S o u th ern O regon News Review. T hursday, N ovem ber 27. 1947
FICTION CORNER
MASQUERADE
By ESTHER AND WARREN HAI L
lips opened in a sound
less exclamation. Dred! Swiftly,
J in ANET'S
one breath-taking instant, all her
ment. "You're a handsome little fel
low, at that," he admitted grudging
ly. “ How old are you?"
" I ’ ll be live tomorrow.“ Geoff
boasted. "T hat’s why Daddy's going
to meet us here. He's going to buy
me a fire engine, the biggest one in
the biggest store in New York.”
"F iv e ," Cummings r e f l e c t e d
aloud. " I must say. Jan, that isn't
very flattering. You waited just
about long enough for the ink to dry
on the decree. What's your name,
son?”
“ I ’m Geoffrey G. Huxley J r.,"
Geoff said.
I where she belonged with Geoff and
the man she knew now she loved.
"You've taken aw fully good care
of Jan.” she heard Cummings say.
"She never looked better, not even
when she was Mrs. Cummings."
"W ell, we try to keep her happy,"
Huxley responded, smiling wurmly
at Janet. "D on't we. Geoff?"
"They are good to me.” Janet
said, and her voice was suddenly
husky. Geoff slipped his hand into
hers. "How about my present?" he
wanted to know.
"True enough,” Cummiggs put in.
" I mustn't get in the way of a Are
engine. And I 'l l leave you. sir, to
guard an old flame. Goodbv, Janet."
He pressed her hand a moment and
was gone.
Janet turned to Huxley. " I'm
sorry," she said wearily. " I didn't
intend to . . . to . . ."
"To pretend you were Geoffrey's
mother instead of his governess,"
he finished for her. " I realize that.
Janet. But if you only knew how
mingled memories of Dred Cum
mings merged and rushed to meet
him as he came across the Waldorf
lobby. He was older — six years
older, Janet reckoned quickly—and
his face was burgeoning slightly
with the subtle promise of another
chin. But he still wore his custom-
made charm as debonarily as his
well-tailored clothes.
Janet flicked down her glove and
looked at her watch. Three twenty-
five. This certainly was no time to
be renewing the past. She leaned
back in her chair and turned as
though to speak to the small boy
standing at her elbow. Perhaps
Dred wouldn't recognize her. Per
haps he wouldn’t even see her and
Geoff.
“ Janet, light of my life !”
Somehow she managed a casual
smile. "Gracious," she said lightly,
" it must be old-home week. How
are you. Dred?"
He grasped her outstretched hand
and held it, for a moment, between
both of his. The Cummings' tech
nique. She could remember how
that ardent pressure had thrilled her
the first time they met, and how
hollow it had seemed the day they
parted, the day she was leaving for
Reno.
“ I swear." he said, "you’ re pret
tier than ever — if that’s possible.
But of course, dolls never age, do
they — particularly Dresden dolls
Somehow she managed a casual sm ile. "G racious,” she said
lightly, “ it must be old-home week.”
with spun-gold hair and the bluest
china eyes in the world. And that's
Cummings whistled softly. "TH E long I ’ve been pretending exactly
what you were, you know. The little
Geoffrey G. Huxley? Standard Oil that. Besides, if I were a little boy
Dresden doll I brought to life.”
Huxley? You did pretty well, Jan,” who had been motherless since the
" I t was kind of you,” Janet told
Janet nodded. Yes, she'd done day he was born. I'm sure I'd like a
him. "L e t there be life and there
was life. I should be eternally grate pretty well, up to now. But any m in mother for a birthday present al
most as well as a fire engine. Per
ute. . . . She rose quickly.
fu l."
“ I mustn’ t keep you Dred. It's haps. If you approve, we can give
She wasn't bitter about it now.
Not very bitter, anyhow. But he been nice seeing you again, almost Geoff both.”
must never guess her desolation like having a lock of your hair.
when she first realized that other I . . ." Her voice trailed off. She Stassen at B est
women were as indispensable to m ight have known. Geoffrey G.
Dred Cummings as his brushes and Huxley Sr., big, hearty and peren
O n L abor Issues
palette. He must never know his nially rumpled, was striding toward
memory had left a pall that not even them, an eager grin on his tanned
W HERE I STAND
little Geoff’ s sunny affection nor his face.
By Harold E. Stassen
father’ s kindness could dispel.
"Hello, son.” He stooped and
(D oubleday— 205 p. p.— $2)
“ Come, come, my dear,” he was tousled the boy’s hair affectionately.
By Bill Schoentgen
saying. "T hat’s hardly fair. I wish “ Hope I haven’t kept you waiting
In
an
age of quasi-literate po liti
you'd pose for me again. Just once. long,” he said to Janet. She shook
Do you know, since our divorce I ’ve her head and raised her hands in a cians, Mr. Stassen, the determined
hardly been able to touch a brush to slight, helpless gesture. “ Mr. Cum candidate for Republican presiden
tia l nomination, has tugged at the
mings—Mr. Huxley.”
canvas.”
"Except for that one-man exhibi
“ Dred Cummings?” Huxley asked bootstraps of his social conscious
ness and raised him self above the
tion at the Anderson Galleries,” with obvious interest.
hurly-burly of the vote-getting mob
Janet said wryly, "and those mu
The other man nodded. "T hat’ s to the rare level of a forthright po
rals at the fa ir and . .
right. Your wife has told you about litic a l thinker who takes as his ken
"Oh, I suppose I've managed to me, I suppose.”
his own national society.
struggle along." he agreed. “ But
Huxley glanced at Janet's strained
The former governor of Minne
how about you?” For the first time face. “ The papers have been fu ll of
sota
attempts no probing into the
he noticed Geoff. "Why, Jan! You those murals of yours,” he said
intricacies of foreign policy and
h a v e n 't. . . this isn't . . .”
easily.
makes no benes about adm itting it.
Janet hesitated. The flush on her
Janet stood very still, listening to His thesis is that once a sound, for
cheeks deepened. “ This is my job,” their conversation, watching their ward-looking domestic organization
she said, reaching out and hugging faces. Dispassionately she noted has been achieved, an equally con
Geoff close to her side. "D id you Dred's conceit, his pomposity He structive foreign policy may be
. expect me to go into a convent?”
was, suddenly, a stranger who worked out from that basis. This is
Cummings studied the boy a mo- should be on bis way. leaving her not to say that the lack of an ex
pression on foreign policy is not felt
in Mr. Stassen's book. It is one of
the shortcomings.
More important. Stassen’s lethar
gic estimate of foreign policy, his
relegation of it to a secondary posi
tion, his failure even to touch upon
the voluminous subject of foreign
aid, all would seem to indicate a
preference for a kind of tolerant,
S o lu tio n in N e x t Is s u e
Horizonal
elastic nationalism. Whether or not
this is the right tim e for the emer
1 High
2 3 ‘
1
gence of a strong nationalistic phi
5
6
4
7 8
9
10 11
mountain
losophy in the United States is a
4 Band of
topic which is being subjected to
12
13
14
leather
universal debate. The man from
9 Female swine
Minnesota consistently refrains, in
15
12 Through
16
17
his book, from entering the discus
13 Goddess
sion. It is an omission which un
of peace
18 19
20
doubtedly
w ill be brought piercingly
21
14 Pastry
to his attention by his more antag
w
15 Likewise
22 23
i
1
24
25
26 27 1 onistic colleagues.
16 Tower on a
But it is in the area of labor prob
flying field
lems
and labor legislation that the
1
to indicate
28
29
30
w rite r is most confident of his
the course
ground. In a single monolithic chap
17 Music: high
Ü 33
31
32
ter he dissects and analyzes the
18 Kind of
lettuce
varying status of the United States
i
w 36
34
” 1
35
20 Scandinavian
labor movement from 1920 to 1947,
literary works
and nails down with a hammer of
38
1
22 Sod
39
undeceptive realism its inevitable
40
24 Unit
relation to the prosperity and sound
25 To discharge
ness of the entire economy.
41
42
43
28 Tierra del
Stassen offers his theories on la-
Fuego Indian
b,or in the form of the testimony
46
45
47
44
*8 49 50
29 Shack
which he presented before the sen
30 Face
ate labor committee in February of
51
52
downward
53
this year, during the period when
31 A it
congress was preparing the legisla
54
S3 River in
55
56
tion which ultim atly resulted in the
Scotland
Taft-Hartley act.
34 Perfume
That law, he believes, "w ill be the
obtained from
No.
42
foundation
for a fair, just and well-
flowers
balanced labor policy in America.”
35 Demure
Vertical
In total, Stassen approves of the
33 Sm all, plump
42 Means of
36 Samoan
horse
act. Specifically, he is opposed to
ingress
mudworm
1 Likely
34 Land measure 43 Zone
three portions of the law as it
38 To check
2 Constellation
35 Trigonometri 44 To droop
stands: (1) The provision making it
39 Short watch
3 To postpone
cal function
45 Before
unlawful for a labor organization to
chain
4 Tastes
37 Bone
47 Pouch
contribute to election funds; (2) the
40 Plays a part
5 Attempt
39 Rage
49 Head organ
non-Communist affidavit rule; (3)
6 To yield
41 Haile
40 Molten lava
50 To acquire
the "ultim atum ” stipulating that ex
7 Positive pole
Selassie’s
A n s w e r to P u i t l e N a m b e ! I I
8 To hang
isting union shop contracts cannot
title
9 By fits and
be renewed unless and u n til an elec
43 Sheep’s cry
starts
tion is held and a m ajority of all
44 Ocean
10 To lubricate
employees votes in the affirmative.
46 To ascend
11 Moist
For the rest of his platform. Stas
48 Lim b
19 Belonging to
sen turns to the issues of taxation
51 Skill
21 Unsubstantial
(with which he deals from the stand
52 Relating
22 Toward
point of "dynam ic capital"), hous
to sound
23 To coalesce
53 S trin g
ing, survival of small business and
24 Not at home
the paucity of medical care and hos
akaline
26 Unskilled
solution
27 Symbol (or
pital facilities. To each of these he
tellurium
54 Teamster’s
brings an application of the classic
cry
29 Pronoun
Republican theory of laissez faire
55 To set
30 To work at
and damns heartily all efforts to
upright
steadily
give the federal government greater
5« Still
32 N arrow way
control in those fields.
Serie* H i t
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CHOICE of CHAMPIONS
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P LO W IN G MATCHES 1 \ <-t
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T h a t ’s w h y w in n e rs in the th re e big
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Firestone C ham pion G round Grips w ill
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Specify Firestone Champions when you
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Limn to I be Voice ol Firestone
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10«
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Nam e
•
lUJsi
Ofllf