Newspapers / The Alamance gleaner. / July 25, 1946, edition 1 / Page 3
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unci be r rnifj^ove ! PEGGV DfRSJ WN.U. RELEA6E ft! AHeU mtmrtm I U- ? ? ' ? . . - - ** * ? nun or toet Oan "to Mmetotof nlfktj IMdlu" >M tori ruka'i ? to StoreinS to to* etothhnrtweS >m4 1lecea Win It. Ito luiu tost a "111m Mmrtoe." a lister o< Mrs. Fallow. Htm wit* toe piiselpel sal his wtfs. Me(sa toM sorry to* Tom FlSew. sal aha tosachi a treat leal ahoat toe tee tip shea* kiss sal Ms wilt whea she startel to her tsrertte resttaf place ea tot top *1 a law hlD hiyial to* toe slew. Teat Fshsa was lining ea toe rack she aseh as s heach whea the srrlrel. Whea she toqalred ahoat his wile's health, he tepUel: "She Is mealally in." Whea Met weal to a qolltlas party at Mrs. StasrTs, slide pricks her ahoat Tern. CHAPTER III "I dunno as any of us think the 'feasor's exactly hidin'," she said curtly. "An' I dunno's any of us think Pleasant Grove is such a hick place, come to think of it. Some folks seem to like it. If they didn't I reckin they could go somewhere'* else." Alicia colored darkly and shrugged. "I'm sorry I even men tioned the fact that I saw you," she said ungraciously. "But after all. Hie Ridge is public property. It's not posted or anything. I had as much right to be there as you and Mr. Fallon 1 I was merely gathering a few Autumn leaves and some bit tersweet berries to put in the blue pottery bowl in my front window." Megan was trembling a little,'1 though she knew she was being silly. The little scene with Tom Fallon had been so absurdly innocent; yet there was something in the sly, fur tive manner of Alicia's mentioning it that had made it seem evil and scheming. Megan, still furious with Alicia and her nasty tongue, got away from the quilting party as early as she decently could. At least Mrs. Stuart understood, when, at the door she drew Megan aside and said forthrightly, "Now look here, Me gan, don't pay no attention to that woman. Someone ought to take a gun to her and blow her to Kingdom Come, and that's a fact!" Halfway down the road, she heard a cheerful voice and turned as a pretty girl of seventeen, her arms laden with schoolbooks, came running towards her. "Hi, Meggie," said the girl, flushed and smiling, and very pret ty in a childish, round-faced, bright-eyed way. "Hello, Susie?you're late getting home from school!" said Megan lightly. utt- j a? -a -?i-- '? * * uau vu siay aner scnooi ana write a composition. Like a fool, I thought I could get away with not doing one?according to the law of averages, I shouldn't have been called on today, but the darned law j let me down. Miss Pound's a holy terror?seems to look at you and \ know without asking a question , whether you've done your home- , work," answered Susie bitterly. ( They walked together in compan ionable silence down the wide, un- , paved road, until suddenly Susie i said bitterly, "I hear the Alicia , dame dug her little stiletto into you ] and Professor Fallon today! That t makes you "a member, in good ] standing, of my own club." ( Megan caught her breath" and ] stopped still. ( "How on earth did you hear?" < she began in amazement. i Susie's little chuckle was dry and 1 quite without mirth. 1 "Oh, it's all over the place," she said. "By supper time, there won't be a man, woman or child within < a mile of the place that won't know i you've been meeting the professor secretly in the woods?" ( "Susie!" Megan wailed. "That's not true?" < "Of course not?but d'jrou think ? for a minute that's going to stop t the story? Don't be a twerp, Meg- I gie?you know it won't!" said Susie, c "It wasn't true that I was sneaking I off to meet Bill Esmond either? 1 but you'd have a hard time con- f vincing anybody in this town that it isn't! Just because one afternoon s I happened to run into him at the t county seat and had a soda with c him. My mother hit the roof, on c account of because Bill's folks are f not?Well, not quite as high hat as | mother thinks we ought to be?" Her young voice trembled a little s and she blinked heard to clear her ? eyes of threatened tears. , Megan asked curiously, "Is that c all there is to that story, Susie?" Susie flushed and her eyes were B stormy. h "Absolutely! Up to then," she d added. "Oh, sure, I liked Bill?we k all did! He was an honor student, and the kids were crazy about him b and he played football like nobody's o business?but I'd never had a date c with him in my life. How could g] 1, when dad and mother practically K lock me up nights? But that after- p noon, mother was sick with a head- V ache, and she wanted some stuff * from the county seat that Burns didn't have, and I took the car and drove over. And I ran into Bill. gj He'd Just had his physical and was Q all but ready to be taken into the b; Cadet Air Corps, and we celebrat- m ed by having a soda." h, Susie drew a deep breath and ft said quietly, "Bill's?quite a fel- tr low!" She laughed and said, "May- m ue i ougni 10 De graierui to tne Stevenson wench?if she hadn't raised such a row about my having a soda with him, and behaving as though she'd seen me coming out of some foul dive with him?I'd nev er have noticed what a grand guy he is! Oh, well?" They walked on in silence and at the gate to the MacTavish place, they stopped and Susie said sud denly, "Meggie, Is there any truth in what Stevenson says about? Mary Rogers?" "Mary Rogers?" Megan repeat ed puzzled. "You know she got expelled last month and she's gone to stay with her sister and learn to be a war worker?a riveter or something?" Susie explained, and after a mo ment blurted out, "The Stevenson? er?witch?says Mary is going to have a baby, and has dropped a hint that Bill may have some part in the matter?" Megan said explosively, disgust in her voice, "Goodness, Susie?what a foul story!" Susie nodded wretchedly. . -? I Megan asked curiously, "Is that all there is to that story, Susie?" "1 know?the dickens of It is that most folks agree that the Steven son's not a liar?but that she Just has an unholy capacity for scatter ing damaging truth about where it can do the most harm!" she admit ted. "It's just that?well, I'd hate to think he'd be mixed up in any thing like that?" Megan said forcefully, "Well, from my own personal experience, I'd say Alicia Stevenson has a fatal ability to pick one tiny shred off and embroider it to an incredible de gree! I went for a walk on the Ridge, with my usual three-ring circus, and quite by accident, Mr. Gallon was also there and we ex changed a few, words. But this afternoon, Alicia let drop the infor nation that since he and I'd spent tours together on the Ridge I must mow him pretty well!" Susfe nodded meaningfully. "Sure?that's why I said you were tow a member in good standing of ny club!" she answered. Megan laughed a little. "What dub is that?" she wanted to know. "The Club of 'Why the devil loesn't somebody do something to ihut Alicia Stevenson up?' " an iwered Susie. "It's composed of iractically every man, woman and thild within a radius of ten miles of feasant Cfrove. Personally, I'd ike to see her with her throat cut rom ear to ear!" "Susie!" gasped Megan, between hock and pity for the girl whose iloodthirsty words were at such omical variance with her Dresden hina prettiness, her young, smooth lesh and shining blue eyes and [olden hair. "Oh, it won't happen, of course," aid Susie ruefully. "People like hat live to a ripe old age?and hen turn into hen's teeth! They ever die?or have accidents!" Megan put an arm about the slim boulders and gave Susie a little ug. "Well, don't let her get you own, Susie. After all, everybody sows what she's like." "Sure?and when she sticks that arbed tongue of hers into their wn affairs, they say, 'But of ourse, that's not true.' But when he's stabbing somebody else they ay, "Now, I wonder?' " Susie ointed out, with such truth that legan' could only agree with her iberly. For a little while they stood in ilence, both of them looking uneas y across the road and to the shab y little old cottage where lighted indows proved that Alicia was et jme. The cottage set well back ?om the road and there were a few ?ees surrounding it. It was a juare, boxlike bouse, never paint ea, so tnat its walls were a rough, dark gray of weathered drabnesa. But aince Alicia had come, she had painted the window trim and the corners of the house a rich deep green; there were green window boxes at the windows, and the place had taken on a rather surprised perkiness. "Oh, well?" said Susie at last, and heaving a sigh. "If I don't get on home, mother will have connip tion fits and upset dad so that his dyspepsia will be worse than ever ?and I would like to go to the school dance the Saturday after Thanksgiving." She said good night and went on along the road. A quarter of a mile farther on, she would come to the substantial, old-fashioned red brick house that was Pleasant Grove's finest home. Susie was the only child of Lawyer Bartlett and his wife, Maysie. The Bartletts were, next to the Burns, Pleasant Grove's most substantial citizens, and Mrs. Bartlett was not one to let the town forget that for a moment. There were times when Megan felt extremely sorry for Susie?and to night was one of those times. She sighed a little and went into the house, where Annie had supper al most ready to serve. Her father was waiting for her, very comfortable in his smoking jacket and slippers, provided with a new book (which had cost three dollars and a half, and which Me gan could have borrowed for him from the small, but good local li brary) so he was inclined to be genial. For which small favor, Megan told herself wearily, she was glad! r or the next two or three days, although she told herself she was being a fool, Megan deliberately avoided seeing Tom Fallon at all. He had been in the habit of stopping on his way home from school late in the afternoon to get milk, butter, and eggs which he bought from her. She had always been the one to give them to him, but for the next two or three days, she saw to it that she was somewhere else when he stopped by, and Annie, puzzled and watchful, waited on him. But on Saturday, she was in the chicken yard checking up on a set ting hen who was due to hatch her brood in a few days, when Tom came to the back fence and spoke to her. "Good morning," he said, almost warily. Megan turned, startled, and felt her face grow hot, even as she greeted him casually and matter of-factly. He waited for her to come to the fence before be said anxiously, "I've been a little worried?and deeply puzzled. "I've tried my darnedest to think what I could have done to upset you?" Megan laughed and hated herself because the laugh sounded artificial. "What nonsense, Professor!" "But you have avoided me, and I thought possibly something I said or did?" he began anxiously. Megan looked up at him and said quietly and frankly, "I see you haven't heard the news, Mr. Fal lon!" Puzzled, noting her use of the for mal prefix rather than the careless friendly "Professor" that was al most a nickname, he said quickly, "News? No, I am afraid I haven't?" "I feel very silly to be rela^hg it to you?but I know Pleasant Grove so well ? the attitude towards teachers ? especially towards the principal of the school?" She floun dered miserably and was silent Tom said quietly, "I think you had better tell me straight Miss MacTavish?" "There seems to be a rumor about that you and I have been meeting secretly on the Ridg*?1" She let him have it almost in a single breath. Tom stared at her as though he thought she had lost her mind. And then his face hardened and his eyes blazed and he said through his teeth, "Where in blazes?who'd try to start a lie like that?" Megan made a weary little ges ture. "It's too silly?and too?cheap to notice," she pointed out to him. "Except that since you are new Here and this is your first year?oh, I feel an utter fool about the whole thing. But I thought it would be better if we?well, we've done noth ing to start gossip, so it seems a little difficult to know bow to stop it?" Tom said sternly, "Who started this talk?" "Mrs. Stevenson," answered Me gan frankly. "She happened to be on the Ridge the afternoon we met by accident, and chose to believe that we were meeting there regu arly?and as secretly as possible?" "But that's nonsense?she could not possibly believe anything so? so?darned silly!" Tom exploded. "I don't think she really believes it, but she seems to get quite a lot of pleasure out of dropping little significant remarks." Puzzled, Tom said, "Who is this Mrs. Stevenson? I suppose she has a child in school, but I don't seem to recall the name, though it's not unusual, of course." OO BX OONTDIUED) JL - J"1 U IMPROVED m ,W"" UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL Sunday fi chool Lesson By HAPOLD L. LUNDQUIST. D. D. Of The Moody Bible Institute of Chicago. Bdcated by Western Newspaper Uniou. Letton for July 28 Um nUKta ud ?crtptur? luu ? I kcUd and copyrighted by International Council of Rcllfloua Education; uaed by perm lad 011. JESGS AND REVERENCE FOR SPIRITUAL VALUES LESSON TEXT?Exodus Ju l: LeylUcuJ 19:12. Ma to tew 9:33-31: Mark 7:5-9: J.M-M MEMORY SELECTION-But ?cek 7" Sr?l the kingdom of Cod. and hli rlghtcouaneas: and all thaaa thinga ahall ba addad unto yov.?Matthew I 23 Reverence is not an Incidental thinf which we may or may not choose to have in our lives. It is i vital. Reverence toward God and the things of God will result in re spect for all values in life. It will balance our thinking, speaking, and our acting toward our fallow men as well as toward our God. Our lesson calls for I. Reverence in Worship (Exod. 20:7; Lev. 19.12). ? The Lord rightfully expects from us a proper attitude toward him. If we worship him as we should, we shall find that other matters fall into their proper relationships. Essential in true worship is rev erence for the name of the Lord, for that name stands for all the qualities and characteristics of God. This means that there must be no taking of the name of the Lord "in vain." Our use of the word "vain" car ries the meaning of "useless, with out purpose or meaning." This is part of what is in mind in this com mandment, for the name of Je hovah is sacred and is to be rev erenced as standing for the eternal God. It is never to be used carelessly, or for a frivolous purpose. All too often we tell jokes or stories which have no real purpose or meaning ex cept to elicit a laugh, and in them we use the name of God. We all need to exercise care at that point. The Hebrew word translated "vain" has the additional meaning of "evil" and "falsehood." Men are so bold that they may even use the name of God to support themselves in a lie. God hears and will in no wise hold them guiltless. II. Reverence la Words (Matt. 9; 33-37). The Sermon on the Mount (so called), from which this portion of Scripture ia taken, ia difficult to in terpret to the satisfaction of all. Some disregard its evident applica tion to the kingdom and, attempting to apply it in the midst of an un godly generation, fall into such in consistency that they abandon the effort and regard the teaching of tha passage as impossible idealism. Others, who rightly interpret the passage as presenting the laws and principles of life in the kingdom of God, when it shall be fully set up on earth with Jesus aa King, fail to make any application of those prin ciples to life. This is also an un fortunate error. We who follow the Lord Jesus are not to swear by either things sa cred or things that might be called secular. Perhaps he has In mind that our lives should be so true that men will not need to have any kind of oath to be assured of our sin cerity and honesty. Swearing should be entirely be yond the pale with Christian men and women. It ia all too common with both men and women. One fears that this is true not only in the world, but among professed be lievers in Christ. Let us stop itl III. Reverence la Works (Mark i T:M). - [ words which do not issue in works , are worse than meaningless. They \ lead to acceptance of a formal re- , ligious system which is dangerous. , "It gives a sense of religious sat- , lsfaction which is very superficial, but of some apparent value. It car- , ries with it no h^gh ethical demands. It helps a man to feel religious with out being either ethical or moral. It does not probe or arouse. It . soothes and calms" (W. R. White). ! Who will deny that much of the 1 ( church life of our day has reached i ( that same sad state of "much ado . about nothing"?talk, talk, talk, and no honest disposition to deal with sin, or to seek holiness of life. The Lord hates it, and it is a vain exer cise as far as spiritual results are concerned. IV. Reverence In Will (Mark 8: 34-36). Here true reverence shows itself In recognizing that God's will is "good and acceptable and perfect" (Rom. 12:1). Following the Christ of Calvary calls for a willingness to say no to self (literslly, to deny any con nection with self-life) and to follow 1 through with him on the path of 1 shame and crucifixion. No self- c will and no compromise are per- . 1 missible to Christ's disciples. Foolishly to attempt to hold one's life for self is to lose it. That pain ful loss has left brokenhearted, wrecked lives all along the path of j man's history. But why should : anyone do it? ' Equally foolish is the hoe who j supposes thst this world has any- ( thing to satisfy the human soul. As timing the possibility of the impos- : sible?that is, attaining the whole r world as one's own possession?to ' , do so at the coat of one's soul would be an indescribably poor barcain. TRUMAN'S VETO WASHINGTON. ? Opinion* may differ aa to whether President Tru man was right in vetoing the price control bill, but he personally has not changed his mind a bit. When be arrived on Capitol Hill lor the Roosevelt memorial service, Tru man was greeted by his old friend, Kenneth Romney, sergesnt-at arms of the house. As they shook bands, the President quipped: ??I didn't know whether you folks would let me come up here today after reading my latest message." '?Oh, don't worry a boot that." ehnekled the sergeant-at-arms. "A lot of ud are glad yon vetoed that OPA bUl. And your veto message hit the nail right on the head. Ton did the right thing, in my opinion." "I couldn't do anything else," | replied the President with chin-set seriousness. ? ? ? EQUIPPING U. 8. SCHOOLS When a committee representing the leading national educational organizations tried to see War As sets Chief Lt. Gen. Edmund B. Gregory about getting surplus equipment for American schools, it received two brush-offs. Once Gregory had been "called out"; another time he was "too busy." However, the educators had no trouble seeing Gregory's boss, President Truman. Further, Tru man'a callers were definitely as sured that steps would be taken to provide schools, colleges and uni versities with more war surplus. They Informed the President that approximately t.Mt.M* American youths would seek education next fall in colleges alone. Of these, about flt,Ht will be World War H vets. Un less schools are given a "fair and reasonable" access to war surplus goads ? Ihbordtory. - classroom, cafeteria and kitch en facilities, electronic# equip ment, visual aids and other items ? a great many of the students cannot be accommo dated. . I "Education cannot afford to go | Into the commercial market for what we need ? and need drastical ly, Mr. President ? because we do not have the money," asserted one of them. * ? o CONSOLIDATING GERMANE Top secret talks between the Americans and the French have now started to weld western Ger many into one economic unit. The move may end up by uniting the U. S., British and French zones into one ~bnti-Russian sector, with the rest of Germany under the ham mer and sickle. The U. S. occupation zone in cludes most of the province of Wurttemberg and the northeastern quarter of Baden. The remainder of the latter province and a small western piece of Wurttemberg are under French control. ibis suggestion wmi iffmxl in principle by Maj. Gen. Loelus , Clay and LL Gen. Joseph Me Narney, highest-ranking C. 8. commanders in Europe, and tin war department ha* in structed General McNarney to ' inform the French that thle country will disco** the plan if France agrees to discuss, at the same time, internationalising the vital Ruhr basin. If the deal Is worked out, it will ( he an important step toward ending ( the economic confusion which exists , tinder the present set-up. The | United States, Britain and France , ire hoping to unscramble the cur- , rent mess, at least in western Ger- | many. Ruaaia so far has indicated no willingness to go along. ... , RESEARCH FOR FARMS Secretary of Agriculture Ander ?on and a delegation from the house agriculture committee re :ently called on President Truman to plug for the Flannagan ? Hope [arm research bill. However, not much plugging was necessary. Anderson opened the White House ?neeting by emphasising the impor tance of the leglilatiot, which is limed at finding new uses for [arm products and improving mar ceting. "The bill already has been called to my attention," the President said Immediately. "I have looked Into it and I am in (aver of appropriating whatever money is necessary." A primary aim of the bill is to do >way with such marketing bottle lecks as caused large acreages of tabbage and lettuce to be plowed inder recently in North Carolina. ? ? ? CAPITAL CHAFF Official state department broad asts to Russia in the Russian lan guage will begin Just as soon as he necessary staffs have completed heir training. . . . One of John Inyder's first acts as secretary of be treasury was to agree to the eiease of gold to Argentina. This [old was seized by the U. 8. gov rnment at the start of the war. Its eiease is a major victory for Presi lent Peron. . . . President Tns nan has decided to abamdoo his ilana for an Alaska vacation. llfJlom* *1044*1 Repofdofi h WASHINGTON By Walt* Stood WWCm*?M WKU Wuklmtum Bmttu liutrttW Utility Lobby Coo Handle Congress, but Not the People '"pHE powerful utility lobby in Washington has been quite suc cessful in bottling up measures which they consider inimical to the interests of the private utilities. Of course the most important of these are the bills which would set up regional authorities in the Missouri river basin and other rivers of the nation. Several of these bills have beet, bottled up in committee for months. But hearings reveal that out in the country where the utilities coma up against the' rank and file of the American people close to home, their batting average is almost nil. During the past year 100 cities and towns have changed from private to municipal ownership. We now have 3,371 incorporated towns in the nation served by publicly owned , electric systems. Of this number, and this is im portant, 2,827 towns are in the popu- , lation class of 5,000 and under, the Home Towns of the country. On top of this there are more than 800 Ru ral Electric Co-operatives operating ( outside incorporated towns and con gress has appropriated $550,000,000 to be spent in two years for the organization of new and extension of the lines of existing REA co operatives. Moreover, during this past year there is not one city or town on record which has gone back to private utility ownership. These figures put the utility lobby in the bush-league class, making strange indeed the influence they have upon the elected representa tives of these same people in the small towns and rural areas of the nation. __ r Cost of Current Lower Why are the people looking to ward municipal ownership instead of private ownership of utilities? The simple fact is that the records show every city with a municipal utility has a lower tax rate than cities of comparable size with private utili ties . . . that they have lower elec tric rates, that tney can afford to make more use of electricity as a result, for as the price of electricity has been reduced by municipal own ership, its use has been multiplied. Wider use of current permits fur ther rate reductions and consequent ly still more use of electricity. According to the testimony in these hearings, however, the folks in our small towns and even in our cities have only scratched the sur face in the use of electricity as a means of better living. For in stance, in IMS the national average of electric consumption in the coun try was 1,225 kilowatt hours per res ident consumer, while in Canada where municipal ownership has been in vogue for many, many years, the consumption runs more than 1,000 kilowatt hours per consumer. Contained in the testimony is acrid denunciation of the Tennessee Valley authority, and yet the same testimony shows that when private jtilities have lowered their rates to neet municipal competition they Save invariably shown higher net earnings. This was true when the Georgia Power company lowered Its rates to meet TV A competition and experienced the highest net income the following yesr In the history it their company. Many samples I were given where this same condi tion held true. U ? a Down in Mississippi at Tupelo, or instance, the first town to get rVA power, folks there are using nore than 2,000 kilowatt hours per consumer, almost twice the national iverage. These higher averages ire true all through the TVA area, ind at lower rates than ever were Ireamed of in the days of private nonopoly of electric utilities. In many sections of the country, irivate utilities are now attempt ng to choke off or eliminate REA o-oper stives by building spite lines nd cutting rates for consumers who rere refused private service until tEA promised to serve them. Claude Wickard, REA administra or here in Washington, warned that We are facing a bolder and per aps a more desperate opposition rom private utilities at this time han REA has ever before expert need. This opposition extends from ream-skimming spite line activities 1 areas laid out for development y co-operatives, to the maintaining if a strong lobby in Washington. "A national advertising campaign i the weekly and daily press, in na ionally circulated magazines and on he radio networks is being carried ut. State legislatures and regula ory bodies are being flooded with itility proposals for various restric ive measures to be applied to the tEA program," Mr. Wickard con I It would seem, however, that with irowth of municipal utilities and the IEA in the home towns and rural i re as, this lobby is only affecting nembers of congress, not the peo 3 1 Pegged Lawn Chair Easily Taken Down WTTMM 292 REMOVE PUft TO STORE PKCtEfU* M 1 I 9 ? ? ? THIS chair has such smart lines that it may be used in any in formal room as well as out of doors. It is made with simple cuts of the hand saw from stock widths of lumber. The tides, the seat and the back are separate sections which are put together and held rt?id with pegs. Remove the pegs and you have four flat pieces. ? ? ? 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July 25, 1946, edition 1
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