Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 321, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 May 1928 — Page 18

PAGE 18

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SALLY FORD. 16. ward of the State orphanage since she was four, is "farmed out” to CLEM CARSON. She meets DAVID NASH, athlete and student, who ts working on the Carson farm daring his vacation. David strikes Carson a crushing blow when he makes insinuations about David’s friendship for Sally. They run away and join a carnival —David as cook's helper and Sally as “Princess Lalla," crystal carer. In Capital City, location of the orphanage. Sally l* recognized by one of a crowd of little orphans who come trooping into the show, chaperoned by a beautiful woman. She learns from ARTHUR VAN HORNE, an easterner” who annoys her with his attentions, that tha beautiful chaperone is ENID BARR, wealthy New York matron. Sally is puzzled at Enid's interest in her. David and Sally flee from the carnival and in the county seat arc "half-married” when the ceremony is stopped by MRS. STONE, matron of the orphanage, and Enid Barr. Enid confesses she is Sally’s mother, but that she believed her child to be dead until recently. Enid separates Sally and David and for the next two years Sally is placed in a finishing school. When Enid sends out the invitations for Sally's coming-out party. Sally insists that she keep a promise made two years previous r.nd send David an invitation. At her iiarty Sally waits eagerly for David to come. When h* arrives. sh rushes to him, but he seems changed. Later she asks him if he doss not love her any more. He tells her she must forget him. They are interrupted by an unexpected visitor. Arthur V3n Horne stands at the door. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XLVI “TJLEASE don’t go, David!” Sally jL implored, but he mistook her distress, occasioned by Arthur Van Home’s entirely unexpected appearance for a plea for a longer interview which he knew would only cause them both pain. He shook his head dumbly and strode to the door. He paused there a moment to bow jerkily first toward Sally, then toward Van Horne, who was watching the scene with amused, cynical eyes. Pride mercifully came to Sally’s aid then; she closed her lips firmly over the question she had been about to fling at David with desperate urgency. She even managed to wave her hand with what she hoped was airy indifference as David opened the door. “So!” Van Horne chuckled when the door had closed softly. “It’s still Sally and David, isn’t it? I’m glad I was vouchsafed a glimpse of this Paragon. Astonishingly good-look-ing in a Norse viking sort of way, but rather a bull in a China shop here, isn’t he? But I presume that is why Enid fondly hoped when she allowed him to come. I gather that she did invite him? Avery clever woman, Enid. I’ve always said so.” Sally’s teeth closed hurtingly over her lower lip, but she said., nothing. The pain and horror of David’s uncompromising rebuff were still too great to permit room in her heart for fear of Van Horne. Os course he had recognized her at once, had undoubtedly recognized her from her pictures in the papers, but what did it matter now? David was gone —gone—He had not even kissed her—- “ Still afraid of me, Sally?” Van

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Horne laughed, as her eyes remained fixed on his face in a blind, unseeing stare. “Afraid of you?” Sally echoed, her voice struggling strangely through pain. "Oh, you mean—?” She tried to collect her wits, to push aside the incredible fact of David’s desertion, so that she could concentrate on Van Horne and the frightening significance of his presence here coupled with his knowledge of her past. “Dear little Sally!” Van Home said tenderly, and Sally clenched her fist to strike him for using the words which had been heavily sweet when David had uttered them so long ago. “I told you the last time I saw you that you had not seen the last of Arthur Van Home. I meant it, but I give you my word I hardly expected to find you here! I spent the deuce of a lot of time and money trying tj trace you after you left the carnival. Old Bybee finally told me that you’d run away and had porbably married your David. So I took my broken heart to China, Japan, Egypt and God knows where. And now like'the chap who sought for the Holy Grail, I find you at home waiting for me.” “I wasn’t waiting for you,” Sally contradicted him indignantly. “I was waiting for David and he’s just told me that he doesn't want me. I hoped I’d never see you again” “Why, Sally, Sally!” Van Horne chided her, his black eyes full of mocking humor. “Don’t you realize that I’m the oldest friend you have in this new life of yours? I really haven’t got used to the idea yet of your being Enid Barr’s daughter. Os course I knew there was something mysterious about her overweening interest in ‘Princess Lalla,’ but this thick old head of mine wasn’t functioning very well in those days. My heart was too full of that same lovely little crystalgazer. But when I read the rather masterly bit of fiction in the papers, the story which good old asinine Courtney Barr gave out as to your parentage and his wardship which he had supplanted by a legal adoption, the old bean began to click again, and I can assure you I got a great deal of quiet enjoyment out of the thing. Fancy the impeccable Enid Barr’s having—” “Oh, stop” Sally commanded him, flaming with anger. “Don’t dare say a ’word against my mother—l mean, against Enid—” “Against your mother,” Van Horne corrected her serenely. “Os course I haven’t told anyone, Sally, ’and I don’t really see why I should, if—Listen, child; don’t you think we ought to have a long, comfortable talk about—old times? We’re likely to be interrupted here any minute by a chaperon—or by your mother or by a couple of young idiots seeking a quiet place to ‘neck’ in. Slip out of the house when the show’s over—the servants’ entrance will be better—and we’ll go for a drive through the park.’’ “I shall do no such thing!” Sally repudiated the suggestion hotly. “I’m going back to the ballroom now. Please don’t come with me.” When she arrived, breathless, at the doer of the ballroom, she bumped into Enid, whose face was white and anxious and suddenly almost old. “Darling, where have you been?” her mother whispered fiercely. “I’ve had Courtney and Randall and two of the footmen looking for you. This is your party, ydu know. You have other guests besides David Nash. I knew it was a mistake to ask him—” “Where is he, mother?” Sally interrupted rudely. “I’ve been with someone else most of the time.” She could not bring herself yet to mention Van Horne’s name to her mother, for fear Enid would notice that something was sadly amiss. “I haven’t seen him,” Enid protested. “But run along now and dance. It’s the last dance before

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supper. Remember that Grant Proctor is taking you down. Do be sweet to him, Sally.” “She would like for me to marry Grant Proctor,” Sally reflected dully, as she obediently let herself be drawn into the dance by an ardenteyed young man whose name she could not remember. “She wants me to marry Grant Proctor, when I’m already half-married to David. But David doesn’t want me! Oh, David!” Just before supper was announced she slipped away to her own rooms, to cry the hot tears that were pressing against her eyeballs. And on her dressing table she found a note, undoubtedly placed there by her own maid. Her cold, shaking fingers had difficulty in opening it, for she knew at once that it was from David. , “Dear little Sally,,” she read, and the tears gushed then. “Forgive me for bolting like this, but I couldn’t stand it any longer. You know I love you, that ‘l’ll be loving you always,’ but you must also know that Sally Barr can not marry David Nash, and that anything less would be too terrible for both of us. You must be wondering why I came. I wanted to see for myself that you are happy, that your mother is good to you. And, of course, I wanted to see you again, wanted to see if there was anything of my Sally in this beautiful Sally Barr that the papers are making so much of. “I think it has made it harder fer me to find that underneath the new surface you are still Sally Ford. But they’ll change the core of you almost as rapidly as they have remade the surface of you into a society beauty. And after you’re changed all through you’ll be glaff 1 I went away. I’ll carry my own Sally in my heart always, and the new Sally Barr will fall in love with the splendid young son of some old family, marry him and make her mother very happy. She would never forgive us, Sally, if I took you away and made you live on what I can earn as a farmer, and she would be right not to forgive. I would not forgive myself, and after awhile you’d be unhappy, too, remembering all that you had lost, including a mother who adores you. Good-by, Sally. DAVID." She was so quiet, so white at supper that Grant Proctor, who was already in love with her, begged her to let him give her a drink from his pocket flask, but she refused, scarcely knowing what he had said to her. Once she caught her mother’s eyes, and shivered at the anixety and reproach in them. Suddenly a fierce resentment against Enid Barr rose and beat sikeningly in her blood. If she had not interfered, she and David would have been married long ago. They would have been happy in poverty, would have struggled side by side to banish poverty, might even have had a tiny David or Sally of their own by this time. And now David was irrevocably gone, so that

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Enid Barr might keep her daughter. Sally wanted to nurse her anger against her mother, but it was impossible to do so, for she loved her. When the jazz orchestra was hilariously summoning the debutantes to the dance floor again Arthur Van Horne claimed Sally over the protests of the half dozen younger men who were good-naturedly wrangling for the honor. “You’re going to meet me after this foolish, delightful show is over, aren"t you? Os course you are!” he smiled down upon her as he led her out upon the floor. Sally looked up at him wearily and saw that there was more than amusement and gallantry in his narrowed, smiling black eyes. There was menace, which he did not try to conceal, wanted her to see—- “ All right,” she nodded. “You do love your mother, don’t you?” he smiled significantly. “Maybe you’ll learn to love Van a little, too. It would be—very wise.” It was half past four o’clock when the tireless debutantes were willing to call it a night. Sally braved the thing out, but her face was wan as she listened to the last compliments on the success of the party which had officially launched her into the circles of society to which her mother belonged by the divine right of inheritance and immense wealth. “We’ll talk it all over tomorrow, sweetheart,” Enid said pityingly. “You riln along to bed now. I’ve got to give a few instructions to Randall. And you’d better stay in bed all day, or until tea time anyway. You were marvelous tonight, darling. So beautiful, so sweet. These wild young flappers—but run along, daughter beloved. You look as if you might faint with fatigue. Have Ernestine bring you some hot milk.” It was ridiculously easy for Sally Have Your Glasses Charged!

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to slip out of the house, using the servants’ entrance, as Van Horne had suggested. She found him waiting for her and submitted wearily to being led to where his car was parked, a block away. “What do you want, Van?” she asked abruptly, when the car turned into Central Park from Fifth Ave. at Eighty-Fourth St., the wheels crunching the glazed crust of new snow. “To talk with you and hold your hand and possibly kiss you—oh, very possibly!” Van Horne laughed at her, reaching for her hand. “What did you mean when you said it would be ‘very wise’ for me to love you a little?” she persisted, too tired to be diplomatic. But of course she knew. He held her mother’s security and happiness in the hollow of his hand. That he could destroy her own social career if he wished did not occur to her, for she had not yet learned to care about it, to prize it. But Enid must be protected at all costs. “I think you know,” Van Horne shrugged. “But why put it into words? Some things are much nicer unsaid, if they are distinctly understood. Now—will you kiss me, Sally? I’ve waited a long time, sweet child, and I’m naturally not a patient man.” “Not tonight,” Sally said in a low, flat voice, shrinking into her own corner of the seat. “Please turn at One Hundred and Tenth St. and take me mack home, Van. I’m utterly tired.” Van obeyed cheerfully, exultant over her indirect promise. When Sally was creeping exhaustedly up the stairs to her room, her mother,

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still dressed in her formal ball gown, came hurrying frantically down to meet her. “Darling, where have you been? I’ve been crazy with worry How could you go out and meet that Nash boy so brazenly? Tonight of all nights!" “It wasn’t David, Mother,” Sally said in a dead-tired voice. “It was Arthur Van Horne. He—knows—all about me. He’s known all along.” (To Be Continued) Tn the next installment Sally learns something new about the startling Van Horne.

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ARCHM.HALL for Congress We, the undersigned citizens of Marion County, recommend to Republican voters Archibald M. Hall as the best qualified candidate to represent the Seventh Congressional District in the Congress of the United States. For more than twenty years he has spoken in every campaign under the direction of the state and national Republican Committee. Ke was chosen to debate the League of Nations with the late Senator Hitchcock (Democrat) in lowa in 1920. He is splendidly equipped lor this position, and will prove a worthy successor to the late Jesse Overstreet and the Hon. Merrill Moores. A Vote for Hall is a Vote for Real Representation in Congress

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