Ligonier Banner., Volume 78, Number 40, Ligonier, Noble County, 12 October 1944 — Page 2
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THE STORY THUS FAR: Zorie Corey, who hates herself for being so meek, is railroaded into taking a job she does not want, helping Admiral Duncan write his memoirs. She is in love with Paul Duncan, the admiral’s grandson. While aboard the- steamship Samoa en route to Hawaii a hand is clamped over her mouth and she is scooped up and tossed into the sea. She avoids the propellers and manages to catch a life ring which some sailor had tossed overboard when he saw her fall. Zorie is rescued, and learns on recovering from shock that Steve, Paul’s handsome brother, was taken violently ill at the time she was thrownoverboard. The Admlr‘fl announces that Pearl Harbor has been bombed.
CHAPTER XI ; “They can thank God they’re not in Honolulu, where civilians aren’t allowed out of their houses after dark,” Steve said impatiently. “They’ll come if you want them to. And I don’t really give a damn who comes as long as you get Basil Stromberg. Tell him you’ve got to discuss the future of the sugar and pineapple industries with this war on, and the difficulties of shipping between Hawaii and the Mainland, with all these Jap submarines around . . . Three or four other couples to balance the table—but a nice gay crowd.” His deep voice became a rumble. A minute later, Zorie heard a car start. The admiral presently returned along the path he and Steve had taken.
The sudden ferocity with which war had burst upon the Pacific had put all of them under an increasing strain. And Paul was trying too hard to make up for lost time. She was finding his over-zealousness at times trying and she was finding it more and more difficult to keep Steve out of her thoughts. One evening at her stateroom door when Paul had kissed her good night, and had asked her—as he did so often these days—if she still loved him, she had murmured, ““Of course I do, Steve.” u _
She was so frightened she turned cold. But her voice must have been too low for him to hear, or his own thoughts too turbulent. He hadn’t noticed the slip. ' :
‘She could not drive Steve out of her mind. And she was still undecided, still torn between her infatuation and her patriotic scruples. She had tried to rationalize it by assuring herself that she could, ahy time she wished, notify the authorities, and by her knowledge. that there was still, in spite of her sure suspicions, nothing she could prove. She dreamed ahout Steve. Offen there were strange dreams in which both he and Paul figured. If Steve suspected her suffering, he was being very nice about it. It was, she supposed with some bitterness, an old story with Steve—being kind to all the women who made fools of themselves over him. As, for example, Amber Lanning was doing. Most of all, she didn’t want Paul to become aware of it, although she was sure that his renewed ardor
was making him blind. She did not want Paul to be hurt. And regardless of where her heart wanted to lead her, her mind was still at the controls. Her mind kept insisting that she would, in a little time, fully recover. By then Paul would be back on an even keel and they would, at an appropriate time, be married. : Of the remainder of the trip on the blacked-out ship, she would unreasonably recall most vividly, not the frantic excitement of the passengers, nor the tension, the alertness, the white war-worn faces of Honolulu under martial law, but her childish jealousy of Steve’s attentions to Amber. Amber, with her lack of inhibitions, wasn’t making any efforts to conceal the fact that she, too, had gone overboard for Steve. sk : The war, curiously, affected Zorie scarcely at all. After the first awful JJfeeling, when she learned of the devastation at Pearl Harbor and at the army and naval air base, her self-possession returned. Her new fearlessness was impervious. .. She wasn’t afraid of torpedoes or Japanese bombers and, as she saw nejther submarines nor bombers, her fearlessness was not tested. After the first day’s attacks on Oahu; the enemy was occupied swith’ Wake, Hong Kong, the Philippines and Singapore. Yet Zorie was certajn that, if the enemy ‘returned, she would not be frightened. i ~ Often she came upon Steve and Amber, walking together, playing ping- pong, or .the. horse races, or shuffieboard. They were always laughing, always so absorbed in each other that they were oblivious. She tried not to let Paul see how it affected her—the bleak fury, the jealousy, the hatred that swept her. After the first day, there was little war news. All the passengers’ radios were confiscated and only curt official bulletins from Washington were issued. On the day after the attack on Oahu, two United States destroyers magically appeared and escorted the “‘Samoa’ on her zigzag course the rest of the way. = = . Zorie wondered how the war would affect the plans, the status, of Steve, the Lannings and Pierre Savoyard. She had 3‘@;‘3 that 11 er problem would be solved by the military authoriies. Ste had expected all of
lulu. But they hadn’t been. Her own fiery hatred of Japan, of all the Axis powers, had made her problem suddenly acute. Yet she had, despite the intensity of her feelings, done nothing about it. She had rationalized it by telling herself that the blow might kill the admiral. She had decided to talk it over with him, to tell him about all her suspicions, and let him decide what action to take. Y
. She had grown very fond of the peppery old man. Her brightest recollections of that strange voyage had been her work with him. He had no fear of.submarines and he was determined to get on: with The Book. Once he was reconciled to Zorie’s disinterest in his Annapolis pranks and the Battle of Manila Bay—now being fought again with terrible new weapons—he had plunged into the story of the Duncan clan. He was anxious to get on with it, but he had told Zorie there would be no work today. '
Paul found her in the arbor a little before noon and she had lunch
2SS A G LI 26 A Al M e (_:_ ? .;3"?&“&\“‘7"/'} / “ ¢ <1 B 9 e s g = A AN §7 S ANM NS = i.-/a"f AU E \ NS 4‘%4 &Y g ;gk\ég?\ N S 3 (‘ i _‘:‘ nd X _»_ b NS 2 . » }g‘ g 5 .‘]{\ 9 ¥ S ~;,_ 5 2 ; L * . ol BRE -/) A b o 7. .2 2 , MG\ *‘MR;’ ( ; 7, A / v 3 ‘i? Fl/ Vfl:": ::',: / ,/.‘F' DT - y 4 'a\l %;"a— ) 7 ] i‘l- ¢ 2 é‘% » 23\ |H F e— N nE Iy Tt [ oL B P R 7 g 1 ’-’"':") e ‘“\% : e £ T oy ; - 3;, .' G :‘""‘" . 5 1% ! I'a-\"\év "7.‘-':'::': o ‘,A:(:‘S.‘fii ' 2 _‘! .~3‘ “‘“ 3 ‘;; :.2-:‘l.}‘: B "IRe ""_"v; !l:‘. v \ L b 3 5 h ..f‘g-‘. .‘f_‘;-’:':fi — / l'-;;fi;“:;'!'g.é;f»» : R ST As one man they raised their glasses to her. ' with him on a lanai shaded by a Pride of India tree. The centerpiece was an arrangement of translucent spikes of blood-red ginger flowers. She tasted her first baked breadfruit. “I've been thinking things over,” Paul said. ‘“You once mentioned that you’d prefer it if I gave up my ambition to be a professor of psychology, and went to the plantation as a cut-cane luna and worked up.”
“But, Paul, I didn’t say that!” Zorie protested. Or had she? “Did I ever tell you how we came by Uluwehi E Kai?” There was suffering in Paul’s eyes. He was preparing to be selfsacrificing, noble. To please her. He was telling her the story of Uluwehi E Kai, but she scarcely heard him. She was wishing ge would stop being so humble. is overanxiety to please her had reached a very irritating stagg. She scarcely caught the gist of what he was saying. A Hawaiian queen had once lived here. The admiral had bought Uluwehi from the Hawaiian crown fifty years ago. Until recently it had been part of the Duncan Plantation. On the death of Grandmother Duncan, he had sold the plantation to a syndicate in which he owned a large interest, retaining énly Uluwehi. He also had large interests in other sugar and pineapple properties, and in banks and hotels, in steamship and air lines. 1, “I know you're enchanted with.
Uluwehi,”” Paul said. “I’'m.seeing it as I never saw it before—through your eyes. I know how you’ll hate to live anywhere else. So, if you say the word, I'll start in tomorrow as a field luna.” o .. Zorie shook her head with firmness. ‘No, Paul. I will not interfere in a decision as important as that.” s “But you’ve fallen in love with this place!"’. ‘““That has nothing to do with it. Your career comes first!”’ His eyes were grayer than green. “If I thought you could go back to Elleryton without hating it—'’ “But of course I could, darling!” He wasdoubtful. He really looked wretched. “I'd rather make any sacrifice to keep you happy.””’ ; ‘“‘No, Paul,” Zorie said crisply. “Your future isn’t to be werked out on that basis. Decide what you want to do and I'll abide by it.” “There isn’t a lovelier spot in the world than this,” Paul said, “and you would lead the happiest life you've ever known. You'd be the boss of the Duncan clan. .And the _mistress of Uluwehi is the: undis_puted queen of this island.. I know how crazy the admiral is about you. There’s nothing' he woulé;”t ‘do for you .’ . . I realize allthat, and 1 'realize how uflx‘me that setup would be to any womén.” =
THE LIGONIER BMNE& LIGONIER, IND.
She had sensed most of this. She had seen herself presiding over this lovely place, modernizing, simplifying some of the rooms, giving lively parties, taking hold and running things, and restoring Uluwehi to its former glory . . . Of course it appealed to her!
“‘But is your career here, Paul?” He shook his head tragically. “No. That’s just it.” \ ‘‘The instant this book is finished,” Zorie said crisply, ‘“we’ll go back to Elleryton.”” She had a sudden glimpse of the twin chimneys of the Fenwick Body Plant and of the social life—Mrs. Folsome, Mrs. MecGonigle, Aunt Hannah. ““Now let’s stop all this silly argument.” He came around to her chair and kissed her on the cheek. ““Thank you, Zorie,” he said solemnly. . “That was what I wanted you to say . . . Would you like to be married here?’” Zorie hesitated. Her heart was beating in slow, cold thumps. “Yes, Paul. Of course!”
“It would be a lot of fun,” Paul said. “We’d have a luau—an oldfashioned Hawaiian luau. Would you like that?”’ 2 _
A*"Yes, dear.” " “I’'ve been thinking,” Paul said, ‘“that we might be married Sunday.” A knifelike pain went through Zorie’s heart. Trying to control her voice, she said, ‘‘Day after tomorrow? 2?.
‘“Yes,” said Paul. “Why wait? We’ve been putting it off long enough.” : It was true. They had. Rather, Paul had. For more than a year they had been on this vaguely engaged basis. And there hadn’t been a day when she hadn’t hoped that Paul would decide not to wait. But that had been in Elleryton . . . His announcement left her with a feeling of panic. She realized that she hadn’t the slightest desire to marry Paul day after tomorrow. He was fondling her shoulder. ““Then,” he said, ‘“we’ll fly over to Kona for a few days. We’ll come back here and stay until the admiral’s book is finished. I’'ll find plenty to do. I want to do some more work on my dissertation.” He was trying to be gay and reckless. But he wasn’t convincing Zorie and he wasn’t convincing himself. He sensed that something was wrong, but he didn’t know what it was. : ‘““Would you like it that way, honey?n : Zorie was gazing at the garden. ‘““This would be a lQvely place to be married,” she said. ‘She would not try to escape it. She would go through with it. She could not let Paul down. .
She wanted to cry. All the time Paul was talking, she’d been seeing Steve at her wedding—Steve watching her with a brother-in-law’s detached pride and fondness. . ‘“Well, then, that's settled,” Paul said vigorously. ‘“We’ll be married Sunday. I'll attend to everything.”
She was about to leave her room when one of the maids brought her a lei of white ginger flowers. When she put it on, it fell almost to her waist. If she had needed a completing touch, the chain of glowing fragrant white flowers supplied it. She asked the maid who had sent it. ““Mr. Duncan.” , “Mr. Steve or Mr. Paul?”’ i “Mr. Steve.” - It almost went without saying. With all his drdor, his anxiety to please her, Paul would never think of sending her a lei—especially a white ginger lei. She went out onto the lanai with its blackout curtains of heavy blue velvet. The admiral, Paul and Steve were already there, but none of the guests had come. The three men were drinking Old-F'ashioneds. They stared at her as she crossed the lanai. As one man they raised their glasses to her. It was almost involuntary. The expression in their eyes was a toast.
- She murmured, “Thank you, sir,” demurely. : ; Steve made her an Old-Fashioned. She noticed dry little lines about his mouth and eyes. He looked tired and worried and tense. :
She was aware that Paul, in spite of his resolves, disapproved of the frankness of her star sapphire dress. He had betrayed it in his eyes after the admiral had complimented her. It was, she thought, disheartening. Paul did not want her to be radiant. He wanted her to be dull. He had always wanted her to be dull. And when, to please him, she had dressed dully, he had frankly 'admired women who were colorfully dressed. She wondered why. She wondered what the solution was. ]
She was sipping her cocktail when Amber and her unele came out of the house, followed by Pierre. Amber wore the midnight-blue dress—the most effective dress she had. Mr. Lanning was all in white. Pierre Savoyard had crowded his powerfully sloping shoulders into a white dinner jacket. He seemed ill at ease, He stared at Zorie, then sat down in a Singapore chair. He sat there, smoking one cigarette after another, until dinner was announced, arising only when the guests arrived and he was introduced. He spent hisg time nursing one drink and staring at Zorie. . _ : (TO BE CONTINUED) :
——WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS ——— Germans Counterattack to Slow Allies' Smash Into Rhineland; OWI Warns of Hard Pacific War
——— Released by Western Newspaper Union. mee——— (EDITOR’S NOTE: When opinions are expressed in these columns, they are those of Western Newspaper Union’s news analysts and not necessarily of this newspaper.)
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EUROPE: - ‘Greatest Battles’ : In what the Germans said was ok Lihe glreatest battle of material in the world’s history . . .” with 2,500,000 men facing each other on a 460-mile front, Allied forces moved slowly on the Siegfried line against stubborn enemy resistance.
All along the curving battle-line the Germans launched extensive counterattacks, throwing in large numbers of tanks to stem the Allied drive on their all important industrial belt along the Rhine. Bearing the brunt of the enemy’s aggressiveness were Lieut.
Gen. Miles Dempsey’s British Second army driving northward in Holland and Lieut. Gen. George S. Patton’s American Third army lunging for the coal-laden Saar basin beyond Metzand Nancy. In Holland,
G B BN ERRR B B s s S S %5*% LR R Gen. Dempsey
strong German counterattacks were aimed at thwarting General Dempsey’s Temmies from pressing past the northern anchor of the Siegfried line at Kleve, and of throwing an arm to the great water basin of the Zuider Zee to the northwest to cut off an estimated 200,000
Nazis still engaged in the lower extremity of the country. In addition to employing masses of tanks against General Patton’s men before the Saar, the enemy also made good use of the hilly and wooded terrain in the sector to reduce thevaliant doughboys’ advances to yards. . As the fighting raged to the north and south, Lieut: Gen. Courtney Hodges’ First American army launched a heavy attack between those two sectors east of Aachen, fighting its way through thick woods to draw up within 27 miles of the great industrial center of Cologne. Having smashed through the upper reaches of the Germans’
vaunted ‘“Gothic line” in northern Italy, Allied troops fought toward the leveling plains of the great Po valley, cradling the majority of the country’s popu- . lation, and its most highly developed resources. De-
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spite desperate Germanattempts to stem their drive, the Allies pushed on, with Lieut. Gen. Mark Clark’s American Fifth army threatening to close an 'escape - route for stubborn enemy troops ringed between it and the British Eighth army to the east. As the remnants of Germany’s Baltic armies pulled out of Latvia, the spotlight on the eastern front swung back to East Prussia in the north and Hungary on the south, where the Reds pushed offensives to crack these anchors of the Nazis’ eastern front. While the Germans could fall back on swampy, wooded lake country in East Prussia to slow the Russian drive, they had no such advantage in Hungary, where the Reds pressed for the broad open plains to the southeast of Budapest. . ' ' Having landed on the western coast of Jugoslavia, strong Allied forces worked inland to cut off the retreat of an estimated 200,000 Germans moving northward from the lower Balkans. i LOANS DOWN :
- Index of economic conditions, loans on life insurance policies outstanding in midyear approximated $2,100,000,000, lowest in 15 years. During the -critical “depression period of 1932, loans reached $3,800,000,000, almost double present figures. :
- Offsetting ‘a decline in civilian mortality, increased deaths' among policy holders in military service resulted in an 18 per cent rise in insurance benefits paid out so far this
PACIFIC: Airpower Long is the reach of America’s famed B-29 Superfortresses, which have flown to the wars to hamstring the flow of enemy supplies to his Wwidespread Asiatic front by striking at principal Japanese industrial centers.
With recent improvements permitting the carrying of heavier bomb (loads, no less:than 100 of the B-29s flew the equivalent of from Atlanta, Ga., to the Arctic circle in attacking manufacturing plants in Anshan, Manchuria, second largest steelmaking center in the Japanese empire. -
While the B-29s were on the wing, other U. S. army and navy planes struck at Jap positions along ‘the whole Pacific front in attempts to soften the enemy against further advances. Jap Resistance - With Japan possessing many strategic materials in the home islands and Korea enabling her to increase war production; with the country capable of putting 8,000,000 men in the field, and with American supply lines stretched, U. S. victory in the Pacific may require from 1% to 2 years after Germany’s defeat, the Office of War Information said.
To America’s advantage in pressing for victory, OWI said, was its own tremendous war output, capable of turning out 8,000 “planes a month to Japan’s 1,500; the threat to cut the enemy’s supply lines from the Indies area and blockade the homeland, and the overrunning of his outer éefenses which has brought U. S. forces close to the inner ramparts.
Far from slaking the Japs’ fervor, Germany’s fall might strengthen the enemy’s determination to resist, OWI said.
POSTWAR GERMANY: Allied Plans , With Secretary of the Treasury Morgenthau’s proposal for stripping Germany of all of its manufactories and reducing the country to an agricultural basis rejected, Allied postwar plans looked forward to the maintenance of the Reich’s industrial machine under close supervision. Challenging Morgenthau’s position, Secretary of State Hull and Secretary of War Stimson declared that not only did Germany turn out certain essential industrial products for the rest of Europe, but that its business also put it in the market to purchase other countries’ goods. In order to check German industry’s war-making capacity, Allied plans call for control over all strategic materials, with possible elimination of factories adapted to arms production. BUTTER: ' Tight Supply .
With only 12,000,000 pounds of butter in storage earmarked for civilians and consumption on a day-to-day basis, the point value on the product was raised from 16 to 20 points per pound, OPA officials said.
Despite the government’s plans for withdrawing from the butter market in October until production climbs in the spring, no immediate relief in the tight supply was_ seen. Said OPA Administrator Chester Bowles: “ . . . We civilians are going to have to get along with less butter than formerly, at least during the next 90 days or so. . . .” Besides reserving 126,000,000 pounds of the present stocks of 138,000,000 pounds, the government has been purchasing great quantities of butter fat from producers for powdered milk and other uses. Cars ;
Thinkfng in terms of a utilization’ in space and weight, Ford Motor company officials are working on plans for large. scale production of the lowest " priced automobile since Ford’s model A.
Declaring that the vehicle-would not be of a miniature doodlebug type, Henry Ford Il declared: “Such a car would be in addition to our regular line.- What it will sell for, what it will look like, are matters of conjecture at the moment. The logical result . . . wonld be a better uutomobile for the American family” :
CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT - HELP WANTED : S iZermin pow smingnd fu ovvathe l mest ot Svslabtity from thes loce l
WANTED-—-MAN OR WOMAN to distribute circulars from house to house. No selling. Good earnings. Address P. 0. BOX ld. PROVIDENCE 1, RHODE ISLAND. M R L IS WE CAN SELL FARMS, city property business in 10 days. Write T e, Drake Auction Service, Kempton, Indiana, m il i e —— Beauty Course Only $95.00 Complete training, only Bth grade education needed; no age limit. Open to men: and women; E-Z terms. Call RI. 0481. ’ DAY AND NIGHT SCHOOL | Take a job and do this too. Earn $4B-$75 weekly or.own your shop. Free catalogue. | -Open every night till 10 p. m. ROYAL BEAUTY ACADEMY €Ol Roosevelt Bldg. - Indianapelis, Ind. e b A ettt o SHEEP e ee S, VA S Registered Corriedale Rams, $3O to $5O. Improve your wool and market lambs. WALTER SHIEL, R. R. 14, Box 596 Indianapolis, Phone Br. 5168 —————————————————————— REGISTERED OXFURD EWES AND RAMS. HARLEY AND FORD MISHLER, South Whitley, Indiana. e e e AL e imo 8 S ost Coon, Opossum, Fox, Rabbit and combination hunting hounds, shipped for trial. Write for free literature, showing pictures and breeding. State dog interested. Kentucky Coonhound Kennel, Paducah, Ky. .oL 8 £ 2 i A et R 1 2 A e ———— Saddles—Western, factory to you. 200 in stock. Send for catalog. NF /7 LL’S SADDLERY, 1627 S. Broadway, St. Louis 4, Mo. b e SA e 1 A A el Farm Machinery Wanted A eee At e ee i | o Wanted—John Deere Corn Picker No. 101 semi-mounted. Must: be good condition. WILBUR F Xenia, Ohio, Rt. 1 - hone 1344-RXI.
A Ae e At 0 A e AN N AAL TRICYCLE ORDERS TAKEN Ship anywhere. Rgbber tires; full ballbearings; velocipede saddle; adjustable size from small-medium to large-medium. 16-inch front wheel; chrome-plated handlebars; rubber handle grips; bright red finish. Guar.; $27.50. Limited supply available. Matthews, 34th and Central, Indianape 4, 6 and 8-hole reconditioned ice cream storage cabinets, can be used for frosted foods or deep freeze. No priority required. Reasonably pricéd. F. D. GARDNER. 815 S. Delaware, Indianapolis, Ind. $ ? For Sale. 40 a. Mineral Lease 2 miles from Eucutta Field, Miss. Certificate of title & bank refs. iurnigg)ed. Mrs. Elizabeth Dobner, 143 N, Parkside Ave., Chicago 44, 111. O L 8515 e e NGAO 8 Ms . kB L 01P W B Wanted—One used Jacques Portable Power Saw in good condition to fit an A-Farmall Tractor. Quote price and advise condition. THE OAKS FARM - Barrington, Il
QUILT PATCHES Beafitiful assortment; florals, stripes, checks, plains — three pounds postpaid — one dollar — money back guarantee. A. B. C. COMPANY Dept. I-L - Salem, Illinois.
AT 0y Ff‘f} BONDS W
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