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qursDAY. JULY 22, 1952,
s 2 — 013 Efivrt‘-w—“w
(55 === Alos Basil Willing
N g 4 ({4&-{?}"[ By Helen McCloy
P SN ("\ Copyright 1951 by Helen McCloy Dresser, printed through permission of the publisher,
e SOV N 1 Random Mouse, Inc. Distributed by NEA Service, Inc.
rHE STORY: Jack Duggan, a
ivate detective, was murdered
. Miss Katherine Shaw dies
,r mysterious circumstances
' lowing a dinner given by a psy
chiatrist, Dr. Zimmer, at his home.
aiihought the dinner seemingiy
was & part of Dr. Zimmer’s treat-
S ant for seme of his patients,
pasil has found many suspicious
{hings in connection with it, in
cluding the fact that Duggan had
poen impersonating Basil. How
cver, Dr. Zimmer has decided to
rosume these gatherings and Ros
. nund Yorke, one of the guests
.. the fatal party, has accepted.
\ianwhile, Brinsley Shaw, nep
paw of the dead woman, has been
(»xing to Charlotte Dean, Miss
ghaw's secresary, about disposing
of his aunt’s pm.ona.l belengings.
*
XXI
it was Brinsley Shaw who
wished to change the subject
now. “By the way, I have an
invitation for you.~We are both
invited to dine Friday at Dr. Zim
ner’s.”
; Charlotie Dean was surprised.
wThat is very kind of Dr. Zimmer
and Mrs. Mann. I hope you will
thank them for me, but I really
must decline.”
“why?” Fe looked at her di
rectly, annoyed. “Because Greta
wrote to me instead of you? That
was only natural, I think.”
Charlotte was a little rattled by
his inimical stare, “I think .... %
mean Miss Shaw’s been dead
ol a sow weeks. I should,rather
not go out to dine anywhere and
especially at Dr. Zimmer’s .where
thore are unhappy associations.”
“Youre old fashioned. Aunt
Kay herself wouldn’t want us to
be so ...." He sought a word.
p _‘-i()l'bid."
“I'm sure of it. And I’'m going
iy accept Zimmer’s = invitation.
7immer is on a spot. If his pa
tients don’t stick by him, it will
cause talk and that will ruin his
practice. I owe him a lot. He’s
arly cured me, you know, and
KTHENS
DRIVE-IN THEATRE
LAST TIMES TODAY
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“HINGTON STORY”—Van Johnson—Patricia Neal
I was in a pretty bad way. I'd like
to help him. After all, nobody at
Zimmer’s that evening had any
thing to do with that detective
who died so suddenly and, if we all
hang together, we’ll make the po
lice realize it.”
* * *
Charlotte dropped her eyelids.
Her high, clear voice lost its usual
steadiness. “You and I were at Dr.
Zimmer’s that evening and we had
something to do with Duggan, be
cause it was Miss Shaw, your aunt
azi:d my employer, who employed
him.”
Brinsley gasped. “You don’t
mean to say you actually believe
that cockeyed theory of the cops
that Aunt Kay had employed Dug
gan to come to Zimmer’s that
night?”
Charlotte remembered that Dr.
Willing had said she must not tell
anyone about the slip of paper
signed “J. Bush.”
“I don't know.”
“Be your age, Charlotte!” It was
the first time Brinsley had
dropped the “Miss Dean” that
Katherine Shaw insisted upon.
“The police are up a tree, so, to
save face, they make up all sports
of nonsensical theories with
nothing to go on. I knew Aunt
Kay better than you did and I
can’'t visualize her having any
thing to do with a private detec
tive. Are you coming with me to
Zimmer's Friday night or not?”
“I should like to think it over.”
“All right. Let me know when
you decide.” He rose, bundling
letters and newspapers together.
“If anyone phones me after 11,
I'm lunching at the club and I
won’t be home until dinner time.”
He went out of the room, leav
ing a thick silence behind him.
After a moment, Charlotte rang
for Mary. “We’re all through and
Mr. Shaw won’t be here for
luncheon.”
Charlotte went out into the
tiny garden walled with sky
scrapers, a flower bed at the bot
tom of a well. It was the first
time she and Brinsley had dis
cussed Miss Shaw’s deauth since
the police had been there. His at
titude disturbed her profoundly.
What did he know? Were the
Hepplewhite chairs a bribe? Why
should Brinsldy care whether she
went to dinner with him or not?
Charlotte sat alone in the gar
den until the clock struck 11. Only
as she re-entered the house did
she realize that she’d been waiting
for Brinsley to leave—that she
didn’t want to be in the same
house with him any longer than
she could help.
* * *
She went to the telephone. “Dr.
Willing? Thig is Charlotte Dean.
Something has happened and I
want to consult you about it. Dr.
Zimmer is resuming the series of
dinners for his patients and their
families. Brinsley Shaw is going
and I've been invited to go with
him. He wants me to accept. In
deed he is making quite a point of
it. Do you think I should?”
There was silence at the other
end of the line for a moment.
Then: “Have you repeated any
thing about our discovery in the
cellar to anyone? Anyone at all?”
The calm voice avas reassuring.
Charlotte’s own voice grew stead
ier. “Of course not. I promised I
wouldn’t.
“Then I know of no reason why
it would be dangerous for you to
go—if that is what you're asking
me.”
“It is. I must confess that I am
frightened a little.”
“Then perhaps I'm not the per
son you should ask.”
“Why not?”
“I should like very much to hear
from an eye-witness what that
dinner is like. If you went you
might be kind enough to tell me
about it afterward.”
“Oh, Dr. Willing, if you think I
could help you by going....”
“I do. But I must remind you of
what I said a moment ago. I know
of no reason why it would bgdan
gerous. .... There may be some
reason that I know nothing about.”
“T’ll take that risk.” '
“I'm not asking you to do so.
It’s something that you must de
cide for yourself. Better think
toverforadayor®m” .
“Oh, no. I've decided. And
thank you, Dr. Willing, for giving
me a chance to help. I was very
fond of*Miss Shaw.”
(To Be Continued)
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“FLYING BODY”: One way scientists peek into supersonic flights
of the future is with recoverable *“bodies” like the one above.
Packed with instruments shown here in cutaway view, the bodies
are mounted with various types of wings and dropped from high
altitudes. Another test method is the more conventienal wind tun
nel model, like the one being prepared below to study effect of
porous leading-edge wings.
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(alifornia Scientists Tackle New
Heat Barrier In Supersonic Flight
By SHERMAN MONTROSE
NEA Staff Correspondent
MOFFETT FIELD, Caif. —
(NEA)—It may sound odd, but in
the 60-degree-below-zero tem
peratures in which today’s fastest
planes travel, it isn’t the cold that
worries the scientists who are
working out the problems of to
morrow’s plane—it’s the heat.
Scientists at The National Ad
visory Committee for Aeronautics’
Ames Aeronautical Laboratory
here regard temperature — and
high temperature, not low — as
being the biggest stumbling block
to man’s efforts to travel faster
and faster in the faster-than
sound speed range.
At supersonic flight levels, the
rush of air past a plane’s wings,
tail and fuselage causes terrific
friction. The friction causes heat.
Not long ago a Douglas Skyrocket
streaked at 1300 miles per hour
above California’s Mojave Desert.
In the eramped cockpit, the pilot
was cooled by a refrigerator with
sufficient eapacity to cool a thea
ter seating 3000 to 4000 persons.
But it’s not merely keeping the
pilot cool or in an air-conditioned
cockpit that worries Ames people.
High temperatures weaken alumi
num structural parts, thus re
quiring heavier construction. The
heavier the plane, the shorter the
range.
® * =
Friction of the air through
which the plane travels could very
well cause a plane to melt—if it
travels too fast, engineers now
say.
While temperatures encount-l
ered by the Skyrocket on its|
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TIFULIY ¥lo eY? Y& -,’ B
BEAU ;’fiEBU"-T @ §| ‘) ¥
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T £ @ For FREE Home Demon- §
@ AW su\b stration. Letters must §
£} o C:‘sc“g be postmarked by mid
: PR 'g | night Saturday, July 26.
: o A-17
TB AR AT T A
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L) CALL STORES.INC ATLaNTA GA.
TR e o A - A e g £ |
Delta Yacuum Stores, 657 West Peachtroe Street, Atlante, Ge. ‘
Gentlemen: | would like @ Free Home Demonstration of @ Beautifully |
Rebuilt Electrolux without obligation, |
DB it T i ;
B st B IO R i iigmionmons | |
R Yks M AT
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
1300-miles-per-hour rTun are a
secret, some figures have been re
leased. At 2000 mph, for example,
air friction creates heat of 600 de
grees—enough to weaken alumi
rum alloys; at about 3300 mph—
heat may rise to as much as 1600
degrees—heat’' that would sap the
strength of any steel now used in
plane construction.
To attack and #olve the prob
lems of this new “barrier of heat,”
major contributions are expected
from the Bell X-2, a stainless steel
research airplane designed to in
vestigate high supersonic speeds
where aerodynamic heating will
be experienced.
The problem of heat is only one
phase of supersonic flying being
tackled at this vast air laboratory.
L » *
Here are wind tunnels, one of
them the largest in the world.
Here are smaller, supersonic tun
nels, in which the wind screeches
like a thousand banshees as it
beats against plane models ex
erting a force equivalent to ac
tual travel at twice the speed of
sound.
This is a world of aerodyna
mie terminology which confuses
the layman; of needle-nosed fight
ers with virtually no wings; of
huge die casting machines; of
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complex recording machinery used
aloft and on the ground; a world.
of research to find the materials
and the mechanices that will go in~
to the planes of tomorrow.
A peek into a supersonic tunnel,
visible on a projected screen,
shows the shock waves that bend
like the strings of a bow around
the model. The scream of the wind
drowns out all other sounds in the
room.
SMALL INDUSTRY LESS SAFE
NEW YORK-—(AP)—lndustrial
accidents cost the nation $2,600,-
000,000 a year and most occur in
small manufacturing plants with
100 or fewer workers, reports the
National Association of Mutual
Casualty Companies.
It said two-thirds of the indus
trial accidents, which resulted in
16,000 deaths and injuries to 2,-
000,000 persons, occurred in the
smaller plants.
ANTI-TB CAMPAIGN
TEHRAN — (AP) — An anti
tuberculosis campaign is in full
swing in Tehran and its suburbs
as part of the Iranian govern
ment’s camapign to fight disease.
Some 3,000 persons have already
been given tests and vaccines
against TB in Tehran’s suburbs in
the past few weeks.
TIME TO MOVE
LONG BEACH, Calif.—(AP)—
When Andrew Pala stood on Sig
nal Hill in 1919 and enjoyed the
view of the Pacific Ocean, he de
cided the hill was a good place to
build l;u mansion.
Two™ years later, after his
$30,000 home was completed, oil
was discovered nearby. Signal
Hill soon bristled with wells mak-
Elg it an uncomfortable place to
e.
But the Palas were reluctant to
leave. However, when a well
caught fire behind their home and
burned for three days, Nirs. Pala
decided in was time to move out.
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MARS-BOUND BOY —Rigged
for space travel, six-year-old
Johnny Schloss, of Brooklyn,
N. Y., tries out a “rocket ship”
built of parts from a toy me
chanical building set. It was
shown at the sixth annual Toy
Guidance Exhibit. More than
500 wunusual toys from 300
American manufacturers were
seen at the exhibit,
AMAZING R SITIS, N e
IN 7 ESULTS Unlike ex g s EURITIS!
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CONFUSION BEFORE ORDER — All was confusion in
the Chicago Convention Hall shortly before the Demo
eratic National Convention was called to order as dele
gates milled about greeting one another and holding im
promptu caucuses.—(NEA Telephoto.)
“Julius Caesar’”’ Film Will
Star Famed Shakespearean Actor
By 808 THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD (AP) —(AP)—
Bill Shakespeare is being given
another whirl in Hollywood. It is
hoped the old boy won’t be whirl
ing in his grave after this try.
The well-known bard has never
fared too well at the hands of the
Hollywood fiim makers. But this
time MGM is exercising the ut
most care to make sure Shake
spearians as well as movie fans
are satisfied with its version of
“Julius Caesar.” Witness the facts®
1. John Gielgud, ace Shakespear
ian actor of England, is being im
ported to play Cassius.
2. Greer Garson and Deborah
Kerr are playing virtual walk-ons.
3. Marlen Mumbles Brando will
talk plainly as Mare Antony.
Producer John Houseman, who
produced Shakespeare with Orson
Welles on Broadway, reported that
it was easy to persuade Gielgud
to play his first U. S. movie. Miss
Kerr volunteered for her tiny part,
and Miss Garson easily acceded.
“While the roles of Portia Kerr
and Calpurnia Garson are only
about three pages, the scenes are
important,” Houseman explained.
As for Brando— “This business
about his mumbling is silly. He
did that to create a character. I
have heard him do plays in which
he enunciated very clearly.”
Completing the cast are James
Mason as Brutus and Louis Calh
ern as Julius Ceasar. Houseman
explained that he is striving for a
happy combination of English and
American accents.
Past Errors
The producer said he encount
| ered some opposition to a Shake
spearian project, largely due to
past mishaps. He explained their
errors:
“ ‘Midsummer Night's Dream’
i
FW * *
* HARLEM *
Bun. Mon. - Tuesday
“BEWARE” }
Py n b
]
1935 was a mishmash of a play
to begin with. ‘Romeo and Juliet’
1936 suffered, I believe, because
it was largely created by movie
people, instead of those connected
with the stage. Also, Norma
Shearer and Leslie Howard had no
Shakespearian experience.
“Orson Welles’ ‘Mdcßeth® 1948
had three strikes against #: A
limited budget; the Scotch accent;
and Orson was too busy to con
reeaid)
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/3 Down - Up To 24 Months
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PAGE FIVE PAGE SIX PAGE SEVEN PAGE EIGHT PAGE NINE PAGE TEN PAGE ELEVEN PAGE TWELVE PAGE THIRTEEN PAGE FOURTEEN PAGE FIVETEEN PAGE SIXTEEN
genttate on his performance.”
But %ouseman ac#od .-th.a#}.pu_r
ence livier's “Henry and
“Hamlet” blazed the trall for
Shakespeare on film. “It must be
prepared with care and sold to a
select audience,” he said.
When teen-agers entertain at a
porch party they'll like a fruit
juice beverage and doughnuts
topped with a chocolate frosting.
BLriy o
NOW
“LURE OF THE
WILDERNESS"
]EAI;“::"TIRS
JEFFREY HUNTER
Doors
12:45
NOW
- Double Feature!
JOHN WAYNE
in
"RED RIVER"
and
SUSAN HAYWARD in
"TULSA”