Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 January 1952 — Page 9

27, 1952

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SUNDAY, JAN. 27, 1 Your Times Carrier—

Stanley, 13-Year-Old DP, Doubled Route

PAPER BOYS—Stanley Gough (center) has taken over The

Times route formerly carried by brothers Edward (left) and Billy om.

Times carrier Stanley Gough is an exceptional boy. Only 13, Stanley has traveled thousands of miles in ten countries and speaks German, Polish and Spanish fluently. Born in Poland of a German father and Pblish mother, Stanley and his brother Edward were taken from their parents early in 1940 in Siberia. Edward; who was only seven, had the responsibility of caring for his infant brother.

With hundreds of other dis-

placed persons and war orphans

they were shifted from place to place; first to Turkistan and then to Kurrachee, India. In Kurrachee they were cared for by some American soldiers stationed there.

Then they drifted to Tehran, Persia, and finally to Bombay, India where they were taken charge of by the American Red Cross.

They were sent by the Red Cross to San Diego, Cal, by way of Australia and ‘New Zealand. Three weeks later they went to Santa Rosa, Mexico wheres they stayed until 1946.

This same year the boys were placed in St. Hedwigs Orphanage in Chicago. »

Both were taken for adoption in 1949 by Mr. and Mrs. William B. Gough, 4702 Payton St., Lawrence. Their adopted brother, Billy Tom, was a Times carrier, and

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IT'S CHEAPER 11]

952

0) How to Retire and Like It —

The Ones Who Planne

| [the work appealed to both Stan{ley and Edward. Ed carried the route for a year before he got an| after-school job in a drug store,| and Stanley took over the paper route. He's been carrying it almost two years now and has doubled his list of subscribers. Getting new| customers has won him trips to Niagara Falls and Coney Island.| | Besides this he helps buy his own| clothes and pays his own tuition | at St. Lawrence School. The many years of hunger and| {want have taught Stanley to be] thrifty, and his bank account is profiting by the lesson. |

| Atom Ore

| so.

i such a task,

Note: Mr, Kaighn served for 15 years as chairman of the YMCA Retirement Fund. This is the fifth of a series of six articles from his book, HOW TO RETIRE AND LIKE .IT,

just published - by Association Press, By RAYMOND P. KAIGHN

Retired CHAPTER FIVE THE VOICE of expe-

rience ;should be heard by

the man or woman about to .

retire. There are some who retire who find the experience less satisfying than they anticipated, may others find it more Some. slip into it without creating a ripple. It works out just as they had carefully planned it. Several hundred “retired men” were. questioned as to their reactions, favorable or otherwise, to being retired. With most of them the novelty of retirement had worn off or had begun to. In general, the individual who had done some intelligent planning was getting along far better than the one who came

up against his retirement quite |

unprepared. The personal qualities—tem-

perament, philosophy of life, re- |

"A "WRIST-EAR”

ligious interest, condition .of health — plus external circumstances, such as family and home relationships, financial staus, and other variables, affected the reactions of each one,

That makes a bewildering

job of trying to reach a definite |

conclusion. = » o RATHER THAN ATTEMPT tigere follow a number of answers selected at random that reflect varied reactions and from which the

Deposit Found

By Science Service i WASHINGTON, Jan. 26—Extensive new discoveries of monazite, mineral containing thorium, extending 700 miles through the Southeastern States have been) made by Dr. John B. Mertie, of]

{the U. 8. Geological Survey.

| Thorium can be converted. into

a fissionable sort of uranium by {neutron bombardment and thus

Try It, by Indiana's own

| Herb Sweet, will keep the chil-

dren out of mischief with interesting projects. It appears daily on The Times comic page.

ADVERTISEMENT

MorNING COUGHS

Do

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atomic bomb material.

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{cause of these devitalizing symptoms may be The new belt of deposits ra Nges | recurring attacks of Bronchial Asthma. In

250 tor 300 miles from not far such cases, the very first dose of MENDACO

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reader may do his own generalizing. Listen to this: “I have a daily sense of relief from the years of grind and responsibility that was making an old man of me. My wife says that I seem 20 years younger since I retired.” The wife is a good one to judge of the total effect of. retirement on her husband and what its contribution is to the welfare of the home and the well being of them both. After all, unless there are satisfying values to retirement, it is but | a source of grief, not a bless- | ing. “As a newspaper man, I lived for years in a daily atmosphere of excitement and pressure. I was told that I would soon die from boredom when I had to retire, but I found a hobby that has proved to be a life-saver. It's breeding racing pigeons. “It gives me plenty of fun, keeps me out of the house and brings in some extra cash.” Mast hobbies take some cash, “It is a smart person who can make his hobby pay. It is a smart idea to have a hobby thatgtakes you out.of the house for part of the time, A wife appreciates that.

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THIS from an ex-Y. M, C. A. secretary who further said that ‘a‘ny person with -a deep interest in church or social service can find plenty of opportunity to serve gratuitously wherever he lites.” “The greatest satisfaction I have had so far out of my retirement of two years ago was getting a Ph.D. from Columbia University at the age of sixtytwo. For years I had been wait-

ing for the time for a period of

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d For It Said They Enjoyed Quitting Work

Retirement

residence study gaxe me just that.” Post-graduate been taken up and higher degrees awarded to ambitious men women after their earning days. It courage and persistence, but the rewards in happiness and satisfaction they feel are worth ' the effort. Retirement is not all an un-

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found change brings new prob lems. It touches depths of personality that affect tures. painfully, “I have been lonely, nostalgic, and in the dumps ever Since I retired six ago, 1 thought I was going to like it, but I don’t. I would give everything to be back at my old tasks again.” That is a familiar case of retirement blues. No preparation

some - na-

months .

made for the great change, no hobbies, no new interests tq step into. . i What a ty

miserable way

_ meet an inevitable adjustment,

If he does not die of mélans cholia in the meantime, here is hoping he will snap out of nis depressions and face up cour= ageously to the new situation.

(Copyright 1031 by The National Board of Young Mé&h's Christian Association),

Next Sunday: The Summing Up.

asmsnrmasiscis penned

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