Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 69, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 August 1925 — Page 12
12
CHICKIE
The Sequel to
Chickie (Helena) Is the onlv daughter ol Jonathan and Jennie Bryce of Indianapolis. To start liie anew after her child dies and Barry Dunne, her sweetheart, jilts her to marry wealthy Ila Moore. Chickie goes to Chicago for employment. Sarah Dillon, the Abbott sisters, Amy Heaton, Stella Wilson, Mary Blake MePike, Janina Knowles and wealthy Jake Munson are CWickie a home town friends. Jimmie Blake, a childhood sweetheart. who still loves Chickie, accents a position in Honolulu. Chickie goes to the home of her employer, Norn Willman. as companion for his daughter, Barbara. Lee. his son, loves Chickie. Their sister. Edith (Mrs. Dirks Potter), secretly loves Timmy, an actor. Chickie is asked to be a bridesmaid at the wedding of Barbara and Paul Scott. At the rehearsal. Myra King recognizes Chickie and tells Edith of her past life. Edith orders Chickie to leave. Lee attempts suicide when Chickie confirms the story. She accepts a position in, the office of George Edgeman. where Luis Lamarck, friend of the Willmans. has a studio. While Edgeman is away Lamarck Wlls Phickie that her past means nothing to him. The climax comes when he insinuates that because of him she is receiving more salary than the work is worth. She tears up her check and leaves. The case of Elena Castanaday. youthful unmarried mother, impresses Chiekie. Chickie returns home with her parents and begins training as a nurse. At a nurses' dance Chickie meets Dr. David Ra.nm. Their mutual interest grows. GO ON WITH THE STORY By Elinore Meherin Janlna’s white teeth gleaned: her cheeks grew pale under the stress of emotion. She lay on her back and didn’t answer. Chickie said: “That’s the cruelty of it —making a child pay—" Janina rolled over slowly. “People revolt me at times. They’re such incorrigible hypocrites. They’d rather have a dead cat's liver wrapped up in tissue paper than a pulsing human heart served raw. God save appearances! Why should the child pay?” “It’s the way the game is played today—” “By a world that is still in the bully stage—remember that!” Janina got up with a laugh. Her eyes glinted. She had a high, challenging look—thin and muscular in her black bathing sui ~ her striking face upraised. “Even so, I wish I had It!" • Chickie felt a thrill of admiration. I As they walked toward a car to go home Janina caught Chickie’s arm giving her a sudden push. It was too late. They came face to face with a Christian Science—New Generation INDIANAPOLIS BRANCH I of THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE PARENT CHURCH • Os the New Generation Sunday Service 11 A. M.—" Lincoln Room” (14th floor) LINCOLN HOTEL Subject: “THE OPENING OFTHE SEALS” Sunday School for Children up to the age Sixteen years, 9:45 a. m., “Lincoln Room" This church is not connected with the organization now known as The First Church of Christ. Scientist, in Boston, Mass.
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group of beautifully dressed girls who were laughing and excited . ... one of these had gold hair and blue eyes. She wore a stunning wrap of crepe bordered to the hem with summer ermine. She had a black beauty patch on her chin. Chickie noted this with a stark precision.- She felt her life stopping, then she was aware of Janina speaking, of Jarrna saying, “Hello, Ila —" and of herself smiling, and then of bowing with exaggerated grace . . . They were walking toward the other end of the station. They sat on a bench. It was a warm day toward .he end of August, but Chickie’s teeth knocked as with cold. Janina folded her arms. Presently' she said: “Yop carried that off like a princess.” “Where are they, Janina? Was that Bess Abbot with her?” “Yes. They’re sitting at the other end.” “And talking of me!” “Don't you ever believe it! She was the one confused—l’m glad of that. Did you know that they have a son? And three months old.” “I didn’t know it.” “And Papa Moore is building them a home in San Mateo—” Chickie looked out at the trees. She listened to Janina with a remote quiet. She wondered why the doings of these people, once so vital, had now little power to pierce. She said suddenly to, Janina: “They are like people in another world.” There had been a time when Chickie wondered if the thought of her troubled him; when she hoped that it did. Now she wanted no claim, even to his remorse. Sometimes, as the weeks, then the months, flew by and she became more absorbed in her work; when she would sometimes spend hours studying, she wondered how much of her old self was left. She would take a bit of her flesh between her fingers and pinch it. All new cells, perhaps—none of them in existence a few years ago— One night she walked up to the place where she had sat that hour of wild despair, for she knew that lif# had overtaken her. Now she drew Wildie’s head i j to her elbow. She said: “Alon- time, dog—isn’t it?” Yet she was astc shed at this quiet—astonished when she found herself laughing and at the zest she was forever finding In this new life. Once only grief had seemed of moment; now the littlest trifles uplifted her. She did well in a quiz, or she wrote a paper that was praisM; she was beside herself with joy. Finally she went to the theater with Jake and to a concert with David Ramm. I, was a kind of ordeal for her. .nil the while she steeled herself saying. “No matter whom I meet —no matter who—l’m not going to care. Nothing can hurt me but my own thought—nothing.” Yet she was childish enough to regard it as a special kindness in Providence when she met no one.
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• She said to Jake, “I’m all shaking inside ” r > His hand tightened on her arm; the red smile flashed. He whispered: “If all of us shook that should shake, my darling, Lord save the universe.” She was grateful to Jake because he seemed proud of her. She told him all her triumphs, all the bright chatter about the hospital. , “An old man told me he kept on living just to see me from day to day. Now what do you think of that, Mr. Munson?” “Lucky for him he’s not a young one—that’s all.” “And Mrs. Wilton, who’s been there for years, asked me to give her a kiss!” “My God—did you?” In j her senior session her marks were very high. She and Irene Underwood were both tremendously interested in surgery. • Irene said to Phyllis Stone, Chickie’s friend; “Bryce is in love with Ramm. That’s her interest!” Then Chickie was given a preference over Irene. She was allowed to scrub for the minor operations. Irene said right to her: “Why do you suppose you were chosen?” “I don’t know—chance, I guess.” But Chickie knew that it was be cause she had studied harder, because success was not merely of the moment for her. It was life. Jake insisted on celebrating this achievement with a dinner. Then he drove her out to the bluff north of Riverside Park. She said suddenly, “Oh, do you know, Jake, once I thought I could never look at stars again?” He slipped his arm about her, took her hand. She glanced up, her eyes misted. “You were so good to me.” i “To myself.” “But it seems queer that I should be happy—and I am, but in a different way— ’’ “Being a different person now, my dear. Helena, what do you plan?” “I don’t know what you mean.” “Well, you’ve proven yourself to your own satisfaction, haven’t you?” “I don’t know about that. , “Now, don’t lie! You’re all stuck up about it—” She laughed: "Because I never thought I could —” He took a deep, long breath — closed hjs hands on hers. He said “What do you think of me, Helen?” “You know —Jake! Why, that you’re just the most gorgeous per son in the world, mostly—” He kept looking at her hands and pressing them: “You know, I’m going away for a while, Chickie —” "Yes—but you’re coming back —” “Maybe—” He sat forward a little. He stooped down and looked Into her face, the rich, dark eyes touching hers with exuberant fire. She trembled, and suddenly tears were warm on her lids. Then Jake’s arms closed about her and he said: “Helena, darling—little white darling—do I go alone?”
CHAPTER LII. Jake Speaks Jake’s eyes, so near to hers, were warm and flashing; his mouth smiled. “Answer, Helena! Do I go alone?” “What do you mean, Mr. Jake?” “What do I mean? That I love you—l want you. Yes, I do. Quick, put your arms around me —oh, you can—you love me a little. Talk, Helena.” • SJ>e kept her head down so that the sweetness and the whit 9 purity of her features that had always drawn him was now infinitely inning, and he wished to put his lips against her throat. “Helena, dear, you like your old friend, Jake. Don’t you? Look at him, pleaoe. Do you like him a little?”“Do I? I think he’s just most glorious.” "Then will you marry the man, Helena?” He laughed and made her eyes meet his: “You can make him finer nor silk.” There went a trembling and a sudden wild passion of gratitude
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Jake Speakes His Heart to Chickie and Asks Her to Marry Him.
through every pulse. She said: “Oh —” and then, half crying—“you are kingly, Jake.”> "And what does that mean, Helena? Will you have me—quick— God blesis you and out with it!" “Oh, no—” "No? His face grew very pale, and the hands clasping hers, shook. He asked in a husky, quiet tone: “Why, won’t you, Helena?” She was faint because of a panic in her heart and the sudden burning of old, crushed fires. She said: "Don’t talk to me of this Jake. 4 Oh, it seems so strange. And I never thought—l never dreamed you felt so—” “I do, Chickie. I’ve known it a long time. . . Listen to me now, won’t you?” He was smiling and vivid again. “I’ve thought it all out, your side as well as mine. What chums we are, Helena, * dear, and what good times we have. You enjoy them. Yes, you/io. And I can give you everything you want—things you always should have had—” Gayety, like a trumpet note; came Into his voice: “Why, Helena, dear, I can even be what you might want. I’ll let you teaph me! You’ve more than half done it already—don’t you know She raised her chin, glancing long into the wooing, handsome face. Then she said with a proud, wistful pathos: “And now you think you want to marry me? Oh, really, Jake? But it’s just the kindness in you—it’s Just the greatness!” “It’s the want of you, Chickie, and nothing else. Do you think I’m a boy and I don’t know what I want? I’ve had time enough, God knows. I’ve watched you and hungered, wanting you more each day—” “Now wait, my dea: —” he reached over and drew her hands. “Wait—this is the first time your friend Jake ever spoke of marriage. . . .” She smiled with an attempt at lightness: "Then you better stop, Mr. Jake, because it would be sad if the first time should also be the last —” her voice broke—“Oh—Let us go on as we were. Wasn't it very pleasant? Oh, it’s better —it’s the only thing for me —” “Why do you say that?” “Because things in me are dead It’s not that I’m unhappy—” "Nothing in you is dead, Helena, dear. Life is too strong to go down with one little blow. You are living enough for me. You are dear enough So that’s that. Why in a few months you will forget you ever grieved, I had an idea, Chickie, that we'd take a long trip— Europe, perhaps, You’ve never been there —new sights —a new environment —broadening out of all those prejudices of yours. Wouldn’t you like that? Speak the truth, Helena?” “You mean Europe?” “I mean Europe and Jake—the two of them. . . .” She raised her hand stealthily and wiped her eyes. “You’re not crying, Chickie? Now listen—why should you?” “I don’t know. Everything—l guess. And I’m thinking this, Jake —you may love me—oh, I think you and one could be so very magnificent otherwise, but underneath you can’t really want to change. Why, Jake, and you made such fun of Nicky—oh, you are one to be free—always. You don’t know what you offer! You can't ...” He gave a humming, exultant laugh and a mockery was in his eyes: “Underneath I didn’t want to change. Who told you that? But I am changed. The beaten ways have lost their zest and that’s what one Helena Bryce did to me. "Won’t you let me talk, Helena? Os course, I’m one to be free—l have been free and blessed each day of It. They were rich and full—l may have regrets, but I don't know where they are. But I’m telling you the honest-to-God truth—this freedom weighs now like a ton—like 100 rusty chains. I want to be rid of it. For It keeps pulling me in old, worn out paths and all the flowers are trampled. "Helena, I ask you most politely, won’t you take off the chains and let me start on anew road? Why—that would be a fine adventure. Why it would be a gallant thing to know that my own white darling wanted me and waited for me. I’d like that mighty well —” t She turned hpr hands in his. She looked up, pleading. "Why do you call me that name, Jake? It makes me want to cry—” “Chickie! Why—do you mean that? But I will call it to you; I will shout it to you. You are that—you are better and finer than you ever were. Now, don’t try to put me In a hole, my dear. I’ll teach you a better way to look at ‘things—much better. You are what you are and I am what i am because of all that is past—bad and good together. Don’t you know that? If you like me now, you are liking the result of all my high days and my low days—"And I love you for all that you are. Helena, some time ago I Wouldn't have really wanted to marry you. I would have known that I would tire.” (To Bo Continued) (ConTTlcht King Fi-a.tnm Syndicate 1
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
BRYAN SLEEPS BENEATH GREAT FLORAL HEAPS Hundreds Visit America’s Newest Shrine in Arlington Cemetery. Bv United Ptefg WASHINGTON, Aug. I.—A mountain of flowets today marked the spot where Williams Jennings Bryan lies buried on the heights of Arlington Cemetery. Magniflcient floral tributes from giani set-pieces to simple bunches of sweet-peas and roses, were heaped high around his grave. Hundreds of visitors went to the new shrine among many shrines in the national cemetery. The last rites were said over the Commoner late yesterday In the brilliant ra- if the afternoon sun, which bro e .rough the clouds and rain that had shrouded the city all day. Services Simple The services were extremely simple. Rev. J. R. Sizoo of the “Church of the Presidents” read the prayers and committed the body to earth. Rev. George Stewart, Birmingham, Ala., pronounced a brief eulogy at the grave side. Mrs. Bryan, who had not looked on the face of her husband in death, did not witness the interment. With her son, William Jennings Bryan, Jr., she sat in a limousine a score of yards away weeping, while the clergyman intoned “dust to dust” and a sexton filled the grave. Will To Be Offered A clear note of a bugle sounding “taps” muffled commands to the military escort and Bryan was left to rest. Later perhaps a big montftnent will be erected at the spot to proclaim the burial place of the Commoner. Mrs. Bryan has made no plans as yet. She intends eventually to prepare her husband’s- memoirs for publication. She will rest here a few days, then perhaps return to Miami, where Bryan’s will will be offered for probate.
CUTTEN, IN DAY, MAKES $250,000 'Corn King’ Squeezes Short Wheat Interests. Bv United Press CHICAGO, Aug. I—Close followers of grain dealing on the Chicago Board of Trade today credited Arthur W. Cutten with a successful “squeeze" in yesterday’s trading with profits that may approach 000Cutten last year became known as the “Corn King” when he took huge profits In that grain, but his operations recently have been shifted to the wheat pit. He is believed to have sold more than 1,000,000 bushels of wheat yesterday with profits of about 20 cents a bushel. Board of Trade members were Insistent In declaring there was no "corner,” but that Cutten simply had bought July wheat two months ago and held It In the face of market fluctuations. Yesterday found the market oversold and many dealers were compelled to buy at any price so that they could meet July deliveries. ONLY FOUR ARRESTED One Motorist Faces Charge of Excessive Speed. J. F. Liberty, 28, of 48 E. ThirtySeventh St., was charged with speeding Friday night. Three other drivers were charged as follows: Charles Grard, 30, of 1017 E. Pratt St., failure to have license and title plates. Curley Kurer, 23, of 335% Virginia Ave., with reckless driving and assault and battery, and George Hartman, 51, of Martinsville, Ind., with failure to have lights. GIRL KILIJSD BY TROLLEY Bv United Press GARY, Ind., Aug. I.—Stepping from a city street car, Mary Radetinski, 18, walked on the tracks in front of another car and was crushed to death. CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST “LOVE” SECOND CHURCH Delaware at Twellth St. THIRD CHURCH Blvd. Sunday Services • In All Churches, 11 a. tn, and 8 p. m. Sunday Evening Services in Third Church Only. Testimonial Meetings Wednesday even In* at 8 o’clock. Free Reading Rooms 19 Continental Bank Bldg., 17 N. Meridian 205 E. Thirty-Fourth* St. The Public cordially Invited to attend these service* and to use the reading rooms. SUNDAY SCHOOL FOR CHILDREN UNDER 20 YEARS. Second Church at 9:30 and 11 A. M Third Church at 9:15 A. M These are Branches of The Mother Church. The First Church of Christ. Scientist. in Boston. Massachusetts CAMP MEETING SALEM PARK, JULY 30 TO AUG. 9 Sunday program: Prayer Service 0 a. j m.; Praise Service. 9:30 a. m.: Morning Worship. 10:30. Sermon by Rev. Win. S. I Craig, recently from Palestine and Egypt I At 2:30 and 7:30 Rev. O. Jewell of Columbus. Ind.. will speak. Five services dally. I Dining hall on grounds, three meals a j day. Very reasonable rate. Plenty of free parking space and free tenting | grounds. Dormitories for men and wbmon. 25 cents per night, $2 per entire camp. | A ten-day spiritual feast. To reach | grounds take w. Washington car to end of line and walk 2 blocks west to Alton Ave . then north 1 block, or take Danville interurban direct to park, 10 cents fare from city. O. H NATER. Sec’y Pentecost Bands.
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BOY FOUND IN LAKE Search for Missing Dwight Tracy Ends With Discovery. Bv United Press , CHICAGO, Aug. I.—Search for Dwight Tracy, 7, son of Mr. and Mrs. Atle H Tracy, who had been missing since Monday, ended today when the boy’s boJy was found In Lake Michigan a few blocks from his home. Two men who were fishing found the boy’s body, badly bruised and partly decomposed. Police said the bruises did not Indicate murder. They expressed belief he had fallen Into the water and drowned, the bruises being caused by stones along the beach. ORPHANS TO HEAR BAND Mayor Shank will speak and the Police and Firemen’s Band will provide music at the orphans’ first Sunday, to be observed Aug. 9 at the General Protestant Orphans’ Home. Music also will be furnished by the Cincinnati Orphans’ Band.
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