Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 52, Number 208, Decatur, Adams County, 3 September 1954 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday By - . . THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. INC. ■*•>•4 at th» Decatur, md., Post Office aa Second Claw Matter Dick D. Heller President A. R. Holthouse —_ Editor J. EL Heller «.*<*■»* «»***>a***«k as* «e Vice-President Chas. Holthouse — Treasurer Subscription Rates: By Man in Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, 88.00: «x months, 84.85; 8 months, 88.15. ..By Mail, beyond Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, 88.00; I months. B*.?<*> 8 months, 88.50. By Carrier: 85 cents per week. Single copies: I cents.

It Mock io the Ford Motor Motor Company is told to the public the super-salesman may otter a chare with every car. ' «—o—o—. Interest on the |18«,0fi0 worth of bonds issued by the Decatur school board to help finance the new 1300,000 grade building will be less than 115,000. The interest rate was bid down to 1.47 percent with the payment of a premium of 8879.19 for the entire issue. In the financial world this is called cheap money, but it also testifies to the high credit of the school city. “ “ —o—o The Wall Street Journal reviews highlights of the Army- McCarthy hearings and then predicts the outcome of the current censure investigation ot the Wisconsin Senator. Tersely saying: ‘•Now there Is underway another McCarthy investigation and we make bold to predict the outcome. There will presently be a report that Sen. McCarthy sometimes uses rough tactics.” 0_ —o For centuries adventurers and explorers have been mocked by the dream of a short water route between the Atlantic and the Pacific. It was the lure of the Northwest passage that sent Henry ' Hudson and other great nari--<ators out on their voyages es discovery. Last month a United States icebreaker made the trip across the Canadian Arctic. Actually the feat was first accomplished by a Canadian icebreaker, which made the trip through the Prince of Wales strait, avoiding Mclure strait which was consider- , ed impassible. The U.S. Icebreak- . •rs followed the above route, vindicating the dreams of the early explorers. ——o— —-0— — —- The sudden death of Sen. Burnet Maybank of South Carolina brings the thought that the death rate among members of the United States senate is higher than in any other professional or business group. Os the 98 members, four died this year, Increasing the fatalities to eight for the 83rd session of congress. Sen. Maybank, an aristocrat in southern politics and a member of one of the oldest families in his state was only 55? He served as mayor

e o Modern Etiquette | BY ROBERTA LEE ’ 0 - 4 £). I have been asked to serve as a bridesmaid, and the bride has already told me what I ana to wear —color, style, and ad -forth. Shouldn't -she have consulted me about this? * \. is exe-rcUtiurJwr T ree rotative tn this esse. It is he* privilege to choose the costumes of her attendants, even

Tea Now on Ulcer Diets

By HERMAN N. BUNDESEN, M.D. A STRICT diet is the lot of the ulcer patient who wishes to get well He cannot enjoy coffee, alcoholic beverages or snicking, if he cares for these things; These are forbidden to him because they increase the activity of the stomach and hence the amount of gastric juices and acids given off by the stomach. This, in turn, does not allow the ulcer an opportunity to heat » Up until a short time ago, tea was also on this forbidden list, but now is permitted. As customarily prepared with sugar, and if not too strong and taken tn average amounts of two cups, tea does not remain tn the stomach long enough to have any profound effect on the secretions, acids or juices given off by the stomach. It wW not increase the amount of acid in the stomach any more than water will. Effects oi Tea Tea. and especially iced tea, does have a tendency to increase the stomach’s emptying power, tor ths colder the fluid, lbs moa

of Charleston, governor ot South Carolina and had been nominated for his third term to the senate. The duties entailed in high 'public do not permit an individual to relax, it seems. —o—a—The Korean national assembly has decided not to consider a gov-ernment-sponsored bill to restrict foreign news agencies operating in South Korea. The bill proposed that foreign news agencies secure permission from the government to operate in Korea, and that permission be withdrawn from any news agencies which make reports harmful to the government or In any way distort stories. What the bill amounted to, in effect, was press censorship. Democracies do not need the protection of press censorship. Under extraordinary circumstances, such as war, some censorship is understandable if not justified. But a nation which imposes restriction Oh ’what foreign correspondents can report usually has something to hide. 0- —0 Political Trends:— President Eisenhower reported elation because Congress finally passed many administration bills, not always in the form he wanted, but still reasonably acceptable. History records, however, that legislative success In the first two years of a new administration does not always forecast correctly the events ot the years following. President Taft's administration was an example. Taft took considerable of a battering in the ygAy, of r priticism for his failure tA 'fcbt toWev rates’-4Che Payne-Aldrich tariff lew. Next year, however, his legislative fortunes changed. He got through a number of important measures, of which that establishing the postal savings system was- the chief. This legislative success had only temporary political effect. Everything else went wrong, as far as Taft’s popularity was concerned. , A wide party split -between conservatives and progressives helped the Republicans to lose Congress in the fall. Two years later in the race with Theodore Roosevelt, Taft carried only Utah and Vermont in his race for re-election.

though they pay for their clothes. Although this often causes a little reluctance on the part of some bridesmaid*, it still is the accepted procedure. Q. Should men attempt to shake hands when they are -being introduced on opposite sides of a table? A. This is unnecessary, and usually proves awkward. A cordial "How do you do” ,is sufficient under these circumstances. Q. Is it all right to eat breakfast bacon with -the finger? A. No; with the fork.

rapidly it is believed the stomach empties into the Intestines. In cases involving children, however, It should be remembered that children are more susceptible to stimulation from substances like tea than adults, and the drinking of this beverage may interfere with their consumption of necessary foodstuffs. Tea will often decrease the distress, common in ulcer patients after eating. A substance in tea known as tannin may be the reason for this soothing action. Thus, many doctors believe that tea should be no longer forbidden to patients with ulcers or other Intestinal complaints However, such patients should follow the doctor’s advice as to whether or not it should be used, since he knows best about the patient's condition. QUESTION AND ANSWER Mrs. J. B.: Will poliomyelitis cause a woman not to be fertile? Answer: No, there is no evidence that poliomyelitis can cause infertility.

20 Years Ago Today n Sept. 4—Decatur schools opened this morning. Mrs. Henry ®hlerding buried at Lutheran cemetery near Preble. Her death occurred Saturday evening. (Mr. and .Mrfe. G. H. Wehmeyer and daughter. Miss Helena, have returned from a week at the Dells of Wisconsin. Jitn and Dan Holthouse’:: pet dog "Curley" died suddenly this afternoon. He was the friend of all the “kids" in the neighborhood. Jacob Baker, 93. retired farmer, died today. The Catholic Ladies of Columbia will give a card party, open to all. at the K. of C. ‘hall evening of September 18. •—. ; g Household Scrapbook | I BY ROBERTA LEE • Eyebrows To stimulate the growth of eyebrows, mix 2 ounces red Vaseline jelly, % ounces tincture of cantharides. 15 drops oil of lavender, 15 drops oil of rosemary. Mix well and apply with a small brush every night until the growth Is stimulated. Then not as often? Stockings A piece ot an old stocking sewed on the underside of a good stocking where the hose supporter is caught will keep the stockings from being torn so Quickly. Sweet Milk Milk that is kept 'in a large shallow basin will remain sweet for a longer tinje than if kept In a deep receptacle. Indianapolis Vet Dies Os Injuries INDIANAPOLIS (INS) — The family of airman first-class John W. Harvey, 23, received word today that the Indianapolis serviceman died of injuries suffered in a B-36 crash. Harvey was alma rd the giant bomber which crashed last Friday nightnearJßapid City, S. D. He died in an Ellworth air force base hospital where he had been in critical condition since the crash. Two other Indiana men. airman second-class William E. Lynch, 23, of Indianapolis, and T-Sgt. i'arl W. Boyd, 32, of Oden, were killed in tne accident.

a : - xz __ssa . ■ ... w - ■OLLOW SILVER! HELEN TOPPING MILLER K —LounigM. 1953. b» Aooltton-Ceotury-CrofU. Inc. Distributed b» Kutt Fwlures Swtiree ■ V> 1 I

CHAPTER ONE TO BEGIN with, she had no business on that country road at that late hour and she knew it very welt Aunt Maude never worried, enjoying unconventionally nerselt, but Uncle Elihu had a tiresome sense of responsibility, and Penn was very fond of her uncle by marriage. She should not have stayed on so long to hear that expatriate Russian talk. His accent had been so thick it had been impossible to understand him, anyway, even worse than ner own accent and she had only studied Russian eight months. She had tried out a few phrases on the visitor and he had looked at her so blankly she had come away from the class with a Sense of futility and a suspicion that the visitor had been some kind of fraud. So she had driven too fast with fog closing in and everything along the crooked road Shrouded in mist and darkness. That was why she did not notice the young soldier changing a tire in the shadow till she was fairly on him. Her brakes screamed and he leaped off balance and fell back sprawling on the edge of the road. Penn's heart stopped for a minute as she brought the big car to a standstill and jumped out If he lay still she would die! But he did not lie Sstlll He scrambled up and stalked but into the middle of the road, braced for combat. , “Os all the stupid—” he began savagely. Then in the sideways glow from her headlights he saw her and stopped. "Oh—sorry—” he muttered. j Penn was shaking all over, but she felt a rush of relieved and unreasonable anger. I “It was all your fault! Crouching down there tn the dark. How •did you expect me to see you?” 1 I He walked a few steps Coward her brushing off his clothes. “My fault ?” he repeated in a tone of exasperated patience. "Listen, young lady, I was completely off the road —on the left-hand side." Penn studied |he situation incredulously. "You mean—but I couldn't be —anyway, it was so dark and foggy.” • "You were heading straight off the road on the wrong side. Yelling at the top of your voice.” "The radio — Rise Stevens was singing and I was singing too.” "Havs you got an oil can in that car ? One my lugs is rusted and won’t turn loose." "I don’t know. It’s my aunt's car," she said. As he started toward her car ***. kur AjdalaU

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

S. -r-——DRIVE-IN .• ~ ’J-'-?-,. Hk wm a I>4 DAILY ijA ~, ,JI FROM HIRE I J™™*,, Bp - sP* '- - ’ - KO PRESIDENT EISENHOWER nets a 12-inch trout In the cool swift waters of the north branch of the South Platte River, 50 miles from Denver. In several hours of fishing, the President hooked ten rainbow and brown % trout, the legal limit The Chief Executive used a dry fly going upstream and a wet fly coining downstream. (International Sonndvhotol

Penn ten quicK panic. He was very tall. He had powerful shoulders. This was a lonely place and bjP* the radio it was already midnight. The keys were still in her car. "You stay where you are," she ordered. “I’ll see if I have an oil can.” "What the devil? All I want is a few drops of oil." He laughed, then Sobered and stepped back. "You’re right. You’ve got no business out here so late alone, but I suppose you know that. Never mind I can get some oil out of my crankcase, maybe. Thank you very much for not killing me. I must be indestructible. A few thousand gooks and chinks have labored hard for my annihilation in the last couple, of years.” "Oh,” said Penn, "you've j :st' come home?” "Been home two days. That's where 1 got this poor old heap—down off the blocks. Spent two days getting the cobwebs out of her.” He gave the tire another kick. "Os course, I wouldn’t have a flashlight," he grumbled. "Oh, there’s one in the car. I’ll get it." She started toward her car. “You," he said, "should remember that you run the risk of being a dismal photograph in some crime magazine. Why don’t you go home where you belong?" "I’m not afraid for myself,” she said coldly. "I Just don't want anything to happen to my aunt’s car.” "Nothing will happen to it if you look where you’re going and leave grand opera alone. Your aunt must be a very trusting soul.” "My aunt,” she put on a frigid tone, "is Mrs. Elihu Storey. And I’m Penn Houk. If you don’t care to use my flashlight, I’ll tell you again that I'm sorry and bid you good-night.” He took two strides nearer. “You said Storey. Do you mean Senator Storey?” "Senator Storey is nhy aunt’s husband.” She wajk in the car now and had prodded the engine to life. She felt safe, even when he came all the way across the road. The dash light showed her his face. Rather a good-looking face, very weather-darkened and a trifle stem, but engaging, even though there wjas a black smudge on his brow. "You live In a big brick house about a quarter of a mile down this road? With half-timbered gables and a magnolia tree out front?” • 1 "Yes, I live In that house.” The gears meshed neatly. She could leap away from him now when-Lan-Cauluri Uiolt*. lac. DutribuUd tai

r 1 ever she chose, though ne was . leaning on her window. She could P ’see his hair, sand y-brown with . dust in it. A scar, too, white and taut, across his right temple, tight ! lines running down to his mouth. I "You’ve seen Our house? Do you live out this way?’’ i "I’ve seen it.” He turned away , "I was borh in iL I lived there till , 1 went to nigh school. My father ■ built that house,” he said, grimly. I “I'm Marsh NichUs, Junior. AD • this land was once a farm that bes longed to my mother,. It had been i in the family for generations." [' "How interesting,” Penn said, r "I’d heard Uncle Elihu bought the > place from someone named Nichi ols, but, oi course, I’d never heard of you.” ;■ “Bought it?" he repeated. "Sorj ry—skip it. You wouldn't know s anything shout it. Run along. I’ll get home some way. But look > where you’re going.” f He turned away again, but Penn ■ leaned an elbow on the horn. He : stopped in the headlights and glared. "Come back here!” she I ordered. “If you’re a neighbor oi ■ ours there’s no earthly reason why I shouldn’t take you home." “I’m no neighbor,*" "he declared ; “I live on the back road, in the old ! farmhouse, ft .was all we had left > —after the bust." "You could show me the way . couldn't you?" “Listen, Miss Penn Houk,” he ■ said, “will you get going before the ; senator has a posse out looking for I you?” She flipped open the glove com- ■ partment. “At least take this flashI light. You can return it later.” I "No, thanks. I’ll manage. Good- ■ night.” i "You’re very ungracious,” she i persisted. "1 didn't try to hit you and I’ve apologized and offered tc i help you. What more can I do?” "Go home., And stay off dark roads at midnight.” i He went back to his car, and ■ Penn drove on, baffled and tingling . with fury. It came to her presently i that his attitude had changed sud- ■ denly when he found out who she , was. While she was locking the ■ garage and tiptoeing through the ■ still house, she tried to remember i what she had heard about Marsh i Nichols, Senior. It was very little, except that once the Nichols had . owned this place and Uncle Elihu had acquired it shortly before thr [ Houk twins came cast to live with their Aunt Maudd. And what had bust that made Marsh Nichols, Junior, uo alool and- resentful ? • (To Be Continued) / Kaus taadical*.

Decatur Man Injured In Traffic Accident John Kelley, ot Decatur, is tn the Adame county memorial hospital today with injuries suffered in a traffic accident Thursday at 1 p. m. at a crossroads JO inues west of Van Wert, O. Kelley suffered a fractured collarbone and possible rib fractures when hta auto collided with a milk truck driven by Luke J. Dabbelt, 89, of Celina, O. Dabbek was not Injured but his truck was heavily damaged. Kelley's car was demolished in the crash which overturned both vehicles. HKhIJ MRS. CIARI BOOTHI LUCI, United States Ambassador to Italy, is shown on her arrival in New York from Rome where she attended the funeral of Dr. Alcide de Gas* Deri, the' former Italian Premier. a I AUI-Sl9 Penn swerved her speeding car sufficiently to avoid striking the crouched figure that had loomed suddenly on th* highway. She slammed on her brakes to he confronted by a very angry young man who had stopped by the roadside near Washington. D. C.. to tinker with the jalopy which had died on his uMi She learns that hr Is Marsh Nichols war-vet and resident of the area. Penn offers to drive him to his home, identifying herself as Penn Houk, niece of Senator Elihu Storey. He rejects her offer scornfully adding that he wants no part of th* Storey clan. CHAPTER TWO — — HAD been a summer of trying heat, and the fall was not much better. Maude Storey anointed a sunburned streak on the back of her neck. They had cut her hair too short there, and four hours on the golf course had seared thdt unprotected width of skin below her touched-up curls and turned her freckled arms darker. She pushed up her hair. Showing dark at the roots again. Some gray hairs visible, in front of the ears. She smacked at it resentfully with the brush, nating to be reminded that She had not always been a blonde. The big house was warm and still. The five other bedrooms in the upper hall were empty, three of thejji wearing that impersonal airless look of rooms seldom used. The two west rooms, however, made up for the lonely look of the othefs by theft gay disorder. In her pale green chamber, Quincy had left a flowered sun-frock lying where it fell between the ruffled organdy bed flounces and the tufted-satin chaise longue. The dressing table was a confusion of powder boxes, gold-backed brushes, a red belt and a half-dozen letters, some sprawling out of the envelopes. Maude paused at the door of Quincy's room and sighed. At least Quincy was a cheerful person to have around, even if she couldn’t seem to remember that they had only one maid now. The other room was different in Its disorder. This belonged to Penn, twin sister of Quincy. The twins were Maude’s orphaned nieces, identical in looks, but as different in temperament as two people could be. Penn’s bed was neat. But every chair and table in the room was piled with books and magazines, and’the only personal not# was a framed picture of the girl’s mother, Estral, on the dresser. Maud* straightened it mechanically, letting herself remember Estral, •the feather-brained, bright-eyed wife of her older brother, Wendell Houk. A malignant blood malady had ended Estral's life when her dark, handsome daughters were 12 years of age. Elihu, Maude remembered happily, had been very gracious about taking the Houk twins into their household, which was fortunate, since their father had been blown to bits m Uie tragedy of the Coral sea shortly after his wife’s 1 ; death. The girls had made life pleasant in the big house, and now that all the. Storey sons were married and gone, Maude knew that the place would be intolerably lonely lor her with no young things around. She flipped a wall switch and set an attic fan to purring, and. a thin laavnahx. IBM. hv Auula

sew? — - - - — --— ' ■ T ’' y ■M ' ... je * An 18-MAN COLOR GUARD and drum and bugle corps from Culver Military Academy will be on hand-to Impart a martial air to the 20th anniversary celebration of Central Soya and ttie’ 75th birthday of the company’s founder, Dale W. McMillen, in Fori Wayne, September 16. The colorful corps will make an initial appearance at the beginning of the formal ceremonies In the Memorial Coliseum and remain throughout the entire program. Founded by a successful St. Louis manufacturer, Henry Harrison Culver, in 1894. the first cadet corps was 45 strong when they assembled at Lake Maxinkuckee. Approximately 13,000 have attended the regular Academy and nearly 18,000 have entered the summer evtrools since then.

Si inservice Jo Returns To California’ Technical Sergeant Lowell D. Hawbaker. U. S. M. C., has returned to California following * month’s leave spent here. He will report to El Toro, Calif., for further transfer oversea®. His wife and baby daughter will reside with her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Casper Miller. New Address Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Call >f this city have received a letter from their son, Raymond, that he is moving to California for six weeks training. His new address is as follows: Pfc. Raymond C. Call, R. A. 16440637, Tank Co. <Med) 87 Inf. Reg. 10 Div; Camp Irwin, Calif. Wilder On Cruise James Wilder, fireman with the U. S. navy, was aboard the US Wisconsin when the annual midshipman cruise was taken this

oreeze ayirteo tn, snrnng uie curtains. Maryland heat was tiresome in September, but she always reminded herself of the exhausting summers in the midwestern state Elihu Storey represented in the Senate. I XJu .«ong,capiQ Jiame now and then. Gregg, the eldest, and his mother’s idol, was the father of two young sons. Maude had not been too well pleased by any of her sons’ marriages. Gregg’s wife she detested, and Kelly, whom her second son, Rutherford, had married, had appeared at first to be Impossible. Now she liked Kelly a little better. There was, something forthright and refreshing about the girt Kelly’s name was Pearl, but she had been called by her surname all her life. Rutherford had the job of diTcCting a little theater group. Maude remembered that she had promised to go and see a play he was putting on in some barn over in Alexandria. She gave her hair, another poke to hide the gray and went resignedly to the upstairs telephone. It would have to be Winifred again. Winifred was Gil’s wife, married to the younger Storey son. Gil had stayed on in the Navy after the war and now had a desk job at the Navy building. She approved of Winifred with reservations. A fluff of a thing with no brains and little character, she was an amiable person and Maude depended upon her for small favors. She dialled the number and waited. Winifred would surely be at home this hot afternoon, lolling around the little apartment in Chevy Chase in something diaphanous and exciting. There was an answer presently, slightly fretful. ’’Darling, I’m sorry—-I know I disturbed your nap. I promised to go to Rutherford's show across the river and I know dad will never let me take the car out at night" Winifred’s chuckle was audible, though soft. “Maudie, you know you're a dreadful driver, especially after dark." Winifred had the casual charm of manner that enabled her to deal out little jabs in the Storey family With the same finesse of a slightly immature angel. “Won’t that show of Rufe's be strictly from horror. He always picks such grisly things to stage." ■ "Winnie, 1 promised,” Maude insisted. “Rutherford’s so sensitive. He’s always getting hurt and turning the most casual tilings into personal slights and, of course. Kelly gives him no encouragement whatever." "Oh, Kelly! She wouldn’t” Winifred gave Kelly Storey only a grudging respect. True, Kelly had got herself a good job and bought clothe* that fnade her sisters-in-law sizzle, thinking how much better they would look in them, while Kelly looked only nice and healthy. “Maudie, you know I'm happy to do anything for you,” she cooed on, “even sitting through an amateur show.” “Winnie, you’re sweet.” Maude decided to wear her white silk sport dress. It showed off her xin-Cuilwry-Ci'iilLa.- Ina. Duliibutod bv

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1954.

■suffnneiT — FTagShlp of the training squadron, stops were made in France, Scotland and at the navy’s big base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Wilder is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wilder of route four. Home On Furlough Sgt. Doyle D. Mattax, son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Mattax, arrived home this morning for a ten day furlough. Sgt. Mattax is stationed in Fort Myer, Va. Home From Korea Cpl. Robert J. Dick has arrived home from Korea. He has been stationed in Korea as a supply clerk at the headquarters office. Cpl. Dick was in Korea for 16 months. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Dick of Decatur route four. Ronald Liby In Japan Marine Pfc. Ronald R. Liby, sub of Mr. and Mrs. Homer Liby of route 1, has arrived In japan for duty with the 3rd marine division. The division is a unit of the provisional corps. Japan; a Far East “Force In Readiness’’ composed of marine, army paratroopersand navy amphibious groups.

sun van ana was Kina to her hair. She was giving the gray wisps a last disciplining swipe when her husband came up the stairs and into the room. “Hot!" grumbled Senator Elihu Storey, dropping a thin gray coat bn a chair. “I’ve got to fly back home, confound it Be hot out there, too." "Well, don’t ask me to go." Maude draped a chartreuse scarf over her sunburn and studied the effect. • \ . “Wouldn’t hurt you. Your mother might be glad to see you.” "I invited them here. They wouldn't come.” “Claudie’s going with me. There’s a hearing out there and I’ll need her.” “Claudia has certainly lifted herself above her background—with your help, Elihu.” “Well, w-e’ve come a little way from our backgrounds, too. Kids come in yet?” "No, not yet. Quincy went to some affair over in Georgetown and Penn’s at the Russian class she’s mad about just now. If you’re having dinner on the plane wc'U just have sandwiches. Winnie’s driving me over to Alexandria to see Rutherford’s play.” “Throw some stuff in a bag for me, will you?” the senator said. “How long are you staying?” She opened a drawer, laying out shirts. “Can’t tell. Put in six changes. I thought I might take one of the kids along—their grandma would like to see them. But I guess they’re all dated up.” “Definitely. I hardly see them any more myself.” Maude dismissed that idea, knowing that Penn and Quincy, 21 now, would be bored to extinction in that dull little town Elihu still called home. She thought of her mother's house, unchanged she was certain, though she had not seen it in four years. A brown wooden house with a narrow, screened porch, vines swarming over iL In utile backyard a cistern pump under a lattice, a damson plum tree, the inevitable row of sunflower*. She’d better go down and speak to George, she decided. Even more than she, George had put his midwestern background behind him. He was her younger brother, five years younger, and though he remembered casually that his parents still lived, he did not concern himself about anyone but himself. Elihu had managed a fairly decent job for George in Washington. George could be Elihu’s secretary and manager if only Elihu weren’t so timid and inhibited about this nepotism business. Why shouldn’t a successful man in the Cgng.ess give a hand up to his family connections? There was Gregg, top, clever and charming, who had come out of tlie Air Force a captain, and never quite found himself since Elihu had got Gregg into the patent office, but Gregg had haled that routine stuff and given it up in a few months. He had tried the newspaper business, and now real estate, at which his mother suspected he wasn’t doing too well, if you listened to hia wife’s complaining. (To Be Continued} , Kina *'catur«» SvudicaU. . jtE3s’