \ i 1 j Jeremy let Ephraim out at the big, solid brick house on one of the older Residential streets. Ephraim said, too politely, ■ “Thanks very much, Jeremy,” and Jeremy drove, off thoughtfully. \ It dame on him suddenly that Ephraim’s coolness, jsst now, was representative of thR ishtire board’s attitude towards hii® lately. He mentally checked the Individual inembers. Wardens, a dairychain <wner who >hd recently established a foundation for cancer research. had always been friendly enough* although at their la|t encounter pg Dodge . . . Jeremy’s frown de evened. rens hadn’t been exactly Unfriendly, nori ( friendly, eitO| Jeremy had thogight at the indulgently: Tooifnuch dinner, it&ttch of indigestion;: He that; now, as he Warily investigated his last contact with Simon another qf the board members. Urquhart h#i been like withdrawn ,iuncomm uni cat We, And Bill Middleton, and Collins. Jeretoy felt tighten J ' 1 . f ? :

feat I#- because of treason or because of Incompetence, those doing the. planning 'should be removed from power if this nation and our civilization are to survive,” he wrote in his latest book which is distributed throughout Wisconsin. - His reply is that he hasn’t uncovered a single Communistj, and in fact has raised a cloud of dust which has hidden the real Communists. They also say his attacks on Acheson and others are weakening the administration’s drive against Reds and confuse the country's foreign pol"y - ; ■ Caudle To Continue' Testimony On Firing STo Give Funll Story 'To House Probers WASHINGTON, UP — House investigators; delving justice department operations today summoned T. Lamar G&udle to two week end sessions fdr the “full story” of his ouster as the government’ri chief tax / prosecutor. Chairman Frank L. Chelf, D-Ky„ of a house judiciary subcommittee said Caudle gave the group “several documenta” regarding his dismissal during Friday’s four and a half hour closed door meeting. Rqp. Kenneth B. Keating, R-N. Y.J said ’ the “odcumentary evidence” had not turned up at previous congressional hearing'. IThe subcommittee scheduled unusual sessions tonight and Sunday. Both will be secret; hearings. The investigators did not meet today because Caudle had to leave towp for a previously-scheduled business ’ appointment. Caudle refused to Say where be was going. Caudle, now practicing law in Wedesboro, N. C-, was fired by President Truman last November for outside activities “incompatible” wtoh hto office as head ( of the justice department's tax division. • The subcommittee is investigat- ; il|ng the justice department in an effort to learn whether there has been corruption in federal law enforcement or other undue influence on t#e agency. 7. ' _ Late Retard From Indiana State Fair , X I Late returns from the state fair show that Henry Rumple was awarded 6tfa and, 7th placings on two bull calves. A heifer calf was placed ip Bth place. The Adams county Farm Bureau float received honorable mention and a $25 c#sh awalrd. The Adams county 4-H band also received honorable mention and a $25 cpsh award. Lu ! 7 17 I T.' L I TTL ■

—r— ——4 and go hard m the pit of his stomSix weeks ago, a rumor had started that Andrew Carlton was planning retirements. Jeremy, like most of the men on General’s staff, had immediately begun tentative speculation as to who would be his successor. I J The rumor spread, was comflnhed as valid, and Jeremy caught random whiffs of go ship from orderlies and nurses and doctors, from diet kitchens, labs, operating roo-jns. Gossip traveled through a hospital, Jeremy often said, faster thah over the wires of a rural par|y line. E&fore long he Couldn't help knowing that his name was oftenWxed as Carlton’s probjor. Jeremy was young tlon, but he already had a reputation for brile operating room. id plunged through him notion that he might be a|>poihted chief. Several of the staffs men, his close friends, considered the issue settled, and it was an'" indication of Jeremy’s general popularity that there seemed no resentment among them. (gradually, elation hsd cooled to a fine, warm, steady glow. He’d workfed hard at General. Nance hadntt been far wrong when she said the hospital was his life. Nance . . . Jeremy braked at a red fight, skidded on ice, and changing gears thought for a moment of Nance. She would be proud if he were appointed chief. Or would she? Would she care new, one way or the other? ' A qualm still gripped him at re+ Sembrance’ of his treatment of ance. She’d have been justified ip despising him. She hadn’t, though. She had beep—he recalled the painful interview during his mother's illness, right after his marriage—she’d been the first to concede that marriage without love was handicapped from the start. “There are too many hazards,” Nance had said, “without that. You love Eve, Jeremy. It would have been wrong to marry me, loving her. Don’t you.see?” Odd, that Nance , was the one to do the white-washing and make the allowances. Nance, who’d been hurt, administering absolution for a guilty conscience . . . He clashed gears changing them and moved forward with the green light. Yes, Nance would be proud if he got the appointment 1f... He jerked back to the immedjiacy of diagnosing Ephraim Henry’s coolness. At another red fight he turned right, although his house was (I to the left. To the right was Carver street, and Jeremy wanted *udfenly to talk this thing over with his parents. Not with Eve. Already ■ < ! ' i' ■FI ■ d j ..

SEPTEMBER 6, 1952

Unidentified Sub Sighted Off Coast Close Search Fails ; To Turn Up Vessel T - u TOMS RIVER. N. J. \Upr—Authorities reported today an air and seas search had failed to turn dp any sign of an unidentified submarine which a coast guardsman said, he sighted five miles off the New Jersey coast. . < Seaman Adrian Salter; of jthe Seaside Heights coast guard station said he saw the sqrfaced submarine through binoculars tat 8:15 a.m. Friday about five miles out to the Atlantic. Hto report was flashed to thel . which sent planes and surface Craft to search the area. 7 ’ / The navy refused to give any details of th© searth except to iddicate it had found nothing to substantiate, Salter’s, report. Salter spotted the undersea craft while mn duty on a 29-mHe strip Os sand jutting parallel to the mainland about 1. .three toiles off this coastal town.. He said he was Unable to see a name or number On the craft, which was sdiling northward. New York city is some 50 ! mites north of the area. The navy refused to say whether any of its submarines were in the area, but the alacrity, with which it organized the search indicated none wjas. Headquarters of the North Atlantic treaty organization naval command at Norfolk, Va., said no stibiriarinhs attached to that command .were in the sea. 77 Three Os Fataily Die 7 >As Auto Hits Bridge LAFAYETTE, Ind. UP — An auto crashed into a bridge on fnd. 43 south of Romney Friday, killing three members of one family, f Mrs. Claudette Reddish, 40,•Lafayette, was found dead in the Wreckage. Her husband, Charles, an# their 10-year-old daughter, Connie died hours igter in St. Elizabeth hospital here 5 ,. Reddish apparently Jqzed; while driving, staite police said. Governor Schricker Is Endorsed By CIO INDIANAPOLIS. Up — Governor Schrteker’s candidacy for the tJ. S. senate* was endorsed today by the Indiana CIO organization. The endorsement was contained to a state CIO publication which also endorsed Lt. Gov. John A* Watkins for governor, E. Spencer Walter for lieutenant - governor and Thomas Callahan for secretary pf state. All four are Democrats! , /

he’d discovered that his profession ; did not matter a jot to Eve. His work concerned her only in so far as It put her social calendar out of joint. She couldn’t accept emergencies as part ct the day’s work.. To Eve they were only a nuisance. There Weren’t so many emergencies lately, come to think of it. The thing seemed to go to cycles. There’d be weeks at a time with half the emergency wards empty. Then, for no apparent reason, an avalanche of injuries that kept him going day and night, he decided, seemed one of the off times. Although this ice storm would fill up the wards. He frowned, suddenly, remembering Eve’s bland, “Doctor Ireland is not at home,” the other evening. Was she to the habit of doing that ? She’d said not, Theykl quarreled violently over it, and then Eve, boneless and pliant and perfumed, had crept contritely into his arms' and tearfully promised not to tell anyone over the telephone that he wasn’t in when he was. J She’d been darned sweet, he thought, and smiled to himself, ruefully. So many of their quarrels ended on tipit note. He and Eve never solved anything. His father’s old car was to the driveway, and Jeremy parked behind it.. A wave of nostalgia went over him, seeing the two cars bumper to bumper like that in the drive. There’d been no bedlam of emotions for him to this house. No seesawing between logic and passion, no bonfires of violence sniffled out temporarily with a kiss. The front door was unlocked, and he went to: . “Jeremy!” Eleanor’s face came alive with pleasure, and Sam, setting his newspaper aside, said, “Hi, son,” in a boom of welcome. “This, is nice,” Eleanor said. “Have you come for dinner? I’m sure Hattie can stretch the chops. Isn’t Eve with you?” , , " “No, I came straight from the hospital. And I won’t stay for dinner, this time. Although I’ll have a Scotch and soda with you, Dad.” Eleanor had sherry. She lifted her glass, clicked rims with Jeremy. “Happy birthday,” she said, and laughed at his look of surprise. “You’ve forgotten again. You always did, after your eighteenth, unless I reminded you.” A birthday cake, always),. with thick swirls of Hattie’s frosting, F and candles. Jeremy had another thrust of nostalgia. He swallowed his drink quickly. He’d thought he might talk over with them the business of Ephraim’s coolness, but he knew now that he wasn’t going to spoil this spontaneous celebration for them. (To Be Continued)