Newspaper Page Text
WEDNESDATAI.—IEQXIMBER 28, 1951,
{hd of a Chapter &)
XXV
Muriel Halleck ignored Alice
determinedly ana went o with
her story,
«1 tried to cope with young
Rick, but his terror of the storm
put him beyond reason. You saw
how he acted the day ‘he threw
{hat tantrum—"
Alice nodded and Muriel went
on. “Finally I lost my temper. I
remembered that ugly little whip,
1t had belonged to Brent's father,
who used to raise dogs. I got it
anQe—
Again she paused as Alice
<queezed her hand. Anyone but
ruriel Halleck might have burst
into tears.
“Honestly though, Alice,” Mu
ric] continued, “after the very
fvst blow, I just tapped Rick. But
nat was enough to scare the poor
child to death.
“«well, Brent heard the commo
tion and woke up in the middle
' it. He e¢ome charging out of
bedroom. And, really, I
ight for a moment he was go
to kill me. '
«7a orobbed me and slung me
¢k into our bedroom. That's
1 ot those awful bruises on
arm. 1 knew Jyou didn’t be
eve my story about banging into
mathine in the night.”
Alire nodded, realizing that she
- thought the bruises were fur
- evidenece of Brent’s cruelty.
“Then I heard you come,” Mu
yiol was still speaking. “After
«~ds Brent came into the room
-nd hung the whip in my closet.
He said—" Muriel winced “—that
I'd hetter keep it among my own
things if T was so blasted fond of
i, But until now I've let Brent
{ake the—the rap. With you.”
“Ilt's all right now, Muriel,”
Alice llid.
“Now it is, but it wasn’t before.
Don't you see, my dear? I. just
couldn't go off to California let
ting you believe a rotten thing like
that about Brent.”
Muriel’s head came up and she
r- naged a smile. “I'm an ambi
ticus, self-centered woman, Alice,
bet I'm not all bad.”
MMuriel rose and stood again by
the door, ready to leave.
% % »
No, Alice thought as she stood
{-cing Muriel. She wasn’t all bad.
It had taken courage for her to
come here today.
‘lice said slowly: “Fm very glad
vou told me this, Muriel. And
now I'm going to tell you some
thing. T think you ought to go
Lo~z @ Brent and Rick.”
»uriel shook her head decisive
]
“No. That’s out of the question,
Alice. I've tried to be very honest,
I think, abeut everything except
that onae disagreeable episode. But
Erent and I have drifted apart for
a long time. It started even dur
ins the war®
Alice recalled the local gossip
ot Tolllver that resulted from
Prent’s failure to return home on
lcwves and his geiting assigned to
o cupation forces after the war.
Vavbe I"m to blame,” Muriel
<2, “T admit to being cold-blood
ed. You have to be, if you want,
more than anything else, to get to
the top of the world. But I also
found that T had to be honest all
the way around. That’s the result
o’ a good wmiddleclass Indiana
training, 1 suppose.
She sighed. Then she held out
E wnosure of 1-30,000 of a sec
' oud is fast enough to step mo
ton of a rotating electric fan.
Our stroboscopie light will stop
wiion en yeur childrens
Christmas photos made at
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her hand. i
' “Good luck, Alice,” she said,
with a trace of g smile, “I won't
‘ask you what’s going to happen
‘ next. Because, keeping up this ap~
palling honesty—or cold-blooded
‘ness—of mine, it doesn’'t make the
‘shghtest difference in the world
10 me.”
“Good luck to you, too, Muriel,”
Alice said, clasping the hand.
“You're a brave woman.”
After the handshake, Muriel
Halleck turned and was gone.
Alice Pine stood in the doorway
for a moment and then she closed
the door and locked it. She had
to take time to think.
Alice sat down on the edge of
the bed, her hands clasped in her
lap as she went over each detail
of that summer,
Why had she doubted Brent
Halleck? She had known deeply,
within herself, that he was incap
able of being cruel to little Rick.
But the evidence had seemed too
conclusive to ignore,
Brent had been trying to hide
that whip, not because of his own
guilt but because of Muriel’s. And
Brent had not corrected Alice’s
false impression of the incident
because he was just what Chuck
Wisner had said he was: “A
strange guy and a very swell guy.”
Even after her conversation with
Chuck Wisner in Tolliver that one
afternoon, when Chuck had told
her many things about Brent and
about Muriel, that ugly whip and
the night of the storm had re
mained in her mind.
Alice did not blame Muriel so
much for letting her think the
worst, Tt was payment, perhaps,
for Alice’s falling in love with
Brent while Alice was supposed
to be loyal to her employer.
Muriel might not really care for
Brent, Alice told herself, but after
all Muriel had been in love with
him once. And in spite of what
Muriel had said, she must have
had some feelings when she saw
Brent hold Alice in his arms, even
for a brief instant, that night on
the beach.
These and other thoughts trav
eled through Alice’s mind, but
thinking was not what she wanted
to do now. She had to explain
some things to Brent. Chuck Wis
ner’s words: “You're needed here
by a very swell guy,” came home
to her again.
Quickly she changed clothes,
Then she sent a wire to Provi-’
dence. She got her car and started |
a long drive back to Grosvenor
Point. Surely, she thought, Brent
would meet her there. She had
askéd him to. Surely, he would.
There was so much to be said and
to be explained. She wondered
what he would think when he re
ceived her wire. And she began
thinking over the things she would
have to say to him. :
Surely— |
(To Be Continued)
Disease Danger
In Italian
Po River Area
ROVIGO, Italy, Nov. 28 — (AP)
—Carcasses of drowned cattle and
horses hurned on smoking pyres
yesterday ags authorities worked to
avert a threatened outbreak of dis
ease in the flooded Po River Delta.
Gangs of workmen towed the
dead beasts to fires on high ground
in the Polesine and Rovigo areas.
Monday four cases of scarlet fever
were reported there.
Officials feared epidemics might
breat out as the result of damaged
sewer systems and the thousands
'of animals drowned in .the vast
flood area.
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WING WINDUP — John Heuss checks a pylon at Mans
field, 0., factory before shipment to jet plane assembly plant for
suspension beneath wing as part of fuel or armament system.
Infelligenisia |
Put On Soviet
"Approved’ List
PARIS, Nov.—Since the recent
34th anniversary of the Bolshevik
Revolution, the “intelligentsia’ has
been added as a third pillar to the
two pillars of the “workers” and
the “peasants” on which the Sov
iet state hitherto has pretended to
rest.
On Nov. 7, for the first time
since 1917, the annual appeal of
the Soviet Communist Party’s cen
tral committee was addressed “to
the workers, the peasants, and the
intelligentsia of the Soviet Union.”
These annual appeals, consist
ing of some 50 or 60 slogans which
reflect the official party policy,
are studied carefully by the Sov
iet people. The number of each
slogan is an indication of its ur
gency and of the order in which
it appears on the floats carried ir
the great anniversary parade.
Put High On List
This year’s unusual tribute to
the intelligentsia came almost im
mediately after such high priority
items as the “brotherly greetings
:;',—j?_--,,,.tw.- e e eel KR
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SATURDAY
Box Office Opens 12:45
Staget 2:50, 5:10, 7:20, 9:40
Screen Program: 1 Hour 20
Minutes Earlier. :
SUNDAY
Box Office Opens 12:30
Stage: 2:15, 4:20, 6:25, 8:30,
10:30.
Screen: 1 Hr. 20 Min. Earlier.
Also Full Screen Program!
THE BANNER-HERALD ATHENS, GEORGIA
to all nations fighting against ag
gression, for peace, democracy,
socialism” to the “people’s democ
racies,” to China, to the manly
people of Korea,” the democratic
forces of Germany, the Yugoslav
anti - Tito “patriots” and the
“friendship of the peoples of Brit
ain, the United States, and the
Soviet Union.” The prominence
given to the intelligentsia, which
up to now has never been men
tioned on the same level as the
workers and peasantg, culminated
a major political campaign.
For several months, Pravda,
Bolshevik, and other party publi
cations have vied with one an
other in discussing how to im
prove party work among “the in
telligentsia.” Day after day, it
seemed as If the workers no
longer were the main concern of
the party, but the intelligentsia,
The peasants, this other legen
dary pillar of Soviet power, have
long been relegated to a secon
dary place. They interest the
party as members of collective
farms and producers, but no longer
as a social class.
In this curious Alice in Won
derland atmosphere of the U. S.
S. R, two questions immediately
arise: (1) What is this new group,
and (2) Why is the Kremlin woo
ing it?
Harnessed to Party
The Soviet intelligentsia is very
different from that of Tolstoy’s
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Children ..81.00 (Under 12 Yra)
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. R YR R L s~ e e
day, with' its independent writers,
scholars, artists, lawyers, and
other members of the academic
professions. Today the intelli
gentsia is harnessed to the party
or the state and consgists, much
more than in the past, of admin
istrators, managers, engineers, and
other technicians. These are the
persons who today hold the most
important positions. According to
a recent estimate, at least 60 per
cent of the approximately 7,000,
000 party members belong to this
group, b
The new drive to gain the active
support of the intelligentsia ap
pears aimed mainly at non-party
members. It does not seem to
satisfy the Kremlin that these
persons are solidly integrated into
the government machine and un=
der party and police control. Sub
missive obedience is not sufficient,
positive cooperation is required—
and for this reason their hearts
and thoughts must be filled with
Communist ideas,
This is not an easy task. Every
one of the ideological defections
recently unearthed was found
largely among the nonparty intel
ligentsia. Its members have shown
signs of “bourgeois nationalism,
cosmopolitanism, and indiffer
ence.”
Under Suspicion
Betwen the lines of the reports
on party discussions about work
among the intelligentsia, it is made
clear that this group also is sus
pected of two other crimes:
1. Many of the more talented
and dynamic managers, engineers,
geologists, and so on, apparently
would like to do things their own
way; they resent the rigid, cen
tralized bureaucratic setup under
which they have to work.
2. Since they usually speak at
least one other European lan
guage, are more widely read and
better informed about the outside
world than the average citizen,
they occasionally seem to be ask
ing themselves whether the West,
whose broadcasts they hear and
whose ideas they can discern be
hind the fog of their government’s
propaganda, is altogether wrong.
These are dangerous thoughts,
in the Kremlin’s eyes. And what
is worse, they cannot be discussed
without jeopardizing the legend
that the Soviet Union is politically
a monolith.
During the great purge of 1937
and 1938, the intelligentsia was
openly accused of similar devia
tions and treated accordingly.
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Moscow Orders West Europe Reds To Speed
NATO 'Disinfegrafion’ By Strikes, Sabofage
By LEON DENNEN
NEA Staff Correspondent
PARIS — (NEA) - Comin
form orders which may give some
clue to Moscow’s latest strategy in
the hot-cold war have peen issued
to all Red parties in the West,
according to French Communist
sources,
“The fate of the dying capitalist
order has finally been sealed,” the
Kremiln’s instructions to its fifth
columns state. “The relation of
forces on the international arena
is becoming increasingly unfavor
able for the imperialist (Western)
camp.”
Faithful Reds are therefore
urged so speed the “disintegra
tion” eof the North Atlantic
Treaty countries through political
strikes, violence and increased
acts of sabotage.
The orders were the main fopic
of discussion at a secret mecting
of the Cominform in East Berlin
Nov. 15. To encourage Western
Reds, they listed four ‘major de
feats already ‘“suffered by the
international reactionaries”:
1. The creation of the Chinese
People’s Republic and the “his
toric victory” of the_ Chinese
people.
2. The establishment of the
pro-Soviet German “Democratic”
Republic.
3. The “victory of Communism”
in the countries behind the Iron
Curtian.
4, The “national liberation up
surge” in Korea, Iran. Egypt,
North Africa and other ‘“colonial
and dependent countries.”
Moscow is obviously convinced
that “the wundermined position
and growing weakness” of the
West “add to the rage of the im
perialists.”
But the western democracies
are not expected by the Soviet
Polituro to “withdraw volun
tarily from the historical arena.”
On.the contrary, “the aggressive=-
ness of the imperialist camp
headed by the United States is
being intensified.”
Western Communists have been
ordered to exert every effort to
cripple the armament program of
the North Atlantic Treaty Organi
zation. Above all, they must pre
vent at all costs the integration
of West German troops into the
European defense system.
A similar pelicy was recently
outlined by Benecit Frachon,
¥rench Communist trade wunion
leader, at a meeting of the pro-
Soviet World Federation of Trade
Unions held in East Berlin.
Addressing top WFTU leaders
who met immediately after the
Cominform session, Frachon
called for the infitration, of Red
agents into non-Communist labor
greups in order to satotage West
ern rearmanment. . :
The way to do this in countries
where the Communists are weak
is to encourage political strikes
for higher wakes, Frachon indi
cated.
Since the disappearance of
Maurice Thorez, Secretary of the
French Communist Party who
went for a “cure” to Russia last
year, Benoit Frachon is considered
the number one Soviet spokes
man in Western Europe. :
He is the undisputed leader of
the CGT, strongest trade union
federation in France, and is said
to have more than 50,000 agents
entrenched in the most strategic
industries of the country.
Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower is
reported to regard Franre as the
pivot around which the West
European defense strategy—the
whole concept of a European
army, in fact — is being planned.
Continued Communist control of
labor as well as of strategic ec
onomic centers in Framce and
in other parts of Western Europe
thus represents a serious threat to
the NATQ’s program.
The Cominform’s latest orders
to the Western Reds also throw
new light on the tactics pursued
in the United Nations by Andrei
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BENOIT FRACHON: 50,000
agents in major French in
dustries.
Y. Vishinsky, Soviet Foreign
Minister.
With the “capitalist West” al
ready “doomed,” to their way of
thinking, Soviet strategy is to use
all means to push it along the
path, of destruction and await
patiently the final crash.
. .
Pipeline Blast
.
Heard 10 Miles
BETHELBORO, Pa., Nov. 28 —
(AP) — State police reported a
big inch pipe line exploded in this
small western Pennsylvania min
ing community yesterday with
such force that the blast was heard
for 10 miles.
First reports said a score of men
were working on a pumping sta
tion being erected on the site. Fire
companies from six communities
hurried to the scene. Flames were
so intense that it was impossible
to get within 500 feet.
Bethelboro is located four miles
north of Uniontown and about 55
miles from Pittsburgh. ‘
The pipe line carries natural gas
from fields in Texas and Louisiana
to terminals in New York and New
Jersey, I tis operated by the Te
xas Transmission Company.
The line was used during World
War II to transport oil and gaso
line to eastern coast.
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Plus: TWEETIE PIE “TWEET TWEET TWEETIE”"—Latest News”
For Christmas this year give entertainment with
theatre Gift Coupon Books . . . Now On Sale at
the box office in books of SI.OO - $2.50 - $5.00
| Athens Drive-In Theaire l
TODAY and TOMORROW s
Doors Open 6:30 First Show 7:00
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*Sessaad THE PEOPLE AGAINST O'HARA |
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4l (BRIEN - LYNN - HODIAK
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| Plus — CARTOON and NEWS,
PAGE SEVEN
First ski tournament held gtho
United States was at Red Wing,
Minn., February 8, 1887,
World’s highest captial is La-
Paz, Bolivia, 11,910 feet high in
the Andes mountains.
The femur, running from hip to
knee, is the largest bone in a man’s
body. :
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Doors Open 12:45
Meet the “kept men” 5
» who play coliege £ |
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& Columbia Piciuras presenls
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Tweetie Pie “TWEETIE’S 808”
NOW SHOWING
Doors Open 12:45
Palace: 1:22, 3:19, 5:16, 7:13, 9:10