Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 328, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 April 1927 — Page 12
PAGE 12
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SYNOPSIS JOYCE DARING is left homeless by the separation of her parents, she works as a telephone operator at a hotel. Her mother disappears and her father, penitent, searches for her. Through CARTER DELAND, Joyce is introduced into society and makes an enemy of CATHERINE SHERWIN, who is jealous of Deland's attention. Deland proposes a life of luxury and ease to Joyce, who refuses angrily. HENRY DEACON, who is in love with Joyce, is engaged in untangling his father's business, and has little time to give her. She is befriended by MRS. MALTBY. a wealthy widow for whom she did a great service, and upon Mrs. Maltb.v s death comes into a fortune. This she agrees to keen secret, at the, request of JUDGE PERKINS, the Maltby family lawyer. Joyce continues her interest in a reading, circle, of which MRS. FITZSIMONS is patroness. Carter Deland returns from Bermuda and plans to trap Joyce at a house party for which Mrs. Fitzsimmons is hostess. Deacon goes east on business. Joyce accepts the invitation to the Anvil Club party, but Carter purposely drives her to the wrong place. He offers her love and luxury or release after three days, unharmed but With a besmirched Teputation. When her mother’s friend. BUTCH SELTZER, bootlegger and burglar, comes to her rescue, a skirmish follows in which Carter shoots Seltzer. Before he dies he tells Joyce where tp find her mother. '. After a hearing at court Delapd is released. Judge Perkins arranges for Joyce to leave the city until the scandal blows or<r. He makes public the Maltby will. Joyce realizes at last that she loves Deacon and wonder what effect the news will have on him. CHAPTER XLIX . A REUNITED FAMILY Joyce and Agnes Daring looked about them. They were standing as though bewildered in Grand Central Station. Agnes Daring looked at her daughter. “It’s my first time here, too' she said with a half humorous smile. “If your father doesn’t meet us we-kave to ask for help.’’ Joyce felt her heart bound. Surely In this immense place no one could point to her, no one would bother about her past. All about them hundreds of people, and not one of them giving her so much as a second glance. Joyce felt suddenly free, released from the fear that some one was going to say, “See, there’s that Daring girl, the one they say Carter Deland played around with until she got some money of her own.” She fell Into step with her mother and they made their way slowly toward the central Information desk.
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She slipped the ring from Its hiding place against her soft bosom. Should she return it to him? “Agnes—Joyce!” They turned, and as John Daring swept his wife into his arms, Joyce looked at her father In amazement. This tall, upright, well dressed distinguished looking man, her father? His face, his voice, his old Scotch accent, but surely anew man otherwise. Now he released his wife and turned to Joyce. He kissed her then laughed down at her look of honest amazement. “YoU don’t know me, Lass?” he said. “I had to celebrate your return. Can’t meet my wife and daughter in my old clothes.” Agnes Daring clung to one of his arms as though dazed. Her surprise equaled Joy’s but coupled with it was a vision of the tall young man who had thrilled her girlhood. She was suddenly glad that she still looked young, that she had learned how to dress, that she was looking well in her dark traveling costume with its touches of white at throat and wrists. As they turned to leave the station she felt very proud. A glimpse in the mirror showed her a pretty woman, a little past middle age, a handsome man a few years older, and their very pretty daughter. It was nice to be a family again. John Daring took his woman folks, as he called them half teasingly, to a small hotel where he had taken two adjoining rooms. As breakfast proceeded Joyce began to have a feeling of restraint. Her father and mother were absorbed in each other. Their glances at her were fond, hut remote as happy parents are wont to look at a troublesome child. “They make me feel i’i the way,” Joyce thought a little resentfully. Just then a chance look at her mother's flushed and happy face banished resentment. How good it was that she was to have a happy home. After breakfast the,y went to their rooms, and after removing the signs of travel they settled them-
Daily Dozen Answers
Here are answers to questions on page 7: 1. A parallelogram in which the angles are oblique and the adjacent sides are unequal. 2. Oliver Hazard Perry after the battle of Lake Erie. 3. He is a sculptor. 4. Eli Whitney. ' 6. Os Carthage. 6. To emerge from secrecy; to become known; to leak out. 7. Through the invention of dynamite. 8. Leo Tolstoy. 9. Minnesota. 10. Dartmouth. 11. “Ben-Hur.” 12. It was begun Oct. 17, 1878, and finished Oct, 2, 1888. It cost $1,980,969.
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selves for a long walk. John Daring lighted a cigar,
“Will you emoke?" he asked Agnes and Joyce, indicating cigarettes on the table. Agnes shook her head in alarm at Joyce. Then she laughted. “I can’t get used to it, John,” §he said. “There was a time when you felt guilty over enjoying your own cigar.” “Having only my cigar for comfort for nearly a year has changed my tune a bit,” he admitted, taking her hand for a moment. “Now for the stories,” he added. Joyce and her mother looked at each other. “Yours first,” Joyce decided, and Agnes Daring recited again the account of her leaving the hospital and her subsequent months of hiding at Gates Mills. “And all the time I was looking for yet in the big city,” her husband said. "Now Lass, we’ll hear your tale.” Joyce told her story, helped occassionally at the most difficult places by Agnes Daring’s sympathetic words. When she had finished her father’s face wore a touch of his old heavy melancholy. He sighed, then patted her hand. “It’s a hard road we’ve made you •travel, daughter,” he said. “What we can do to make it up for you we’ll do. But somehow I believe it’s God’s will that all will be well and that from all this struggling we’ve done, some good will come.” He spoke simply and with great faith. But it seemed to Joyce that the old fanatical narrowness had vanished from his voice. Presently he spoke again. “I’ve not been idle,” he said. “For a time after coming here I wandered about hither and yon, like a lost soul. But after a month or more I began to see the folly of looking, looking looking, and seeing all my money going- out with never a cent coming in I thought, it I find her I cannot take care of her, so I cast about me for a job. “I told myself, ‘use your head John Daring. All your life you’ve let circumstances get the better of you. No <sne knows you here. Act like you’re a capable man and they’ll believe you are.’ So instead of going to a factory for work I went to a big life insurance company that was asking for salesmen. First I bought myself some clothes and I read up in the magazines some-
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
thing about life insurance and I found that there’s half a million Scots in and around New York. It’s to them I’ll go,* I told myself. And so I did. I started out three months ago and I’m earning more of a living now for j;ou than I’ve ever been able to earn before.” , Agnes Daring looked proudly at her husband. Joyce said, “How wonderful, how wonderful to have such a smart father,” and though her words were teasing, her eyes shone. She got up. ”I’m going to leave you two young people alone,” she said mischievously. “I have Glady’s address, she’s dancing in some show here, and I’ll put in the rest of the day somehow.” They made no protest. She kissed them and went to her own room to telephone to Gladys. (To be continued)
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