Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 196, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 November 1926 — Page 7
NOV. 22, 1926
MEN MUST KNO W HOW IF THEY WANT TO BOSS HOME
Fathers Must Be More Concerned About Their Children Than Their Golf Scores and Spend More Time P at Family Fireside. By Mrs. Walter Ferguson An eminent divorce judge advises men to boss tlieir families and be happy. He is right.
The family, like any other organisation, must have a head to be a success, and father is the person who should naturally occupy that position. Most wives prefer a husband who Joes exert some authority. TheyRant men upon whom ihey can depend for strength and guidance R'hen Important family decisions irise. Must Have Ability However, the one point which the fudge failed to mention, a point R'hich is highly essential, the sucjessful bossing of anything lies in the ability to do it. If the average husband and father would take enough interest in home affairs to be able to speak authoritatively upon them, he would automatically become the head of the house. But most men are so indifferent to the home, and so thoroughly sold to the idea that mothers must raise the children, that they finally get to the place where they are not competent to command. The fellow who manages a business so well that his word is law there acquaints himself with its problems and interests himself in its *lfare. Not until he does this is he BBksidered equal to occupy a # position which carries authority. Way Back When A long time ago, when fathers were more concerned about their children than their golf scores, and spent more time at the family fireside and not so much in conference about the standing of the baseball team, when they actually believed that the home and not business was the most Important thing in everybody’s life, they Were wonderful and successful bosses. Mamma and the youngsters stepped when they gave orders. But what authority has the average modern husband earned who is so interested in politics and pleasure and business that he has no time left for his family, and so concerned about the amount of money he can
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make that he forgets his children need something else besides cash from him? Never fear, men can always boss anything when they want to badly enough. \When you get the American father interested in his home again you will have solved a lot of these marriage- problems.
MENUS For the FAMILY " By Sister Mary
BREAKFAST —Fresh pears, cereal, thin cream, baked omlet with tomatoes, crisp graham toast, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON—Pan-broiled sausage with candied apples, molded spinach salad, whole wheat bread, baked custard, milk ,tea. v DINNER—Baked halibut steaks, scalloped potatoes, buttered lima beans, jellied celery salad, corn bread, sliced peaches, sponge cake, milk, coffee. The luncheon meat is lacking in protein, so the deficiency is taken care of in the dessert. You will like the “candled apples’* for they are unusual and not. expensive. Children under eight years of age should be furnished, a baked potato or buttered vegetable of some sort in place of the sausage dish. Pan-Broiled Sausage With Candied Apples One pound sausage, 4 large apples, 1 cup vinegar, 2 cups brown sugar, 2 teaspoons cinnamno, % teaspoon cloves, cracker dust. Small sausages or link sausage should be used. Dip sausage in broiling water to cover and let simmer for half an hour. Drain and put into a hot frying pan. Prick in several places with a fork and fry for 30 minutes, turning frequently. Drain off fat as necessary. Make a syrup of the vinegar, sugar and spices. Pare apples, remove cores and cut in refunds % inch thick. Drop into boiling syrup and simmer until clear. Remove from syrup and roll in cracker c'ust.l Brown qpßkly in hot sausage fat and serve as border around sausage. (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.)
Recipes By Readers
NOTE—The Times wifi give a recipe filing cabinet for recipe submitted by a reader and printed in this column. One recipe is printed daily, except Friday, when twenty are given. Address Recipe Editor of The Times. Cabinets will be mailed to winners. Write only one recipe, name, address and date on each sheet. ICE CREAM CANDY ' Two cups sugar; one cup water; one level teaspoon cream of tartar; one rounding teaspoon of butter. Put the sugar and water over the fire. When sugar is melted, stir in cream of tartar dissolved in a little water. Cook ten minutes without stirring; then add the butter and cook until It is well hardened when tested in cold water. Add flavoring to taste and pull until white. Miss Ruby S. Shepherd, Hope, Ind. EXCLUSIVELY FOR DISHES Never use dishcloths for any purpose except washing dishes. Have other cloths for wiping up spilled food and for handling dishes. BRISTLES DOWN After you have carefully washed out your scrubbing brushes, turn the bristles down and dry In the sunshine.
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Saint and Sinner By ANNE AUSTIN
“All right, Pete. Make it snappy!” Bob prodded Pete Gonzales with his automatic. A spasm of fear, not only of the automatic, but of the man he was about to betray, twitched the 111-as-sorted, greasy features of Pete’s face. “How do you expect a guy to think with a gun liable to go off in his stummick any lflinutes?” Bob, took his finger off the trigger arid removed it a careful inch from contact with the frayed old red sweater. “Now, spill it! You’ve wasted time enough. IJxpectlng your boss to arrive any minute to help you out of a tight fix, eh?” “Naw,” growled Pete. “He ain’t showin’ his mug around this dump. Got too much sense; might get cock-er-burrs in his golf panties,” he grinned evilly, casting a blinking glance around the desolate, weedgrown vacant lots that edged the road. “Alex Cluny gimme this Job, and Lola’s workin’ for him, too. Now lay that off! He’s your cousin, ain’t he?” "Alexander Clunv!” Boh Hathaway ejaculated, the gun almost dropping from his suddenly relaxed hand. “Pete, if you’re lying I’ll string you up to that oak tree there by your toes.” Cherry tore open the door of the car and sprang to Bob’s side. “It’s the truth. Bob! I’ve suspected it all along. Say, Pete, how di<J Lola get in on this party?” she demanded flippantly. “She was sore on you, see?" he spoke to Cherry. “Jealous. She was Chris Wiley’s sweetie before he took up with you an’ give her the air, an’ then you horned in with old man Cluny, who’d fired her because he seen his son, Alex Cluny, klssin’ her. She was jes’ workin’ up a pretty little sido graft with Alex, but you come along an’ copped off a sparkler from the old guy. Can’t expect her to be crazy over you, can you?” Cherry tossed up her head and
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
BOOTS ANT) TIER BUDDIES—By MARTIN
laughed. Bob frowned at her, and Faith -clenched her hands in helpless embarrassment and anger. “ ’N then, after you’d got the old boy roped in, you butted in with Chris Wiley again, jes’ as him an’ Lola was whoopin’ it up again, lovin’ ae you please. Chris didn’t give her the gate, like you made him promise he would, but he kep’ on seein’ her on the sly, and when he’d get drunk enough he’d tell her the low-down on him an’ you, see?” ’ “I see!” Cherry’s eyes blazed like molten balls of gold. “Swell sister you’ve gut, Pete. But clever. I’ll tell the palpitating world- Now, how did she make this tie-up with Alexander Cluny?” Oddly enough, Pete Gonzales did not seem to resent Cherry’s angry summing up of his precious sister. Bob Hathaway saw and understood that upleaping of evil desire and turned almost roughly to Cherry. “Get* back in the car. I’ll do the talking.” Cherry whisked away, to cuddle down In the sea beside Faith, who was innocently bewildered by Bob’s and Cherry’s behavior. “Now, Pete,” Bob began sharply. “Tell me how you happened to go to work for Alexander Cluny.” “Him an’. Lola was seein’ each other now and again—he was sure sweet on her—an’ she told him some of the dirt Chris had been spiffin' about Cherry —” “Miss Lane!" Bob corrected sharply, his blue eyes snapping dangerously. “About Miss Lane,” Pete amended sullenly, “an’ he let It out to Lola how sore him an’ the rest o’ the Clunys was about the old guy’s gettin’ engaged to Ch— Miss Lane. He had the hunch to put a detective on Miss Lan e trail, so’s he could pick up a lot o’ dirt to pop under the old boy’s nose. “But Lola, shejjfis wise! She told him it was a bum steer, an’ that he’d better give me the job, ’cause a real detective might squeal later an’ make it hot for him, seein’ as how he’s messin’ around in politics. An’ the she eased out on her own scheme, to write them poison pen letters, as you call ’em, to Miss Lane, an’ scare the liver outa her. “I guess Alex Cluny ain’t none too -crazy about you, Ajr. Hathaway, ’cause it was his idea to have her write them letters in your office, on your paper, so’s they could be traced to you in case Miss Lane was smart enough to trace ’em at all. Lola was to swear you dictated ’em to her an' she had to write ’em or lose her job.” “I see!" Bob spoke through clenched teeth.
“The old snake In the grass!” Cherry hissed like a character In a melodrama. “Alex Cluny gimme twenty bucks a day for my work, an' Lola pulled down a grand for writing’ them letters, lessen she’s lyin’ to me, an’ It was more. Dirt cheap for a thousand, I says.” “All right, Pete. I’m taking you to town with me, and we’ll call on my esteemed cousin, Mr. Alexander Clunny.’’ ’‘No, sir, not me! I ain’t ready to commit suicide!” Pete Gonzales ducked as though to run away. “Come back here, Pete, or I’ll shoot your feet off! Cherry, you’ll have to drive. Faith, I’m sorry, but you’ll have to sit In the little seat that pulls out in the rear. And Pete, you will sit between Miss Lane and me, and If you make a false move. I'll shoot.” (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) NEXT: Bob strikes a bargain with Alexander Cluny. AVOID BREAKAGE When washing the glassware dip the pieces ip the warm water so they will be wet on the inside and outside at the same time. Unequal expansion of the glass caused by one part being suddenly heated is what breaks them.
SCRUB WITH SODA The only way to keep your garbage pail hygienic Is to scrub it once a day with soda and boiling water, and if possible dry in the sunshine.
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The ‘WOMAN’S DAY 1—— By Allene Sumner*——
Imagining that she is the lively abused Lady Gulnevers of the play or book is about the only Job which modern woman ip good for. This from none less than H. G. Wells. He comments that the modern woman knows no more worthwhile career than playing the role of heroine of the latest love story. There may be some little truth—no more—in what he says. I know one or two women in a world of several million of them who devote their days to dreaming that they are the lonely abandoned wife, lovely silently by the great strong other man. But the other millions are too busy making grape jell and writing club papers to play the favorite game of 1870. I dropped in for tea the other afternoon—hope the boss doesn’t read this —at ft-iend Margie’s. Margie has recently acquired a lacquer-red tea wagon and tea set to match with •black splashes on the bright china. I am sure some kind God inspired her to buy this glowing thing with which to cheer her “poor working girl friends." Margie had a red lacquer Chinese tray full of tea sandwiches. You might like to know about one which much intrigued me, sweetish and yet not too sweetish. Marge calls It her “hard up” sandwich. Says she makes it when her emergency shelf is bare, like this: Creams powdered sugar and butter together and adds orange or lemon juice, two tablespoons of orange juice and • one of lemon to each cup of sugar. • * * “You and I Have Failed,” says Honore Willsie Morrow’, author and mother, in a recent magazine article. Mrs. Morrow’s editor assigned her to tour America from one end to the other for three months, talking with
parents, teachers, educators, flappers EJid their beaux, in an attempt to find out just hojv wild they are, and if so, why. Mrs. Morrow reports that youth's ideals of morality today would have been scorned by the early American Indian. She blames “an archaic church,” "a custard system of education” and parents who permit "the vulgar license of the country club,” unchaperoned dates for their daughters, and “the indecent opportunities of the automobile.” • • • Pout, sniff, roll the eyes, smack the lips, grin, and bite are the rules of the new “Exercise Your Face” cult which may do away with clay packs, beauty creams and pow-
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PAGE 7
ders. They say that In Europe street cars, omnibuses, and trains are full of face-exercising females. A few casualties have been reported from hair-pqlling exercise as one of face exerciser imagines that the others is making faces at her! *
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