Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 123, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 September 1927 — Page 28
PAGE 28
M.E. PAGEANT I USING MODERN 1 STAGE EFFECTS . ! >' '' V innovation Arouses Interest in Offering at Gary Tonight. . s 'By lulled Prea GARY, Ind., Sept. 30.—A pageant celebrating the diamond jubilee of the Northwest Indiana Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church In session here this week will be given its first presentation this evening. It will be repeated Saturday. The conference organization Was formed at Terre Haute in 1852. Special costumes, scenery and lighting effects set the pageant apart from usual spectacles of its kind and the innovation has aroused such interest that representatives of a number of national religious and educational organizations are here to witness the first performance. Among resolutions scheduled for a (vote today is one on free speech, submitted following an address by £. S. Shumaker, superintendent of the Indiana Anti-Saloon League, under sentence for contempt of the Indiana Supreme Court. A committee was named Tuesday tc consider a merger of the Northwest with the North Indiana Conference, following animated debate on the proposal. Laymen had charge of Thursday’s session. A world service dinner at night was one of the features. Dr. H. C. Davis, Indianapolis, was fe-elec tel secretary by the Preachers’ Aid Society at its annual meeting. Indianapolis ministers who attended the conference include Carl H. Martin, U. J. R. F. LayScock, H. C. Riley and Clyde Liningcr. EXHIBIT OLD DRAWING House Plan Shown at New York Display. VIENNA, Sept. 30.—The oldest house plan in the world, an ancient architect’s drawing discovered In Mesopotamia, has been placed on exhibition. About 4,000 years old, it shows the ground plan of a large house of seventeen rooms. Details ’’e shown in accurate and closely c,.tv. Unes. \ f Dunbk. rentes Candidacy Bn Time a Special NEW ALBANY, Ind., Sept. 30. James W. Dunbar of this city, former Representative in Congress from the Third district, denies he is a candidate for the Republican nomination for Governor of Indiana. However, he stated no good citizeq would refuse the nomination if offered to him. Dunbar was queried about the nomination by Representative Will R. Wood of the Tenth district.
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Nanoy Was preLtr. GAGE, and a blue-blood even though !*-• on the other side of the railroad tracks. But Nancy Just couldn’t help falllnf? In love and becoming engaged to handsome Eric Nelson, whom she had met at Edith HaruJUrt's. a rich school chum. Nancy’s pride causes her to break the engagement when she finds that Eric’s mother Is a laundress at the Harcourt's., Nancy Is extremely jealous when Eric starts going with Clarice Jones, her next door neighbor. , . . Unable to stand the tension of her enforced separation from the man she loves. Nancy goes to live In San Francisco. CHAPTER XIX Relief to be an route! To be speeding away from the scene of one’s heartache and disappointment! Nancy did not even glance at the receding view of her home town. Every nerve was strained to the future. She leaned forward on the plush-covered seat as if by so doing she could hurry the train. She was so eager to get away. Whatever her new experiences, she would not be continually reminded of Eric Nelson. She told herself any hardships would be preferable to the agony she had endured. Forced to see him, knowing she would never be anything to him. Here at least would be strange faces, unfamiliar settings, and the glamour of the untried. She had promised to be very •‘careful” and do nothing a “lady” shouldn’t. Brought up in a small town, she had an acute suspicion of strangers. She was far'too intelligent to “take up” with a traveling companion of either sex. When she reached San Francisco she knew exactly what she was to do—take a taxi to a small hotel on Geary St., where she had stayed on her two previous visits. Buy a copy of an evening paper and look in the “want ads.” Even if it took several days, or a wesk, to find a position, she was sure she could manage. Food meant nothing to a girl In her mental condition. What would Edith think of this unpremeditated flight? She’d have to drop her a note. What was the best wawy to explain? She would just say that she hadn’t “decided” what she was going to do yet. That sounded better than to admit that it was necessary for her to do something. With one slender hand she propped her aching head against the window. Life was so hard! Why need she have fallen in love with a man she couldn’t have? If Eric could only have the Raymond with the Hollandsbee background, it would have been perfect. Or if Raymond could have looked like Eric! With Eric’s fascination and compelling way of making love Even the thought of it made her draw in her breath. She took a handkerchief from her purse and openly dried her eyes. She was weeping in public—a thing no well-bred girl would do. “I don’t care,” she told herself, fiercely. “I’m entitled to a few tears.” She pretended not to see the sympathetic face of an older woman opposite. Quietly dressed, middle-
aged, she looked all right. But one could never tell. Even girls in small towns have “heard things”... When the nice-looking woman leaned across and asked, “Are you ill? Is there anything I can do?” Nancy tossed her head and answered coldly, “No, thank, you!” She wasn’t taking any chances. No one need worry about her. Her arrival In the city was exactly as she had planned. Before midnight she was sitting in a chilly, rather shabby room, scanning the “ads.” Surprised to find so few that even looked Interesting. Those apparently all seeking woman with previous experience. One announced that “dancing partners were wanted at the Blue Moon Dancing Academy,” It wasn’t the sort of thing a nice girl would do. But with the frown deepening between her eyes, she took her manicure scissors and clipped it out. Because if it came to the worst.. ...On one point she was determined—she was not going back. “Tying between the cold sheets, she listened to the hum of belated traffic. She was a little frightened and very sick at heart. If Hilda Nelson died what would Eric do? Was he really interested in Clarice, or had he been punishing Nancy? At first she had imagined his taking her out to be a gesture of defiance, but *fter seeing the girl in his home, she was not so sure. Evidently Hilda liked her. She probably would encourage her son to marry a girl who had been kissed by half the boys in town . . . “If he does, he is finding his own level,” Nancy thought, bitterly. "Anyway. I’m never going to give him a thought again.” She realized the importance of this night’s resolutions. One period of her life was now definitely closed. In these new adventures Eric Nelson was to have no part. Beginning tomorrow she would seal her mind against any r> euiory of him. But it wasn’t morning yet ... .
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“Oh, Eric,” she whispered. A light rain had begun to beat against the windows. It suited her. She would have liked for heaven to drench the world in tears. She was picturing Eric as always on the deck of a rolling ship, legs apart, head back to the fury of wind and rain. But now she saw another girl beside him. Dauntless they faced the storm And no storm would ever break him. Nor any disappointment! Not even that of losing her! The next morning she received a telegram fram her father saying, “Do nothing definite until you receive letter mailed today.” She expected him too be furious—to order her home. She wasn’t going, but she was glad of an excuse to put off the search for a position. She took a walk; then stopped in a motion picture theater. The hero did not look like Eric, buk his technique resembled her former lover’s u> closely that she was compelled to leave—because she would not think of him. Afternoon brought the letter from her father. Nancy was amazed and touched. He said he was sorry she had left so abruptly. He had been trying for some time to see if he couldn’t figure out a plan. Since she was there he would try to send her enough money to live in a “quiet, respectable” place, and—magic words—“go on with her music." Nancy stared at the check as if it were a mystic symbol. Her father, whose gruff words and surly manner had kept her at arm’s length all her life, had responded nobly in this crisis. Not until then did she realize how frightened she had really been. How she had dreaded approaching strangers, asking for a position. This small amount of money would enable her to face the world as she wished always to face it—not as a suppliant begging favors, but as one who has favors to grant!
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With new courage, she put on her hat and went to the Y. W. C. A. for a list of recommended rooms. By the end of the next day she was living in a rooming house and had enrolled in the San Francisco College of Music. The letter she wrote her father must have warmed his heart, she was so sincerely grateful, so impressed by the fact that he had been willing to help her. “I know this will mean a sacrifice to •you and mother.” she admitted. “But I intend to study hard and make you proud of me.” Sitting in her small hall bedroom shabbier even than the one at home, she felt for the first time in her life the faint stirrings of ambition. A suitable marriage had heretofore been her sole aim. But now she was through with men. . . . What tricks life plays! Nancy I had pursued romance for three years, and found nothing but disappointment. Now that she had made up her mind to let it alone, the old harpy. Fate, grinned maliciously and cried, “We’ll see about that, milady!” proceeding to force men of all kinds upon the stage—young, old, rich, licentious, honorable. Meantime Edith’s letters reported the recovery of Hilda Nelson. The news registered with a stab of pain in Nancy’s heart. But she was far away from it now. Practicing faithfully, absorbed and busy as she had never been before. Pursued by a man whose wicked black eyes were as unlike Eric's as possible, whose potentialities were alarming, and whose intentions were obviously everything Eric’s were not. ... (To Be Continued) Rat Bites Sleeping Baby By Times Special ROCHESTER, Ind., Sept. 30. The 13-months-old baby of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Miller was bitten on the face by a rat while sleeping.
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