Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 218, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 December 1926 — Page 19
DEC. 17, 1926
WOMEN MAY HAVE CHANGED, BUT THEIR HEARTS HAVEN’T
Robert, Who Is Disappoints and With Modern Girls, Would Be Pleased to Read Some of the Letters Martha Lee Receives. By Martha Lee The old world may be making tremendous strides in a lot of ways, but there’s one thing that hasn’t even begun to change, oratory and much printed matter to the contrary. That’s women’s hearts.
Strides In almost every profession iman has made. Strong noni aalant, with a touch of the straight and masculine in her attire, she gives the appearance of having turned her mental processes into 1 sterner, unsentimental lines. She hasn’t. Don’t let her boyish bobs or her curveless clothes fool you. She can’t change. She's what God made her and while the universal aental command of the times has >rced her to assume (or so she believes) the attitude that we call modern,’’ her secret heart clings Just as hard to love, romance, as it ever did, and what goes into a hip ilask, a cigaret case, etc., not even the veriest flapper, has more than a urface interest in. There’s not a her in her that really responds to uy substitute for fine, clear heart iterest. Condemns Modern Girl Dear Martha Lee: I have been running around lor a good many r.rs and I am sure ready to settle .; jwn, but I am afraid of the *rirls that >u meet nowadays. You sure cannot trust .if ra. They don't seem to care about lything but a good time and if a feliw does not 6pend money on them, they iave little, use for him. I had a wonderful mother and a good sister but I’m bo- : inning to think I'll never have a wife or 1 sure would hate to tie up with tlie heartless little flappers that are all you meet nowadays. .1 may sound hardboiled on the subject and I feel that way. ROBERT. Well, Robert, I have good news for you. you're mistaken. Not, of course, that you can’t find just the kind of girls that you describe and in such large numbers that the otfier kind don’t show up to speak of, but they exist. You'd enjoy readijig a lot of letters that come to this desk —letters from girls who want to be their sweet simple selves and who declare that If they do, they won’t have a single male friend to go out with. Girls are just about the same at heart. The demands of the time seem so different, that it is no wonder young men of your turn of mind are deceived, but taks my word for it, you’ll find the worth while girl you want, If you can see through the veneer. Friendship Turned to Love Dear Martha Lee: This summer 1 met a young man 19 years old. He fell in love with me. but as 1 am 25 years old 1 refused him dates. However, 1 was very fond of him from the first ami as he kept calling me up I finally got to going with him. We decided that, owing to our ages, we would keep the friendship rust a friendship, nothing more. But it ■ lid not work. Now he wants me to marry him. I do not look my age. but just the same I do not want to ruin his life. What shall I do? MISS P. To begin with, X think you are making too much over the difference in age. It would take more than that to “ruin his life.” Os course he is too young to take on the serious obligation of marriage, but when he arrives at a maturer age, if you and he still care for each other, that six years difference won’t wreck your happiness.
How to Get Acquainted? Deax - Martha Lee: I am a young man —> years old. It seems so hard to get ac<;(tainted In this city. I dance some and when I do have a dance with a girl I don't seem to be able to get any better acquainted. I guess I am too dry as I am not much ot a talker. Bv the way, why is it that some fellows with the biggest ‘line" have friends! Whv Miss Lee. they tell some unbelievable things anybody with common sense would know them as lies. Please advise me. ELMER. Well Elmer, you have our own remedy. It may be regrettable, but it’s a fact that most girls do fall for a "line” and one reason is that when the “line” is applied to her, the girl who is listening doesn’t see it as the bare-faced exaggeration that you may consider it. It doesn't seem preposterous to her that the talker thinks she looks "wonderful” in sky-blue, pink or that she is different somehow from any girl he has ever met. We all like to be appreciated the person who is a good appreciator will always have .. large circle of listeners. This is* not necessarily "hokum.” There are good points in every one you meet. Look for them, then don't be slow in expressing them.
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Hf and LI LKJ UvJ l_Ei ui By Anne Austin
THE STORY SO FAR RALPH CLUNNY, 68, was murdered just before he was to have married CHERRY LANE. 18. As if that not enough for people to talk about. Cherry disappeared, leaving a note for her sister, FAITH, etying she could not go on with the wedding. Later it was discovered Cherry had run away with CHRIS WILEY. The news is ,a terrific shock to Mrs. Lane, Cherrys mother, a semi-invalid, suffering with heart trouble. _ ... Cherry has lived a butterfly life. Always there have been many men in love with her and she has been engaged to more than a few. She tried to run away with ALBERT ETTLESON, a married traveling salesman, and was rescued by Faith and a yftung .man, 808 HATHAWAY. Up to this time Bob had been very much interested in Cherry, but now he paid more attention to Faith, who has loved him for a long: time. They are engaged now and although Faith did not wtnt to announce it yet, Bobo has told the police and the world in general. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY “I’m going to phone the police station,” Bob announced after his arrival early next morning. “They may have delayed letting us know. I hope Cherry gets back before the Inquest, for she can clear up the whole business as soon as they let her tell her story.” He closed the door after him when he went into the hall to telephone. AVhen he returned there was unmistakable relief on his tired face. “They’re located her—and AViley,” he added with an apprehensive glance at Jim Lane. “A country preacher had just phoned in to headquarters. Said he’d read the morning paper and recognized Cherry from her picture. They were married by him at ten o’clock last night, and they were going to drive to Chicago on their honeymoon. The night chief, who's still on duty at the station, said the preacher chap described them accurately, so there’s no doubt about it’s being Cherry and Wiley. He said Cherry seemed both happy and frightened, like any other eloping bride, and that Wiley was so elated he gave the preacher a twenty dollar bill.” "My girl married to a scoundrel,” Jim Lane groaned. “It’s done now, Dad. There’s no use grievin’ over it,” Junior spoke in a strange new voice. "If I know Wiley, and I believe I do, they can look for them near the preacher’s—that Is, if neither one knew they had anything to fear, and none of us believe they did.” “The police are already on their way to that locality. They were married near Minturn, forty miles east of here,” Bob answered. “But I have hopes that Cherry and Chris will see the papers this morning. They’ll know they’re wanted and that it will be useless to try to go on. And since we all believe Cherry had nothing to do with this thing, we’re pretty sure she wouldn’t consider trying to escape.” “Guess we might as well take a squint at the headlines ourselves," Junior moved, slowly toward the liv-ing-room. “Guess we’ll have to get used to being on the front page. Oh, Lord?” Across the entire front page marched the tall, black letters of the headline: FLAPPER BRIDE ELOPES: RALPH CLUNY IS SLAIN. Continuing the sensational aid tragic news, other headlines said: Maid says runaway bride quarreled with fiance; Garageman talked with Chris Wiley and eloping bride after slaying; Hundreds turned from the church when neither bride nor bridegroom appear for wedding. In the center of the page was a picture of Cherry—the demure, wideeyed, angelic likeness which Faith had given to the reporters, and beneath it was a portrait of Ralph Cluny—a picture at least twenty
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years old, showing Ralph Cluny as he looked in his prime, a virile, handsome, statesmanlike figure, with a thick mane of dark hair and a pair of piercing eyes, darker and brighter than the pale eyes of the waxen-faced old man that the Lane family had come to like and respect. A laudatory biography of the State’s most prominent criminal lawyer, set in black-face type, filled the rest of the space beneath the pictures and was continued on the second page, which was almost entirely devoted to the big story of the year. There were pictures of all the Clunys—Alexander and his wife and their daughter, Kileen, away at school, and their son, Ralph the second, now assistant district attorney; Mrs. Seymour Allbright, who had
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MDIANAPOLM TIMM
been born Alice Cluny; Mr. Allbright and their daughter, Muriel. There also was a picture of bold-eyed, handsome Chris Wiley, and smaller reproductions of all the members of the luckless bridal party. “No matter how Innocent Cherry is. she’s branded for life!" Jim Lane groaned, and struck the paper. (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1926. NEA Service, Inc.) NEXT: Bob tolls Faith of discovering footprints below Ralph Cluny’s bedroom window. FOR FISH SAUCE Two tablespoons of catsup and two of horseradish In your mayonnaise dressing make an excellent sauce for cardlnes or canned fish.
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—By Martin
DRESS IT UP Ice cream la more than ordinarly interesting If you serve It In a dish lined with lady fingers, with preserved fruit and whipped cream over the top. WIVES POPULAR CONSTANTINOPLE, Dec. 17. The three wives of the former Sultan of Turkey, recently granted permission to return to this country, are the object of many suitors. Rumor has it that an American millionaire is among those pressing for the hand of one of the women. There has been no report of any of the men being accepted.
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HERE ARE CHRISTMAS CANDY TIPS v Sister Mary Gives Recipes for Fondant and Carmel. By Sister Mary Yesterday I told you some of the tricks in making Christmas candy. Here are some recipes. So many variations can be made from the general fondant formula that it’s perhaps one of the most important. Fondant Two cups granulated sugar, twothirds cup water, one-eighth teaspoon cream of tartar or one tablespoon white corn syrup. Sift sugar with cream of tartar into a smooth sauce pan. Add water and stir until well mixed. Put over a very low fire, cover and bring to the boiling point. If corn syrup is used in place of cream of tartar, It should be added when the boiling point of the syrup is reached. Remove crystals from sides of pan as suggested. Boil slowly until the soft ball stage or 238 degrees Fahrenheit Is reached. Remove at once from the fire and let stand two or three minutes, until all bubbling is stopped. Pour onto a large platter lightly rubbed with butter and let stand until cool enough to hold a dent made by the finger tip. Work with a wooden spoon until creamy and solid, then put on a molding board and knead until perfectly smooth. Form into a ball, wrap In waxed paper and put into a covered bowl. Let stand at least an hour before flavoring and molding. However, fondant can be made several days before wanted and is really better when allowed to “ripen” twen-ty-four hours. Has Many Uses The variations of fondant are legion. Finely chopped nuts added to the cream and the whole made into a roll which is cut in slices, is always liked. A few’ drops of vanilla should he worked into the fondant with the nuts. Two tablespoons butter, %-teaspoon vanilla and fondant are worked with a fork until thoroughly blended. The mixture must then be allowed to stand in a covered bowl until chilled and firm. These “butter creams” are formed into marbles and dipped in chocolate. You will find yourself stuffing dates with fondant flavored wdth vanilla( making fat little halls with an un-
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broken half of a nut garnishing the top, wrapping candied fruits in thin squares of fondant and doing all sorts of things with this intriguing mixture. Caramels are delicious and not quite so common. Caramels Tw’o and one-half cups granulated sugar, %-cup red label corn syrup, 1 cup cream, 4 tablespoons butter, 1 teaspoon vanilla, 1 cup chopped nut meats. Melt one cup of the sugar over a slow fire until a golden syrup. Stir while melting. Add remaining sugar, corn syrup and cream. Bring slowly to the boiling point, stirring constantly and add butter. Cook very slowly over a low fire. Cook until the syrup forms a hard ball when a few drops are tried In cold water until the themometer registers 254 degrees Fahrenheit. Remove from the fire and let cool about ten minutes. Add vanilla and nuts and pour into a well-butered seven inch
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