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“would blow it or put it in the bank. That’s dull. And so we have to dig.” Some of the digging done by Fed- derson and his score of writers has unearthed nuggets of nobiUty: One young widow spent only $20 of her million and gave the rest back, when she discovered the prospective stepfather for her young son hated rich women. A Texas cowboy hung diamonds on a New York show girl until he came to his senses, returned to the range and bought a piece of it as a wedding gift for Plain Sue. A burlesque queen who came offstage a millionaire promptly put on her clothes and endowed a college with a $500,000 scholarship fund. A mental patient who thought Michael Anthony, the man with the check, was just a delusion, repaid the real estate losses over which he had lost his sanity when aspirin didn’t dispel his “hallucination.” A miser was induced by his wife to spend $500,000 in two weeks. A man unjustly condemned to death for mur¬ der proved he didn’t do it and lived to endow a church for the prison chaplain. A stenographer went to Europe and fell for a smuggler, but was willing to wait for him to get out of jail. A village ne’er-do-well, suspected of theft, cleared himself by financing the town bank in an emergency. A few of TV’s temporary nouveaux riches have proved unworthy of their good luck—but all have managed to see the error of their ways within the 26 minutes allotted them. There is no indication, as the show resumes on CBS with new stories after a sununer season of repeats, that mil- lion-dollar gifts won’t continue to in¬ spire melodramatic shenanigans. This John Beresford Tipton—^his name is a composite of Fedderson’s home town, his wife’s home town and his lawyer’s first name—is loaded. “do-it-yourself” jobs DON’T PAY For a physical check-up—see your doctor. When it comes to your TV set —see your serviceman. Your TV set is not like a screen door or a water faucet. It’s a complex, sensitive electronic instrument. By tinkering with it, you can hurt the set —you can even get hurt yourself. Call in a skilled TV serviceman. He’s a profe.ssional... a trained technician. He has made a big investment in equipment and know-how to diagnose and cure the trouble quickly and completely. If you do need any new parts, chances are he’ll put in precision-built Mallory Rectifiers, Capacitors, Resistors, or Controls—the same as most "TV set manufacturers use. With men who know TV, Mallory replacement parts are recognized as tops in quality, per¬ formance and dependability. P. R. MALLORY & CO. INC. INDIANAPOLIS 6. INDIANA MallorY 19