Ligonier Banner., Volume 78, Number 39, Ligonier, Noble County, 5 October 1944 — Page 2
==2 L OVERBOARD S=o S _ 2 |'‘~§ g w i - . ’«::‘ :- :,,‘... SRR i oT - ” - :“”' 3 “." ',~\:;;’“ e R e GEORGE 7. WORTS oA Sel S T i & WNU.RELEASE eSS s
, THE STORY THUS FAR: Zorie Corey, i who hates herself for being so meek, is i railroaded into taking a job she does not | want, assisting Admiral Duncan write his . memoirs. She is in love with Paul Dun- ; can, the admiral’'s grandson. Aboard the i steamship Samoa, en route to Hawalii, . she dances with Steve, Paul’'s brother. Paul is furious, and warns Zorie against . 'him, ‘claiming that Steve is a Nazi spy. On returning to her stateroom after tak- . Ing dictation Zorie discovers that her notebook is missing. While alone on deck a brutal hand is clamped over her mouth, she is scooped up and thrown overboard. She avoids the propellers ' and manages to catch a life ring which some sailor has tossed into the sea.
. ~vw .... CHAPTER X @ ~ “The nurse told me not to disturb you for a while. I'd like to see you as soon as possible. It’s very important, are you alone?” “I will be,” said Zorie. She reached for her dressing gown and said to Amber: “You won’t mind going out for a while. My fiance wants to talk things over.” o
There was droll amusement in Amber’s “Ah, yes! Your fiance! Not at all, my dear.” S :
Zorie was sitting at the dressing table, thoughtfully considering Amber’s array of cosmetics, when Paul knocked. She opened the door. He came in and closed it. s
She half lifted her arms, expecting that he would seize her and hug and kiss her out of sheer relief that she was alive.
"He looked her over quickly. He nodded jerkily, “You were lucky,” he said. “‘You certainly were lucky. Are you sure you're all right?” 3 “Yes,"” Zorie said. “I’'m ajl right.” She was surprised that her feeling about Paul hadn’t changed. Everything else had changed, but-she was still in love with Paul. With a little working over, Paul would be satisfactory. : : 28 “Well,” Paul said in a businesslike way, “I’ve just had a long talk with the captain—with the doctor and the chief officer sitting in. This is pretty serious, Zorie.” S “Yes,” said Zorie, “I suppose it isn’t an everyday occurrence.” -'*
She realized she had to make-a decision. Her sole desire just now was to find out who had thrown her overboard. It occurred to her that it might be unwise to tell Paul that she had been thrown overboard. She" was sure that the only people on the ship who knew were Amber, her unele, and PierreiSavoyard. It would be impossible to prove that one of them had thrown her overboard. It would; she decided, be wiser to wait until she had talked with Steve,
- “I have it all fixed up with the captain,’”” Paul said. . ‘““The 'whole episode will be forgotten—nathing will be_said. = The incident will be elosed 2> e :
"“I'm afraid I don’t understand,” Zorie interrupted. ' 1v oo . *You see,” he explained, ‘‘a thing like this is very unpleasant for the steamship company.” . . v | ~ “It’'s rather unpleasant for ‘the victim, too,”’ Zorie pointed out. “You don’t understand,” said
Paul. “This could easily cause a great deal of trouble for us all "The mainland and the Honolulu papers, if they picked up the truth—"’ . ““The truth?’’ Zorie stopped him.. Paul looked somewhat grim. ‘“You see, Zorie, even while the ship was being put about to pick you up, and - since then, the captain and the chief officer have been questioning the crew, - Several of the crew say you were drunk. You were seen stag- -~ gering about the ship.” “I see,” Zorie said dreamily. “I fell overboard because I was drink-
ving."-’ »‘2 ; . “Well, isn't it obvious? Didn’t. you?n : ; ‘ “Will that get into the papers?’’. Zorie asked. . ; ~ ““Certainly not! That's what I've been arranging. Everything’s all fixed. The story had already been wirelessed to Honolulu and the mainland that it was a prank. Someone: dared” you to” walk the rail.” | You ‘did. ~You slipped.” You—"" . % [ “Who dared me?*"* Zorie asked. + Paul made a gesture of impa“tience. “No namé had to be given. “No' one knows. One of the passensgers. That clears you ofényg the’ wrong kind of notoriety, and it ab.;Solves the company of any'tgsnog;, jponsi-- ' bility. You see,-in a case like: this; there’s often apt to be a lawsuit.”” . *“You mean, the company might “sue me?” = ad et R o $-“No, dear.” You might sye.the. company." % S 2 gg : fi‘;‘_} “Paul,” Zorie said, “you’re wonderful. You think of \everyu:%i:{‘ #] even dropped in on the wire:
less man. They publish the ship‘board newspeper, you know.: I gave -them a_rather amusing account of it —for the passengers’ benefit—and to. plug any nasty rumors that might be going around. Now, all you have to do is sign this.” : ‘~'He held out a typed slip and his ~fountain ‘pen, uncapped. “What is it?” i ! 7> “A release. It absolves the coms pany of all responsibility.” - . Zorie signed it. Paul waved the release, to dry her signature. = - __“By the way,” he said, “my brothSaie i . - L
Stevel’ Zorie cried. . - ' “‘Just about the time you fell overboard he was taken with an attack, of acute indigestion. That was*why the doctor didn't take care of -‘you: He was busy pumping out Steve’s stomach.” ;
"“How ill is he?’’ Zorie gasped. m'th, he’ll be all right in the morng.” o ;. ““Does he get these attacks often?”’ *“No, but he should—the way he drinks. I don’t want to sound like a reformer, darling, but you do know how I feel about liquor. I hope you’ve had your lesson. I hope you’ll never touch the stuff again as long as you live.” . ' There was a familiar expression in Paul’s eyes. It usually went with one of his lectures on the importance of being earnest. “Zorie,”” he said, ‘‘you are still under the influence of those drinks, and I'm afraid you don’t quite know what you’re saying.” : B “I’'m saying,”” Zorie said gently, “you’d better stop being so grim—and you’d better start stopping awfully soon. I am not the girl you knew, Paul. I am a changed person. I'm not meek any more. I'am a woman who intends to fight for her rights.”
“Good night, dear,” Paul said hastily, as he moved to the door. ‘“You need sléep. Sleep as late as you can.’ Good night.” -
““But . . .” Zorie began with determination”! Then she realized that she must be patient with Paul. There were many people with whom she hadn’t the slightest intention of being patient, but Paul was not one of them. She adored Paul. She would see fo it that he lost his grimness and his stuffiness. Then Paul would be perfect.
She went to bed. She was almost asleep when Amber let herself in. Amber opened and closed the door so carefully that it didn’t make a
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sound. She undressed noiselessly. She took the greatest pains not to disturb the girl who had slapped her face. . :
~ ‘The telephone awoke her at a little before nine. Amber reached for it,, answered it, and handed it to Zorie, saying, ‘“lt's for you, darlillkg.," . ; : : 5
It was the admiral. He hoped he hadn’t waked her. He hoped she was feeling well after her experi-
- “Dosyou suppose you could drop .around sometime this morning?’’ he asked. ‘‘Steve.is very anxious to talle t 0 VOIS o L Tl
‘“How is Steve?” e L “‘He’ll be all right. Steve is pretty. tough, you know.” , ‘‘Was it something he ate?’’ Zorie aaSked. et o s s
ae ‘The doetoricouldn’t say. Il tell him you'll be around as’ soon .as you’'ve had a bite of breakfast— Rml “‘All right,"” said Zorie. She would see Steve when she got around to it. She wanted to do some thinking first. And there were other things she wanted'td do.© * . She' went ' to ‘the “beauty parlor. ~She had ‘her hair washed, waved -and arranged in: ‘a becoming new way. The beauty operator was clevknew just what Zorie wanted and she knew just how to help her. Zorie “bought rouge and lipstick and the beauty ‘operator helped her apply. them tellingly. s “Now,"” the girl said, when Zorie -paid and tipped her, ‘“you are beautiful, Miss Corey. You.really are.” .. Zorie did not have to be told, but it was glcei anyway.. The mirror ‘told her“everything. But it wasn’t just the new hair-do, the rouge, the lipstick-— It-was-something new in her face.’ There had been'an’ indefinable: softness: before—a vagueness. Her chin line seemed clearer and bolder. But the great change was in her eyes. They were clear and bright and sparkling, They had assurance, They had arrogance. | She went fo the admiral's syite | and knocked on the door, not with ‘her old timidity, but with assurance. | She had two :lovely battles on her hands beyond that door, and they weren't going to be Battles of Ma-
THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, IND.
nila .Bay; they were going to be Jutlands. .. o~ & A
‘The admiral opened the door. He was smiling absently. He looked at her. He stared. His smile became tremulous. It faded. It returned in the form of a delighted grin. “Zorie!” he cackled. “Why! 1 hardly knew you, my dear! And after what you went through last night! You are lovely!: Maybe I'd better fall off this ship myself!” ‘““Where is Steve?”’ “On -the lanai.”
Zorie walked out into the lanai, with the admiral trotting along behind her. ° ! :
Steve, in a white toweling dressing gown, was stretched out in one of the long bambeo chairs. - His pallor was shocking, . His eyes were pale. He looked really ill. -
He grinned slowly and said, ‘‘Hello, glamour girll” . ) - The admiral said, *“Zorie, do you think you’re going to feel like working today2?”’ T e
““Yes,” Zorie answered, “I feel very much like working today.” “I wanted to get on with the Battle of Manila Bay, then I thought we'd" go back and finish up those clt;apters on my first years in Annapolis.” Ny . :
For a moment, her resolve faltered. Habit—that detested old habit of meekness—made her pliant. But the wavery feeling passed. “I’'m sorry,” Zorie said. “I’'m sorry to let you waste all that time. If you want me to help you with your memoirs, Admiral, the chapters on Annapolis and everything, perhaps, but a short chapter on Manila Bay go overboard.” il Lo - “Now, wait a minute—"" the admiral began. Ly S “I mean it,” she said. “‘Steve was right yesterday. You’re the only person alive who can tell the story of the Duncan family. From the little I've heard of it, it’s a fascinating story, a really wonderful story. If you want me to help you on a book—that’s going to be the book.” ;| ~° She heard a chuckle from the bamboo chair. ' 5o
The admiral’s eyes were fiery. His obstinate chin was unusually prominent. His right fist was clenched. With it he banged on the table. ‘“Nobody is going to tell me how I’'m going to write my book!” he shrilled. “Not even you, Zorie. No, sir! I write my own book my own way—or there won’t be a book!” “Very well,” Zorie said serenely: *“There won’t be a book. As a matter of fact, there isn’t any portion of any book. All of yesterday’s dictation—"’ She lifted her hands in a gesture indicative of emptiness. _You didn’t destroy it!” the admiral gasped. :
“*Gone!” said Zorie. : “Good girl!’* ‘said Steve. : " “I’m sorry, Admiral,” Zorie said, “but that’s how it is.” =
Admiral Duncan glared at her. “All right!” he snapped. “If you say so, Zorie—all right! But only because I have the utmost respect for your opinion! Not because I agree with you for a moment—hm??” *“And that,” Steve said languidly; “is the first time since grandmother died that anybody has backed down the old fire-eater.” He strode out of the room. A moment later he came back almost running. His face, usually so red, looked very pale. He was panting when he stopped beside them. ¢ ‘‘Honolulu: and ‘Pearl Harbor,” he said breathlessly, ‘‘were bombed this morning! Japanese planes flew in from a carrier! They’ve destroyed our planes at Hickam, Wheeler and Kaneohe! We're helpless! The radio says they’re coming over Shafter again in new waves!” -
The road into Uluwehi E Kai ran along the edge of a purple-red cliff beside tall ripe sugar-cane with sil-ver-bronze plumes, then it dipped rather abruptly into the palm trees which fringed the cove. Zorie caught a glimpse of a golden beach on which waves broke. in a snowy smother and -of pale green water deepening to dazzling blue offshore. Through the palms she -caught glimpses of a,group of houses with flat blue tile roofs and an immense garden against the sheer mountain wall in back. The mountain side was a shivering purple flame of bougainvillea. .And she recalled that Uluwehi E Kai meant ‘“a profusion of growing things by the sea.” . It was a sparkling morning, golden and blue. Schooner clouds ghosted along an indigo horizon. n
Zorie unpacked in the charming airy guest room to which a Japanese maid had taken her, then wandered out under the banyan trees and into the garden—a fragrant jungle of strange, exotic flowers, = She hoped that Steve would join her and tell her what some of the flowers were, but she presently saw him and the admiral walking briskly ‘along -another garden path toward the garage, . .~ = .. ¢ ' They passed within a dozen feet of her, but the largest ferns she ad ‘éver beheld screened them, gge ‘heard their wvoices clearly in the' jungle stillness. -~ 0 &=8 . “Well, all right,” Steve's grandfather was saying in a sharp voice,: “but it may be hard to arrange at /the_last minute. This island is un.; der total blackout and people aren’t. going to like driving over these nar.. row, twisty little roads with those dim blue headlights.”’” = i 7+ (TO BE CONTINUED)
Western Front Afl Nazi > ® : trive to Ho A e vance, . oy Congress Shapes Postwar Aid W Released by Western Newspaper Union. — ; - enxe'.”‘é’wfih:‘:’:' pinions are expressed in these cohmna they are those of est . s news analysts and not necessarily this newspaper.) eT S BRnaiotcon B 0 oo eAo et oo oo Pe S >"s‘;§J e S B ‘fi’gé T LSO B ‘fii‘{&v e T e R L AR e ‘"A:;:a'f‘_)‘:,::\/'l}'f%?‘fi{@?fi:;:( 5 o S REE 2 s \{‘}, fil&&.‘%;‘: ” 2 fi.;;:?.:- --:E:.::E:i:%\:‘.‘.. ’*W’?%*?’%‘ el R : T “\?‘k{&'&\gfi” g 3 T b e R N -6“5%""1.-: ‘.':%M:':'Z:lz SR i o : 5 e S R e R I R o }@E 5 % ST Kk;%fi%fi%firgfi o TN s A e g RNS B S %&s‘wfim S s R w{:‘""«&“"’*‘?k; B A BS S ee T B B R R B e B S R B e 'x:’.’;‘;%g-‘?a‘.«?«,%fif? S R O RN B g, 2 %%fi'@‘&? eo R 1%;.\ o o 5 B ::'kg.“>\.\4s:‘2\ B e BS R M > e ORioR B e i ‘ x«&fi': fs’%{i{? B &L 3\% g 3 R St v&!‘fiw%{"y&%}fiff“é%fl‘i /.“' S G R \}v % fi""-’\‘"’ 3-:‘.,7 3 i R \;:::::;::3‘;.%;._{;.;:;:;:5;:3-:-:-:4-3»:.;.;.:::(:;5;:;:;%::-:-:.:43:‘\ B B R e e BB BM 3 A B Rgl ag,%? ST e "&,“Hfim*‘*‘@ e S e R e R e R g S GapteTT oSI e G R an R B RS S AR R R RS s B 3 ’w%,*o&%?\*’&’ R %f‘?’mfigg’?%v@fib;{w D % Rt D R S aa ¢ RIS 3. ¥ SN S it e %@@fi’ S R %g\,,\ B e R e 2 R i e 2 o G TRI TR e R e R ROV Lol RS 2 ~ PR v&@si; e e : 8 R - s P S B RN R o B s = Caan T R R 3 : RS i | Ry bR - R : R RS s onE e RT T T ee S S g 5 PR oo SE s i e sN R g\ @ : B S g e R e o R S 5 : SRR 3 W % g o S = Ry i :7:5:::'?:: \ AR S e o e RSR R As war comes to their soil, German civilians pack belongings and move from battered villages in war zone to safety.
EUROPE: Battles Rage s ' In some of the bloodiest fighting since D-Day, the whole western front from Holland down to Switzerland was aflame, with Allied forces slugging through stubborn enemy defenses and then holding their own against German counter-attacks.
Especially bitter fighting occurred on Lieut. Gen. George S. Patton’s Third army front, where U. S. tanks spearheaded a drive on Germany’s famed coal and industrial Saar basin, and the enemy lashed back with strong armored forces. As Patton’s men edged forward, the enemy fell back on the rugged and wooded slopes of the Vosges mountains, where they were expected to make a stand before retiring to the Siegfried line to their rear. . ...° g
- Stiff German resistanee and-° repeated = armored . counter--. attacks also slowed progress of Lieut, Geni Courtney Hodges’ - First army to the north of Pat- . ton’s Third. In this sector, enemy strength concentrated about Trier and Stolberg in an effort to throttle Hodges’ drives to the ' great Rhineland industrial cities: ©
- of ‘Cologne and Coblenz. eh i _ln Holland, an estimated 100,000 Germans fought against entrapment by Allied ground forces driving up the eastern border of the country toward the Zuider Zee, and paratroopers dropped in their rear. Effect of the Allies’ drive not only was to threaten the pocketing of these six divisions in western Holland, but also to put them into position to drive around the Siegfried line ending to the south of this sector and burst out into the Ruhr valley. TR : .« Clawing through the battered “Gothic - line” under the cover of the rolling barrage of their massed artillery, Allied forces looked out onto the rich Po valley in northern Ifaly, as German armored formations sought to stem: their rolling advance in this great agricultural and industrial region. ; Russ Break-Through L
Heaviest fighting on the eastern front centered in. the north, where the Germans claimed more than 680,000 Russian froops were attacking to cleariout the Baltic states of Estonia,: Latvia and Lithuania. °° ‘Despite ‘the Germans’ hard defense of their lines, built up in the swampy lake country of Estonia and Latvia, the Reds punched out sizeable gains. : 0 The old Polish capital of Warsaw was a fiery inferno as the Reds pumped shells into the German defenses of the city, and Red froops surging across the, Vistula river ‘came to grips with enemy units. Armistice Terms . :
Calling on the nation to ‘. . . stick to reality and try to build up . . . existence with the opportunities that are left to us,” Finnish Acting Prime Minister Ernst von Born disclosed Russian armistice terms to a heavyhearted people. . e Including restoration of the 1940 Russo - Finnish border; cession of Petsamo fo the Reds; leasing of the. Porkkala peninsula on the Gulf of Finland for a_ Russian naval base, and reparations payments of $300,-: 000,000, the armistice terms were described as ‘‘the hardest . . . in our history” by Von Born. e - Restoration of the 1040 border. ‘meant Finland's surrender of its most highly developed industrial region containing 10 per cent of its population, and cession of Petsamo meant the country’s surrender of rich nickel mines. |
GAS TEST , & _Five hundred - officers and enlisted men have been commended by the chemical warfare service of the army services forces for voluntarily exposing themselves to lethal ‘gases in order to test a new antigas protective ointment. - .- As a result: of the tests, during which men entered gas-filled chambers and-contaminated areas, medical. officers and research scientists have conclusive evidence that the M 5 protective ointment will be effective against gas warfare. ‘
PACIFIC: No Pause Even as U. S. marines and doughboys cleaned up resistance in the Pala islands, 600 miles east of the ‘Philippines, American airmen were on the go softening up other ememy strong-points. : Again the Philippines were the principal targets. Hopping off from New Guinea, army bombers blasted the southern port of Davao, shuttle point for enemy troops and supplies in the -area, and carrier planes operating in the Third fleet hammered shipping, airfields and military installations around Manila bay, nerve center of the islands. £
- In striking the southern Palaus, whose conquest placed U. S. forces closer to the vital enemy water route from the Indies to Japan, American troops encountered fanatical resist--anée, more than 7,000 Nipponese soldiers out of ‘aforce of 10,500 fighting to: the death on the main island of Peleliu. . -+ ; > 3 FIGHTING SHIPS: & Allied Might = - =.Recognized naval' manual of the world; the 1943-'44 edition of “Jane’s Fighting Ships” noted the increasing strength of Allied might on the high seas and the continued -decline’ of Axis strength. : s - Indicative of the growing power of the U. S. navy, “Jane’s’ revealed that it numbered 4,167 ships last January, exclusive of thousands of landing craft, with high watermarks including the scheduled launching of two new 45,000-ton battleships this year, the development of a fleet of 100 aircraft carriers, and the construction of new 2,200-ton flotilla leaders. -
Referring to Axis naval strength, “Jane’s’” reported that disablement of Germany’s Tirpitz and Gneisenau removed its last big capital ships from service, and despite the launching of two new 45,000-ton battleships, Japanese shipbuilding facilities were running behind demands. o CONGRESS: i, Charts Reconversion . With the fall elections rapidly approaching and congressional leaders pressed fo :assemble sufficient quorums, the house and senate made preparations for handling the pest‘war economic crisis and then moved toward:a recess until November:
First bill to get an O.K. and be sent up to the White House for the President’s signature was the one providing for a three-man administrative board to supervise the disposal of an estimated 100 billion dollars of surplus war goods, with no
As the first major step_ to enable the automobile industry to prepare for peacetime manufacture, the War Production Board authorized Chrysler, Ford and General Motors to permit techiticians to plan correction of wealknesses in 1942 models; bring material specifications to date; map plant layout, and design minor changes in 1942 models. None of the companies are permitted to spend more than $25,000 mm;gdy for: labor or material in this wor :
discrimination to be shown against little business ‘and sale of all war ‘plants over $5,000,000 subject to congressional approval. 3 : o - The second bill passed called for establishment of an. office of re‘conversion, which would .coordifiate ‘the work of all government agencies in the switch-back to peacetime conditions, and also authorized the lending of funds to states if needed to meet unemployment compensation payments. .
. "NELSON: Having concluded conferences in China looking toward the reorganization of the rickety Chinese industrial machine, Donald Nelson was scheduled to head for home to work out America’s participation mteprotent, . g 0 . BULLETS: Army ordnance experts have developed a new incendiary bullet capable of penetrating self-sealing gas tanks, S
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