Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 273, Decatur, Adams County, 18 November 1952 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
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SENATOR Lyndon Johnson (Dk Texas, is likely choice of the Democrats for Senate minority leader when Congress convenes early in January. (Internationt
fr— ' --• 'i '■>' 1 - Js&ugSKKgtfy Gifts & Greetings for You — through WELCOME WAGON ' x • ." ' Y~,4 from Your .Friendly Business Neighbors ] and Civic and ’, Social Welfare Leaders < •.?• ■ ;i- -, (_• ■ < ' ' On the occasion of : ” The Birth of a Baby Sixteenth Birthdays Engagement Announcements . Housewarmings Arrivals of Newcomers _ I to Decatur ■ ■ ■■ ■ - i ■ '■ '' : Phone 3:3196 'Y-—
S‘ * ii—.l, ; i L 1 n nuMmi,— —. <\j j§fet * ’J , When you see beauti- ffi - ful materials in a Gillig and Doan funeral ser- TOr 4 vice, THERE IS NO P REASON TO FEEL ™ COST WAS CESSIVE... In fact, as a 5 rule they represent our most- moderately priced selections. i WATJTV, at attr §2 FT VFR al ROME. i MEANS EXTRAVAGANCE. ICl} GILLIG t DOAN y FUNERAL HOMI L Uh DECATUR ' i. Phone 3-3314 i//, • 1 - , •'' '". I : '-l&t" ’•'•■• V- z ,1-N ' ; J '
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General Economy Vital To Farmers j Purdue Expert Is Convention Speaker \ CHICAGO UP —A good farm price support program must consider the city dweller, conservation of resources ahd the individual freedom of the farmer, an agriculture expert said today. J. Carral Bottum of PUfdue department of agricultural economics spoke before a meeting of the Illinois agricultural association now holding its 38th annual convention.. : !“A prosperous general economy is essential" tjo a prosperous agriculture,” Bottum said. "Therefore farmers must direct a proper proof theii- efforts towards tose .broader policies which permit a high level of general business activity.” "In times of severe economic distress the support of farm incomes becomes of foremost importance to agriculture, but in the past the rewards to v farmers and to society of a free, dynamic, changing agriculture have been much greater.” he said. In other talks before the IAA; Dr. Raymond W- Miller of Harvard University’s business school said that free spending arms’ aid will not bring peace to the world. He advocated spreading American "know how” to backward farming areas. ) A dairy expert, A. L. McWilliams, president of the Pure Milk Association, said that in. three years one-fourth of the milk sales were switched from quart bottles to gallon and half gallon containers. And less than one-.third of the milk produced is being delivered to homes now, he added. Reports were offered showing that state farmers and their Cooperatives have prospered during the last year.: The Illinois Farm Supply Cd., an IAA affiliate, reported a combined total volume exceeding 156,000,000 in the 1952 fiscal year, highest in the history of the company. Another IAA organization,! the Illinois Marketing Association sold 816,746 head of cattle during the year. Harold A. Kaeser, general manager of the Illinois Fruit Growers Exchange, said that many farmers were' turning ptachj acreage to other crops because of the disappointing production ttyis year. Prof. U.' S, Garrigus of the, University of Illinois said that the west seems to be declining as a sheep raising area and southern and midwestern states are producing more of the animals. Illinois sheep production is up 25 per Cent while the nation’s average has
Draft Board Head's Home Is Painted Up MT. VERNON, 1 nd. UP — The home of the Posey county seleo* tive service board chairman was daubed with paint and a rockijvas thrown through a window early today. ' Authorities believed somebody was angry because the board recently began drafting married men. Red and yellow paint was- splat-, tered over the front and sides of the home of chaiman. Walter Blackburn. The rock was tossed through a kitchen window. Atomic Committee To Review Picture Pay Special Heed \ To Security Slips WASHINGTON UP . — Sen. Bourke B. Hickenlooper said today the congressional atomic energy committee will “review the entire hydrogen picture,” with special attention to “the security slips that may have occurred” in' the recent H-bomb tests. The lowa Republican, ranking GOP on , the committee and prospective chairman of the group, told A reporter “iwe are ahead of the Communists in, this grim competition for nuclear power —a competition which they have forced upon us.” “Before they think about waging aggressive war, they had best stop, look and \Jisten,” Hickenlooper said. Dr. Jules Halpern, chairman of the Federation of American Scientists, hinted that the H-bomb is only the forerunner of weapons capable of even greater devastation. He said in a statement, that the Atomic Energy Commission's historic announcement of H-bomb tests 1 “is a sober and grim reminder to the world that v-a waymust be found to prevent use of these and even more potent weapons to come.” Hickenlooper made his statement shortly after government officials revealed investigations are underway throughout the H-bomb task force .in the Pacific to determine if “restricted data” has been revealed. Authorities expressed concern about the flow of “eyewitness letters” from Eniwetok describing what the writers, mostly junior officers and enlisted men, called history’s first hydrogen bomb explosion. The letters started arriving in this country a week before the atomic energy commission’s Sunday announcement of the Hbomb> tests. Th! task force which conducted the tests was composed of AEC, Army, navy and air force personnel commanded by Maj. Geri. Percy W. Clarksoh- Military officials here said the AEC laid down the security regulations for the task force. * - The AEC declined to reveal the specific security regulations until the investigations are completed, but a spokesman said “any revelation of restricted data would be a violation of the atomic energy act.” Hickenlooper said that “while I am pleased with the way the tests were conceived and carried out on a technical basis, we, the atomic energy committee will have to look into the security slips that may have occurred.” , increased only four per cent, he said. * Bandits Hold Match For Holdup Victim NEW YORK UP —Two bandits followed Meyer Goldberg into his bakery Monday and took turns holding' lighted ’matches so their victim could see well, enough to open his safe for them. They took $2,Q00 from the safe and S3OO from a cash register. JUDGE ORDERS (Conflnoed From Page Owe) county; marshal Preston Pyle of Geneva; and police chief James Borders of Decatur.
- ■ 0 ''' DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Governor-Elect To Speak At Conference PrerLegislative\ - Meet Ends Today INDIANAPOLIS UP — Governorelect George N. Craig speaks today at the closing session of a prelegislative conference which has been devoted chiefly to money matters. Craig was to be afternoon speaker after reports from state police Supt, Robert A. O’Neal on his departinent’s expansion plans, -di (Eleventh district > congressman Charles B. Brownson, a Republican, and Indiana Welfare Administrator Maurice O. Hunt were principal speakers late Monday. Brownson encouraged Rejection of federal aid programs, and Hunt urged expansion of state welfare programs. Hunt said the 1953 state legislature should increase payments to dependent children and offer aid. to totally-helpless adults not old enough to obtain old-age assistance. He said 22.000 Hoosier dependent children receive “very meager” aid, and for half of them, it isn’t sufficient to me!t essentials of living. He said the state's dependent children program ranks 34th in the nation.' ' Although 35 states included helpless adults in their welfare programs, Hunt said, Indiana does not. He said the federal government would pay more than half the bill, and about 2,100 Hoosiers would be eligible. < Brownson suggested that Indiana “declare a 10-year moratorium on Christmas gifts 'from Uncle Sam.” He said economy in government must begin in the states. ‘‘lnstead of relying more on the federal government,” he said, “state governments are going to have to revise their philosophy and reject federal grants-in-aid if government economics on. the national level are to be effected.” Friendship Gave Way To Feuding • Truman-Eisenhower Meet Recalls Feud WASHINGTON UP—The won-' der about the Truman-Eisenhower meeting today is that the two men are willing to speak to each other at all. < 1 During the election campaign, their onetime friendship gave way to a scathing personal feud {that seemed to rule out any chance of future cooperation. President - elect Eisenhower charged the President with bungling the nation into the Korean war, coddling corruption, and beiug soft on Communists in government. ’ Mr. Truman lashed bach in whfetlestop speeches across the country, attacking Eisenhower as a “sad and pathetic spectacle” with neither the character northe training for the presidency. , He said Eisenhower “betrayed his principle® and his followers not. only on foreign policy but on the defense of the United States.” He eaid he was responsible for the “wave of filth” the Republican party was spreading on administration policies in Korea. The President rapped Eisenhower for refusing to denounce GOP attacks on Gen. George C. Marshall. “What do .any of us say about a fellow who joins with those who have tried to stab an honored chief, a friend and benefactor, in the back?” he asked sarcastically. \ • The t feud probably reached its peak when Mr. Truman changed in a Washington speech Oct. 17 that Eisenhower seemed willing to accept the Nazi's so-called “master race” theory in immigration legislation. \ For his part, Eisenhower maintained a lively attack on the President and his policies, calling Mr. Truman an “expert in political demagoguery” and one of the “prous prisoners of their own mistakes” who dismissed the Alger Hiss case as a “red herring.” He called the President the “always right and never wrong chief of the party now in power” and the man who said in 1948 that “I like old Uncle Joe Stalin.” Eisenhower’s target also was plain when he said Kansas City political boss “Tom Pendergast is dead but liis political influence, his’ political morals, his political offspring, they all go marching on.” The President-elect dismissed the President’s whistlestop attacks as “harmless blank®.” He said ip the Trumkn administration, “corruption has been consistently condoned.” ■ ' ' ’ ' ' • ■ '\ - Worked While They Slept BENEDICT, Neb. (UP) — This sleepy town woke up to find that burglars had made a rich haul. The looters entered the town shortly after midnight and leisurely, moved from one business firm to the next without waking a soul.
Charge Youth With Failure To Report EVANSVILLE j'UP FBI agents 2 I today announced the arrest of Richard Smith. 20, Canisteo, N. Y., on a charge he failed to report for army induction last May 20 at Bath, N. Y. Smith was. indicted by a grand jury, the/ FBI said, am? stopped overnight in a trailer court here while en route to Florida. Mrs. Ike Not To Visit While House Declines Bid from Mrs. Truman Today WASHINGTON UP — Mrs. Mamie Eisenhower had “other engagements” today which kept her from visiting Mrs. Truman at the White House while their husbands talk business. What the engagements were, Mi’s. Eisentiower kept secret. Th<re ptere some raised eyebrowk at the lateness of the invitation which Mrs. Truman telephoned ‘ to Mrs. Eisenhower at Augtista, Ga., Monday.* But friends doubted that personal- pique figured Ln Mrs. Eisenhower’s turn-down of the present First jLady’s offer to fill her in on the details of housekeeping at the executive mansion.. “Mamie’s not like that,” they said. Besides, the two women are friends from the post-World War II days when both were members of the White House Spanish club. ft ’fas thought more likely that Mrs. Eisenhwoer wanted to snatch a few hours with her .sister, Mrs. Georgte Gordon Moore Jr., who lives here with her husband and three 'children, Mrs.. Moore didn’t know. She was Waiting for a last minute long-distance call to get her marching orders. She. was anxious, of course, to see Mamie but most of all she wanted to see “Mom.” “Mom* is sprightly Mrs. Elvira Doud. I who campaigned with her sqn-in-|aw and has been with the ELsenlipwers in Georgia. It was believed possible, too, that Mrs. Eisenhower wanted to step aside and let full public attfentiop focus on her husband. Origins? Iplans for her to ride in the parade? procession from the aidport ;tp the White House were amended. The women-folk, including daughter-in-law Mrs. John Eisenhpwer, and the three Eisenhower .. grandchildren planned to tide intq town separately. Mrs. |Truman explained- that she found but only Monday that Mrs. Eisenhpwer would be accompanying the President-elect. Although the fujure mistress of the White House | declined for today, she promised to come down from New York “Woon” for a briefing on the choresf involved \in running a 100room i fiansion. ! | j ■i’ I ‘ TWO MEN KILLED (Cejntlaned From P»»e O»e) fpr thejpast 10 years. He had been employed as a car inspector for the Pennsylvania railroad for the past if years. ( He Was a son of Ernest and Caroling Zelt. His father died Nov. 9 at hi| home near New Haven. The Occident victim was a member of Bt. John’s Lutheran church on U. S. 27. - Burvftring are bls wife, the former Velma Heemsoth; his mother, Mrs; Ernest Zelt; three daughters, Helen, Shirley and Janet, and fqur sons, Lester, Rodger, James and Stanley, all at home, the eldest 14 years of age; one sikter, | Mrs. Walter Werling of. Fort and six brothers, Amandus BL Belt of Decatur, Paul, Karl aid Erwin Zelt, all pf New Haven;? Walter of Fort Wayne and Ernest of Gladwin, Funeral services will be conducted at 1/p.m. Thursday at the Harper funeral home in New Haven and at 2 o’clock at the St John’s Luiherato church, the Rev. W. G. Schwehn officiating. Burial will be in the ehurch cemetery.
-Herman C. Mailand Herman C. Mailand was born In Marlon 1 township, Allen county, March 24, 1883, a son of Charles and Joljanna Meyer-Mailand, and was married to Christina Reiter Nov. 12| 1922. He was also a member of the St John's Lutheran church. Surviving in addition to his wife are three daughters, Mrs. James Young of Allen county, Mrs. Donald R. ;Konow, at home, whose husbands is serving with the afmy in Korea, and Anita, at home; two sons, <Jp|. Wilmer H. Mailand, with the army in Korea, and Eufgne C. Mailand,* at home; one brother, Herbert F. Mailand of Fort Wayne; two sisters, Mrs. Carl Heine of near New Haven and Mrs. Elmer Lageman of j Fort Wayne, and three grandchildren. The body was removed to the Zwick’ funeral home. Funeral arrangements have not been completed. '!• ; v : ■ " ■He Bays It’s Beer TOKYO (UP)—Tasty synthetic beer can: be brewed in four days instead of six months and sold at one-third’ the cost of natural beer, a Japanese scientist says.
Beneficial Rain To Midwestern Farms ] t Millians Os Dollars Saved By Rainfall By UNITED PRESS Rain soaked mid western farm lands again today, and agricultural experts called it a blessing that would save both farmer! and citydwellers millions of dollars. Weather forecasters predicted mere showers from the Central Mississippi Valley up through the Great Lakes region. v The heavy rainfalls sent many nearly dry creeks and rive|B ovei l their i banks jor raised them to flood stages. Meanwhile, the balmy weather whi£h held temperatures up in the 70s in Illinois and Indiana was due to bow out as southerly winds began a\ shift to tbe west. Snows which fell over 1 the plains states and in the higher elevations of the southwest were likely to be nearly by tonight, 'forecasters said. Clearing in Arizona helped rescue workers in their search for 350 elk hunters trapped in a wetek end blizzard by snow which measured up to four feet. ! One hdnter became lost when he wandered off from his party. Charlie Sparks of Phoenix, Ariz.. was reported missing Saturday and has not been heard from since. Another lost hunter found his own way to safety after t#o days and nights in the wilderness. Joseph Jphnson, 37, Rochester, Minn., walked out of the Northern Minnesota Woods late Monday night. He became separated from a hunting party Saturday. The weather staged varied acts in different parts of I the country today, from the welcome rain which dissolved droughts in Minnesota and Wisconsin to fair cohditions in the southeast, the western plateau and the southwest. A tornado twisted crazily through northwestern Arkansas. It whipped down on the farm home of Mr. and Mrs. Erman Henry near Waldron, Ark., who said they saw a “whirling funnel” and ran outdoors. They were slightly injured by flying debris. Despite . the \ general rain!, streams and rivers in the high country of the northwest were at their lowest levels since 1937, and a rationing program to reduce power consumption by 110,000 kilowatts went into effect Monday. Trade in a Good Town—Decatur.
JOY
SYNOPSIS After a brilliant formal wedding. Roger and Emily Field settle in a-fine old house on Beacon Hill. Boston, the gift of Emily's rich, eccentric Grandmother Forbes. Brian Collins and David Solomont. taw Arm associates of Field are frequent callers'here. Reaching home, weary and spent one evening. Field finds nis wife seated alone with Solomont. Silently he resents the presence of thia suave, handsome, charming intruder in his home. Solomont hadi accompanied Emily to a family dinner party during her husband's absence from the city He had dared to kiss her. at the,end of the evening and when she admonishes him for this bold act. he tperely laughs at her •‘innocence.’* \, CHAPTER NINE SINCE Emily’s younger cousin, Priscilla, had not attended a major private school, it was .impossible for her to obtain the official status of a debutante upon her graduation from one of. these. It was therefore decided, through general family conferences that it would be well for her to come up from the Cape early in the spring, settle down at the house on Joy Street and gradually drift into the current of the proper preliminaries to a formal entry into society. Neither Old Mrs. Forbes nor Emily had ventured to hope that would make much of an Impression at the Empire Dance or the freshman Jubilee, and were therefore agreeably surprised to find that she was able to more than hold her own on both of these occasions. They had taken it for granted that she. would do better at the pseudo-rustic barn dances which were .featured among the spring festivities, the synthetic Hofbrau on Stanhope Street and. the Tour-course picnic suppers on Buzzard’s Bay, They had likewise felt almost certain that she would ride tn the Memorial Day Horse Show: and, with this tn mind, had decided somewhat hesitantly Co include Elliot Berkeley among the guests at the first dinner given in Priscilla’s honor, which, because of the greater prestige which would inevitably be attached tp it tinder these circumstances, was scheduled to be held at Old Mrs. Forbes* house instead of Emily’s. It was when this dinner list was submitted to Priscilla for inspection that she asked her first disturbing question. 1 ! “Aren’t you going to ask David Balorhont to the party ?” she inquired with genuine surprise. “Why, no. We hadn’t thought of doing so. You see, he’s older than the crowd you're going with and—” 1 “He isn’t any older than Elliot Berkeley, is he? I thought he was younger.*? **Well, he is, a little. But we made an exception, in the case of Elliot Berkeley, because we thought you might find him especially con- ? ■' \ i- ■ ' ■ $' I
Housing Starts Are Reported On Increase WASHINGTON UP V Housing starts totaled 101,000 during October, an increase of 3,000 oter September and 11,000 more than October a year ago. ■ The bureau of* labor statistic* reported that the Septemebr-Octo-ber increase was\almost entirely in private housing, which totaled 109,000 units in October. Filling Station Men Robbed, Abducted Two Indianapolis Men Later Freed INDIANAPOLIS, UP — Two service station attendants were robbed and abducted today by what police beliete to be the same team of three armed persons. Police said LaWrence Holderfield, 24, Indianapolis, was robbed of $29,49 by two armed men who drove into a station shortly after 1 a.m. They forced Holderfield to lie down in the back oftiheir car, and later put him in the trunk. The men abandoned the car about 12 blocks away and met a second car. Joe Morris, 53, Indianapolis, was fpqnd missing from the station he managed about an hour later. Morris called state police frotn jjear Attica, where he had been' let out of an auto at the intersection of U. S’. 41 and Ind. 55. Morris said he was forced to lie in the back seat by two men and a blonde girl. He was robbed of $l4O. '. J ; • Charge Burning Os Cats In Furnace J NEW YORK UP —John Klasowski, owner of a 39-family apartmenj house, was under mental observation today ’after his tenants complained he burned live cats in the building furnace when they asked for !iore heat. '.V -—— Man Is Killed By Service Elevator TERRE HAUTE, Ind. UP — Michey . Lowe, 23, West Terre Haute, was killed Monday night wtyen hjs -head was crushed in a service elevator accident. ' Democrat Want Ads Bring Results
gemai, on account or nis interest in norses. We asked Caroline so that there’d be ah older girl too." “1 found David very congenial all winter. He’s spent several weekends with us on the Cape and we all like mm a lot. Besides, ne invited me to supper at ms apartment just as soon as I ijame up to Boston ahd |t was a wonderful supper too. We haven’t asked him back yet. I think we ought to.” \ , Old Mrs. Forbes and Emily, who were seated facing Priscilla, on | the opposite side of a large flat-topped desk where various lists were spread out. exchanged glances which, though fleeting,, did not escape Priscilla’s notice. “You're right, Priscilla, and we will.” Old Mrs. Forbes said reassuringly. "You may ask him here to dinner any night you like hext week.” Having done everything she could think ot, with marked success, to give the atmosphere of the house coprifort and culture, combined with elegance, Emily had more recently turned net attention to back yard which, like most back yards in Boston, had hitherto! been an unsightly ‘find neglected area. it did possess one natural advantage—a good-sized tree of heaven which, as the spring advanced, provided pleasant shade; and with this as a focal point, Emily planned 'and planted a small garden complete with brick walks and flower beds bordered by miniature box, a few Japanese quince and syringa bushes ahd even a little fountain. She nad never 'done any gardening before, since, in common with most Bostonians, she nad neither the taste nor the talent tOr it which are second nature to Southern women; and she was amazed and enchanted to find that ner plants not only survived, blit throve, and that the erstwhile dismal “dump” had become a pleasing terrace. She equipped it with painted iron furniture, upholstered in bright denim, and gay matching parasols: and, on warm afternoons, she abandoned the library and began to serve tea and tall drinks from a metal table covered with a cloth embroidered in crossstitch and well supplied with all necessary utensils and ingredients. Roger was inordinately proud of the success of her experiment and spontaneously revealed his own enjoyment 'of it, which encouraged Emily to make more and more uste of the little garden. She was already ensconeed there, becomingly dressed in cool green, and painstakingly following difections tor knitting Argyle socks—-
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1952
Judge lashes Out At Bank Officials Refuses To Sentence Embezzling Cashier TOLEDO, O. (UP)—Officials of the First National Bank of North Baltimore, 0., had nothing to say about a tongue-lashing given them.' by a federal judge Who refused to sentence a cashier convicted of embezzling |7,500 frqm Che bank. - Judge Frahk L. Kloeb said the bank official® themselves should have been indicted for paying the cashier such a. low salary. Judge Kloeb lashed out at the bank officials Monday when George W. Sponsler, 53, a 32-year employe k>f the bank, appeared before him for sentencing. The judge said Sponsler received SI,OOO a year when he began work for the b!.nk in 1920. In 1942, his salary was only $1,900 a year, the judge said, pointing out that the money Was taken in small amount® before 1941 and used by Sponslejr only for the 'support of his faniily. Sponsler was; making about $5,000 a year when he resigned bis position with the bank several months ago. _ “It is a shame to Look at such a record,” Judge Kloeb said. “Th® bank should actually have been indicted in this case. If I had the authority, I would sentence Che bank officials and the boa?d of directors to read the story of Scrooge at Christmas — Charles Dickens “A Christmas Carol”— think of the defendant.” Trade ,in a Good 1 own —Decaturl Keough Hep ™ unu CHIUKH For coughs and acute bronchitis due to colds you can noW get Creomulsion . specially prepared for Children in a new pink and blue package and be sure: (1) Your child will like it. (2) It contains only safe, proven ingredients. (3) It contains no narcotics to disturb nature’s processes. (4) It will aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed throat and bronchial membranes, thus relieving the cough and promoting rest and sleep. Ask for Children in the pink and blue package. » CREOMULSION FOR CHILDREN relieves Coughs, Chest Colds, Acute BrDßchitit
another recently acquired accomSshmentr— when David appeared the scene; and, after coupling her that some gin rickeys would taste good with the comment that she knew they would be much.better if he made them, she led up to the point she wished to make by circuitous and what she believed were tactful means. “Almost everyone I’ve talked to lately seems 5 to be making vacation plans," she said.’ “What about yours?” “I think I’ll probably go to Venezuela. The Grace Line has replaced the old Red D Line ships with some very snappy new Santas. So the trip there and back ought to be an extremely pleasant one now, what with buffet luncheons beside an outdoor tiled swimming pool and dinner in a white-columned dining room whose high, arched ceiling rolls back to reveal a starlit sky.” ■ “Please stop. You’re making me green with envy.” "Yoib don’t look green. You’re coloring's lovely—and tt gets still lovelier when. anyone pays you a well-deserved (compliment. You’re almost the only young lady 1 know who hasn’t lost the gentle art of flushing. Well, about Venezuela. Ln addition to the pleasures ot the voyage on the Simta Paula or the Santa Rosa, 1 can look forward to others in Caracas. Some of my father’s relatives, that we used to visit regularly when he was alive, have a rather nice place there.” “It' sounds wonderful, * Emily said, wondering why David could not have nad some relatives of this kind in Boston instead of the kinsfolk of nis mother, with whom he naa stayed at first, and with whom ne seemed to be rapidly losing touch. "Well, yes. Caracas is a very pleasant city. And of course these relatives of Ours have a quinta in the country too—l wouldn't know how, many acres. But I do know there are three girls in the family. 1 must say they are quite easy to look at. A recent picture of them rather influenced my decision about a vacation: It made • very favorable impression on me." “No doubt you’d make a very favorable impression on them too,” Emily said, delighted that she had been provided with such an advantageous approach to the subject she wished to discuss. "You certainly nave on Priscilla." David smiled, with a slight deprecatory shrug. U “It’s nice to know I have the unqualified approval of some member of the family,” ne remarked. (Ta Be Continued)
