Ligonier Banner., Volume 78, Number 41, Ligonier, Noble County, 19 October 1944 — Page 2
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THE STORY THUS FAR: Zorie Corey, who hates herself for being so meek, is rallroaded 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 manages to catch hold of a life ring some sailor tossed over. board. On recovering from shock Zorie learns that Steve, Paul's handsome brother, with whom she is infatuated, was taken violently ill at the. time she was thrown off the boat. The admiral makes the apnouncement that Pearl Harbor is bombed. " t ;
CHAPTER XII It was the first time that she had exchanged more than a few words with any of them since the night one of them had thrown her off the “Samoa's’’ stern. She became aware that all of them were under a strain. Mr. Lanning drank his cocktails as fast as Steve would make them for him. By the time dinner was announced, he must have had seven or eight. Amber was nervous. Once, when she lit a cigarette, Zorie saw her hands shaking. Something, Zorie guessed, was in the wind, and only Paul was unaware of it. He was aware only of her. Whenever she glanced at him, he was looking at her with that puzzled expression in his eyes. 'He did not drink at all. When. she had her second cocktail, she glanced at him. The old familiar expression of stern disapproval was about his mouth. ; :
Why, Zorie wondered, did he disapprove of everything that was really fun? She suddenly felt hopeless about Paul. She wondered if they could ever work things out. She saw Paul suddenly as one of the unfortunates he was always talking about—the maladjusted people, the problem children grown up. : Eight of the admiral’s guests were attractive - couples ° from various parts of the island. The ninth to arrive_was a big man with irongray hair and a square ruddy face. His name, Basil Stromberg, meant nothing to Zorie at first. Then she recalled the fragment of conversation she had overheard between Steve and the admiral in the garden that morning, with Steve saying, “I don’t care a'damn who comes—as long as you get Basil Stromberg.” ‘Zorie sat down beside Paul and asked “him ' who Stromberg was. ‘‘He’'s the mianager of one of the biggest plantations on the island. I suppose he’s just another Nazi, although I never suspected it before.” HWhyt) o £ e o Paul = shrugged. - “Well, . Steve seems to prefer Nazis. It looks to me as if he’s turning Uluwehi into a Nazi' hotbed.” - g A :
- #‘Are these other people Nazis?” I don't know. Tl'm “a stranger here myself. . Basil is an American citizen. He was born on-Kauai—of German parents. He was educated in' Germany and he spends long vacations there. I believe he's been there- quite recently.’ ‘Shall ‘I ask him?” i
“Paugl—pleasé!” 7+ i} “But you asked a question and, with: me, the inquiry of.a beautiful lady is a ringing command.” Zorie realized that Paul was. furioys about something, and suppress{rlg it only with ‘ah effort. She had looked forward to this dinner party, to pretending she was the princess of Uluwehi; but -now. that it was here, she was miserable, .. Paul’s disapproval and the tension she sensed in Steve:were spoiling everything.
Itiwas: a pity, because it might have been a.delightful dinner party. Dinner' was served by four pretty Japangse girls who wore beautiful kimongs' “andl obis and resembled Japanese dolls. She watched them cyriously and observed how masklike their young Oriental faces were. Paul had said if she knew what these young Japanese 'were thinking these :days, she would run for her life. - It was hard to believe. ; There were flowers in the center of the long koa table that made it difficult for her to see Paul. She could see all of Steve’s face. He was being amusing and charming, but he wasn't fooling Zorie. Something was happening -under the surface and he was taking the most elaborate pains, it:' prove that nothing was happen-
' When dinner was over, they returned to the lanai under the big banyan tree for coffee and brandy. Zorie sat down beside the admiral. When'they had finished coffee, Paul said: ‘“‘Shall we take a little stroll? We won’t be missed.” He was furious about something. His eyes bad that familiar narrowness and his mouth its well-known thinness. He disapproved of the star-sapphire dress. Doubtless, he disapproved of other things, too. She wondered, in a little flurry of panic, just what she’d done to make him §0 angry. She hoped he wouldn't be too harsh with her. , They had taken hardly a dozen steps when he pulled his arm away. He was taking her toward the ironwood arbor on the beach. : “What—what is it, Paul?” Zorie “1 want to have a talk with you,” .Paul answered. ‘“But not just yet. I want to think a little.” , hwm they reached the arbor, Z&x; '8 eyes were growing used to t
sat down. It was the same bench on which she Had sat that morning to wrestle with her problem. - ' . Paul did not sit down. He stood near her, with his hands in his coat pockets. From that characteristic posture, with one shoulder down a little, she knew what to expect, and she wondered. if he took that stance when he was addressing his classes. “Zorie,” he said, ‘“‘this evening has shown me exactly what I'll be up against when we’re married. I’'ve been watching you and studying you all through dinner—analyzing you as I’ve never bothered.to analyze you before. I've had the pleasure of watching you—the girl I'm going to marry day after tomorrow—staring continuously at another man, with such adoration, such worship that it nauseated me to watch it.” ;
Her sense of fear suddenly departed. With it went all of her old feeling of meekness. Zorie got up. *“‘Paul,” she said softly, ““I think you'd better stop. I think you don’t quite realize what you're saying. I think you had better be awfully careful, Paul.” - “I know what I'm saying,”’ Paul said harshly. “I'm saying that you'’re nothing but a natural-born cheat! It was written all over your face! You were goofy-eyed! You
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were ga-ga! You sat there, just drooling over that brother of mine}” T Spagl v ¥ “Let me finish,”” he snapped.
“Paul, I'm warning you. I won't let you or any bther man say such things about me.” g oh oF
“You’ll let me say what I have to say,” Paul replied. : . Zorie sat down again. He continued in ‘the " same strain. Her shamelesg adoration of Steve. i,
- “Look at those flowers in your “hair!’Ever'since ‘He put some white ginger flowers ih ‘your hair, you've been weéaring them like a holy symbol! Steve the great, Steve the won--derful puts ginger flowers in your hair-and .you melt. You go blah!”. - ¥t ‘was,’ she supposed, inevitable. Out 'of him was gushing the bitterness that he had kept dammed up since that morning of their discussion on deck. She realized the truth —Paul could not take #. He had ¢racked under the strain he had imposed op himself, His solicitude had been a pretense, his ardor a sham. _He did not, she realized, love her. Not at this'moment. In the morn“ing he might, but not now. He hated her for revolting against his Victorianism. He hated her because she had refused to be disciplined and dominated. It was really as simple as that. B “I can’t go through with it,”” Paul said. “I want to be released from our engagement.” ... Any other time, Paul’s outburst ~might have been justified—a little justified, although nothing she had ever doné, except in her innermost thoughts, could have justified this.
“I understand,”’ she said gently. In spite -of the ugly things he had said, she was sorry. for Paul. Tomorrow, if she knew Paul, he would humble himself, would plead for her: forgiveness. = Yet, even tomorrow, he might realize that things, after this, could never be patched up. She hoped he would. She hoped this was the end.. . o . “You're free,” Paul said waspishly. “You're free to do whatever you wish, to marry-anybody you please.” To marry anybody she pleased! That, in his mind, meant Steve. As if she had merely to mention to Steve that she was now free to be. his—and he would clasp her in his arms, to have and to hold, forever! Perhaps, in one sense, Paul was: right. “Certainly, a large part of Steve’s attraction was physical. She: could niot recall-ever being attracted so strongly to Paul. .- . - Anyway, she would not have to marry Paul. She had escaped! ~ Zorie was aware of a sense of
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“I understand, Paul,” she said quietly. ‘“‘Everything’s finished. Perhaps it’s best. I think we’d better go back now.” : ‘“Ah, yes—back to your lovely Nazis!”?
Halfway to the blacked-out lanai, Zorie heard men’s voices. They came from the other side of a high box hedge that she and Paul were about to pass. o ; Paul seized her wrist. He whispered: ‘‘Keep quiet!” - ‘He pulled her close to the hedge. Zorie saw several dim figures in the starlit darkness beyond the hedge. Then she heard Steve’s voice. ““This war is apt to ruin everything,” he said. His voice sounded thin. It sounded nervous. ‘“There’s very apt to be.trouble. I’ve spent most of the day at Kokee, looking the ground over. The only favorable factor is that they’re working with only a skeleton crew. They’ll be reinforced in a day or two. If we’re to get in there, it will certainly have to be tonight.” Gt
Steve’s voice hesitated. Zorie tried to see his face, but she could not. “Briefly, the setup is easier than I expected,”” he went on. *“JY-419 is there. It’s being used every day, but not at night. They’re using the old hookup for night-time listening.” Steve paused again. “‘l’ve learned one thing of vital importance. It will detect a plane more than fifteen hundred miles away. That's five hundred miles better than I was told in Madrid.”
“Why,”’ another voice interrupted, “‘didn’t it detect the bombers that came over Pearl Harbor last Sunday?" The voice was so strained that Zorie identified it, with difficulty, as Winthrop Lanning’s.
- ‘““How can you expect me to have the answer to that question?”’ Steve answered. “The old hookup would have detected them. The carrier could not have been more than two hundred miles offshore. - Why didn’t the Oahu listening stations report them in time?'’ meelna's e
~*What is this trouble you mentioned?” eidi . ““It has nothing to do with getting JY-419 out of the listening post,” Steve answered. ‘““JY-419 is in one ‘compact sheet-steel cabinet that weighs, at a guess, between eighty :and gne hundred pounds. Itis being kept in-a small- building some distance from the regular equipment. There’s only a small plain padlock on the door.” G e ey The* pressure of Paul’s grasp in--ereased - on- Zorie's wrist. .- He had no .doubt felt the tremor that had gone' through her. She was: begin< ning to realize fully what this meant. So this was Steve’s ‘‘very dangerous game’’—plotting with these sly, sinister people to rob his own country of a secret and valuable planedetecting device!
«-All.the ugly things Paul had.told ‘her about Steve, together with all sthe-ugly: things of which she herself _suspected him, were: in_his voice " “We can break that padlock and ‘carry the cabinet out.” - 7 **Wait “a minute,” another voice interrupted, and Zorie. recognized it, with its softness, as Pierre’s. ‘“‘How do we get it out of that listening “post? Won’t those sentries be shoot--ing ‘at ‘shadows?” ' 1' . e *. “Probably,” Steve answered. It will ‘be dangerous and:difficult, but it isn’t impossible. The shed in “which JY-419-is locked up is within fifty feet of the edge of the Kalalau Lookout. . I mean—the -edge of the canyon, The sehtry at that' post won’t expect anyone to come up “over that edge.” - < " . - “But is it humanly possible?” Pierre broke in. ¥ :
. “¥Yes. There’s an old goat trail, now overgrown with vegetation, that I used as 3 boy. Don’t forget"l know every inch of that country. We can ship in and out past the sentry.” .. “How?’’ Pierre asked dubiously. ~ “It has been raining in the mountains for two days and nights. ‘lt was “raining ‘steadily up there all day. - Don’t forget that this is our rainy season. We can safely count on rain tonight.” : “‘But if it isn’t raining?”’ Mr. Lanning asked.’ A,
' “Then we will overpower the sentl'ys" 4?‘. ; Ee . ix “That is very, very risky!”
“The whole job is risky,” Steve said impatiently. ‘lt always has been. The fact that the war is on doubles the risk. But that is not my worry, Winthrop. With these blue headlights and ‘with occasional halts by the Provisional Police, it will take an hour to drive as far as we can safely go. It will take us fully three. hours to follow that old trail to the listening post, to get in, secure JY--419 and to get back to the car. That will bring the time to three o’clock, if we leave here at eleven. They will discover that JY-419 is gone by six at the latest. The navy will tear this island apart looking for it, Don’t forget that this island is under martial law and that JY-419 is as vital a war secret as the famous bombsight.”” 26 g 00l “I won’t,” Mr. Lanning said dry?“fim,;.eefia'in' that we can get inthere and get out with it,"" Steve continued. - *‘But "’h;:hwm ‘We do with it? It.is very. much like a play
in a football game. We will have the ball, but we won’t dare keep it. We must pass it as quickly as we can ‘into safer, stronger hands.”
———WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS e Naz: Resistance Grows in West: Chinese War in: Critical Stage; Strong Cattle Markets Forecast . R€l€aSed by Western Newspaper Union. e — (EDITOR’S NOTE: When opiniens are expressed in these eslumns, they are those of “ Western Newspaper Union’s news analysts and not necessarily of this newspaper.) N\ a —— ‘ Rrer Walihcle——— e —— - Quanconly BRSO N SEAs— LLILEY ~HCHANGE - Spewersl T &= PACIFICE <%, : R v ; A § wwaune AMONSEFORMOSAS———— » e —Hr—— P e e - KUNMING HONGKONGEES——————————— | 2 OCiANT e \ cog=—— - . "‘\\\E}) e Dark shaded areas on map show extent of ;lapanese occupation of China, and progress of drive along east coast to seal it off to counteract possible U. S. landings. e : .
EUROPE: wit Nazis Fight Back Long famed for artillery fire, U. S. army units brought their big guns into full play as dogged doughboys slugged their way through the Siegfried line above Aachen in the face of mounting German resistance. Although the main fighting focused above Aachen, action remained heavy along the whole 460 mile front, with the Germans seeking to unsettle Allied advances with strong armored counterattacks.
With an array of 75 to 240-mm. field pieces laying a creeping barrage before advancing doughboys, and with squads of tanks rumbling over the countryside to blast enemy strongpoints at short range, Lieut. Gen. Courtney Hodges’ Third American army . tore a big.hole through the vaunted Siegfried line, finding stationary defenses manned by inferior German troops, with the best saved as reserves for counterattacking. © Equally bitter fighting raged on either side of the Third army sector, with the Nazis counterattacking strongly: around Nijmegen in Holland to blunt the British Second army’s end.run around the Siegfried line in the north, and elite enemy troops putting up. stiff resistance to doughboys flushing them out of the great . underground fortifications guarding Metz, key to the coal-laden Saar basin.. .. : :
_On the southern anchor of the western front, the “ enemy fought back viciously from prepared defenses in the rolling countryside in an effort to stop the U. S. Seventh army’s thrust toward passes in the Vosges mountains and the wide Belfort Gap leading into southern.Ger“many. LSRR S K
In Italy, the U. 8. Fifth army pushed closer to the great communications center of Bologna, - through which the enemy has been routing reinforcements to his sagging Po valley front. As the Russians increased their pressure against Hungary, and other Red forces drove across Yugoslavia for a junction with U. S. and British units, the Germans were put to it to plug up the Balkan gateway to southern Germany. : Although the Nazis reportedly succeeded in withdrawing the bulk of 200,000 men from the southern Balkans before the British invasion of Greece and the Russian drive to sever communication lines along their escape route, the Reds pressed to nip off the siraggling remnants. In driving across eastern Yugoslavia, the Russians overran rich metal deposits around Bor, which the Germans had been working extensively, and enveloped the capital of Belgrade. With Romanian troops fighting by their side, the Reds advanced to within 135 miles of Budapest, heart of Hungary. : , CATTLE MARKET: Prices Strong Large government purchases of low-grade beef, and decreased hog shipments in the face of big demand, will tend to keep market prices at a high level this fall and winter, the department of agriculture reported. Because of the sale of more range cattle than last year, however, and the relatively smaller marketings of finished grades, overall prices may average lower than in 1943. With a ‘much larger prospective s:lgpl_y, calves are also expected to fall below last year’s prices. -~ At ceiling prices throughout midsummer, hog prices are expected to remain’ high through the next six months, with the government in the market for the smaller pork supplies reflecting the 24 per,cent reduction Nki ek
MISCELLANY _The first B-29 Superfortress cost $3,392,396.90. Current production models are costing $600,000. i Into the cost_of the first model of any warplane go all the years of engineering, time it takes costs money—and ‘the minimum time from the first design of a new plane to the completion of the first production model is about three years; Sometimes it takes five years. £
POSTWAR INDUSTRY : Fear Concentration
To prevent the concentration of industry in 11 northern and eastern states in the postwar period, a senate committee recommended that the government stand against the reconversion of its war plants in these states to civilian production. Indicating the possibilities of such concentration, the committee pointed out that before the war these 11 states produced 65 ‘per cent of the nation’s manufactured goods and received 51 per cent of all plants and facilities erected by the government for the war effort.
Besides calling for a shifting of war production to the south and west after Germany’s downfall, the committee recommended-an adjustment of freight rates, attention to patents, and technological aid to small industrialists as part of a long range program for stabilizing business in these areas. : CHINA: -
In Crisis « News from China recently has been none too rosy, with the country’s armies falling back before the Japs’ drive to seal off the whole eastern coast to counter an attempted American landing, and the U. S. air force compelled to abandon four advanced bases before the enemy’s push. ' In an effort to help China help herself, President Roosevelt dispatched ex-War Produttion Board Czar Donald Nelson to confer with Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek in the building of an integrated industry to exploit the country’s vast resources.
SRR W AR AT f e o e R P S ”‘5;? e e e B R S S R R :;.‘,5; c SRR SRR "'° R e R R R e, R MRS S e \‘Q R PSR s T I B RSR S i ::;:z@@:z&- b R RI 0 bl T e Sfhm e R B S RNPR SR R e SRR e ;&‘ R RN %‘:":\z 3 "M 2 N T e RN g IR IR AR e SRR \‘3‘\ R %Q&M -:'*’""-‘:s:{:-.1'1:‘:~::-‘-,»:1:; - SRREeC Y SRR o & \tA S g By R SN g $ R s S 3 o 3%fl 5 )%‘ R S i B ga3 g ISR e b s o B 3 g b A Maj.-Gen. - Patrick, Hurley (left) and Donald Nelson (right) confer with Chiang Rai-shek (center).
‘With: Chinese industry largely undeveloped, the Japs blockading the eastern ports, and mountainous terrain and primitive roads- handicapping the overland route from Burma, valiant Chinese armies have been sorely ill-equipped. - With Chiang’s regime losing much face as a result of successive military . defeats, the Chinese political sitiation also has been blurred, with the Communists pressing for greater power in government, PACIFIC: Jap Ship Shortage Effect of the heavy U. S, aerial and naval campaign against Japanese shipping in far Pacific waters was reflected in the Tokyo radio’s announcement that a shortage in ocean tonnage had contributed to a food crises. Flood and drought were other factors mentioned. i
"~ Tokyo admitted the crifical shipping situation as the destruction of planes and subs was revealed, and as army fliers intensified their attacks on enemy craft plying in: the Philippine area. One of the principal U. S. targets was the great oil storage center of Balikpapan on Bornea. EXPORTS
Best customers for U. S. goods in 1941 were Great Britain, which took 31.8 per cent of our total exports of $5,147,000,000 including lend-lease; Canada, 19.3 per cent; Egypt, 4.9 per cent; and South Africa, 3.6 per cent,- : , With 16.5 per cent, Canada sold U. S. the greatest percentage of foreign goods, with Bt_itisp Malaya second with 10.3 per cent, and the Netherlands Indies thigd with 7.2 per cent. Brazil fqgowed with 5.5 per cent and Cuba with 5.4 percent. =~
M ® Persons now cniucé in essential industry will not apply without statement of availability from thg local United States Employment Service. Correspondent Wanted Familiar with Sunday school needs. To write letters to customers that will make Hon S BrEht Lo Torine Bl oy n wi ar re, established publishing house 35 miles N. W. of Chicago. Ideal working conditions in clean modern plant. Good salary, bonus, -vacation with pay, retirement insurance. Address DAVID C. COOK PUBLISHING CO. Elgin - - Hlinois. _—-——_——_—— —-——-—_‘.___—— Saddlzs—Western, factory to you. 200 in stock. Send for catalog. NEWELL’S SADDLERY, 1627 S. Broadway, St. Louis 4, Me. At e L 1 5 M 5 et e e ettt et e ARS 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 oßt ee B e k. 5. e AT e A e et et . A et i e. et RIS Photostamps is¢. Double size $1 hundred. Any photo—prof. enlarg. from neg. 8”"x10” —3s¢. E. Lang, 1334 Thorndale, Chicago.
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Life Insurance Policies - Auctioned Off in London For years in London, many a person wishing to cash his life insurance policy has put it up at a monthly - auction' where it may bring from 5 to 20 per cent more than its surrender value, says Collier’s. Every detail about it, except the name and address of the insured (which are never disclosed) is furnished by the auectioneer. s
"As the successful bidder becomes the beneficiary and responsible for all further premium payments, he thus gambles that the face value of the policy will greatly exceed his investment in its purchase and premiums.
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