OCR Text |
Show THE LEHI SUN, LEHI. UTAH mam v v mmmmmm " - - ,11' .aT J CIRCLE PATTEIUSS WORTS H I FAR: zre c'ev RT.iS. Paul Snncan. I. rail-Job rail-Job lh. does not f lu i. memo.,-, of hi. fASUD-- Aboa,, ir' nTall she H thrown over- f S1 'wr landlnif' I tarbeu Paul's brother, '" l Zorie sow 1. to love, t?to r.'.' trie,,t0 tf th motaln., where .be L U1 ot see the sunrise. t ttrew Zorie overboard, ar- wn ind antl ber killed. 57J5. S ith 8te" that Steve U dead. I CHAPTER XVin fawayfrrmtbat girl!" Mr. fwoUen wet lips and backed frS had, in . curious J, dear again. She heard patter of rain en the roof silver wires again dangled trStt'omberg walked into I He said vigorously, "What JiereT Where Is Steve Dun- I Zorie. He said harshly: . this girl doing here?" started to talk, but Mr. ,2 cut him short "Hend-,tald, "Hend-,tald, "what lithe meaning looked about for another Mr. Lannlng answereL "I to explain," he said. I explained, Mr. Stromberg jre and more grim, i could only hold Stromberg i . If the could iomehow pn' all here! Long before f disappearance from Ulu-et Ulu-et have attracted attention, fadmiral had recalled how Steve had been on having Jomberg at the dinner par-ihe par-ihe would have the key to try. The admiral would first Mr. Stromberg at his planta-)e. planta-)e. Not finding him there, logically look for him here, tit reasoning brought him kas safe to assume that he ring help. inning was still lucidly ex- IMr. Stromberg broke in, leave that car in front of !" love it," Mr. Lanning said tided to It You have been iiess. Hendley, Savoyard, tn't you ion watch? An army e inarched in here! You t placed me in an extremely Msing position. You will ) get off this island at once, five you the address of a agent In Waimea. He will to everything." . along, Pierre," Mr. Lan-H. Lan-H. -i a moment," said Mr. & "We have something to Hendley, go out there and i that window." He turned i Zorie. He shook his head ; 'Why," he asked her, "does nt little thing like you have ixed up in an unholy mess t!" "Ngged. "Why not say the i of war?" she answered. 'hat I usually say when I 1 ttese tight corners." . iomberg was staring at her. fc you mean?" - Fght ask Pierre." ne whirled around. 1 Ah-nah Boland!" ridiculous!" Mr. Strom- "It's . . . he fitonned. P back to Zorie. ;ed her head a little. She )g to handle the situation as Jd as boldly as she believed nd would have handled it. an't possibly be Anna Bo-Pasil Bo-Pasil Stromberg declared, wand was shot by a firing Berlin six months ago!" Pierre said. "And four . I threw her off the 'Santo 'Sa-nto the propellers and ner!" ' ws not shot In Berlin. will look closely. Mr. . Zorie said demurely, see that you have bagged rare specimen." Mh lying" Mr. Lanning u resemblance to Anna "at precipitated all this ?"s nothing but an amaz-deMe. amaz-deMe. UntU the past fort-1 fort-1 Pent her whole life in ftSSSLZ"! coUege lUJy so amusing," Zor- 2, Berlin. Mr. Strom-I3' Strom-I3' did Berlin say, Mr. i it was Anna Bo-that Bo-that we shot,' They iSS-where rve been T1 since I got out anil V!i . . . . -uci j tun reported - smart Waracter." mbg's steel-blue f erJ narrow .. ftmterestmg." he said. ,.7 Me Anna Boland." Zorte. i really am led t fa.' Chair toward her and ls her. coQfes, I have always f. ous about you. Miss Vnf "ally shocked." 'orie answered, as if ! I and a very eyes she were amused, "have been rather cunous aoout you, Mr. Stromberg I have the greatest respect and admiration ad-miration for the work you've been doing here in Hawaii. You are not on my sidebut I always admire jjnuiiiiii wors. Mr. Stromberg smiled. His face became red. "This girl . . . Mr. Lanning be-gan. be-gan. "Hendley," Mr. Stromberg laid Impatiently, "I told you to go out and watch at that window." Mr. Lanning shrugged and walked out of the room. "I am most curious to know how you escaped from the firing squad," said Mr. Stromberg. "But, Mr. Stromberg, is it customary cus-tomary for you to subject your guests to such indignities? Am I a wild beast that might spring on you three powerful men and destroy you?" "I am so sorry, Miss Boland! Pierre! Pi-erre! Untie Miss Boland's hands and feet at once!" Pierre severed the cords that bound her feet, then the cords that bound her wrists. Her legs were numb to the knees, and her arms were numb to her shoulders. Pierre took her hands from behind her. They hung down limp, blue-white and useless. The dawn was growing brighter. The prickling sensation had reached her wrists and ankles, was begin- jiiiiii A man appeared. He came lurching lurch-ing in the doorway. ning to enter her hands and feet She tried to lift her hands, but she could not. "Will you tell me," Mr. Stromberg asked, "how you got out of Oslo in January, 1941?" "There again," Zorie answered, "you are embarrassing me. To answer an-swer that question, I would Implicate Impli-cate innocent people." He studied her. The prickling was extending into Zorie's hands and fingers. She tried to lift her hands into her lap. She succeeded, but the pain almost made her cry out "Ask her," Mr. Lanning's voice came from the living-room, "any question in uerman or icm.u, Stromberg. Anna Boland, you'll recall, re-call, spoke nearly every European tongue." "But this girl" "Ask her! I insist this girl is not Anna Boland. Mr. Stromberg. I insist in-sist she is making a fool of you." Mr. Stromberg got up. His large, handsome face was suddenly red. "Very well," he said quietly. He spoke rapidly to Zorie in German. He said, in English. "Please answer that question in either German or French, Miss Boland." But this is so childish!" Zone cried It was no use. In the silence, she would have heard a car if it had been a mile away. No car was coming. It was obvious that Paul 2? i admiral had not followed the line of reasoning she had hoped they would. Mr. Stromberg got up and went to the doorway. He turned and looked at her. Whoever you are." he said I am awfully sorry for you. Pierre. Se'ber here in this cab-in" cab-in" Pierre protested. SeTotent into the other voices, so low she could hardly ear Kd that their better natures cision. They dared not keep Jerj prisoner indefinitely. t not set her free. They must give Pierre the order to dispose of her. eledTrubher hands to-gSer. to-gSer. Sensation was returning to RELEASE 2-!3- them, but it took the form of an agonizing ag-onizing ache. She tried to stand up. Afiere were sharp cramping pains in ner feet now. Her ankles would not support her. H she could stand up, she could crawl through the window. She could crawl away and hide somewhere. some-where. It was her only chance. She made another effort at getting J"P- Her legs gave way. When she tried to grasp the seat of the chair and push herself up, her hands slipped off. They had no strength. Flashes of pain went through them. Panting, she rested a moment The three men were arguing. Zorie saw the kitchen door slowly opening. She thought it was being blown open by the wind, but there was no wind. A man appeared. He came lurching lurch-ing into the doorway. A knifelike pain seemed to twist her heart The man stood, swaying, with his headi sagging. His head, his face, his clothing' were a mass of shining purple-red mud. What she could see of his face, under the mud, was battered almost beyond recognition. Blood and mud were indistinguishably intermingled. in-termingled. Zorie stopped the scream as it rose in her throat She whispered: "Steve! Steve!" He carried in one hand two metal objects so covered with red mud that it was hard to recognize them. He stared at her blearily. She realized that he was so groggy he could hardly stand. He must have been lying half conscious in mud alj this time. He must have called on superhuman effort to keep this appointment ap-pointment with Basil Stromberg. He stood, swaying drunkenly, staring star-ing at Zorie out of bloodshot, blurred blue eyes. With his head sagging, his arms limply beside him, his whole body caked with mud, he was even more frightening than Pierre had been. Steve Duncan came lurching toward to-ward her. He moved as deliberately, deliberate-ly, as stiffly, as clumsily as a robot He paused beside her and peered into her shocked white face. He dropped one of the revolvers or pistols pis-tols into her lap. In a strange, rumbling voice, he said: "Use this, baby." Her relief was so great that a spasm of hysteria shot through her. He staggered drunkenly past her and into the living-room. A sense of warmth and strength flowed magically mag-ically into her. . Steve Duncan was, suddenly, more than a man that she loved. He was Man the un- defeatable. Beaten and battered and left for dead in the red mud, he bad made himself get up and come here. She thought: "We'll probably not get out of this alive, but I've seen the most glorious thing in my life. I've seen a man who was beaten to death refuse to aocept it I've seen a man prove that mankind can't be beaten down!" The man was in the next room, saying in his strange, rumbling, unearthly un-earthly voice: "Hands up all of you!" There was a sudden, short silence. It was followed by an outburst of sound. A gun went off. There were other sounds. Zorie was trying to pick up the revolver or the pistol in her lap. But her bands were useless. She thought of what Steve had done the agonies he must have gone through to get here. She tried to stand up. There occurred, oc-curred, in the next room, a splintering splinter-ing sound, and a thump, as a door burst open. She saw them from the window. There were three of them Steve, Pierre and Mr. Lanning, all locked together, a straining mass of muddy men. Their feet slid about In the red mud. With a superhuman effort, she picked up the gun in her lap. It slid out of her hand. She reached down for a handful of her sun-pleated sun-pleated evening dress. She tried to swab the mud off the gun-She gun-She watched the fighting men. She wondered where Basil Stromberg was. The three men were still locked together, floundering about in the mud, with Pierre and Mr. Lanning striking at Steve.. There was a revolver re-volver in Mr. Lanning's right hand. Steve's hand was closed tighJy ohnnt Mr. Lanning's wrist His hand holding the revolver was above his head and the revolver was pointing fo the sky. Pierre stepped away. He reached up for the revolver and pulled it out - tr T.annine's hand. Then he ajj, va stepped back. He started to circle shnut them. Mr. Lanning had one arm about Steve's neck. With the hand that had been holding the revolver, he swung repeatedly at Steve's face. Xhey spun about in the mud. Zorie found herself on her feel with the automatic pistol in h hand. She did not know how she fc.d sot to her feet or how her hand had acquired the strength to grasp the pistol. Kh moved with dragging stepi toward the bving-room. She passed .noh the doorway. She saw Mr. Stromberg lying near the front dooi on his back, with one arm throwr over his eyes. TO BE COOTTNUED) Pretty, Practical Apron-Pinafore Tot's Frock for School or Play 1272 mi 14-42 iMi-z Apron-Pinafore A CURRENTLY popular style is " the mother - and - daughter theme. This attractive house frock for mother buttons at the shoulder and waist in back and is mar velously simple to do up. Pattern No. 1272 come in sizes 14. 16, 18, 20; 40 and 42. Size 16, with sleeves, requires iVt yards of 35 or 39-inch material; mate-rial; 4 yards of rick rick to trim. - Play Frock I ITTLE daughter will feel quite grown-up in her apron pinafore pina-fore to match mother's. The gay over-shoulder ruffles and sweetheart sweet-heart neck are edged in bright binding. Ideal for school or play. Pattern No. 8741 is designed for sizes 1, 3, 4, 5 and 6 years. Size 3, with sleeves, requires 23,J yards of 35 or 39-inch material; 3 yards trimming for ruffles and neck. WhenYourlnncrds" are Crying the Blues WHEN CONSTIPATION nukes you feel punk as the dickens, brings on stomach upset, sour taste, gassy discomfort, tak Dr. Caldwell's famous medicine-to medicine-to quickly pull ths trigger on lazy "innards", "in-nards", and help you feel bright and chipper again. DR. CALDWELL'S Is the wonderful senna sen-na laxative contained in good old Syrup Pepsin to make it so easy to take. MANY DOCTORS use pepsin preparations prepara-tions in prescriptions to make the medicine medi-cine more palatable and agreeable to take. So be sure your laxative is contained con-tained in Syrup Pepsin. INSIST ON DR. CALDWELL'S the favorite fa-vorite of millions for SO years, and feel that wholesome relief from constipation. constipa-tion. Even finicky children love it. CAUTION: Use only as directed. DR. (WELL'S SENNA IAXATIYE SYRUP PEPSIN CONTAINED IM DON'T JUST SUFFER COLD MISERIES (t3 GET MULTIPLE RELIEF RELIEF ONE-Redsce fever. RELIEF TWO-Ease stuffy nose. RELIEF THREE-Reduce body aches. RELIEF FOUR-Ease muscle pains. RELIEF FIVE-lesses headache. Ctor' Cold Tablets, Ilk many doctor's prescription, ar a multiple medicine. A combination of eiftht c-tie c-tie medicinal Ingredient eipecially detifined for relief of usual cold ml, rie. Insist on genuin. GROVE'S t.0ilcdts Due to an unusually large demand snd current war conditions, slightly more time is required in filling orders for a few of the most popular pattern numbers. Send your order to: SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. 149 New Montgomery St. San Francisco, Calif. Enclose 25 cents in coins for each pattern desired. Pattern No Size........ Name Address ? ASK MB n ANOTHER ? ? ? The Questions A Genera! Quiz 1. In what year did the CapitoJ in Washington, D. C, burn? 2. Through which country in South America does the equator run? 3. Which is wider at its widest point, North America or South America? 4. What was the nationality of the man who devised the universal univer-sal language, Esperanto? 5. What is a limited edition of a book? 3. What did Sarah Bernhardt use as her motto? 7. What state in the United States is bound by only one other state? 8. What is the average depth of the ocean? 9. Which is heavier, the sun or the earth? 10. By what other name are the West Indies known? The Answers If oP it? yO fer tovgh and threat lrritllM mutt Ing frm cold ar mklng, millions tt COUGH LOZENGES Really toothing because they're really medicated. Each V t F Cough Loxenge gives your throat 15 minute soothing treatment that reaches all the way down ... below be-low the gargle line. Only 10(! box. Put Every Spare Penny You Own Behind Victory And a Lasting Peace I Buy War Savings Bonds 1. In 1814 (during the War of 1812). 2. Colombia. 3. South America. 4. Russian (Dr. L. Zamenhof). 5. An edition of which the publisher pub-lisher guarantees there will be no more copies printed after the first stipulated and comparatively small amount. 6. Quand meme (In spite of all). 7. Maine (by New Hampshire). 8. About 2lA miles. 9. Scientists say the sun is 700 times heavier than the total weight of the 9 planets. 10. The Antilles. as mile Aiuhi Niagara's Future At its present rate of change, Niagara Ni-agara talis will live another 5,000 years; but It will slowly decline In grandeur. It will drop In height from its present 160 feet to a final 100 feet, and then, no longer rolling sheer over a cliff, It will become a boiling rapids. Preserve Nutrients -Heat, water and air will take their toll of various nutrients In food , which is not carefully stored, pre-J pared and cooked. It Is Important to prepare food so that it will reach the table with maximum amounts of vitamins, minerals and other nutrients. Remove Wax To remove candle wax from linen, lift off the excess with a dull knife. Place white blotters or absorbent tissue on both sides of the fabric, press with warm Iron. Sponge off excess grease with cleaning fluid, and launder. At the Beginning The medical officer felt that he was not getting straight answers from the recruit, wh6 seemed not to know what illnesses he had had in the past. "Well, tell me the heaviest you have ever weighed," the M. O. suggested. "One hundred forty pounds," the recruit answered. The M. O. made a note. "And the lightest?" snapped the M. O. "Seven pounds, sir," replied the recruit, without blinking an eyelid. Strange, Did He Say? "You have such strange names for your towns," an Englishman remarked to an American soldier. "Weehawken, Hoboken, Pough-keepsie, Pough-keepsie, and others." "I suppose they do sound queer to English ears," said the American, Ameri-can, thoughtfully. "Do you live in London all the time?" "Oh, no!" said the unsuspicious Briton. "I spend part of my time at Chipping Norton, and then I've a place at Pokestogg-on-the-IIike." No Doubt up ha th turned you -but don't A woman' laid -Whaft down?" "She ha.' f Rough luck, old man-take man-take it to heart too much. 'No' often mean 'Yet.' " "She didn't ay 'No' the Raul"' Slip Up? A man who had been stopping at a fashionable hotel was paying his bill. He looked up at the girl cashier cash-ier and asked what it was she had around her neck. "A ribbon, of course," she said. "Why?" "Well," he replied, "everything else is so high around here that I thought perhaps it was your belt." What Could They Be? A small girl was entertaining her mother's visitor. "How's your little girl?" she asked. "I'm sorry to say, my dear, that I haven't a little girL" "How's your little boy?" "I haven't a little boy, either." "Then what are yours?" Dad Sowed The visitor going around the penal settlement came upon a convict con-vict making sacks. "Good afternoon," said the visitor. visi-tor. "Sewing?" "No," was the reply. "Reaping." Let's Go! Jasper 1 am not myself tonight. Joan Then we ought to have a good time. That Got Him Joan Why did your cousin quit his job as riveter? Was it too noisy for him? Jasper Oh, he didn't mind the noise of the riveting, but the fellow fel-low next to him hummed inces santly! Some folks never stop to think; there are others who never think to stop. Conserve Energy Conserve energy of the refrigerator. refrigera-tor. Freeze no more ice cubes than you actually need and don't waste ice. After quick freezing, return the cold control to the normal setting as soon as the job is done. Rich In Oil Rich In oil resources (Lake Mara-caibo) Mara-caibo) and with good prospects for agriculture and stock raising on her savannahs, Venezuela's coast was once the haunt of buccaneers. Strained Honey Strained honey may be substituted substi-tuted for part of the sugar in fruit cakes, " ' I rr pV iTi "VAVVY, YOU ACT V-'jL Lr as old as : F'X' GRANDPA TODAY" f " mi wWit:4worti. mmmmmtmr .taapasHa MANY MEN are persecuted by lumbago or other nagging muscle paini epeciaUy after exposure to cold or dampness. If every nfferer eonld only know about soretons Liniment! In addition to methyl salicylate a most effectivo pain-relieving pain-relieving agent. Soretone acts like cold heal to speed relief: 1. Quickly Soretone net to enhance en-hance local circulation, 2. Check muscular cramp. 3. Help reduce local swelling. 4. Dilate turf ace capillary blood vessels. Tot fastest action, let dry, rub in again. There's only one Soretone insist on it for Soretone results. 50. Big bottle, only J L SORETOME soofhes fast wiffi COLD HEAT r "and McKesson makes it 3--I 'ii 131 LI In co of MUSCULAR LUMBAGO OR BACKACHE . e t fttlfti r xour MUSCULAR PAINS Su to Ml SORE MUSCLES So to (Vtnrtrk MINOR SPRAINS fscitnt irifTrdlnt Id Bor-toiw Bor-toiw act Ilk rwti to lrrrwat th tuprflciai supply of blond to tht rt nd Ifiduckt gloWiDf MtiM Of WUHUfe vou TRUSTY ME TRUSTS Your family doctor uses Cutter Vaccines & Scrums to protect you and your family against disease because most Western physicians prefer Cutter biologicals. So think what it means when we promise you that our livestock biologicals are made with the same scientific care as our products for humans. No wonder Cutter really does a job of cutting your disease losses. If not available locally, order direct from Cutter Laboratories: Berkeley, Denver, Fort Worth, Los Angeles, San Antonio, Seattle. CUTTER VACCINES & SERUMS produced in equally high quality for horses, cattle, poultry, sheep, hogs |