HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1944-07-20, Page 3at•
• SERIAL STORY
Murder on the Boardwalk
BY ELINORE COWAN STONE
Last Week: , After agreeing to
#meet the mysterious "Lucille" at
$, Christine keeps 'her appoint-
meat with Mr, Wilmet. Bill has
been taken to police headquarters
after his keys were found to fit
Mrs. Talbert's car. His story
founds very thin.
CHAPTER XIII
Christine spent the rest of the
morning al the last place where
she thought curiosity seekers would
look for the "Boardwalk Mystery
Girl" — the public library — with
}icr too -well-publicized face buried
in a newspaper, her mind still
worrying about the story Mr. Wil -
met had told her, her eyes impa-
tiently watching the clock.
At 12:30 she was to meet Bill
for lunch — that is, if Bill were
still "in circulation."
When she reached the restau-
rant, the worst of her fears were
realized. As soon as she asked for
Bill, a waiter led her to a table.
"Mr. Yardley has sent word that
we are to serve you at once, Miss,"
be told her. "And he -sent this note
or you." •
"Sorry," • the note said, "Can't
snake it. Please leavereply with.
Louis, the waiter who will hand
you this — and who is as safe as a
church — saying where I can find
you about 9 this evening."
Christine let the lunch Bill had.
ordered cool while she composed
a reply which, sketched an outline
of her plan for the evening with-
out betraying the confidence of
!'Lucille." At the end she added,
as a possible line of communica-
tion, "Am dining at Decker's with
Mr. Wilmet."
* * *
Mr. Wilmet insisted on Chris-
tine's ordering the dinner, sitting
back without even glancing at the
` menu, although he must have
known that Decker's prices were
appalling. The service was lei-
surely, and Mr. Wilmet, too, was
leisurely — and tiresome — with
a long acount of his persecutions
by the police and press.
He insisted on taking a wheel
chair back down the Boardwalk.
It was a closed chair with sun -
glass windows. Christine, who
Bated being shut in, fumed as it
Inched along under the guidance
of a decrepit old darkey... Suppose
elle should be latel
When, a little short :of the Paris
Shop, she insisted on saying "Good
night," Mr. Wilmet's face clouded
with concern.
"1 really don't think you ought
to be alone on the Boardwalk," he
objected, "after what's just hap-
ix:red. l 4,*'. r,tett-- — see
you to your destination? Of course
— he " laughed nervously —
tot exactly a fighting mail, but I
might help in case of trouble."
"Thanks," Christine said impa-
tiently. "There won't be any trou-
tle. I'm spending the evening with
a girl I've known for years."
She was afraid he might follow
Iter; but when she looked back, he
was going dejectedly into a tobac-
eo shop.
* * *
Christine had no difficulty in
identifying the girl, who stood be-
fore the shop ' window as if rapt
by a pair of silver sandals. When
(~pristine paused and removed her
sunglasses, the girl glanced up
with a flicker of recognition, re-
turned for a moment to her in-
spection of the sandals, 'and then
qtralled off along the Boardwalk.
Presently Christine folowed, satin -
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ISSUE 30--1944
tering as the other girl did.
At the 'top of a flight of stairs
leading to the street below, the
girl glanced 'back before she de-
scended. She walked on a block,
turned into a side street, unlocked
a door, and went in, heaving the
door ajar.
For the first time Christine hesi-
tated. After all, what did she
know . of this girl except that it
was her voice which had first
sounded that ominous note of dan-
ger which had run like a motif
through the last 24 hours?...
Then her curiosity got the bet-
ter of her, and she passed through
the door.
* * *
We found herself in a poorly
lighted, inhospitable hall, from
which a stairway . ascended • into
darkness behind, Christine won-
dered if she were mistaken in
thinking that something moved in
the shadows of that stairway.
The girl who called herself
"Lucille" was waiting.
"Conte in here, please, Miss
Thorenson," she said abruptly,
and opened the door upon a lighted
room.
Christine stood amazed at the
contrast between the bleak ugli-
nes of the hall and the quiet good
taste and comfort of that room.
The room was pleasantly lighted;
a soft Oriental rug covered the
floor; two of the walls were lined
with books; and there were com-
fortable chairs. It was a room,
somehow, to inspire confidence.
Yet Christine felt no confidence
now, even in herself.
Before she could speak, a man
she had not seen at first got up
from a desk that stood in a shel-
tered alcove. Chandra!
"I am sorry about all this mys-
tery, Miss Thorenson," he said in
a well -remembered voice, "But it
seemed necessary."
Christine thought angrily, "Of
course. I was right in the begin-
ning."
* *
He had shed every trace of the
Oriental mystic. From his unob-
trusive appearance and the quiet
precision with which he spoke and
moved, one might easily — as she
had that first night - have taken
him for a well-trained major domo.
FROM THE CHETNIKS
Reigning as millinery queen in
west coast fall showings, cover girl
Anita Colby models this original
Chetnik beret made up in a Stuart
dress plaid.
t
For Christine realized that she had
seen those tawny -brown eyes not
just once, but twice before.
"Yes," he anticipated her as she
tried to reconstruct that brief en-
counter on the station platform,
"you have seen me before... The
first time you may not recall. You
thought your cousin might have
sent me — That disguise was a
good one. I did not expect you to
remember."
"It was your eyes, not your
clothes, that I noticed... You said
you were taking a train," Christine
said thoughtfully. "Yes — I see."
* * *
"And of course," he said dryly,
"it will confirm your worst sus-
picions when I admit that -I dropped
off the other side .of that train be-
fore it pulled out, and that I was
in the taxicab behind yours when
you got out at your hotel. ... And
I was not the only one following
you, Miss Thorenson."
Christine broke out angrily, "I
was crazy to come here. I guessed
from the beginning that this • girl
was one of your spies."
"I suppose that it's no use to
expect you to believe that 1 ant
really trying to be honest with
you," the clairvoyant . went on
quietly. "Batt it is quite true that
I was asked to keep an eye on your
movements : by • someone whoilt
your cousin had expected to meet
you, but who was -- unable to do
so. 1 agreed to do it because" —
he broke off as if searching for
words that might hold her atten-
tion — "because I know that I am
.-- partly responsible for Mrs. Tal-
bert's death."
"Are you so sure that you have
deceived the police," Christine
gasped, "that you dared to trick
nae into coming here and—"
"1 said," he interrupted with a
MAIL FOR THE FORCES OVERSEAS
•
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aSts
In Normandy, in Italy, wherever
they may be, Canadian forces over-
seas get mail from home quicker
because of the big Lancaster trans-
ports operated by Trans -Canada
Air Lines in the Canadian Govern-
ment's trans-Atlantic service. And
from the fronts mail comes quicker
to the folk at home.
More than 50,000,000 letters have
been carried in 95 crossings of the
Atlantic — less than a year's oper-
ation. With four aircraft in service,
three round trips are now made
each week between Montreal and
the United Kingdom. Flights are
made direct, without intermediate
stops, and the distance, 3,100 stat-
ute miles, has been covered in little
rnore than eleven hours.
In the big noses of the Lancast-
ers, as much as 8,000 pounds of
mail may be carried. Parts and
equipment of importance to war
effort are carried as freight. No
fare -paying passengers are trans-
ported, brit official passengers on
urgent war business are sometimes
carried.
TABLE TALKS
Three Good Breads
Home -baked bread, biscuits, muf-
fins—all are welcome on any table,
and they can be as healthful and
good for you
to eat as they
are appetizing.
T h e follow-
ing recipe with
a slight change
or two, enables
you to prepare
three excellent
breads—giving your family a de -
faint smile, " 'partly responsible.'
. You see, Miss Thorenson, peo-
ple come here for such a variety
of reasons. They want, for in-
stance, to be told how to find things
bands are spending their evenings;
whether they will get the jobs they
want; whether that pain that wor-
ries them is what they fear it is;
whether the time is right to in-
vest their money... There are
some questions you cannot answer
directly if you are honest,
...You try, if you are wise, not to
complicate family troubles or to
give advice involving large sums
of money... There are other que-
stions you must not answer fully.
Those are the questions involving
life and death."
"This is very interesting,"
Christine interrupted impatiently.
"But why does it concern me —
or my cousin's death?"
"Because Mrs. Talbert's case',
Miss Thorenson, was one of the
~`must-nots.' Partly on that ac-
count, and partly because there
were — circumstances I did not en-
tirely understand, I did not warn
yourcousin of her danger,"
(Continued Next Week)
lightful change in this "staff of
life" food:
Wheat -Meal Quick Bread
3 cup wheat -meal
2 cups milk
2 cups sifted flour •
4 teaspoons double-acting baking
powder
'1 teaspoon salt
/ cup sugar
1 egg. well beaten
4 tablespoons melted butter or
other shortening
Add cereal to milk and scald,
stirring occasionally, Remove from
heat and pour into mixing bowl.
Let stand 15 minutes to cool. Sift
flour once, measure, add baking
powder, salt, and sugar, and sift
again. Add egg and shortening
to cereal mixture and stir well.
Add flour mixture, stirring only
until all flour is dampened. Turn
into greased loaf pan, 9x4x3 inches,
ansa 'aster in moderate oven (2-&-o.
z.)
.m Lutes, -.. 1,t- ,+n +i1
Wheat -Meal Prune Bread
Increase salt to 1/ teaspoons in
above recipe; add 1 cup chopped
prunes and 1 tablespoon grated
lemon rind to cereal -egg -fat mix-
ture.
Wheat -Meal Raisin Bread
Increase salt to 1/ teaspoons in
above recipe, add 1 cup seedless
raisins or currants to cereal -egg -
fat mixture.
8,000,000 B ditish
Women At Work
Eight million women are sup-
porting the, war effort in Great
Britain. Of these, 10 per cent. are
housewives working part time. Of
women between the ages of 18 and
40, 90 per cent. of those single and
80 per cent. of those married or
widowed are either in the nation-
al forces or in industry.
PICTURE OF NIP ABOUT TO DIE
In the remarkable close-up above, smoke streams from a Jap "Kate"
torpedo bomber, hit by a 1J, S. Navy PB4Y over Truk, before the
plane smashed into the sea. The rear gunner stood up as if to bail
out, but sat down again, failing to jump from the plane, which 'ex-
ploded when it hit the water,
!r
Outstandingly Good
AL
TEA
OK
CH ONICLES
®f GINGER FARM
6y
Gwendoline P.
* *
Clarke 11
a
Looking back, last week seems
like several weeks rolled into one.
When it started we thought help
for baying would be our only pro-
blem. For that reason we had
one of the farm Commandos out to
help—and we were very well satis-
fied with the result. It looks as
if city help has saved the day for
a good many farmers. Monday
all our bayin that was ready
for the barn. Tuesday Partner
intended cutting again — and was
that ever a break for me, because,
on that very day I was invited to
go to Toronto. Did I accept?
• WelI, if I hadn't I would probably
be stepping around with bare feet
by now. As it is my feet are
anything but bare. You see I
went to a store that specializes in
"corrective footwear" and the shoes
they sent me home with are like
"herring boxes without topses" so
I shall never be surprised if my
family renames me "Clementine".
* * *
Wednesday Partner was straigh-
tening out the mow all day in
preparation for Commando help
next day. But the Commando
help was cancelled because Part-
ner's brother arrived for the day.
Friday morning the real climax
came when our son walked in. Or
maybe I should call it an anti-
climax, because, from a wire we
had received, from him we surmised
he was down in Halifax, or maybe
half way across the Atlantic. How-
ever his visit was of short duration
— just a few days embarkation
leave—which was more than we
had hoped for. On Saturday morn-
ing another friend arrived from the
city to help with the hay and of
course I had phoned Daughter that
her brother was home so she cane
along too. Saturdty afternoon I
saw a strange "bike" on the lawn
—young John, who used to work
here had come up unexpectedly
for the week -end, But he had stop-
ped off at the hayfield and was
driving the team on the horse -
rake.
* * *
So, with continued fine weather,
and plenty of men around, Part-
ner got in quite a bit of hay
but naturally not too much because
we didn't want to take advantage
of the help that was so willingly
given. Haying, plus hot weather
can be hard to take. _Sunday night
our visiting family were all on
their way again, and I must con-
fess Partner and I are feeling a
little limp.
SUNDAY
SCHOOL
LESSON.
G.IDEON'S FAITHFUL FEW
July 30
Judges 6, 7, 8
PRINTED TEXT, Judges 7:4-7,
15-21.
GOLDEN TEXT.—There is no
restraint to Jehovah to save by
nniany or by few. 1 Samuel 14:6.
Memory Verse: Thou, Jehovah,
hast made me glad. Psalm 92:4.
THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING
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Midianites, Garstang places at
1161-1154 B.C., and the forty
years' judgeship of Gideon front
1154-1114 B.C.•
Place.—The great battle in which
the Midianites were defeated oc-
curred, primarily, in the plain of
Jezreel, which is the plain of Me-
giddo in central Palestine.
Preparation For Battle
"And Jehovah said unto Gideon,
The people are yet too many, .
This shall not go with thee. the
same shall not go". The Lord sur-
prised Gideon by telling him he
must reduce his army, for Israel
Is to be taught that the Lord is
their deliverer, all glory is to be°
given to Him.
"So he brought down the people
unto the water ... likewise every
one that boweth down upon his
knees to drink." Those who were
eager for the fight quenched their
thirst as quickly as possible. The
rest were glad of any delay in
meeting the enemy and thought
more of their need and comfort
than the cause of the Lord.
Interpretation of Dream
"And the number of them that
lapped, putting their hand to their
mouth . . . and let all the people
go every man unto his place." In
the whole army there were only
300 heroes full of courage, self-
denial and watchfulness, fit for
God's work. The Israelites were
to learn that numbers did not count
with God, however much they
may count with men. Sometinies,
as in our last lesson, He uses na-
ture to overthrow the purposes of
man.
"And it was so, when Gideon
heard the telling of the dream, and
the interpretation thereof, that he
worshipped; and he returned into
the camp of Israel, and salts, Arise;
for Jehovah hath delivered into
your hand the host of Midian."
So wondrous seemed the dream
in its interpretation that when
Gideon heard it he bent in silent
worship, assuredly knowing that
God had given them the victory.
Gideon's Stratagem
"And he divided the three hun-
dred Hien into three companies...
and they cried, the sword of Je-
hovah and of Gideon." Now we
see the clever stratagem of Gid-
eon. The three hundred are divid-
ed to give the idea of forces conn-
ing from three directions to con-
fuse and perplex the pagan hosts.
Each man carried a trumpet and
a pitcher. The pitchers were used
to conceal .the lamps, until by the
noise of their breaking and the
sudden appearance of the lightr-•the
11,11tY44.44.44._.. . L... 4 ,
rifled and thrown into confusion.
The success of the „stratagem
depended on a perfect understand-
ing of what was to be done, and a
perfect unity of action, 'as I do„
so shall ye do.'
It was in the strength and pow-
er of the Lord that they were to
go forth against the Midianites.
His invisible sword and hosts
would win for them.
"And they stood every man in
his place round about the camp;
and all the host ran; and they
shouted, and put them to flight:„
The battle went precisely as Gid-
eon had planned. The surprised
army was thrown into utter con-
fusion, Everyone thought of treach-
ery and turned his sword against
his fellow. Escape was the com-
mon impulse and the disorganized
host fled, pursued for days and
nights by the Israelites.
Defeat of Midianites
And so the terrible misery of
Isreal was removed and the op-
pressor's power broken forever.
All this was done by God, but done
by means of the three hundred
tested and chosen heroes.
Annual cheese consumption in
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four and one-half pounds per cap-
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ileadache
Nothing ismore depres•.Y
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Why suffer?...Lambly's
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HEADACHE POWDERS to