. Mark Tidd; his adventures and strategies . ch. MARK TIDD For maybe an hour we got along fine. Nota thing happened, and we found lots of thingsto talk about. We got to figuring about hisfathers turbine and what it would do andhow much money Mr. Tidd would make outof it, and it sounded pretty important. Someday we were sure thered be big shops inWicksville where the engines would be manu-factured, and Mark would be general managerwhen he got through college, and all the restof us would have good jobs. I was going to bea mechanical engineer some day, so Markagreed to put me in charge of that de
. Mark Tidd; his adventures and strategies . ch. MARK TIDD For maybe an hour we got along fine. Nota thing happened, and we found lots of thingsto talk about. We got to figuring about hisfathers turbine and what it would do andhow much money Mr. Tidd would make outof it, and it sounded pretty important. Someday we were sure thered be big shops inWicksville where the engines would be manu-factured, and Mark would be general managerwhen he got through college, and all the restof us would have good jobs. I was going to bea mechanical engineer some day, so Markagreed to put me in charge of that figured his father would make maybe fouror five thousand dollars in a single year. If he m-makes anything,: said Mark. But hes goin to. He aint got it patented yet. What of it? If somebody got holt of his idee, or stolehis drawins and got it patented f-f-first, hednever git a thing out of it. Not a dollar? Not a dollar. Theres always folkstryin to steal inventions. Most inventorsgit cheated out of their money or s-some- thinV 72. THERE, CROUCHING ON THE BROW, WAS THE FIGI RE OF A MAN
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