Ligonier Banner., Volume 78, Number 44, Ligonier, Noble County, 16 November 1944 — Page 2
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THE STORY THUS FAR: Zorie Corey 1s 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 Samoa en route to Hawaii she is thrown overboard, but is rescued. Pearl Harbor is bombed while they are steaming towards Hawail, and two destroyers escort them to the isle of Oahu. After landing Zorie and Paul overhear Paul’'s handsome brother, Steve, with whom Zorie is infatuated, plotting with ‘Winthrop Lanning to deliver some radar equipment to the Axis. Believing Steve is in danger Zorie rushes into the night to save him and discovers the body of beautiful Amber Lanning on the ground.
CHAPTER XIV
“I didn’t!’”’ Zorie wailed. ‘‘Pierre did it! Just this minute! He must have strangled her!” : Mr. Lanning held the light not too steadily on her face. “Miss Corey,” he said, “this is tragic. This is very, very tragic.” i The next thing, his hand was clamped over her mouth and he was holding her tight against his body with his other hand and arm. She could not move.
‘ln the silence, she heard footfalls on the other path, and the sound of men’s voices. She identified them as Pierre’s and Steve’s. They were going to the garage.
She struggled. She tried to free herself, but Mr. Lanning was prepared for it. He held her so tightly that she could not move. He held her until the sound ¢came of a car starting, then the soft low whine of its gears. The crisp sound of its exhaust retreated and faded.
Holding her securely, Mr. Lanning shook out a folded handkerchief. It was, she discovered later, a large one. He forced the thick center part into her mouth and tied the ends tight behind her head, so that she could not cry out.. He seemed to have recovered his composure. He- was, once again, the calm, urbane gentleman she had known on the ‘“‘Samoa.” He was meeting an emergency, a serious crisis, as men of his sort always do, with finesse and sureness.
“I'm so sorry, Miss Corey,” he said. ‘““‘But this is really necessary. This is a very critical time, I assure you, and you have stumbled upon something that is very embarrassing to me.” '
He carried her along the path to where it joined the other path. He carried her into the garage. With his flashlight, he found some short pieces of rope. He tied Zorie’s feet together, and he tied- her hands securely behind her.
“I am really so sorry about this, Miss Corey,’”’ he said. ‘“But I can’t leave you here.:. I assure you, you are most embarrassing to me. I have to keep an appointment, and I dare not leave you here.” He found some soft cushions and placed them on the floor of a sedan. He arranged. Zorie on these cushions, and he was extremely gentle about it. He closed the door, then got into the driver’s seat, backed the car out, and started. Zorie knew when they were climbing the hill out of |} the cove to the cliff, and she wondered if he intended throwing her off the cliff. The car stopped presently and Mr. Lanning got out and opened the rear door. It was now raining hard. He removed the gag from her mouth, but he did not remove the cord from her wrists or ankles. Zorie's lips were numb and there was a bitter taste in her mouth. He took off his coat and draped it about her shoulders. He gathered her into his arms and started at a trot through the rain. . In the light of his pocket torch, which danced as he ran, she saw the house—a large cabin painted a dull green, now shining wet with rain.. Mr. Lanning carried her up on a_ porch, unlocked a door and carried her inside. He directed his light about the room.’ a i It was a cozy, nicely furnished room—typically a man’s idea of - what a comfortable living-room in a | mountain cabin should be. ' : He carried her through this room and into the one beyond, a smaller ~room- at the back of the house. It ‘was a combined study and breakfast room; and beyond it, through an open door, she caught a glimpse of the kitchen. , + Mr. Lanning gently set Zorie in a chair beside a window. He closed the living-room door and lighted a - kerosene lamp on the table. . - He sat down in a chair facing her. ' He looked her over with anxious solicitude. Her lovely sun-pleated starsapphire gown was spattered with ‘purple-red mud. o . .As she stared at him, all her coirage, the fortitude that had been ~ sustaining her, threatened to leave her. She had a quick ";Pflflnt glimpse of the girl she had once & - been, the girl who had changed so miraculously. She felt herself slip- - ping back irresistibly into that per- ~ petually meek, timid, frightened girl. . Then her wavering eyes returned : to Mr. Lanning's flushed face and .. steadied. Stmngih ~and courage. ;. came back muwgod gu%togd hgd - self she IVO -1 ve g Ql‘“ ,‘ B R seR e s e L
and feet tied, Miss Corey. But this is an extremely dangerous situation. I may be occupied with other things, and you must realize that, under the circumstances, I cannot entirely trust you.” He took a flat quart bottle out of his hip pocket. He undid the foil about the neck of it and unscrewed the cap. - .
“Bra;ndy,-" he said, “is always so comforting in a crisis. Will you Join me?”
“No,” Zorie said huskily.
The precautions he had taken were alarming. If he merely intended to detain her a while, to question her, he would have untied her hands and feet. And something in his manner, in his eyes, was alarming, too. For the first time since he had discovered her bending over Amber’s body, she felt thoroughly frightened. During most of the ride she had been too occupied with thoughts of Steve to give much thought to herself. She had reasoned that he and Pierre would probably not go to Kokee. Pierre would doubtless shoot him as they drove along. She was sure that Pierre intended to kill Steve. He might be dead now. . Her thoughts returned briefly to Paul. She could recall so clearly his vindictive expression as he said those things that he should have known might sentence Steve to death. A man of Paul’s type was
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He gathered her in his arms and started at a trot. .
not to be trusted in a situation calling for honest thinking. At this moment, her feeling for Paul was one of sheer loathing. Because of his vindictiveness and his unpredictable nature, his brother was possibly dead and she was in a position of the utmost gravity. ‘“What are you going to do with me?’”’ she asked.
Winthrop Lanning tilted the bottle to his mouth and drark. His hand was shging -a little. He put the bottle batk on the table.
He looked at her. The steadiness of her stare seemed to disconcert him. He glanced away. He made a grimace. :
“Nothing,"” he answered. “The matter is no longer in my hands.”
““Whose cabin is this?”’
Mr. Lanning’s dark eyes were vague. The gray flesh under them looked more puffy than usual. He bent forward. =
“Miss' Corey, you have in your possession an extremely dangerous piece of information. I regret exceedingly that it happens to be in your possession. I am very much afraid that the outlook for you is very serious. I am very much afraid that there is no hope at-all for you.” He sighed heavily. “You are entirely innocent. I admire you very much.. And I do wish there was some way out of this for you. I will gladly help you in any way.” Zorie's mouth was very dry. ‘Do you mean—l won’tdeave this cabin alive?” #OB Mr. Lanning avoided her eyes. He seemed to be genuinely -upset. “The gentleman to whom this cabin belongs will be here presently. He will have to decide. Meanwhile, since things are so completely hopeless for you—is there anything 1 can do?” S
‘“What is happening to Steve?” "~ He lifted his shoulders slowly and let them fall. *“I do not know, Miss Corey. ‘I haven't the faintest idea. I will gladly answer any: question you care to ask.” .. Ty “I think I'm beginning to understand,” Zorie said, ‘‘lt’s either your life or mine. Isn’t that true?” - “Only partly, Miss Corey. It is really a little more comprehensive than that. If you:should be set free, you can say 'so many dangerous things;;not only about me but ~about other people.”. . - “But it I disappear, how will that “Many people disappear and it is ~never explained.” T
THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, IND.
_“How will Amber’s death be explained?”’ His eyebrows went up. ‘“But my dear Miss Corey, I thought that was quite obvious to you. You are such: a clever young lady I sometimes forget you've had no experience with this sort of thing.” ; _ ‘“‘Are you saying,” Zorie gasped, “that her death will be blamed on me?” :
“But it is already blamed on you!” he said, as if he were greatly surpfised.. ‘“Where do you suppose your compact is? Where do you suppose your handkerchief is?”’ . “By her body!”” Zorie cried. “But of course, Miss Corey!”’ Zorie took a deep breath. Mr. Lanning was gazing at her sadly. ‘““Men in your profession do things so thoroughly,” she said. . “I’d forgotten. As you say, I'm not used to this sort of thing. When Amber is found, with those simple proofs that I killed her, the authorities will assume that, in grief or panic, I went off and perhaps threw myself off a cliff. I suppose that’s very obvious.” .
He was nodding. His attitude remained one of mild amazement. It was all so obvious, so logical, to him. :
“You're sorry,” she said quietly. “You're awfully sorry that I must be—liquidated. But you've arranged it so that I haven’t a chance.” ;
Mr. Lanning shook his head. ‘‘No, Miss Corey, I don't say quite that. There may be an alternative.” “Is there any alternative to my being killed in cold blood?” ‘“I do not say that there is,” he answered. “I only say there may be.” ““Where did Steve and Pierre Savoyard go?”’ “I don’t know, Miss Corey.” ‘‘But don’t you assume that Pierre will kill him?”’ 5
“I think that Pierre will try. But Steve is very clever. If he was aware that your fiance said the things he did, he would be better prepared to cope with Pierre. But he wasn’t aware. Therefore, Pierre has a slight advantage. But only a slight advantage. It may not be enough. I am speaking very frankly. Pierre is not clever. He is relentless, but his intelligence is not always alert. And in this profession, cleverness counts more than relentlessness. Therefore, Steve has an even chance of coming out of it alive.” s, Zorie believed he was being honest. If Steve had a chance of coming out of it alive, he might come to this cabin. It would improve Steve’s chances—and her own—if she could persuade Mr. Lanning that Paul had been lying maliciously and that Steve had been honest in his dealings with these people. If Steve reached this cabin alive, she was certain he would not let them kill her, provided he was given a voice in the matter. It came down to that very ironical basis: Her only chance to get out of this cabin alive was to convince Mr. Lanning, and anyone else who came in, that Steve was what he actually was—a trueblue Nazi! And if she could somehow save her own life, she would have -a chance of trapping them all. She suspected that Mr. Lanning, in his present frame of mind, would be an awfully hard man to convince. First, she must secure all the information he would part with.
“Who owns this cabin?”’ “One of your dinner guests—Basil Stromberg. You are surprised?” “And Mr. Stromberg will have the final say, whether I'm to live or not?”’
‘“Yes, Miss Corey.” ““When will he be here?”
Mr. Lanning looked at his watch. “I told him two-thirty. It is now twelve-forty. He is usually very punctual, but he had certain arrangements to make and he may be a little late.” :
Zorie supposed that these arrangements had to. do with getting the precious cabinet containing' JY-419 off this island. Mr. Stromberg was doubtless contacting a Japanese agent who would arrange to have JY-419 delivered to a Japanese submarine. : : ““Are we in Kokee?”
‘“Yes. On the edge of Waimea Canyon—the most beautiful canyon in the world. More beautiful, in my opinion, than the Grand Canyon of the Colorado. I sincerely hope you will live to see a Waimea sunrise, if this rain will only stop. You will see it from this window. The edge of the canyon is only a hundred feet away. From this window, the view is superb.”’ Foodnee He went around -the ‘table and. opened the window. = Y “We don’t have to blackout here,” Mr. Lanning said. ‘‘There is noth ing across the canyon but swampy ‘wilderness, 'Of all the dreary e strictions of modern warfare, the: ‘one I detest the most is the blackOut-” ¢ > g St : b A . 'He returned to his chair. He had another drink. The level in the bottle had already gone down amazing- { ly. Zorie recalled the seven or eight -eocktails he had-had before dinner. His eyes were as clear, his hands. and his voice and evidently his brain ‘were - as steady as if he hadn’t a | _ (TO BE CONTINUED) i
——WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS ———— MacArthur's Forces Close In to Cut Off Japs Pacific Empire; Set Up Military Rule for Reich
(EPITOR’S NOTE: Wher opinions are ox'z:emd in these columns, they are those of Western Newspaper Union’s news analy and not necessarily of this newspaper.)
EUROPE: Press Through Mud - - As American forces extended their holdings about rubbled Aachen, and other Allied units pressed against the reich through fall mush, the U. S. and Britain' laid down regulations for strict military government of occupied German territory and Adolf Hitler called on every able-bodied male between 16 and 60—and “‘if need be, women and girls’’'—for guerrilla warfare against the conquerors. i Focal point of fighting continued around Aachen, where Doughboys rooted out German defenders house by house in the once proud, now shattered, city of 165,000, and strong enemy units assembled to the east of the metropolis in an effort to prevent the Americans from bursting into the vital Rhineland. Action also flared on the Dutch frontier to the north, where British troops pressed toward the German border below the pivotal Siegfried bastion of Kleve, gateway to the industrial Ruhr valley. So bitter was the fighting in this sector, that desperate Nazis made every house around the village of Venray a stronghold, with hand-to-hand struggles even carrying into the hallways framed with miniatures of Dutch masters.
Fighting was equally intense on the lower end of the 460-mile front, where the U. S. Seventh army edged up the foothills of the Vosges mountains guarding the Bavarian border, and lashed at approaches to the 25-mile-wide Belfort Gap to the south. Strict Control ?
In extending military government to occupied German territory, the Allies demanded strict obedience to regulations, and decreed death for espionage, armed resistance, unauthorized possession of firearms or a
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Churning through muddy roads, jeeps carry U. S. troops to rainsoaked battle-front.
wireless transmitting set, looting or pillage, destruction of records and sabotage. Further, travel within Germany will be forbidden except by special permission, and all political prisoners, Jews and foes of the Nazi regime will be released. ~ - Pending establishment of Allied control, postal, telegraph and telephone service will be suspended. Radios will be permitted. s
‘By Every Bush’
In calling up the guerrilla army to operate behind Allied lines, Hitler gaid: :
. “Just as in 1939 we are facing the enemy alone. In a first enormous effort of our German people’s strength, we succeeded then; Germany’s second all-out effort must and will succeed. Relying on our own force, we will not only break the enemy’s will of destruction, but we will throw him back again . . .” Addressing the reich from a barracks in East Prussia, under siege of Russian forces driving in io,m the north, east and south, Home Front Commander and Gestapo Chief Himmler ordered the defense of Germany *. . . by every village, every house, every farm, every ditch, every forest and every bush. . . ."” G Massed Attacks
With the Russians attacking in force in East Prussia, driving into Czechoslovakia through the northern Carpathian mountain passes and battering enemy armored columns on the Hungarian plains, the Germans were hard pressed to hold their lines in the east. S Referring to the bitter fighting in East Prussia, where the Reds were employing upwards of 600 tanks, the Nazi radio exclaimed: *. . . The country is enveloped in smoke and belching flames and above it hangs the never ending din of battle. . . .””
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PACIFIC: Return to Philippines Pursuing the tactics he employed in the Solomons, New Britain and New Guinea in separating enemy forces, General Douglas MacArthur struck .at Leyte island in the center of the Philippines. As the generals grand strategy shaped as the U. S. Sixth army, sup-~ ported by the U. S. Third and Seventh fleets and carrier planes, not only were the Japanese on the main island of Luzon in the north divided from their units on Mindanao to the
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Circle indicates region of U. S. invasion of Philippines. south, but the Americans’ foothold put them in position to threaten the enemy’s supply lines farther to the west carrying vital raw materials from the Indies region up to the foe’s home industries. i Under cover of an extensive air umbrella and the big guns of the U. S. warships, supplies were poured ashore to the American troops, who held a wide strip reaching southward from the principal port of Tacloban, and who girded for a showdown fight with an estimated 225,000 Japanese in the Philippines under Field Marshall Count Juichi Terauchi. ; General MacArthur’s invasion of the Philippines, fulfilling his pledge to return after the Japanese conquest of the islands less than three years ago, followed in the wake of the Third fleet’s continued aerial attack on enemy shipping and aviation units in the Formosa and Manila regions, which prevented theii’ free dispatch to counter the big invasion of Leyte. - The presence of substantial elements of the Third fleet in these waters, with warships as well as aircraft carriers in full array, also scared off the vaunted Japanese navy’s incursion into the invasion waters, the enemy turning tail before large-scale action could develop.
General MacArthur’s return to the Philippines was personal, the commander having directed the operation from a warship and then set up headquarters ashore.
¥UEL: Warm Winter
Due to a combination of high production of coal and efficient transportation, U. S. homes will be well warmed this winter, even though the government continues to advise conservation to assure orderly consumption to meet wartime needs. With production having passed the 500,000,000 ton mark so far, softcoal output is running 25,000,000 tons over last year. Not only are rail deliveries moving up to snuff, but careful planning has permitted the transport of great quantities of coal over the Great Lakes for distribution to adjacent territories. How much foreign countries may draw on U. S. coal supplies remsains undetermined, with British production lagging and miners threatening to strike for higher wages, and uncertainty existing as to what extent output may be resumed in liberated nations to help meet some of their own needs.
Oil Output
Rieh in coal, the U. S. is equally rich in petroleum, with oil production estimated at approximately 5,500,000 barrels daily. . With its western and coastal fields alone yielding over 1,000,000 barrels daily, Texas, with its seven producing areas, leads the U. S. in output with over 2,000,000 barrels. With almost 900,000 barrels daily, California runs second. ; e HEGTANG
Other big producers with their approximate daily output include Louisiana with 360,000 barrels; Oklahoma 340,000; Kansas 265,000; Illinois 200,000; New Mexico 100,000; Wyoming 98,000 and Arkansas 80,000. . With 50 barrels daily, Florida is at the bottom of the list. .
While casting in the west fork of the Chippewa river near Hayward, Wis., Frank Shriner of Chicago, 111., drew on a 3% foot musky. ' Twice the musky bumped into the spoon, then, enraged, really charged it a third time as Shriner pulled it in. Coming in hard, the musky crashed right into the flat side of Shriner’s boat as he nailed the spoon and lay nearby belly up! ~ Then the musky rolled right side up, shook the spoon out of his jaws, and was off. +
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Cold Preparations as directed
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Kidneys Must IR U
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