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This is Nora Drake 1950

Lovely  Nora Drake is a nurse in Page Memorial Hospital. Anytown, USA Zealously devoted to her work. Her pursuit of her own personal happiness runs a poor second to her  career—which makes tough on the men who fall m love with her. Charles Dobbs, a young lawyer, loves her desperately and hopes some day to many her. Attractive and successful has the common sense and keen judgment of people that Nora-the idealist and champion of the underdog—frequently lucks, Charles has an ill-starred brother George who has changed his last name to Stewart in order not to blacken the Dobbs name. Brilliant but weak George constantly involved i n shady enterprises, the latest of which is forgery, for which he is wanted by the police His wife Dorothy, whom he adores, has stayed with him through all his other deals but for her this is the last straw, and she leaves him.

Charles Dobb, who loves Nora Drake. enters his office one night is shocked to see his brother George , who is wanted by the police.

"Why don't you have me arrested?' taunts George.

Charles finds he can't do that. He takes George-ill physically and mentally to a restaurant and gives him twenty dollars for decent food and lodging. He learns George only lives for his wife's return to him.

Later that evening, Charles tells Nora about it. and they go to George's wife Dorothy. She's packing to fly South with a wealthy suitor and scorns the idea of returning to George.  A huge corsage of orchids arrive, which Dorothy thinks are from her new beau. Discovering they're from George (who has spent the whole $20 on them!) she won't accept them and hands them to Charles.

Charles leaves to go back to his brother. Nora tries in vain to persuade Dorothy that she still loves George. At the airport, Dorothy is belatedly touched by George's corsage.  Nora goes to George's shabby furnished room, finds turn quite ill, and hasn't the heart to tell him that Dorothy has left for Florida. George guesses as much, believes that she has left him forever.

Dorothy suddenly enters and goes lovingly to her husband. George, strengthened by her devotion, decides to stand trial.

Joan Tompkins is Nora Drake

Elspeth Eric is Dorothy Stewart

Grant Richards is Charles, Dobbs

Leon Janney is George Stewart

Milton Lewis, Writer

Charles Irving Director

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Portia Faces Life                      CBS: Oct 7, 1940 to April 25,1941. (29 Weeks)  
                                                         NBC: April 28 1941 to March 31, 1944. (153 Weeks)  
                                                 CBS: April 3, 1944 to September 29, 1944.  (22 Weeks) 
                                                         NBC: October 2, 1944 to June 29, 1951.  (352 Weeks)  

HERE ARE THE PLOT AND CHARACTERS, UP TO DATE, FOR THOSE WHO CAME IN LATE

1943

A soap opera that outdoes its sisters, in the realm of feminine drama, is achieving something of a record. "Portia Faces Life" might be said to do that, in presenting an heroine who has to meet not only the private heartaches (as reported by fiction writers) of a mother and a woman in love-but also the public problems of a criminal lawyer by profession.

In general, Portia Blake's name and character are patterned after Shakespeare's lawyer -heroine in "The Merchant of Venice." Like her, the 20th Century Portia wants to temper justice with mercy, but radio listeners are probably more enthralled by her struggles to keep both her sweetheart and her child than by her tense courtroom battles to save people from injustice. Unlike her Shakespearean counterpart, author Mona Kent's Portia now has a war to contend with, and her current trials are bound up with Nazi spies and saboteurs.

Prior to this, however, she has had many personal problems which latecomers to her audience should know about, to understand the characters who play a prominent part in her story.

First of all, there was the unhappy marriage of Walter Manning, her fiance. Society girl Arline Harrison had forced him to marry her, through his belief that this was the only way to save her life, but she had soon realized that he was ill in love with Portia. She attempted to "frame" the woman lawyer, was saved from the consequences of her plot only by Portia's own legal skill, and finally divorced the husband who didn't love her.

Meanwhile, Walter had gone to Europe as a foreign correspondent, and Portia threw herself into slum clearance work in Parkerstown. There she found a loyal friend in Miss Daisy, whom she took into her own home as nurse for Dickie Blake, her son by a former marriage. Unluckily, she also crossed the path of the town's corrupt "leading citizen," John Parker, who tried to pin a murder on the fighting young lawyer, in order to get rid of her. Although Portia managed to prove her innocence, the trial gave Mrs. Amelia Blake, her mother-in-law, a new excuse for trying to take Dickie away from her.

In Europe, Walter was imprisoned in the dreaded concentration camp at Dachau while his Nazi double, Nicholas Veit, came to America to impersonate him. Veit tried to marry Portia, so no one would suspect his true missionsabotage-but she stumbled upon the real truth and began collecting evidence to prove his subversive activities. That is the situation leading up to the more recent episodes...

PORTIA BLAKE (played by Lucille Wall), the lawyer heroine of 'Portia Faces Life," is defending her fiance, Walter Manning, against a charge of treason. She alone knows that he is being tried for the crimes of a Nazi agent who had impersonated him. Walter had killed the impostor, in order to save Portia'i life-but, in the absence of the body as evidence, Portia has been unable to prove, even to his friends, that any double ever existed.

WALTER MANNING (Bartlett Robinson)-a newspaper man and foreign correspondent-returned from Europe to discover that his place hadbeen taken by a German spy who looked exactly like him. Portia alone believes that "Walter Manning" has really beentwo different people-and he is now being tried for treason onthe very evidence she herself had collected against his double.

ARLINE HARRISON (Nancy Douglas), vivacious but spoiled society belle, uses tank tactics to get what she wants. She wanted Walter, and once snared him-only to lose him. Determined that Portia shall not have him, no matter what else happens, she gave perjured testimony at his trial which might have convicted him of treason, but for Portia'r brilliant cross-examination.

MISS DAISY (Doris Rich) is devoted to Portia and hasstood by her through trial and mistrial.She lives with her, taking care of Dirkie. and acting as combined companion, nurse and housekeeper. She has been a bufferfor them both, through one disaster after another, and is oneof the few people on whose help the busy lawyer can rely.

AMELIA BLAKE (Ethel lntropidi), mother of the widowed Portia's former husband, has long had a hidden but grim determination to take Portia's son, Dickie, away from her. Using both her frail health and her immense wealth as weapons in the unequal struggle, she has tried to win the youngster's affection away from his busy mother, while Portia was practicing law to support him.

BILL BAKER (Les Damon), ex -newspaper man now a captain in Army Intelligence, was once Walter's closest friend but is now his bitter enemy. Believing that Walter is guilty and that Nazi threats had been able to persuade him to shed his democratic principles rather than his skin. Bill is helping the District Attorney with the prosecution. He wants to save Portia, whom he loves devotedly, from a miserable life with a cowardly "traitor.

ELBERT GALLO (Karl Swenson), long respected as a well-to-do publisher, was really the ringleader of a crew of Nazi saboteurs, exposed by Portia's investigation. Although Gallo knows that the false Walter is dead, he has resolved to drag the real Walter down into disgrace and a traitor's death with him, as a final revenge.

KATHY MARSH (Selena Boyle) is a real friend of Portia', but, as a busy dietitian, plays rather a minor role in the lawyer's professional life. Her wholesome common sense has often been a personal comfort to Portia-and Portia is going to have need of all her friends in the next developments which she faces in the story of her dramatic life, according to present plans

  • 2 weeks later...
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On 10/21/2025 at 1:28 AM, Paul Raven said:

@Reverend Ruthledge Thank so much for this.

I have read about the early years of TGL but this is at another level with a lot of new details that flesh out the story.

The amazing thing is , that with a few tweaks, the story could be airing now.

A rebooted Guiding Light recreating these plots, set in a multi cultural inner urban area would a great contrast to BTG. Go on CBS, do it!

The Right to Happiness spin off which moved Rose Kransky to the new show debuted Oct 39.

The Doris Cameron character was introduced to prepare viewers for the spin off.

Many pages back we wondered how the Kranskys seem to move from Five Points and your summary explains Mrs Kransky selling her store and moving to Garden Heights.

I'm going to have to re read this and maybe make a cast list.

Hope you have more!!

 I'm currently up to a February, 1940 script and Rev. Rutledge is visiting Mrs. Kransky in Garden Heights. The Kranskys haven't been in the TGL story for a while. Maybe an odd episode here or there with Rose or the Cunninghams. I'm not sure if the Cumminghams were on Right to Happiness. Anyway, it's basically just an expository episode. Garden Heights is established to be five miles away from Five Points. Mrs. Kransky is catching Rev. Rutlhledge up with what, I guess, was going on on RtH. Mrs. Kransky is apparently managing an apartment building and the Burkes (Terry, his dad, his siblings Donny and Kathie and his Aunt Emily) are tenants. Mrs. Kransky talks about how she hopes something will happen with Terry and Rose but she fears that Rose will never love anybody other than Charles. It seems like the Kranskys are already starting to come back into GL. There was talk of something that I know soon turns into a TGL Charles/Rose storyline. It doesn't seem like the Kranskys stayed around RtH very long at all. The Burkes might have left RtH when the Kranskys left and the show became all about Doris and her daughter. 

  • 2 weeks later...
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Some excerpts from The Barbour Family 'Memory Book' from One Man's Family.

HENRY BARBOUR, born 1875. Married 1896. Father of Paul, Hazel, Clifford, Claudia, Jack. Founded the Henry Barbour Stock Brokerage House, 1912. With Henry - and partly from him - I learned what an important and stabilizing thing a family can be in this fast changing world. As he once said: "If we, by example, can in some small way further the desire in America for family tradition and family loyalty, we will have served a worthy purpose."

CLAUDIA BARBOUR, born August 1, 1912. Married on May 6, 1931 to John Roberts, Jr. (Deceased 1933). Daughter Joan born May 3, 1933. Claudia married Captain Nicholas Lacey, Bart., June 24, 1935. Divides her time between their home in San Francisco and the Sky Ranch, which Nicky bought in 1935.

PAUL BARBOUR, born June 4, 1897. Married June 1918 to Elaine Hunter (Deceased July 1918). Much of Paul's time away from the flying field is spent being a good father to Teddy, whom he adopted in the Summer of 1933.

CLIFFORD BARBOUR, born August 1, 1912. Twin brother of Claudia. Married Sept. 19, 1937 to Ann Waite (Deceased 1938). "J.D." born Oct. 16, 1938. Clifford entered his father's business August 10, 1934. When Clifford was in bed with a broken ankle last Spring, he said: "It's a good idea for people to be sick once is a while. It gives them a chance to slow down, and kind of get acquainted with their families." That's what gave me the idea of making this book - as a way of getting acquainted with some of the things about my family I had forgotten.

HAZEL BARBOUR, born March 11, 1900. Married William Herbert, May 7, 1932. Twin children Martin Henry ("Hank") and William Barbour ("Pinky") born January 30, 1933. Daughter Margaret born Aug. 2, 1936. When Hazel was a little girl. Father Barbour used to say: "Hmph! Won't that child ever be anything but all legs?" Now he admits she's one of the most gracious and courageous mothers he has ever known. Hazel herself says: "Naturally my chief interest is making a wellrounded home for Hank and Pink and Margaret. Beyond that I ask very little... simplicity, a little pleasure and a great deal of pleasant contact with the family."

JACK BARBOUR, born January 13, 1917. Married Betty Carter, Deo. 18, 1936. Jack says: "Betty's the swellest wife a guy could have" - and Betty says: "Being married to Jack is more fun than I ever had in all my life." Jack and Betty have been married over three years now - and I've learned this from both of them: that when young people of the newer generation decide to marry, they try with everything that's in them to make their relationship solid and honest. They seem to see in marriage and a home not only something pleasant and exciting in itself - but one of the few sure, stable institutions that are left them in this changing and uncertain world. Claudia says: "Betty's a pretty wise young wife... When she calls Jack 'My great big wonderful man' he does ex¬ actly as she wants him to. Even Jack admits: 'The reason Betty and I get on so well is she goes her way - and I go with her' ."

NICHOLAS LACEY, born London, England, Oct. 6, 1907. Husband of Claudia, and' father of Penelope. Nicholas deserves a full page in this book. ..because I have learned from him that a son-in-law can be so generous and considerate, so open-hearted, that he wins his way into the heart of the family. As Nicky himself says: "Joining a new family's like reading a good book - with something new and interesting on every page." Nicky married Claudia June 24, 1935, at our home in Sea Cliff, with Clifford as best man. When Nicky went to get the license, they asked him if he was looking for a hunting license and he said: "No, the hunting is over. I want a license to marry the girl I've found."

In the Summer of 1935, Nicky bought the Sky Ranch where he raises thoroughbred horses, and where he and Claudia and the children spend their Summers and a lot of weekends. Here is a snapshot of Claudia beside the swimming pool they built last Summer. The whole ranch covers 400 acres - and much of it is woodland.

FANNY BARBOUR, born 1878, married 1896. Voted by the Barbours the most loving, tolerant, and kindly mother that they ever had. Knowing her generous nature, perhaps the best we children could wish for her is what she wished for herself - when she said, just a little while ago: "All I ask or hope for the years ahead is a repetition of all the good years that lie behind me. I have your father and I have you children. What more could any woman ask? I will find strength in Hazel's strength, anticipation in Claudia and Nicky's anticipation, and pleasure in Clifford's pleasure. I will find food for thought in Paul's reflective nature, and I will find youth and the excitement of being alive in Jack and Betty's new found happiness. Mine will be a future running over with good things. "

  • Member

Thanks @Paul Raven for all those details.

I saw a post on Facebook reminding that the last major radio soaps ended in the US yesterday, 65 years ago.

Still such a short-sighted loss...

  • Member
8 hours ago, DRW50 said:

Thanks @Paul Raven for all those details.

I saw a post on Facebook reminding that the last major radio soaps ended in the US yesterday, 65 years ago.

Still such a short-sighted loss...

It would have been interesting had they stuck around into the 60's and survived.

  • Member
7 hours ago, Paul Raven said:

It would have been interesting had they stuck around into the 60's and survived.

I would have been especially interested in how they would have dealt with topics like Vietnam. I didn't know for a long time that Ma Perkins lost a son during WWII.

  • Member
12 hours ago, DRW50 said:

I would have been especially interested in how they would have dealt with topics like Vietnam. I didn't know for a long time that Ma Perkins lost a son during WWII.

I would imagine it would be the same as television soaps at that time which, surprisingly, didn't address it much. At least not the five soaps whose history I'm familiar with. Of those, only ATWT seemed to address the Vietnam War with both Paul Stewart and Tom Hughes fighting in the war.

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6 hours ago, Reverend Ruthledge said:

I would imagine it would be the same as television soaps at that time which, surprisingly, didn't address it much. At least not the five soaps whose history I'm familiar with. Of those, only ATWT seemed to address the Vietnam War with both Paul Stewart and Tom Hughes fighting in the war.

You're probably right, it is still something that interests me because I think radio soaps had more of a freedom for psychological storytelling due to the lack of visuals. I could have seen one of them having material set in Vietnam.

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Here's what's happening on various soaps week of June 30 - July 4 1947

Romance Evelyn Winters. Mon.: Evelyn attends a party after the opening of Janice King Barrington's play and receives an ominous message from the crystal gazer.

Romance of Helen Trent. Mon.: An argument between Pat McGuire and Gil Whitney concerning Helen leads to a fight in which Gil is seriously injured and Pat is placed under arrest.

Our Gal Sunday. Mon.: Cleared of a murder charge for which he has been on trial, Lord Henry Brinthrope starts home with Sunday, only to meet enroute with a startling occurrence adding complications.

Big Sister Serial. Tues.: John Wayne's determination to stay in Glen Falls brings into the open the fact that he is competing with Reed Bannister for the love of Ruth. Grace Matthews plays the title role of Ruth Wayne. Julian Funt writes the scripts

Young Doctor Malone. Tues.: For the first time in many weeks there is happiness in the household of Jerry and Anne Malone when Jerry suddenly discovers that he can move one of his legs, which have been paralyzed completely since his automobile accident. Charles Irving plays Dr. Jerry Malone and Barbara Weeks plays his wife Anne

  • 4 weeks later...
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Daily Bulletin Endicott. Thurs July 26, 1956

'Romance of Helen Trent' Oldest Soap Opera of All by Charles Mercer.

Yesterday a few bars of 'Juanita' sounded from a few million radios across the country and a soap opera called "The Romance of Helen Trent" entered Its 24th uninterrupted year of broadcasting on the CBS Radio network. As far as anybody can find out - and just watch a couple of authorities from somewhere arise to dispute the flat statement- "The Romance of Helen Trent" is now the oldest consecutive soap opera on the air. Its 5900 scripts, if laid end to end would consume fill 61 solid days and nights of heart-throb.

Romance Over 35

Helen has survived by a simple, neat formula that has endeared her to millions of women as they slave .over their ironing boards and cookstoves. She demonstrates, in fact she proves—that a woman of 35 or older may still have romance in her life.

Granted that Helen, a successful Hollywood dress designer may have been 38 when her perpetual and persistent romances began back in 1932. She now is a mere 62—a real spring chicken. One thing about Helen is that she's a mighty good girl, with none of the major or minor vices. She has been courted only "by wealthy men-it's doubtful if anyone knows how many. Yet, not once has she been led to the altar.

Her listeners have their favorite suitors of course. One actor who played a suitor some time ago, says he used to receive constant communications from a listener, a sweet little old lady from Chicago, who was rooting for him.

She's report what were being said about him behind his back on the program. She urged him to "strike back'' But when Helen finally rejects her listeners apparently accept the fact with a fatalism born of the ironing board. Tomorrow there will be somebody else. Tomorrow there will be hope. And there always Is Gil Whitney. Helen's most persistent suitor of the past dozen years.

Helen was the brain-child of Frank and Anne Hummert. a husband and wife writing team. Only nine writers have worked on the show in its lifetime. The present writer is Margo Brooks, of South Salem. Ernest Ricca has been the director for the past 12 years There have been occasional substitute stars but the present Helen, who took the job at the age of 27 and will be 40 in -November, is an actress named Julie Stevens who Is married to a television executive named Charles Underhfll and lives in Armonk. , Helen .has .been aroundL*-long tinw-aiw shows-no' eigne of ever leaving the airways. One fact mint be. faced, however: Helen never can marry. if she ever did there would be no more romance for, a lot of listeners.

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Thanks @Paul Raven

And she never did get married. I wonder if they knew the show was ending and never wanted to have her marry or if they were caught by surprise.

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I think someone said they enjoyed my 1937-1939 synopses for The Guiding Light and wanted more so here is my 1940 synopsis for those that are interested:

-1/1/40-1/31/40. Through Fredrika, Torchy learns that Spike was using her to get information on Ned’s birth identity. Spike goes to Cleveland to get proof that Ned is Fredrika and Paul’s son. Ned prepares to return to San Francisco for work, unaware that Spike is on the train from Cleveland with the proof he was looking for. The story that Ned Holden is the son of a murderess hits the City Times. A distraught Ned wanders the streets for two days in a blizzard and winds up collapsing at the door of the parsonage. Ned has contracted pneumonia and Torch rushes to the parsonage to declare her innocence to a believing John and a dubious Mary and demands that Ned be taken to the hospital. Ellis talks Torchy into letting Mary know that a delirious Ned has been calling out her name. As John, Mary and Torchy hold vigil outside of Ned’s hospital room, they are relieved when the doctor announces he will survive and recover. He also delivers the news that Ned is asking for Mary. When Mary asks Torchy if it’s ok for her to go in, Torchy asks, “What difference does that make? He asked to see you?”. 

-2/1/40-2/29/40. An ill Helene, who thinks she could die, has a wish to see Charles, Rose and Johnny together after she’s gone. Torchy, confused about her feelings about Ned and what she wants to do now that he has passed his crisis, is urged by Fredrika to give him his freedom. Torchy goes to visit Ned in the hospital and realizes she can’t be hurt by him anymore so, therefore, she must not be in love with him anymore. She also realizes when she sees Ellis and Iris together, who share so much in common, that she will never be good enough for him. Ellis, however, has silently come to realize he’s in love with Torchy. Ned feels certain that Torchy will give him a divorce but Rose is dubious and just hopes Torchy falls in love with Ellis so she’ll move on and want to give Ned his freedom. Reverend Ruthledge visits with Mrs. Kransky in Garden Heights and Mrs. Kransky catches him up on what has been going on there. Mrs. Kransky is managing an apartment building with the Burke family as tenants. Mrs. Kransky hopes something will develop with Terry Burke and Rose but fears that Rose will never love any man other than Charles. Torchy wants her relationship with Ellis to be more clearly defined but Ellis remains aloof and elusive. Torchy sees the finished portrait Ellis has painted of her and is shocked to see the way she looks. Outraged that Ellis painted her as Torchy from the waterfront who she was when he met her and not the sophisticated Myrna she felt he made her into, Torchy slashes the painting and runs out. Torchy heads on a train back to San Francisco, determined to leave Myrna behind and go back to being Torchy from the waterfront. Mary is glad Torchy has left Five Points and demands that Ned get a divorce based on abandonment and end the whole mess. 

-3/1/40-3/29/40. Upon arriving back on her old stomping grounds, Torchy reluctantly gives in to her past and lets go of the woman she hoped to become. Iris’ past comes back to haunt her as a pursuant admirer, Cliff Foster, comes to visit and her ex-husband, Roy Fencher, also comes to try to convince her to come back to him. Iris is revealed to have divorced her husband on the basis of neglect and they have an 8-year-old son, Billie, who is living with her parents. Ned goes back to work for The City Times as a reporter even though they are the ones who outed him. Roy unsuccessfully tries to get Iris to go back to Oklahoma and to him and their son. Helene lets her wish be known to Rose that after she’s gone that Charles, Rose and Johnny can be a family. Rose wants to leave the past in the past. Reverend Ruthledge gives his Good Friday sermon and juxtaposes Jesus’ sacrifice with the stories of bigotry and cruelty that have come from overseas. Iris questions whether she should go back to Oklahoma for the sake of her son Billie while Ellis opines that she shouldn’t give up her right to happiness for the sake of a son who is going to be going off to live his own life before too long anyway. John, Mary and Ned’s debate on the subject of chance vs. determinism is interrupted by the sound of fire engines. As they look out the window and see that the tenement building is on fire, Ned’s concern for his mother comes out as he rushes out to see if she’s alright. 

-4/1/40-4/30/40. Ellis saves Fredrika from the fire but is blinded by the fire in the process. Iris, influenced by Ellis’ words to her, tells Roy that he can take Billie back to Oklahoma without her. Charles is stunned when Helene asks him to marry Rose after she dies so that Rose and Johnny can bear Charles’ name. Mrs. Kransky and Ellis both think Rose is a fool for considering getting involved with Charles Cunningham again and Rev. Ruthledge warns Helene against trying to direct other people’s lives. Mother and son are reunited as Ned goes to Fredrika, puts his head in her lap, and asks her to forgive him. Not sure how long Doris Cameron is going to have her on leave, Rose takes a temporary job as a secretary in a law firm. Helene Cunningham dies. In San Francisco, Torchy takes a job singing on a radio station and starts dating Martin Kane. Martin wants to make things more serious but Torchy is hesitant. Martin thinks Torchy is still hung up on her husband, Ned, but Torchy is thinking about Ellis.  

-5/1/40-5/31/40. Ellis gets bad news that his blindness is long-lasting, if not permanent. Charles tells John that he couldn’t honor Helene’s wish as he is heart-broken and doesn’t think he will ever love another woman. Iris tells Ellis that she’s seen pictures of Torchy in the magazines with a male companion. Jack Felz, one of the lawyers in the firm that Rose has been temping in, offers Rose a permanent job as his personal secretary. Martin persuades Torchy to go back to Five Points to deal with her past and figure out if she wants a future with him. Fredrika tries to persuade Ned to make amends with Ellis to no success. Torchy arrives back in Five Points and gives Ned his divorce but the real reason she’s there is to see Ellis, though she is scared to.

-6/3/40-6/28/40. Ned and Torchy’s divorce is finalized, making Ned and Mary ecstatic and leaving Torchy to wonder, “How could anything be over when it never existed?” Ellis finally swallows his pride and tries to call Torchy at her hotel, unaware that Torchy is on a train on her way back to San Francisco, wishing that Ellis had called. Back on the west coast, Torchy lets Martin know about Ellis. Martin says he’s willing to wait around until Torchy knows who she wants. Ned and Mary get married in a wedding officiated by Reverend Ruthledge. Jack opens Rose’s eyes to the need to forgive other people for their mistakes and it causes her to reconsider her decision not to let Charles visit Johnny. Mrs. Kransky, worried about her daughter getting hurt again, doesn’t think Rose should relent. Ellis finally reaches out to Torchy and calls her in San Francisco and starts to catch on that Iris likes him. Visiting with Johnny, Charles lets his loneliness be known to Rose. 

-6/11/40. Reverend Ruthledge officiates the wedding of Ned Holden and Mary Ruthledge.

-7/1/40-7/31/40. Ellis has found new hope in his condition and thinks he will see again. He’s also filled with new hope when Iris reads him a letter from Torchy hinting that there could be a future for them together after time alone to work on their own problems. Iris, in love with Ellis, has her hopes dashed after reading Ellis the letter and seeing his reaction. Rose tells her mother that she wants more financial security for her future. Mrs. Kransky, knowing that Rose is mentioning this because she is thinking about marrying Charles, points out that what people think of as “security” can be gone in a second. Mrs. Kransky asks Rose to remember the Depression they’ve lived through as an example. At the same time Charles talks to Reverend Ruthledge about his desire to make Rose his wife, Jack is letting Rose know about his desire for the same. Jack breaks the news to his mother and two spinster sisters, Lillian and Ada, who he’s been taking care of, that he wants to get married and have his own family. The news comes as a disappointment to his family but the real shock is that he wants to marry the scandalous Rose Kransky. Lillian and Ada plan to break up Jack’s relationship with Rose while Jack’s enmeshment with his family leaves him feeling bound to them. 

-8/1/40-8/30/40. Jacob wants to drop out of his senior year of high school and go to work as a machinist. Mrs. Kransky is dead set against that and wants him to go to college and become a lawyer as Abe wanted. Mary is pregnant. Martin persuades Torchy to go back to Five Points and make a final decision on whether she wants to be with Ellis or not. Torchy’s reappearance in Five Points makes both Mary and Iris nervous. Iris tells Mary that if she can’t be with Ellis, the man she loves, she’ll go back to her ex-husband. With Mary out of the house and busy with her domestic duties, Reverend Ruthledge places an ad for an assistant and organist. The ad is answered by a mysterious woman, Laura Martin, who seems to be running from something. Lillian tells Jack he’s making a mistake by wanting to marry such a scandalous woman as Rose Kransky but Jack thinks his family would disapprove of anybody he wanted to marry because they don’t want him to leave them. Not wanting to bring Rose into such a situation, Jack contemplates whether his individuality is more important than familial obligations. Rose meets Lillian and sees how controlling and passive-aggressive Jack’s family is. Mary intuitively doesn’t like Laura. 

-9/2/40-9/30/40. Jack stops by the Kranksys when Charles is over helping get Johnny ready to go for a hospital stay to try to straighten out his leg and feels like an outsider. He later accuses Rose of still being in love with Charles and a defensive Rose lets Jack know about his family’s interference in their relationship. Torchy lets bitterness and disappointment  take over as she begins to regret coming back to Five Points. She starts to think Ellis is in love with Iris and she starts to question whether Fredrika’s friendship was genuine or she was using her to get close to Ned. Mary is jealous of Ned’s past with Torchy and Torchy’s presence in Five Points is getting to Mary. Ellen and Laura’s territorial claws come out with each other. Jack’s family freaks out even further when he tells them Rose has a baby. Jack finally tells Rose that he loves her, prompting Rose to finally make a decision. She decides to marry Jack instead of Charles.

-10/1/40-10/31/40. Mrs. Kransky and Mrs. Felzer have opposite reactions to the news that Rose and Jack are engaged. Things are missing in the parsonage. Rose tells Charles about her engagement. Charles points out that Rose doesn’t love Jack but Rose says, after what she went through with Charles, she never wants to love a man again. Rose meets all of Jack’s family and their coldness causes Rose to reconsider her decision to marry Jack. Ellen finds the missing items in Laura’s drawer and tells the Reverend. Laura pleads ignorance and says Ellen must have put them there, which John doesn’t buy for a second. Jack gets Rose to tell Charles that he should no longer have anything to do with Johnny now that Jack is going to be his stepfather and make him Johnny Felzer. Ellis undergoes surgery to restore his sight. Fredrika goes over to talk to Rev. Ruthledge as she waits for the result of Ellis’ surgery. They discuss unrequited love. Frederika doesn’t think Torchy was really in love with Ned but is really in love with Ellis and is frustrated at Ellis’ unreturned love towards Torchy. Reverend Ruthledge thinks Torchy needs to accept things and move on. Ellen tells Rev. Ruthledge that she wants to get away from the parsonage for a while. She is upset that Laura Martin, Rev. Ruthledge’s new secretary has been stealing things and that Rev. Ruthledge wants to keep her on because he feels bad for her as he feels she’s suffering from kleptomania. Without accusations, Rev. Ruthledge encourages Laura to discuss her problems on her own terms. Martin comes to visit Torchy to see if she’s over Ellis and is disappointed to see that she isn’t. Iris lays her cards out on the table with Torchy in regards to Ellis and the two women become openly antagonistic with each other. Jack presents Rose a ring and Rose honestly admits that, though she thinks they would have a good marriage, she’s not in love with him. Jack is okay with that but Rose can’t stop thinking about Charles and how she was in love with him at one time, unsure whether she can live without romantic love. Roy files a custody suit against Iris for Billie.

-11/1/40-11/29/40. Ellis encourages Iris to seek out Jack for legal help in the custody suit. Jack’s judgmental distaste for what he deems Iris’ abandonment and now change of mind towards Billie causes alarm for Rose since she did the same thing with Johnny. On the day the bandages are to be taken off of Ellis’ eyes, Reverend Ruthledge prays for Ellis to have spiritual sight as well as have his physical sight restored. Ellis is overjoyed to be able to see after his bandages come off. Reverend Ruthledge gives an Armistice Day sermon and urges listeners to not forget the lessons of World War 1 as new wars rage overseas. Taps and silence follow the sermon. Ellis doesn’t think his life in Five Points has been real life for him and he thinks it’s time to move on. Fredrika encourages Torchy to give up on Ellis but she stubbornly refuses to do so. Martin stops by the Silver Pheasant before Torchy’s performance to say goodbye to her as he goes back to San Francisco and resigns himself to the fact that they’ll never be a couple. Johnny calls Charles “Daddy”. Iris goes back to Oklahoma to fight for custody of Billie. Once there, she realizes the door she thought she left open to the past is now closed as Roy tells her he’s with a new woman and that no court will give Iris custody of Billie. Roy makes Billie decide between him or Iris and Billie chooses Roy. Iris takes the train back to Five Points feeling sad, empty but hopeful. The hope is dashed when Ellis tells her that he’s leaving Five Points. He wants to go back to his past to see if there’s still a door opened to him whereas Iris is despondent to see that all past and future doors seem to have been closed on her. A psychic who works the Silver Pheasant tells a disturbed Torchy that, “The road you travel will not lead up, but down, and you will travel that road alone.”

-12/2/40-12/31/40. Rev. Ruthledge gently calls Iris out on her selfishness. Out of frustration, Jack shakes Johnny which causes an argument between Jack and Rose. Someone witnesses Laura taking a bracelet from a store and tells John. He gently confronts Laura and she admits to having a problem and serving time in prison. John has pity on her as a kleptomaniac and doesn’t judge her for being a thief. Iris tells Ellis that Roy has been awarded full custody of Billie. She wants to leave Five Points and try to find what’s left of her past where she grew up. Ellis says the same though he doesn’t know what’s left now that his grandfather is dead and his mother has married a younger man and moved off to Mexico City. He lets Iris know that he’s really Gordon Ellis of the Ellis Family. Christmas is making Charles want to be with Johnny even more. Charles lavishes Johnny with Christmas presents and suggests Rose go off to Florida with Johnny for a little while so Johnny can recuperate in the warmth. Reverend Ruthledge, Ned, Mary, Fredrika and Iris spend Christmas Eve together. Jack, Jacob and Mrs. Kransky see Rose and Johnny off at the train station as they leave for Florida and Jack can’t help wondering if Rose is just going to get away from him. Iris tells Rev. Ruthledge that she’s going to start the new year with a new life away from Five Points. He tells her she has to find her answers within and not try to escape her problems in a new place. On New Year’s Eve, Torchy sings at the Silver Pheasant and John and Laura welcome 1941 alone at the parsonage.


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