Page Ten TRSPECTIVES EPISODES IN THE PERPETRATION OF A DASTARDLY CRIME Continued from Page 9 and powerful. Finally George turned and walked out of the dance hall. With a look of angry but satiated pride Catherine turned to Jack Bishop and said, "If he gets any more wise ideas 'ike that you'd better tell him to keep them to himself." Episode Three . FTER HE WENT AWAY to college Jack necessarily saw George only at intervals of vacations, and even then not very often. However, he thought considerably of George and Catherine, particularly because he at one time tried to write a short story about them. The theory he had developed concerning the reason for their relationship was not very thorough: he said merely that "Catherine's fascination for George was the same as the fascination of the tongue of a snake for a rabbit." In view of the theory he was not surprised to find George and Catherine together again. One of his infrequent encounters with them had been his last, in the preceding summer, when he had met them in a Vountry night club called "The Black Cat." It was on a Saturday night, and Jack had stopped there because he en- joyed the atmosphere of spurious revel- ry, and also because he had nothing else to do. He watched them for some time before he caught George's eye, noticing that they were speaking to each other only rarely. He finally sat with them re- luctantly, already formulating excuses so that he could leave, because he was afraid of the possibility of unpleasant- ness between them, particularly since the agent of liquor would make the possibility of unpleasantness so much greater. He was not sure why he wished specifically to avoid such unpleasant- ness, because, since he fancied himself as a writer seeking experience, it might have proved interesting. It was George who spoke first. "Well, Jack, how are things going in Ohio? Isn't that where you are?" "I'm out in Indiana, George," Jack said, "but I'm getting along fine out there. How about yourself?' "Oh, me? Fine. Fine and dandy. Me and the wife here . . . " Jack looked at him with sudden interest. "No fooling?" Jack said. "No, we aren't married," George laughed. "That's just a way of speaking. No, we aren't married. Are we, Cath- erine?" A look of annoyance crossed Catherine's face. "No, George, we aren't married." Jack was somewhat surprised at the new glibness of George's conversation, but thought that perhaps it was because he had been drinking. At any rate he though of this, along his previous line of thinking, as "the complete departure from George-ness." He noticed that Catherine was very quiet, and even somewhat morose, and that she was drinking very quickly. As the evening progressed, however, she spoke oftener, but not pleasantly. George, in turn, was becoming quieter. During the evening Jack wnt into the bar in the next room to get a pack- age of cigarettes, and was surprised to hear someone cal his name. It proved tp be Tom Heller, the milk truck driver. "Hello, Tom," Jack said, with false heartiness, "how's it going?" "As well as I could expect, I guess . . I suppose your old man's told you that I still haul out there by your place." "Yes," Jack said. "He was just telling me today, as a matter of fact." "You have time for a beer?" Tom said. "Sure would like to, but I guess I have to get back to the table. I'm in there with George Albertson and Cath- erine Shepherd. Tom looked at him quickly. "Yeah, I guess George is a pretty good buddy of yours . . . I have a pretty good idea that George is still pretty mad at me for that time ov'er at the high school dance. That's too bad, ecause if I'd known he was going to get mad I would- n't have done anything. Christ knows she isn't worth it." "Just don't seem to get along, do they?" Jack said. "Let me tell you, that boy's making a big mistake, that's all. He's been suck- ing around for almost three years now, and doesn't even get a look in, where I know guys who make time with her all the time . . . I guess it's just his tough tit, though. If he was smart he'd forget about her. I figure she's got it in for him some way, at least that's the way she acts. She tells other guys that she doesn't like him, but still she lets him hang around." As he sat down at the table Jack heard Catherine saying, "Georgie-Por- gie is the dangerousest man. I opened the dash compartment in his car to- night and there was a gun in it." Jack remembered that George often carried a .22 caliber automatic pistol in his car, and that he was very proud of his skill with it. "I had it out in the woods this after- noon, shooting squirrels," George said, annoyed. "Oh, come on now, Georgie. 'Fes up that you've just got it to shoot big bad mans who makes eyes at poor little me." To Jack, George said, "I don't carry it for that, Jack. I want you to under- stand that."He spoke with a look of al- most childish seriousness. "I just had it along to shoot squirrels." "Oh, George," Catherine said, "do you think anyone cares if you carry that gun in your car. You coudn't shoot any- thing even if you wanted to." Angrily, George said, "Oh, I couldn't. eh? . . . I think I've taken about enough of that stuff from you." He stood up abruptly and went into the next room. Jack and Catherine sat quietly for a few minutes, until Catherine said, "Why don't you go in there and bring him back, Jack. He'll probably just stay in there and drink too much." At the bar, George said. "Oh, she wants me to come back, eh. I knew she'd come crawling as soon as I went away. By God, I will come back, but I'll show her a thing or two." George came back to the table, but only momentarily. He took his chair and set it a few feet out on the dance floor, which was near them, and sat down, in conspicuous view of everyone. "Oh, what does he think he's doing now," said Catherine. "Sometimes he does the craziest things." Jack didn't an- swer, but watched George, astonished. "Well, he can stay out there," Catherine said. "I'm not going to ask him back." The music had started again, and the floor filled rapidly with dancers, most of whom looked at George with good- natured smiles. George himself was grin- ning fatuously, and tapping his foot with the music. "Oh, look at him," Catherine said. Louder, she said to George, "Oh, come back here, George. You're just making a fool of yourself." George cupped his hand behind his ear and leaned forward. "Hey, what's that? What's that you say?" he said with exaggerated humour. And today, which is Sunday, Jack is reaing the LUnsdal Daily Intelligencer in bed,'which is his custom on Sunday mornings. He finds it mildly amusing, just as he always has, even when he reads the headline of the following cur- ious news story, but his amusement does not last long. The headline, typical of the headlines in the Intelligencer, reads: "LOCAL GIRL WAS FOUND MUR- DERED NEAR THE ESTATE OF J. E. BEAN." The subhead continues: "Body Was Found In Drainage Ditch By The Caretaker Of The Estate," and another subhead, "Town Has Been Aroused By The Perpetration Of This Dastardly Crime But The Police Force Caniot Lo- cate Murderer." The story itself proceeded: "The body of Catherine Shepherd, popular and at- tractive member of Linsdale's unmar- ried set, was found yesterday at 9 a.m. in a field adjoining the estate of the noted philanthropist, J. E. Bean, by Cornelius Schmidt, caretaker of the es- tate. Miss Shepherd's death was caused by a bullet entering the brain from the left temple, is the opinion of Dr. Ed- win G. Nye, county coroner. "The news of their daughter's death came as a distinct shock to Mr. and Mrs. The Soviet Power Hewlett Johnson Modern Age Books Galileo was dragged before the Holy Inquisition for suggesting that the earth is not the center of the universe but revolves about the sun. The Dean of Canterbury has been pilloried by the largest organs of the press for writing a book in praise of the Soviet Union and for suggesting that England and the United States might learn a great deal from the success and errors of that country. With the primary purpose in mind of promoting better relations be- tween Moscow, London and Washington, the author is fully aware of the enorm- ity as well as the importance of this task. He wishes to dispel many of the illusions about the "socialist sixth of the world" fostored by professional journalists like Eugene Lyons of by the sinister hack Jan Valtin (alias Richard Krebs, Gestapo agent). On page 9, he points out Lyons' own admission of fact- juggling and forgery and asks if we can believe anything that this self-confessed mis-reporter writes today. On page 280 he answers an English critic of his book with quotations from the personal ex- perience, from the reports of friends and scientific men who have worked in Rus- sia, and from statistics which he has discovered by personal research to be authentic. "I confess, frankly," he says, "that I am more at home in the com- pany of experts like the engineer I quote than with unscientific journalists like Mr. Lyons." He does not consider the Soviet Union a Utopia nor Russians the paragons of virtue, but so much has been written painting the black side that a wholly distorted picture is ob- tained. The Dean endeavors to paint the good side which he finds far more im- portant and valuable to us. His approach is, first of all, personal. He describes his middle-class back- ground, his work as a mechanic, and his apprenticeship in the Church. Through contacts with the wealthy factory own- ers of Manchester as well as with the laborers, he grew to distrust, he says, that system which might provide plen- ty for all, but does not. which is essen- tially inmoral and denies those values which he, as a Christian, believes to be mest necessary. After several visits to the Soviet Union, the Dean became convinced that communiSm was not only Frank E. Shepherd, who live at 39 Ridgeview Ave. Although Miss Shep- herd had been missing from her home for almost three days, her parents had not been alarmed, since this was not the first time she had been away from home for short periods without, their know- ledge. "Chief of Police Fred Ziegler bent every effort today to apprehend the murderer of Miss Shepherd, but con- fessed that a difficult task confronted him because there were at present no clues unearthed. However, Chief Ziegler said that the force had many promising leads to work on.. When he finishes this Jack gets out of bed and stands at the window in his pajamas, running his fingers through his hair. In a sense it is death which has made him sad, but it is not the death of Catherine Shepherd. He is sad because he knows who committed this dastardly crime, as you do, and because he recognizes this as the end of the cycle of the destruction of a personality, which, in a very real sense, is a death. compatible with those ideals which he held, but an economic change in society such as he saw taking place absolutely necessary for the realization of those ideals. "It has struck the death-blow," he says, "to an immoral order in which we have tacitly acquiesced." Two fields of inquiry occupy most of the Dean's interest. These are science and the care and education of children. Perhaps the most exciting chapters in his book are devoted to the recent dis- coveries of Soviet agronomists and tech- nicians. Science has been encouraged and allowed to expand until now, unham- pered by the profit motive and industrial rivalry, Soviet experimentators have far outstripped their co-workers in other lands. The electrification of the outlying provinces has proceeded at astonishing speed from remote Kazakstan to Tad- jikistan and Armenia. Whole new cities have sprung up over night. Magnito- gorsk, in the Ural Mountains, settled 60,000 workers, built a dam, hospitals, schools and a steel industry with the most powerful blast furnaces in the world over the period of a few winter months. The scientist has become the hero of the hour. As for the care of children, the Dean describes in detail his visits to children's nurseries, homes, playgrounds, museums, and theatres. Everywhere he saw the child as the first concern of the govern- ment, not, as in Germany or Italy, to be raised as cannon-fodder, but to be raised as useful working citizens with the inalienable right from cradle to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. College students, considered as respon- sible and useful citizens like industrial workers, are paid a fixed wage! The expenses of education to the individual are few, the opportunities limitless. There is no class discrimination and no racial discrimination in education. The experiences of Paul Robeson and his young son demonstrate the new equality and its accompanying freedom, the Dean points out. If there is any fault to be found with this book, it is in the Epilogue, which at- tempts to summarize Soviet foreign pol- icy from September 1939 through 1940. The analysis, while competent, is too brief for the average reader and needs to be supplemented with outside ma- terial. - E. G. Burrowis