Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
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£ lV % _Dr. Logan’s Wife
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- I : & = Copyright 1951 by Dions Gaines. ‘Used by errange
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THE STORY: Jennet Logan,
whose well-ordered life is upset
by her attraction toward a young
and charming biophysicist peter
Surinov, believes that a contribu
ton of cash to Peter’s pet proj
ect of slum clearance will rest
her troublesome conscience and
that she can once more become
the dutiful wife of Dr. Gus Logan.
Peter has won enmity of Maxwell
Cota, layman head of the hos
pital where Peter is doing re
search in atomic medicine, Dr,
Logan, not suspecting his wife’s
infatuation for the younger man,
has supported Peter, but the fizht
is not over. Not wishing to give
her husband’s money to Peter,
J~nnet takes a diamond lavaliere
which she Inherited to a jeweler
who gives her SI2OO for it. Jennet
gors to the bank and has a certi
f'ed check made out and she in
tends to give this to Peter the fol
s.dowlng day.
- - *
XIIxX
THE next day, Wednesday, was
Jennet's day at the clinic. She
phoned Peter from the booth in the
waiting room at five minutes to
nine and told him she had to see
him about something.
Deter's voice was ebullient.
“Then you're not mad. That’s
wonderful! T thought when vou
left the meetinr so suddenly Mon
day night ... .”
“T was tired. And I think T had
some fish at the Club that didn’t
arree with me. Didn’t you hear
my stomach rumble during the
sneech? But you didn’t call to ask
why Tleft. .. .7
“You eould figure that one out
{for yourself. 1 don’t have even
minimal rights.”
“Yes, yes, T know. Let's not go
into that on the nhone. Where
shall we have lunch?”
“Well, you say it’s important.
The lunchroom dosen’t offer much
privacy. There's a little stand that
s~lls sandwiches and milk. What
if I pick up some lunch there for
both of us—and we can eat it
pirnic style somewhere?”
“Where would you suggest?”
“On the hill opposite mv rat
bole near the science building.
There’s an old elm tree that'll
serve as a beach umbrella.”
* » v
PETER lay on the hard-packed
ground, looking wup through the
spaces in the kinky follage of a
veteran live oak tree. Jennet sat
beside him on the car blanket.
“I don’t understand vou, Jennet.
1 can’t make you out. You have no
more Interest in the misfortunes
of the roor than a—a debutante—
and yet you went through all those
shenanigans to raise this money.
Why? Why did you do it.”
“I'm trying to be honest with
vou, Peter. I don't know. I don't
know why I was so moved by
that man’s talk. Heaven knows I
didn’t enjoy it. The slums aren’t
news to me but still, I couldn’t
stop thinking about it. And T want
to gorget it. I'm buying my way
out, that's all” ~
“But a dollar—two dollars—five
dollars is all we were asking for,
you knew that.” He took from his
trousers pocket the check she had
given him and unfolded it over his
head, reading it off, still unbeleiv
ing. “One thousand and two hun
fred dollars!™
“Don’t you want it? Then give
it to me. I'll tear it up. I'm sick
of it!” Angrily, she reached for
I\‘he check, would have snatched it
? “out of his hand, but he held it
away and when she let her arm
fall, he slipped the check back into
his far pocket. Peter said. “I won’t
give it back. You won't miss it—
and, of course, they need it. I'm
just trying te figure out what goes
on im that mysterious head of
yours. Not that I'm not glad to
have the doru‘p:.”
“All rl,;:t. Jennet sald, exas
perated. “I'm an unstable charac-~
ter, = neurotie, an eccentric mil
lionaire. I've gt a Lady Bounti
ful complex. Or, if you like, I'm
trying to impr.eu.ym‘x.”
HIS head moved from side to
side in a cradle of his hands.
“] wish that were true,” he said.
‘{‘§ut I don’t believe you did this
or me. Nor do I think you are
getting any satisfaction from it.
You give against your will. You
seem to be ashamed or afraid of
your good instincts. I have a
hunch you're a pretty mixed-up
little .fi.- He sdid it to the
pieces of sky, and when there was
no reply, he sgid, “Are you?”
“I don’t know what you mean
by mixed up,” Jennet said. “‘Are
you asking me if I'm happy?”
An aceumulation of gas in the
stomach forms pressure, crowds
the heart and results in bloating,
“gagsy” catches, paliptation and
shortness of breath. This condition
may frequently be mistaken for
heart trouble.
CERTA-VIN is helping such gas
“yictims” all over Athens. This
new medicine is taken before
meals, so it works with your food
—helps you digest food faster and
better. Gus pains go! Bloat van
ishes! Contatns Herbs and Vitamin
B-1 with Iron to enrich the blood
and make nerves stronger. Weak,
miserable poogt’e soon feel differ
ent all over. don’t go on suf
fering. Get CERTA-VlN—Crow’s
Drug Store.
CONTROLLED |§
- JFaoxe 10 |
| “Well?” he prodded.
“Are you?”
“I guess I am,” he replied “1
enjoy my work, my independ
ence. Does that answer it?”
“Only in a negative way, I think,”
she said, very low, and then, wons
dering how much she was saving,
added. *““That used to be enough.”
He nodded and she went on:
‘“Peter, it’s impossible for me to
talk to you like this. I'm not used
any more to speaking for myself
as & single indicvidual for myself
part me, the rest is wife, The two
are hornswoggling each other right
now, it’s a nasty humiliating sort
of conflict. Anything 1 tell you
of myself reveals Gus too, and I
have no right to expose him to
you. Even the word expose is
wrong_. It sounds as if there are‘
bad things to tell about him, and
'he’s actually a fine and admirable
person., Just mentioning his name
to you, just thinking about him in
your presence makes me feel rot
ten and guilty and a little cheap
when I want to seen glamorous
and desirable. I can say all sorts
of things to you, but I can’t say
them out loud.”
“Why-—what are you afraid of?”
“Everything.” And because to
say words like “divorce” to Peter,
who had net demanded anything
of her, would make her sound an
utter fool, sh& fell again between
her fences. “Everything” she re
peated. “So much that I*don’t
think we should do this again.
Meet alone, I mean.”
“l can stand virtue or drama,
but please, not both.”
(To Be Continued)
Archie Patterson,
Red Cross Head
On Georgia Campus
Red Cross Roll Call on the Uni
versity of Georgia Campus will be
under the direction of Archie Pat
terson, professor of forestry, with
Nick Chilivis, president of IFC
spearheading student-activity. Or
ganization and soliciation of facul
ty and administration in the 1952
campaign will be under the direc
tion of Patterson.
A student committee, with Ro
land Stubbs, Sylvania, chairman,
will canvass the campus for stu
dent members. A report earlier
this week stated, erroneously, that
all funds on the University campus
would be handled by the IFC com=
mittee. Patterson, and his organi
zation, to be announced at an early
date, will have charge of the Roll
Call campaign among faculty and
admisinstrative personnel.
All plans for the Clarke county
drive are heading up toward a
kick-off breakfast Monday March
3 which open a campaign for over
$17,000 in Red Cross memberships
to support the more than a dozen
activities carried out by the Clarke
county chapter,
BOY—YOU CAN 17% MORE WHAT A COMBINATIONI THAT “JET-SCOOP” HOOD
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THE BENELUX union gets its name from the front letters of its
three member countries—Belgium,.Luxembourg and The Neth
erlands. The Benelux is a customs union, regulating trade and tar
iffs among the three nations. Its eventual aim is to drop all barriers
and form a strong economic union of 19,000,000 people. The Benelux
pattern was first worked out in 1944 by governments of the three
nations exiled in London by:Nazi conguest. The initial agreement
went into effect Jan, 1, 1948, It was the first post-war experiment
in Western European integration, and as such it doesn’t inspire too
much confidence for an eventual United States of Europe. Economic
experts of the Benelux countries have now drafted a 50-year treaty
that would put the customs union on a firmer footing, but the Dutch
government reportedly isbalking at signing. Dutch objection is that
the treaty doesn’t go far endugh toward economic unity, but rather
freezes progress toward that goal at a point where Belgium gains
the wider market she seeks, with Dutch hopes remaining unfulfilled.
Root of the difficulty is that the war-ravaged Netherlands is still
fighting an uphill battle for recovery, while Belgium has become the
prosperous “‘senior partner.” Belgium now ships one-fourth of all her
exports to The Netherlands, Top-level officials of the three nations
soon will review the proposed 50-year treaty in an effort to smooth
out rough spots and speed the Benelux plan on to its goal of unity.
Man Hates The Word ‘Change,’
He's Conservative By Nature
I just finished another one of
those scoffing pieces about men
and their clothes, how conserva
tive the poor men are and how
they suffer for it,
Nothing anybody will ever write
poking fun at men and their
clothes is going to change them.
Men are just conservative by
nature, It's the woman in the
family who instigates the chan
ges.
Women love change as much as
men hate it. When you hear that
the Browns have finally decided to
build a new house, or that the
Smiths are making plans for an
entirely new kind of vacation, you
can be sure that Mrs. Smith and
Mrs. Brown are behind those
changes.
And it's a safe bet that they've
had to.work for months, oy maybe
even years, to sell their husbands
the idea that a change is desirable.
Some women have so little luck
in getting their husbands to make
any kind of change they have to
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
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3 TABLETS 25 | wowe FASTER
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small ways.
Women’s Urge to Change
will Out
You'll find such women forever
rearranging the living room furni
ture (usually the husbands liked
it better the way it was), getting
new hair-does, trying new shades
of lipstick, and searching out the
most startling hats they can find.
If a woman can't change her
husband or the life they lead she
can at least change herself a bit,
and maybe she can even get by
with sneaking in a few changes in
the house.
But as for men changing of their
own free will just because they
like change, that’s rare.
They don't cling to the same
kind of clothes year after year be
cause they are convinced they are
the most comfortable clothes they
could wear.
They cling to them because they
hate change. And as long as wo
men can change their own styles
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| o g
Airline Is Sued
For 5 Thousand
NEW YORK, Feb. 19 — (AP) —
A $500,000 damage suit was filed
Monday against National Airlines,
the first to grow out of the Eliza
beth, N. J. crash of its DC-6 air
liner a week ago.
The Federal Court action asked
damages for the death of Scott
Chalfant, one of 32 persons killed
in the Feb. 11 disaster. He was
President of Federated Airlines
Inc, a non-scheduled line.
Chalfant was among the 28 pas
sengers and crew killed. The other
four victims were residents of an
apartment house struck by the
falling plane.
Broken Heart Is
. .
Suicide Reason
RICHMOND, VA, Feb. 19 —
(AP) — The note in the girl’s hand
read: “cause of death, broken
heart. It is as simple as that.”
The note and 45 cents in her
purse were all that police found.
There were no clues on the body to
identify the girl, who died in a
Catholic Church Sunday after she
was seen to drink from an un
determined liquid.
The girl was identified today as
Margaret Bidgood, 22, of Rich
mond.
Dr. G. T. Mann, State Chief
Medical Examiner, said dozens of
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:I}l Official Watch A ;’rix
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TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1952,
persons viewed the body at ‘u,,
city mogu: bt;ffir;fl !'dentlflcation
was ma y the 8 nung, M,
Frances Hudson. .
e————
Two-thirds of all persons liy.
ing in Louisiana who have reached
the age of 65 have made a pa.-
r's plea and are on public re
fi:f rolls. The Chamber of Com -
merce of the United States says
that 119,000 aged men and .-
men are receiving such relief,
» .—_——————
Georgia leads the South in tota]
forest acreage, and ranks first in
the nation in privately ‘owneq
forest area and ,the number of
forest landowners.