Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 316, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 May 1928 — Page 14

PAGE 14

‘TELEVOX’ WILL BE EXHIBIT AT PURDUEFRIDAY University Will Hold Annual Open House. By Times Special LAFAYETTE, Ind., May I. "Televox,” the new mechanical man, Vhis is almost human in its workwill be one of the most interesting features on display Friday in the annual open house of the engineering and science schools of Purdue University. The mechanical man will put on a continuous performance in the electrical engineering building for the benefit of the visiting 4-H club boys and girls from over the State and also for the hundreds of citizens from throughout northern Indiana who make the open house the occasion for a visit to the university to see it in full swing. Last year more than 5,000 persons passed through the shops and laboratories from 7 to 10 o’clock, the hours for the open house. Lightning to Be Made Another feature of unusual interest in the electrical building will be the high tension laboratory where electrical demonstratins with as high as 60,000 volts will be given. This is one of the two laboratories in America where artificial lightning can be produced. The testing laboratory, housed in the new civil engineering building, Will be on display for the first time, and actual tests of road and other building material will be in progress as they are done every day. Two hydroplanes, recent gifts from the United States Navy, have been received and it is hoped to have them unpacked and assembled in time for the program. The new metallurgical laboratory, which is housed in the first unit of the chemical engineering building, will be open with demonstrations and student work in this important field of engineering. Museum Open for Visitors The university museum, housed in the basement of Stanley Coulter Hall, the biology building, will be open with all its equipment on display. Special demonstrations are planned by the school of science in the chemistry building and with these and many other features not mentioned, the open house offers the most complete an indstructive program ever given in one evening at the university. The boys in industrial vocational work in high schools of the State also will be at Purdue Thursday and Friday in connection with the annual 4-H club round-up and all of these students will visit the open house as one of the features of their program.

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THIS HAS HAPPENED Ward of the Stale orphanage since she was four. SALLY FORD is “farmed out” to CLEM CARSON the summer she is !. She meets DAVID NASH, a student working on the farm during vacation. David hits Carson when he makes remarks about David’s friendship for Sally. They run away and join a carnival, David as cook’s helper and Sally as “Princess Lalla,” crystal gazer. In Capital City, location of the orphanage. Sally is discovered by one of the little orphans, who are chaperoned by a beautiful “Lady Bountiful.’’ Quick action on the part of GUS. the barker, saves Sally. She learns from ARTHI'R VAN HORNE, handsome easterner who annoys her with his attentions, that the beautiful chaperone is ENID BARR, wife of a wealthy New Yorker. In another State Sally and David believe danger of detection is over and they go about freely. He Sally engagement ring. MRS. STONE, matron of the orphanage, follows Sally and confronts her in the sideshow. Again Gus, the barker, comes to her rescue and Sallv manages to get away. She and David flee and plan to marry. They find a “marrying parson’’ and he is just beginning the service when Mrs. Stone and Enid Barr rush in and stop them. Enid tells them she :s Sally’s mother, and how only recently she learned the truth. Sallv£clings to David and insists she wants only to marry him. Enid, who has different plans for her newly-found daughter, tells her she cannot marrv David Nash. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XLI VERY gently David unclasped Sally’s hands, that locked convulsively about his neck. His eyes were dark with pain as Sally, hurt and resentful shrank from him. “You’re glad to get out of It!” she accused him. “You were only marrying me because you were sorry for me. You won’t fight for me now, because you’re glad to be free— ’’ “Sally! You don’t know what you’re saying!” David Interrupted her sternly. “You know I love you. that I’ve thought of nothing but you since we met on Carson’s farm. Os course I want to marry you, and will be proud and happy to do so, if your mother will consent.” Sally’s face bloomed again. She seized her mother’s hands and held them hard against her breast as she pleaded: “You see, Mother? Oh, please let us go on with our marriage! David and I will love you always, be so grateful to you— Listen, Mother! You’ll have a son as well as a daughter—” “Don’t be absurd Sally!” Enid brusquely. "When you were indeed a girl alone, wih no family, no prospects, nothing, a marriage with David woukl undoubtedly have been the best thing for you. But now—it’s ridiculous; This boy has nothing. You would be a burden upon him, a yoke about his young neck that should not be bowed down by responsibility for several years. You’re both under a cloud. I understand that he cannot return to college or go back to his grandfather until this trouble is cleared up. What did you two children expect to do, once you were married?” “I expected to work at anything I could get to do,” David answered with hurt young dignity. “I have brains, two years of college education, a strong body, and I love Sally.” Enid Barr leaned across Sally and touched David’s clenched first with the caressing tips of her fingers. “You’re a good boy, David, and Sally, the orphan, the girl alone, would have been lucky to marry you. But you understand, don’t you? She’s my daughter, will be the legally adopted daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Courtney Barr. Anyone in New York could tell you what that means. She will have every advantage that money can offer her—finishing school or college, if she wants to go to college; travel, exquisite clothes, a pla;e in society, a mother and father ’vho will adore :ier, a girlhood rich with all the pleasures that every normal girl craves. Help me to give her these things, David, things you would give her if you could!” “This is all nonesense!” Mrs. Stone spoke up sharply. “You know perfectly well, Mrs. Barr, that these two foolish children can’t get married without your consent. I, for one, think you’re wasting your time. Simply put your foot down and take your daughter home with you.” Sally flushed angrily and struggled to rise, but David held her back. “You’ll have to go with her, darling. Remember how you’ve always wanted a mother? You have one now, and she wants you with her, wants to make up to you for all you’ve missed.”

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As only mute rebellion answered him, he wisely changed his tactics: “Do you think you could ever be really happy, darling, knowing that you had hurt your mother, cheated her of the child for whom she has grieved all these years? She’ll never have another child, Sally, and she needs you as much as you need her.” When Sally’s mouth began to quiver with new tears, Enid Barr took the girl in her arms. At last Sally raised her head and searched her mother’s face with piteous intensity. "Do you really need me?” she cried. “You’ll love me—be a real mother to me? You don’t just want me because it’s your duty?” Tears clouded the clear blue of Enid’s eyes as she answered softly; “I'll be a mother to you, Sally, not because it’s my duty, but because I | already love you and will love you ! more and more. If I had searched | the whole world over for the girl I : would have liked to have as my daughter, T~could not have found one who is as sweet and pretty and dear as you are. I’m proud of my daughter and I shall hope to make her proud of me.” * “Then—l’ll go with you,” Sally capitulated, but she added quickly, “If David will promise not to tove any other girl until I'm old enough to marry him.” Over Sally's head, cradled against her mothre’s breast, Enid Barr and David Nash exchanged a long look, as if measuring each other's strength. David knew then, and Enid meant him to know, that Sally's mother had far different plans for her daughter than any that could possible include David Nash. “I’ll always love you, Sally,” David said gravely, as he rose from the sofa. Sally struggled out of her mother’s clasp and sprang to the boy’s side just as he was reaching to the little certer table for his hat. "Where are you going, David? Don’t leave me yet! Oh, David, I can’t bear to let you go! How can I write you—where? Tell me. David! Oh, I love you so I feel like I’ll die if you leave me!’* Defiant of the tight-lipped disapproval of Mrs. Stone anu of the anxious signal which Enid’s blue eyes were flashing him, David put his arms about Sally and held her close, while he bent his head to * kiss her. “You can write me here, general , delivery. I’ll stay here for a while, I think, until I can make plans—” ! My husband is in Capital City now, David,” Enid interrupted j eagerly. “I am going to have him intercede with the authorities for you. You can return to Capital City as soon as you like. There’ll be no trouble, I promise you. It is the only thing we can do to repay you for your great kindness toward—our daughter.” “Then you can go back to college, David,” Sally rejoiced, her eyes shining through tears. “And when you’ve graduated and—and gotten your start, we can be married, can’t we?” “If you still want me, Sally darling," David answered gravely. “Thank you, Mrs. Barr. You'll—you’ll try to make Sally happy, won’t you?” “I promise you she’ll be happy, David,” Enid answered,' giving him her hand. “May I speak with you j alone a moment?” she added impulsively, and linking her arm in his drew him toward the door that opened into the little fover hill. “David! You’re not go ng? With- ' out telling me goodby’” Sally cried, I stumbling blindly after tnem. “Good-by, my darling.” He put his arm about her shoulders and laid his cheek against her hair as he murmured in a low, shaken voice: “I’ll be loving you—always!” When the door had closed upon her mother and her almost-hus-band, Sally did a surprising thing: she went stumbling toward Mrs. Stone, and dropped upon her knees before that majestic, rigid figure which she had feared for twelve years.

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When Enid Barr returned a few minutes later, two round spots of color burning in her cheeks, she found her daughter in the orphanage matron’s lap, cuddled there like a small child, trustfully sobbing out her grief. a a a Enid Barr left with her daughter for Kansas City that night, after wiring her husband. Courtney Barr, who was still awaiting word from her in Capital City. For two days Sally and Enid shopped for a suitable wardrobe for Sally, went to shows together, explored the city, and spent many hours talking. Whenever the question of Sally’s future arose, Enid spoke only in generalities, evading all direct questions, but about Sally’s childhood and young girlhood in the orphanage and on the Carson farm, and about her experiences with the carnival, Enid was insatiably curious and invariably sympathetic. Sally sensed that her mother was anxiously awaiting Courtney Barr’s arrival before making any definite plans, and gradually the girl grew’ to dread the ordeal of meeting her mother's husband, the man who would become her father by adoption. And when at last he came she knew that her troubled intuition had been correct. However, “wonderful” he had been to Enid when she had discovered that her child had not been born dead but was alive somewhere in the-world. Sally felt instantly that his kindness and generosity toward Enid would not extend to herself. Courtney Barr was a meticulously gromed, meticulously courteous man who had, in slipping into middleage. lost all traces of the boy and youth he must have been. To Sally’s terrified eyes, this rather heavy, ponderous man, on whom dignity rested like a royal cloak, looked as if he had been born old and wise and cold. She wondered how her exquisite, arrogant little mother could love him so devotedly. Almost immediately after the awkward introduction—“ This is our Sally. Court!”—the three of them had had dinner together, a silent meal, so far as Sally was concerned. She had felt that the Enid with whom she had talked and laughed and wept these two days

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had slipped away, leaving this sophisticated, strange woman in her place, a woman who was in nowise related to her, a woman who was merely Mrs. Courtney Barr. They left her alone for an hour after dinner, an hour which she spent in her own room in writing a long, frightened, appealing letter to David. At 9 o’clock Enid knocked on her door and invited her to join them in the parlor of the luxurious suite which had been such a delight to orphanage-bred Sally. She found Courtney Barr seated in a large arm chair, her mother perched on the arm of it, one tiny foot in a silver slipper swinging with nervous rapidity. The man smiled bleakly, a smile that did not reach his cold gray eyes, as Sally took the nearby chair that he indicated. “Mrs. Barr and I have been discussing your immediate future, j Sally.” he began ponderously, in

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tional voice—meekness hiding fear and rebelllion—which answered, “Yes, sir.” “Oh, let me talk to her, Court!” Enid begged. “You’re scaring my baby to death. He fancies himself as an old ogre, Sally darling, but he’s really a dear inside. You see, Sally, I was so eager to find my baby that I made no plans at all." Courtney Barr said, “I think I’d better do the talking after all, my dear. Your sentimentality—natural, of course, under the circumstances—would make it impossible for you to state the case clearly and convincingly.” Sally’s cold hands clasped each other tightly in her lap as she stared

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with wide, frightened eyes at tile man who was about to arrange her whole future for her. “I have made Mrs. Barr understand how impossible it will be for us to take you into our home at once, as our adopted daughter,” Courtney Barr went on in his heavy, judicial voice. Sally sprang to her feet, her eyes blazing in her white face. “I didn't ask to be found, to be adopted!” she cried. “If you don't want me, say so, and let me go back to David!” (To Be Continued) Sally finds that plans have been made to keep David from writing to her.

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