The Syracuse Journal, Volume 27, Number 45, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 7 March 1935 — Page 3
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COLLIDE v Edwin and Phii f^i ß WMU Ssrvire. 4«0Bw 'WOT' W**AtS9P* IP* t
tSecilllona of tons of mass colliding ta cosmic catastrophe. Steam. fire. smoke. Tongues of flame from the center of the earth. The planets ground together and then morod across each other. It was like watching an eclipse. The magnitude of the disaster was veiled by hot gases and stupendous flames, and was diminished in awfulness by the Inters ven Ing distances and by the seeming •lowness with which it took place. Bronson Alpha rode between them and tbs earth. Then—on its opposite side—fragments of the shattered world reapjseared. Distance showed between them—widening, scattering distance. Bronson Alpha moved away on Its terrible course, fiery, spread enormously tn ghastly light During a hill of humble voices Kyto could be heard praying to strange gods la Japanese Eliot James drummed on the padded floor with monotonous Anger tips. Tony clenched Eve's hand. Timo passed—it seemed hours. A man hurried down the spiral staircase. He went directly to Hendron. Hendmn’s voice was tense: “Tell “They have seen the first result" Ton Beits replied. “The earth is shattered. Unquestionably much of its ma terial merged with Bronson Alpha; but most is scattered In fragments of various masses which will assume orbits of their own about the sun.” “And Bronson Alpha J” “It seems to have been deflected so that it will follow a hyperbola into space.” "Hyperbola, eh? That means.” Hendron explained loudly, “we will have seen ths last of Bronson Alpha. It will not return to the sun. It will leave our solar system forever. And Bronson Beta?” Hendron turned to ths German. "As we have hoped, the influence of Bronson Alpha over Bronson Beta Is ended. The collision occurred at a moment which found Bronson Beta at a favorable point In Its orbit about Bronson Alpha. Favorable. I mean, for ua. Bronson Beta will not follow Alpha into space. Its orbit ° becomes independent; Bronson Beta, almost surely, will circle the sun.” lons of the women burst out cry tag to • hysteria of relief. The world was gone; they bad seen It shattered; but another would take Its place. For the first time they succeeded In feeling thia Tony's heart raced, tt was difficult to breathe; be felt himself growing taint, dtssy and nauseated. His brain roared. The air was becoming filled with people. The slightest motion was sufficient to cause one to depart from whatever anchorage one had.. Tony saw Hendron going hand or* hand on the cable through the stair, tag head foremost. hto feet trailing out behind him. That was all he remembered. He fell into coma. When his senses returned be was lying on something hard and cold. He explored tt with his fingers, and realised dully that It was the glass screen which projected the periscope views. It was the ceiling, then, on which the pa mongers wore lying In a tangled heap, and net the deck. Their potitions had been reversed. He thought that he was scone deaf, and then per solved that the noise of the motors had stopped entirely. They were fall Ing toward Bronson Bota, using grav tty and their own inertia to sustain that downward flight He understood why be bad seen Hendron pulling him " self along the staircase. Hendron had been tranatorrtog to the control room at the opposite end of the aMp. The passengers wore breathing gasping, hiccoughing: their hearts were poundtag; their faces were stark
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They Were Walktog, Hand Ir Hand Like Children, Over the Bare, Rough Ground. The Amazing Aurora es This Strange World Lighted Thom.
white; bat they seemed to be afiva. | Tony knew they weald be all right «a | asea as the gravity from Bronson i Beta become stronger. Be knew that I the voyage was more than half fin* MfiOCCL* Clw aOfl Im CO • BUll" steep and coma. Borne sms woke him. " We're eating. on mmn ilnerFjt*t B** XI xe ww* nv» <svw WMNII • Mmlwluu HC Ml ui>. Ike gravity was SUB very Might, bat ; u how tatw omAMom wwe tab I proTiMI fw tnoTtitu ® boot th# chitift* < ber A by the Mart'ns of the
I which were to decelerate the ship. The floor was firm again. On the screen f now at their.feet they could see Bronu son Beta. It was white like an imi raense radon. but veiled in clouds, s Here and there bits of its superficial b geography were visible. In four hours b the deceleration bad been greatly Increased. In six. Bronson Beta was vls- • Ibly spreading on the screen. Decelert ation held them tightly on the floor, but they would crawl across each otbi er laboriously, and ta turn stare at » the floating, cloudy sphere upon which I they expected to arrive. I The hours dragged more, even, than l they bad on the outward journey. A r word of warning went through the I ship. The passengers took another drink of water, ate another mouthful » of food, and once again strapped themi selves to the floor. Hendron turned I on more power. 1 A half hour passed, and be did not budge. His face was taut The dan1 gers of space had been met Now • came the last great test At hla side again was Duquesne. So great was 1 the pressure of retardation that It was almost Impossible for him to move, and yet tt was necessary to do so with great delicacy. A fractional miscalculation would mean that all his work > had gone for nothing. 1 Suddenly the clouds seemed to rush • up toward him. Hendron pressed a stud. The re- ( tardation was perceptibly Increased. ( Sound began to pour ta awful volumes to their ears. Suddenly Hendron’s lips jerked spaa- , modlcally, and a quiver ran through the band on the rheostat He pointed I toward the screen with bls free band. I and they had their first view of the ( new world. CHAPTER XII I ■ o • I t The first view of the new world t now flashed through the remnants of , cloud to all the passengers. Below r them was a turbulent rolling ocean, i Where the force of their blasts struck t It It flung back terrific clouds of steam. They descended to within a . * mile of its surface, and then Hendron. I operating another lever, sent out horizontal jets, so that the ship began to move rapidly over the surface of this unknown sea. To everyone who looked, this desI ' olate expanse of ocean was like a ; ; beneficent blessing from God himself. I Here was something familiar, some- ] thing interesting, something terrestrii at Here was no longer the Incomj prehentible majesty of the void. i ' The Space Ship had reached the surface of Bronson Beta and was travi eling now at a> slow, lateral velocity above one of/the oceans. Hendron worked frantically with the delicate controls to keep the ship poised and • In regular motion; yet It rose and fell like an airplane bounding ta rough i winds, and It swayed on Its horizontal t axis so that its pilot ceaselessly played bis fingertips on the releases of the i quick blasts which maintained equilibrium. f The sullen, sunless ocean seemed I endless. Was there no land! Had the cities, had the mountains and I plains, been mere optical Illusions! Still the views obtainable from the i side periscope flashed upon the screen and showed nothing but empty sea and lowering cloud. i Then, on the far horizon, land ap I peered dimly. A ery. a shout that drowned ta the i tumult of the motors, broke from i trembling lipa Speedily they approached the land. It spread out under them. It towered Into hills Its i extent was lost ta the mists. They t reached Its coast, a blqak Inhospitable
dfiwtch b? brows earth and rock, sandy beach and cliff upon which nothing grew er moved or was Inland the country rose precipitously; and Hendron, as it be shared the imps ttance of hto passengers and could bear no more, turned the ship back toward a plateau that rose high above the tevei es the sea. Along the plateau he skimmed at a spend that might have been thirty miles an hour. The Art drew down toward the new Earth until it was ■
1 but a few feet above tb»* ground Th•peed diminished, the motors vwv turned off and on again quickly. There was a very short, very rapid drop ; bodies were thrown violently against the padded floor; the springs beneath thorn recoiled—and there was silence The ship settled at a alight angle in the earth and rock beneath It Tbe Ark was filled with a new sound —the sound of human voices raised in hysterical bedlam. “Hendron I" rose rhe shout ; and men and women, almost equally hysterical rushed to him. They bad to clap bands on him. touch him, cry out to him. Tony discovered Eve at his tide struggling toward her father, an weeping. Some one recognized he •nd thrust her through the throng. Men and women were throwing thei. arms about each other, kissing, an<; screaming In each other’s faces. Ai last some one opened the larder an< brought out food. People who had eaten practically nothing for the foui days began to devour everything the? could get their hands upon. Tony, meanwhile, bad somewhat re covered himself. He made a quick census and shouted: “We all are here. Everyone who started on this ship survived!" It set off pandemonium again, but also it reminded them of doubt of the safety of tbe second ship. “Where is It! Can It be sighted! . . . How about tbe Germans! . . . Tbe English! . . . The Japanese!” Their own shouts quieted them, so that Hendron at last could speak. “We have bad, for three days, no sight of our friends or of any of the other parties from Earth," he announced. “That does not mean that they all have failed; our path through space was not the only one. Some may have been ahead of us and arrived when the other side of this world was turned: others may still arrive; but you all understand that we can count upon no one but ourselves. “We have arrived; that we know. And none of you will question my sin cerlty when 1 repeat to you that it Is my conviction that fate—l>estiny—far more than our own efforts has brought us through. “I repeat here, tn my first words upon this strange, new. marvelous world what I said upon that planet which now flies in shattered fragments about our sun; we have arrived, not as triumphant Individuals spared for ourselves, but ss humble representatives of the result of a billion years of evolution transimrted to a sphere where we may reproduce and recreate the life given ua. . . . “I will pass at once to practical considerations. “At this spot, it Is now late In the afternoon of Bronson Beta's new day, which lasts thirty hours Instead of the twenty-four to which we are accus tomed. For the present, we must all remain upon the ship. The ground immediately under Is still baked hot by tbe beat of our bjast at landing. Moreover we must test the atmosphere carefully before we breathe it “Os course. If tt is utterly unbreath able, we will all perish soon; but if it proves merely to contain some unfavorable element against which we must be masked at first until we develop immunity to it, we must discover what It Is. “While waiting, we will discharge one of the forward rocket tubes at half-bour Intervals In the hope that our sister ship will see this signal and reply. We will also immediately put into operation an external radio system and listen for her. I wish to thank those of you who acted as my crew during this flight, and who In spite of shuddering senses and stricken bodies stuck steadfast to your poets. But there is no praise adequate ta human language for the Innumerable feats of courage, of ingenuity and perseverance which have been performed by every one of you. I trust that by morning we shall be able to make a survey of our world on foot, and I presume that by then we shall have beard from our sister ship." Eve and Tony walked back and forth through the throng of passengers, arm tn arm. Everyone was talking. Presently some one began to sing, and all the passengers joined In. Up tn the control room Hendron and bls assistants began their analysis of a sample of atmosphere that had been obtained through a small airlock. They rigged up tbe ship's wireless, and sent into the clouds the first beacon from the Ark's sky-pointing tubes. Lights were on all over the ship. Above the passenger quarters, several men were releasing and tending stock. The sheep and a few of the birds had per tahed, but the rest of the animals revived rapidly. One of Hendron's assistants put a •Up of paper before his chief. He road it: Nitrogen, 48 per cent; oxygen, 24 per per cent, neon. 13 per eent; krypton. ! • per cent; argon. S per cent; helium. 4 per cent; other gase< 3 per cent. Hendron looked at the list thought fully and took a notebook from a rack over the tabla. He glanced at the assistant and amlled. “There’s only about a 3 per cent error In our telescopic analysis It will be fair enough to breathe.** The assistant. Borden, smiled. He had been, to what tbe colonlsts came to describe as “bis former Ufa,", a professor of cbesalstry ta Stanford university. His smile was naive and pleasing. “It’s very good to breatbe. In fiset, I drew ta a large sample and breathed what was left over for about five miantei it fait like air; it looked like air; and I think we might consider it a very superior form of air remsriraMy frssh, too." Hendron chadded. “AU right Bor den. What about the temperature?” “Bghty-slx degrees Fahrenheit, top aide of the ship—but tbe ground all around has been protty highly heated, and the blast from tbe beocon also helped warm up the air. I should conjecture that the temperature to really about seventy eight degrees.” Hendron nodded slowly. “Os course i don’t know snr latitude and longi tude yet, but that seems fair enough. Pressure?" “Thirty point one hundred thlrtyflve ten Ukousaadths.** “Wind vetodtyr “ISghteen mites an hour." *SaaM«Htxr
THE SYRACUSE SOURMAX.
“Seventy-Tour per c» nt. Tm .ny judge of weather, it’s cieartag up.” “That's fine. We’ll go out to the r.orning.’’ Another man approached the desk. 'The radio set is working, Mr. Hen dron. There’s terrific static in bursts, but in the intervals listening has been >retty good. Everything’s silent. I lon*t think anybody else made it” “Right No one will leave the ship < might I believe that the situation iere is favorable; but we will need ■very advantage for our first expert nee upon thia planet So we will wait for the sun." The night came on clear. The visa screen, which had been growing darker. showed now a dim, steady light It was the light of the earth-destroy er, Bronson Alpha, shining again upon the survivors of men as tt set off on its measureless journey into infinite •pace. Other specks of light rein forced it; and the stars—glints from the debris of the world settling themselves in their strange circles about the sun. Exhaustion allied itself to obedience to Hendron's orders. The emigrants j from Earth slumped down and slept. Tony lay down but did not sleep A thought bad been stirring to his brain for a long time. Some one would have to take the risk of being the first to breathe the air of Bronson Beta. - A small sample was not decisive. Tony ■ did not know how a<*curately its composition might have been measured. He thought it might be chemically possible to breathe, but practically, hopeless. It might contain a trace of some rare poison. He should * test it himself. They should send him out first. It was a i small contribution, In Tony's mind; but't would help justify his presence on the Ark. “They might send some one useful,'* he thought. “Hendron might sacrifice himself ta the test” At last he rose. He went down the spiral staircase quietly. He shut doors behind him. In the bottom chamber he stood for a long time beside the airlock. He was trembling. He lifted the levers that closed the Inner door/ balancing them so that they would fall automatically. He stepped between It and the outer door. The lock slammed; the levers felL He was In pitch darkness. He opened the outside door. He leaned out —bls heart to his mouth. He drew In a breath. A hot, rasping, sulphurous vapor smote his nostrils. He shuddered. Was this the atmosphere of the new planet? He remembered that the blast of the Ark had cooked the ground around It Gasping, with running eyes, be lay down on the floor and felt with his feet for the iron rungs of the work- ■ men's ladder that ran from the now Inverted bow of the Ark to the upper . door and matched that on the opposite i end. He began to descend. He coughed ; and shuddered. With every step the heat Increased. His foot touched the ground. It > gave off heat like the earth around a geyser. He ran away from the looming bulk of the ship. Hla first fifty < steps were taken to the stinging vapors. Then—cooler air blew on his face. Sweet, fresh, cool air! He inhaled lungfuls of It It bad no odor. It was like earth air washed by an April rain. It did not make him dizzy or tick. He did not feel weak- ! ness or numbness or pain. He felt i exhilarated. He flung oat his arms to ecstasy. Beside him a voice said quietly: “It’a splended, Isn’t it Tony?" He could have been no more startled if stones had spoken or a mummy bad sat up in Its sarcophagus He stiffened, not daring to look. Then Into bls Icy veins blood flowed. He bad recognized tbe voice. Ha turned ta the lush, starlit dark. | “Mr. Hendron, 1—1—1—“ “Never mind." The older man ap proached. “I think I know why you came. You wanted to be sure of the air before any of the rest of us left t tbe ship.” Tony did not reply. Hendron took J bls arm. “So did L I couldn't sleep. I bad to Inspect our future home. I j came out on tbe ladder half an hour ' ago.” Hendron chuckled. “Duquesne . was on ay heels. 1 bld. He’s gone > for a walk. I beard him fall down I and swear. What do you think of It! ; Did you see the aurora?" “No." Tony looked at the stare ' He bad a feeling that the sky overhead was not the sky to which he had been accustomed. The stars looked tilghtly mixed. As be stared upward, a crimson flame shot into i tbe zenith from tbe horizon. It was followed by torches and sheets ta all colors and shades. “Lord!” be whispered. “Beautiful, isn’t ItY’ Hendron said softly. “Nothing like It on earth. It was ta rippltag sheets when I came ; out. Then to shafts—a colorful cathedral. It made faint shadows of the I venture to say It’s a permanent fixture. The gasee here are different from those on earth. Different ionization of solar electrical energy. That red may be the neon. The blue—l don’t know. Anyway— j It’s gorgeous.” “Yon mean—this thing will play i overhead all night every night!” | “I think so. Coming and going. It seemed to me that It touched the ground over there—once.” He pointed. “I thought I could hear It—crackling faintly, swishlng. It’s go!ng to make radio broadcasting bad: and it’ll affect astronomic observation. But it to magnificent."' “Like the rainbow that came on Ararat." Tony said slowly. “Lord! So It to! God’s promise, eh! Tony—you’re an odd fellow for a football player. Football! What a thing to hover- ta the mind here! Coras —let’s see If we can find Dnqueena. Tbe wily devil wanted to be first on Bronson Beta. He came out of tbe Ark like a shot. No. Wait toelt* Tony glanced toward the Ark. The lork was opening again. They watched tbe fourth man to touch tbe new soil make his painful descent and run across the still hot earth. They saw him stop, a few yards away, and breathe They heard his voice ecstatically. Then—they heard Miw wjro. . , _ . i
'Hendron called: “Hello—James!" Tony saw Slot James undergo the uneerthUness of bearing that voice come through the empty air. Then James approedwd them. “How beautiful!“ bo whispered 'Ta sorry. I thought some one should try the air. And—l admit—l was keen to get out Wanted to be first, 1 suppose. I*m humiliated—" Again Hendron laughed. “It’s all right, my boy. I understand. I understand all of us. When I came out, 1 half expected you others would be along. It’s tn your blood. The reason you came here one by one, alone and courageously, to tbe reason I picked you to come here with me. It makes me rather happy.” On the outcrop of stone ledge they seated themselves. They looked and breathed and waited. Occasionally one of them spoke. Usually it was Hendron—casting up from his thoughts between periods of ti lence memories of the past and plans for the future. “We are here alone. 1 cannot help feeling that our other ship has in some way failed to follow ua. If, In the ensuing days, we hear nothing, we may be sure It is lost. Bronson Beta belongs to us. It to sad—tragic. Ransdell ta gone. Peter Vanderbilt to gone. Smith. That Taylor youngster you brought from Cornell. All the others. Yet —with the world gone, who are we to complain that we have lost a few more of our friends?" Tony moved away from them. H« was stirred with a great restlessness. He wandered toward the ship; and be saw, ta that glowing, opalescent night, a woman’s form; and he knew before he spoke to her, that It was Eve. “I was sure you’d be out," he said. “Tony!" (TO BE CONTINUED.) TIPPECANOE Mr. and Mrs. J. Garber, Royal Kline and wife and Mrs. J. L. Kline visited at the Daniel Eberly home Tuesday. Jessie Baugher called on Mrs. J. Garber Wednesday. Gorman Shock called on Mr. and Mrs. Isaiah Kuhn Wednesday. J. Garber called at the Gordy home Wednesday. Royal Kline and wife visited Mr. and Mrs. J. Gilbert Thursday evening. j Mrs. Isaiah Kuhn and daughter Eva called on Mrs. Lewallen WedInesday evening. Avelda and Carl White spent j Thursday night with Evelyn Lewallen. Ormel and 2&ayzel Kline and Mrs. Chas. Bigler called on Mrs. J. Garber Friday. | Mrs. Bernice Weller of Elkhart i called on Mrs. J. Garber Sunday sf- ; ter noon. - Miss Mayzel Kline visited the Stanley Morehead daughters Saturday. Noble Kline and Gerald Priest were home over the week end. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Kline called ’ on Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Fairweather Sunday. Albert and Gerald Gilbert visited in tbe J. L. Kline home Sunday afternoon. CONCORD William Wyland was at Auburn Monday. | Miss Lolo Buhrt and mother spent Saturday afternoon at the Paul Buhrt home. , Messrs and Mesdames Omer Hite ! and, Amoe Stump of Pierceton spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. William Wyland. i Mrs. Mary Gilbert spent Monday afternoon with Mrs. Mary Stiffler. | Wayne Coy has the measles. | Mr. and Mrs. James Dewart and Tobias Fike spent Sunday with Mr. ■ and Mrs. Jacob Bucher and family. Mr. and Mrs. Charley Dean of Syracuse spent Wednesday with the later's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jamas Gilbert. Lester Dewart spent a few days in Fort Wayne with friends. Mr. and Mrs. Burton Howe spent Saturday in South Bend. Mrs. Myrtle Miller spent Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. Cora Wyland. I Mr. and Mrs. Eldon entertained ■ the later's mother, Mrs. Anderson and friend of Indianapolis Sunday. Roy Stiffler spent Thursday night with Billie Eyer. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Bucher were in Goshen Friday. | Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Darkwood | have the measles. I DISMAL Fred Kline and family moved from the Hamman farm south of Wawasee to the Cressell Kitoon farm in the Dismal, last Thursday. Dr. Shaffer of South Bend was the guest in the Clell Buchtel home over the week end. Mr. and Mrs. Everett Miles of Fort Wayne were guests in the Merrit Lung hnme, Sunday. Mrs. Charles Dull called at the James Stump home in I igonter, Saturday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Shock and Ralph Shock of WQmot called on Don Ciingerman and wife, Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. J?mes Buchtel and family attended the funeral of Mrs. BuchteTs uncle. Will Moore of Kimmel, Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Charles Dull, Mre. Lee Lung Ms. Stanley Lung and daughter
3etty, and George Du’l v’rtef Mr and Mrs. Ray Henderson and family at' Winona Lake, Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Swenson of Indian Village visited Mrs. John Swenson Sr., and Viola Kauffman, Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Dean Carlson and DeLorma of Topeka visited Dora Ciingerman and wife, Sunday. SOLOMON’S CREEK Mias Bernice Shistler is ill with the mumps. Mias Vera Rice called on Laetta Hillbish, Sunday evening. Quarterly meeting was held at the church Tuesday evening. Guy Nicolai and family moved on the Charles Nicolai place, Monday, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Nicolai will live at the filling station. Mrs. Harry Smaltz and son Robert of Leesburg and Mrs. Allie Darr spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John Darr. Mrs. Allie Darr remained for a visit. The Brotherhood will meet next Tuesday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Dave Holtzinger. Ray Price and family ’have moved to New Paris. Guy Smith called on friends in Benton, Monday. Mrs. Holtzinger entertained the Leaders class at an auto party at the Benton hall last Wednesday evening. There were 31 present. i Lawrence Firestone has taken over the Routeon garage and is running it. Mr. and Mrs. Art Nicolai spent Sunday at the Vic Niles home. Mr. and Mrs. Bill By land have moved to Warsaw. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Stewart moved last week on a farm they bought, near Cromwell. Mr. Eby and family of near Wakarusa bought the Stewart farm and moved there last week. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Zimmerman and children, Mrs. Louise Miller and son and Ralph Darr spent Sunday at the Charles Bunger home near Millersburg. Mr. and Mrs. Sailor Darr called in the afternoon. Mrs. Dale Umbenour and son Lavon spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Hapner. Sunday-school Sunday morning. Preaching service Sunday evening. NEWSALEM Doris Hummel and family spent Sunday with Joe Godschalk and family. Emory Guy and wife called on Joe
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*'-d famly Sunday' ftf’-mo'-n Joe Smith called on Jesse Crowl Sunday forenoon. Mary Etta Auer had the measles. , Roy Pinkerton called at the Ralph Neff home Friday. Reuben Mock and daughter attended the funeral of Frank Bushong Saturday afternoon at Syracuse. Henry DeFries, Charles Bowser and families and Arch DeFries and family attended the funeral of Mrs. Cassius Keller of Huntington last Monday. Mia. Keller was a sister of Henry DeFries.
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