Ligonier Banner., Volume 78, Number 45, Ligonier, Noble County, 23 November 1944 — Page 2
e -»*:WLVM e s R N eNy e\ APh: a:"é% | -S S N = QBT /;? e ——— ' ;‘t".‘:;!l‘é‘}“\i:""df ITEEREC e GEORGE F. WORTS ~— Sl iSR i / WU RELEASE == ”
THE STORY THUS FAR: Zorie Corey is railroaded into taking a job she does not want, helping old Admiral Duncan write his memoirs. She is in love with Paul Duncan, the admiral’s grandson. While aboard the Samoa en route to Hawail she is thrown overboard, and before arriving at Oahu, Pearl Harbor is bombed. After landing, Paul and Zorie 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 in danger Zorie rushes into the night to save him and discovers the body of beautiful Amber Lanning. Winthrop Lanning binds Zorie and drives her to a cabin in the mountains. ’
CHAPTER XV
“Is there anything you can say to me,”’ he asked gently, ‘“‘that might be useful—on your behalf? Mr. Stromberg is a realist and a man of quick decisions. Ido not know what he will decide to do, but I assure you I will do everything to save your life. You are so innocent and so beautiful.” . -
“Will you tell me who Ah-nah is?”’ Zorie asked.
“But of course, Miss Corey! I will gladly answer all of your questions. Ah-nah is Pierre’s way of pronouncing Anna. He is referring to one of the bravest, cleverest, most brilliant, most dangerous secret agents who ever lived—Anna Boland. She was an English girl, of about your age—an amazing person. She was shot by a firing squad in Berlin six months ago.” “Do I resemble her?”
Mr. Lanning laughed, sharply. “My dear girl, you are Anna Boland!- It .is the most amazing resembiance I have ever known.” “Is that why Pierre threw me overboard?” .
“Yes—and for other strangely coincidental reasons. Do you recall the night in the rain in Elleryton when you met Steve Duncan?’’ “Yes."” g
“What you may not recall was that, while you were talking to Steve beside. that telephone pole, a sedan —a pale green sedan—came along. Do you recall that?”’ ‘(Yes.)) : $
. “I was in that sedan. So was Pierre. We saw you talking together. As we passed, Steve Duncan pulled you behind the pole.” ““Why?"’ said Zorie. “Steve explained that to us very lucidly. He did some very quick thinking. He had seen your amazing resemblance to Anna Boland. Then he recognized me in the sedan. He reasoned that, in spite of our belief that Anna Boland was dead, your resemblance to her placed you in danger. He pulled you behind the pole to protect you,” “Might you or Pierre have shot me—something like that?’” -
“I would call that a very remote possibility,”” Mr. Lanning answered. “In spite of his lazy way, Steve Duncan thinks with great rapidity. He was simply taking no chances.” “And, of course,” Zorie said, “That made you suspicious.” ““At least it made us very curious. But we did not see yeu well enough that night to notice your remarkable resemblance to Anna Boland. It was later, when we saw you on the ship, that we pieced things together. In Elleryton, we merely thought that you and Steve were being extremely furtive.”
“But there were other suspicious circumstances. One was your possession of a certain engineering paper on the retooling of the Waffenfabrik Krupp plant for increased war production. It was the sort of document Anna Boland might have had. Another item was your stenographic notebook.” :
She wondered why he was going to all this bother. He didn’t have to explain anything to her. Certainly he expected to learn nothing of importance from her. Back of his air of solicitude was a quality that puzzled her. Why, she asked herself, was Mr. Lanning being so outspoken? e SR | Mr. Lanning paused.” He took another drink. PR Bl
“You; realize, of course, that Pierre killed Amber by mistake. When your fiance made that unfortunate disclosure on the lanai, I knew that Pierre would go berserk. It has taken all my persuasiveness, all my' ingenuity, to keep him in hand so far. All along, he has been very suspicious of Steve—and certain that you were Anna Boland. If he kills Steve, he should be here at any moment. When he finds that you are still alive, he is apt to be quite upset. “You see, Anna Boland was something of a legend. Every time she was killed, she popped up somewhere a litle later—more alive than ever. Pierre has already killed you twice—once by drowning, onc,emz strangling. He is a very supers tious man. His face, if he comes inte this room, will be very interesting to watch.” = = g
“With you,” Zorie said, “insisting that lam not Anna Boland, and with Pierre insisting that I am—why didn’t you check up? Couldn’t you somehow have radioed Berlin and confirmed Anna Boland's death? I've lived in Elleryton all my life, It would have been so easy . ..” -
Mr. Lanning jumped up. “But, my dear girl, that is the most amazing part of all. The day before Pierre tried to drown you, we sent two radiograms, one which reached Berlin, in round-about ways, the other
to a man I happen to know in Chicago—a faithful man—but not too intelligent. I instructed him fo proceed at once to Elleryton and send us a brief report on you, to be followed later. by a more detailed report. 5
“My message to Berlin must have fallen into the hands of an overcautious clerk. I said, iff substance, ‘ls Anna Boland dead? Her duplicate is aboard this ship under very suspicious circumstances . . .’ The answer said: ‘Perhaps it was Anna Boland’s double we shot.’ Of course, that bolstered Pierre’s suspicions tremendously, but not nearly so much as the answer we received from the man I sent to Elleryton. This will amuse you very much, Miss Corey.” : : Mr. Lanning paused for another drink. and Zorie wondered if anything could ever amuse her again.
‘“His reply, decoded, said literally this: ‘Zorie Corey left for Hawaii on fourth. Was employed by Professor Bowdoin J. Folsome past four
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Mr. Lanning paused for another
months. He says she is too smart. His wife claims she is a very suspicious character. Full report later.’ “That,” said Zorie grimly, ‘“is very, very funny, Mr, Lanning.”” He started to smile, but when he saw her expression he checked himself. : i
“It is so curious, isn’t it? Steve told us about Mrs. Folsome’s tea invitations. It should have convinced Pjerre, but he is so stubborn! And Amber was almost equally stubborn. Incidentally, that ‘full.-report’ had not come when we left Honolulu.””
Zorie wondered why he was so eager to explain, to answer all her questions. His solicitude for her plight did not wholly explain him. It was, perhaps, a natural instinct; but it went deeper than that. He was a little drunk, therefore garrulous. But it was not just that. Perhaps, she reflected, ‘it was his vanity. He was bored. He wanted to talk. And he was an exhibitionist. Recalling the night she had slapped Amber’s face, Zorie said, ‘“Amber hated me.” -
“‘On the contrary, Miss Corey, she admired you very much!” ‘““On the assumption th&t I was Anna Boland?”? # = ; :
‘‘She was never quite sure about that. You see, Amber was not a secret agent, Miss Corey. She was merely a girl of strong enthusiasms who sincerely believed in our cause. She asked repeatedly to be given a chance to help. She lived on Martinique and when the island went Vichy, she was one of our most loyal supporters. She was capable,’” Mr. Lanning said thoughtfully, “but a frifle too enthusiastic—too inclined fo take matters into her own hands. She had the ardor of the amateur. She hated to take orders.”
‘““Wasn’t Pierre ‘under your orders, too?”’ Zorie interrupted. - “In a lesser sense. Pierre has lived mostly in the United States, although the past two years he has been in and out of Europé frequently. In certain kinds of work, he is indispensable. His vanity makes him hard to work with.” ‘“He is a brute,”” Zorie said with feeling. ‘‘He is a beast.” “Yes. And he is sometimes difficult to handle, His two attempts at killing you were typical of Pierre, He tried to drown you because, if you actually were Anna Boland; you were an extremely dangerous enemy agent—to be:liquidated. His mistaken attempt at killing you to‘night was similarly motivated. As ‘he saw it, our work was done—the jig was up. We'd all clear out immediately. And you are still, to him, Anna Boland—a dangerous en--emy to be eliminated.” :
“How do you plan to clear out—in a Japanese submarine?” =
He -smiled and shrugged. “Perhaps. There are so many ways.”
SEYRTE. M??’Vith this is this island so well g guard-
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Mr. Lanning seemed amused. ‘M) dear girl, this little island hasng: yet cut its war teeth. You saw how easily I got past those guards. Q:i;fi as easily I can clear out. As awa goes on, you learn many tricks, many ropes . . . I was about to say that Amber was an individualist, too, but easy to'reach through her emotions. She yery much enjoyed playing the part I gave her, which was that of the lovely siren. In an assignment of this nature, we always have ‘a-girl of her type along.” - “The first time Amber saw me,” Zorie interrupted, “she stared at me as if I were a ghost. I know now she thought I was Anna Boland.” -
Mr. Lanning chuckled. “Yes, you gave her a dreadful shock.” “If she spent her life in Martinique, how did she know Anna Boland?®; -t oy e
“She did not know Anna, Miss Corey. Amber was a resident of Martinique, but she spent a large part of her life in the States. At least, she went to finishing school and college there. Miss Boland was pointed out to her twice—once in a New York night club, and once in Martinique. A large part of the treasury of France—something like four hundred million, in gold bullion—is stored there, you know. Anna Boland was in Martinique, doing a little snooping. “In spite of being a British agent, Anna Boland was Amber’'s ideal. Anna was beautiful, clever—and a witch. She was quite in the tradition. She had no conscience. There was no trick in the bag she hesitated to use. To her, love was a weapon or a tool. Men lost their heads over her. Amber, in this assignment, tore a page from Anna Boland’s book. She used love as a tool. At least, she tried. “I instructed her to worm her way into Steve’'s confidence, and, of course, the surest way to worm your way into a man’s confidence is to make him believe that you’ve fallen in love with him.”’
“‘She did it very well,” Zorie murmured.
“She was always jealous of you. She knew that Steve had fallen in love with you.” j ““That’s absurd,’” Zorie said. j
Mr. Lanning shrugged. ‘“Perhaps! I do not know. Love is a luxury that I cannot afford. I enly know that Amber would not have qualified as a secret agent. She was too human.” : 7 i
“Or too wise,” Zorie murmured.
Winthrop ‘- Lanning’s eyes were partly lidded. He looked more cynical than usual. I think you would do marvelously in this work because your innocence is such an excellent cloak for your cleverness.” “I’'m afraid I’'m too human, too,” Zorie said. ‘“‘Besides I could never work with you. You're too suspi~ cious, too obstinate—’’ ,
“In this work, my dear girl, suspicion is—" . “Ah, yes, I know! The one firm foundation! But I've listened to you argue. I've heard your opinions. You're what we call, back in Elleryton, a conclusion-jumper. I've suspected this for some time, Mr. Lanning. Now I'm sure. Suspicion is no lgnger your slave—it’s your master! ! B S
Winthrop Lanning started from_’ihis chair. He was suddenly wary. “Just what are you saying, Miss Corey?” “I'll give you a perfect example,” Zorie quickly answered. ‘‘You honestly believed that what Paul Duncan said on the lanai tonight was the truth!” 2| “It was the truth!” §
-“It was a malicious lie! But you: leaped at it because you were S 0 willing to be suspicious! If you ' hadn’t become the slave of suspicion, you would not have believed® it!”’ g vy
“My dear Miss Corey,” he ‘answered with his most urbane smile. “I am not a fool. Perhaps I am always suspicious, but I am always clever, too. Sometimes I am almost psychic. Steve has been clever—altogether too clever. He has had me fooled a great deal of the time. He almost had me fooled tonight.” 3 .
*“Do you realize,” Zorie stopped him, “that Paul did not know what he was talking about?” i “Why did he say it?” @ ‘‘He and I happened to overhear your conversation behind the hedge with Steve and Pierre—your plans for tonight. Paul said what Re did merely to upset Steve’s plan—by . destroying your trust in him.”
Mr. Lanning was staring at her curiously. “This is most interesting, Miss Corey, but I think you are being ‘a little too clever yourself. Your fiance was very convincing. He accomplished his purpose nicely. But my psychic sense tells me that your flance was telling substantially the truth.”
“Why?"” Zorie demanded. *‘Because it was a very dangerous moment for you! It was safer to. be suspicious! You weren't being clever or psychic! ;You were playing safe! My candid opinion is that you picked that moment to lose your nervel” Winthrop Lanning sank back in his chair. He was smiling mysteri. (TO BE CONTINUED) : l
——— WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS ——— U.S. Fleet Secures MacArthur's Supply Lines to Philippines; Authorize More Civilian Goods
(EDITOR’S NOTE: When opinions are expressed in these columns, they are those of Western Newspaper Union’s news analysts and not necessarily oi this newspaper.)
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U. S. Doughboy is shown knocking out Nazi tank with bazooka on western front. : S b : .
EUROPE: i Clearing Holland Pushed back in France and Belgium, the Germans were being shoved out of their last holdings in Holland by Canadian and British troops applying a double squeeze on some 60,000 Nazis in the southwestern part of the country. Only in Holland was there major action on the western front, with rain and snow bogging U. S. drives about Aachen, Metz and the Vosges mountains. :
Even though the British 2nd army had overrun the entire eastern section of Holland in a drive that the Nazis only stopped at the gateway to their important Ruhr valley, the Germans held their ground in the western part of the country for the purpose of denying the Allies use of the great North sea poris for the supply of their onrushing armies.
Principal port denied the Allies was Antwerp, which the Nazis blocked off by occupying both sides of the Schelde river leading inland to the city. Dotting one side of the Schelde are the Walcheren and South Beveland islands, connected to the mainland by a causeway below Bergen Op Zoom. In attempting to knock the Germans out of their strategic positions -along both gides of the Schelde, Canadian' troops cut into the enemy’s defenses on the south bank of the river, and fought to capture the causeway below Bergen Op Zoom and cut off island communications with the mainland.
Meanwhile, British troops smashed through Nazi defenses to the north, with the aim of racing toward the
Speaking in the house of commons after his conference with Josef Stalin in Moscow, Prime Minister Churchill declared: “Unconditional surrender in the sense of no bargaining with the enemy ‘is still the policy of the government.” :
sea and thus cutting off all German troops along the Schelde to the south. : G
Capture of Antwerp and Rotterdam would givethe Allies at least two great ports for funneling in supplies for the drive on Germany and relieve the need for a reliance on smaller, crowded facilities. -
Slow Going in Italy
" In'ltaly, German Field Marshall _Albert Kesselring seemed to be pulling his lines northward in a slow, withdrawing :movement hinged on the : big communications hub of Bologna, as Allied troops pushed further through the mud onto the .broad plains of the Po valley.
Russ Reach Norway
-‘Norway was the latest European state to be invaded by the Russians, with, Gen: K. A. Meretskov’s northern Red army driving into the Arctic port of Kirkenes in the wake of its. abandonment by 25,000 Nazi troops. . e
Russian entrance into Norway coincided with the Reds’ all-out offensive against East Prussia, noted wooded and lake country of the Junker military caste. Calling panzer formations into action along roadways leading to the heart of the province, the Germans sought to stall the. Russians’ advance westward, originally paced by an’ estimated 600 tanks.
Compelled .to . throw additional forces in Hungary to stave off the Russian drive on Budapest, the Germans fought hard to protect the broad ‘gateway to Austria from the western end of the country. In raging tank battles, the enemy suc‘ceeded in slowing the Red advance 50 miles from Budapest.
ODT Says Women Are Different, After All
Rosie the Riveter notwithstanding, there’s a basic difference between men and women workers, the Office of Defense Transportation says. | In a bulletin to employers, the ODT says: “The average woman differs from the average man in cer{ain physical, psychological and exm« factorsh' mhwhpve a direct For guhncc. ODT points out, the
PACIFIC: S Save Communications
Long in hiding, Japan’s imperial navy came out for battle in an effort to smash the American supply line to General Douglas MacArthur’'s forces in the Philippines, and limped off in defeat as the U. S. 3rd and 7th fleets shattered the attack and secured the vital communications.
The Japs’ attack took the shape of a three-pronged assault, with one enemy force coming in through the narrow Surigao straits south of Leyte; the second driving in through the San Bernardino straits north of Leyte, and the third heading southward from Formosan waters.
Apprised of the Japs’ approach by alert U, S. carrier planes, Vice Adm. Thomas C. Kinkaid divided his outnumbered 7th fleet into two forces, which, with the aid of carrier planes, dealt the enemy a telling blow before he could fully develop his attack. Meanwhile, Adm. William F, Halsey’s 3rd fleet, made up of warships, - carriers and subs, caught the Japs sailing down from Formosa. ' 1
After the smoke of battle had
cleared, two Jap carriers, two - battleships, five cruisers and three destroyers were sunk, with three more warships probably < sunk and a dozen damaged. For their part, the Japs claimed to have primarily struck transports and landing craft. | As the crippled Jap fleet limped homeward licking its wounds, General MacArthur’s ground forces consolidated their hold on Leyte island despite mounting enemy resistance and also strengthened their grip on Samar island just across the San Juanico straits. : bog HOME FRONT: o
News for Consumers
On the home-front, consumérs heard this news: il
There will be less meat for civilians in November but more of the better grades. There will be lédss cheese but the same amount of butter as in October. : ' Approximately 800 plants were authorized to produce 152 million dollars of civilian goods during the next year. Loaesiie. 1 ; Infants’ and children’s clothes were expected to be in greater g;epply next January, February and March. Cotton textile controls will be maintained after Germany’s zleTewt. ' Tl £ Possessing available facilitij ‘and labor, the 800 plants will bée - permitted to manufacture vacs uum cleaners, bed springs and innerspring mattresses, autoy motive parts, building materials§ : plumbing and heating items, _household aluminum ware, elecz ~tric irons, lamps, lawn mowers, - furniture, church goods, foun‘tah; pens and sporting goods. - Because of pent-up demand, made -even more formidable by swollen purchasing * power, the mount ;of goods authorized represents virtually a drop in the bucket. | To assure production of more infants’ and children’s wear for the first three months of 1945, the War Production board moved to release sufficient material for 30,000,000 garments, and also laid down specifications for the type of goods and workmanship to be employed. = The WPB hurried the program even as its .chairman, J. A. Krug, announced that because of drops in output of cotton textiles due to lag:r difficulties, controls will be extended after Germany’s downfall to prevent ‘acute shortages. | : :
differently in women, partially accounting for their tendency to grasp tools differently from men and be less steady on their feet. According to ODT, most women are handicapped in the men’s world because they never play with mechanical toys, mow lawns or drive ‘heavier vehicles. Because of their ‘ummmd other finer t‘::hbow‘ever, they p " greater fants exterity, ODT coneludes.
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