Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 226, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 December 1926 — Page 7
I•rj \ 27, 1926
MEN NAG, TOO, ONLY THEY CALL IT ‘CAVE MAN GROUCH'
Martha Lee Disagrees With Kansas City Minister Who k Adds a New Commandant for Women —Thinks 'lt Applies to Husbands as Well. By Martha Lee Here’s something ladies! A Kansas City minister, the confidante of numberless disgruntled husbands, has declared that anew decalogue, especially for women, should be drawn up and the first and foremost commandment should be, “Thou shalt not nag.”
That’s a good observation but honest and truly, Mr. Minister, is nagging confined only to the women? Is it possible that only we feminine beings this cruel, grinding weapon that like the continuous drip, drip of water on a stone wears down to the quick of human endurance and strength? Well, we don’t believe it and we’re not a dyed-in-the wool feminist, either. Men nag. We’re sure of it, only their nagging gets another name because it hasn’t the whine that we associate with this favorite indoor sport. The men get more punch and vim in their nagging, even if some of the words are lacking and it sails along as a good cave-man grouch. The Kansas City minister gave out some other "commandments” that he thinks apply especially to us ladies. Here they are: . Thou shalt noj give thy thoughts to dressing wholly. Thou shalt not be jealous. Thou shalt not be pugnacious. Thou shalt not expect thy husband to be the cook or the dishwasher. There are other "commandments” from this wise man, but these will do for us to begin on. He Is Grouchy Dear Martha Lee: Do you think that when people have lost their love for each other that it ever cornea back? I was married seven years ago when I was 16 years old and my husband and I were surely in love, but now I don't care about him and although he does not say so, I think he feels the same way about me,. He is very grouchy and sometimes goes for days at a time without speaking, and how can X like suoh a man and why should I. just because I'm married to him? MRS. It. T. W. We love that which is lovable, and if persons—husbands or wives—are not lovable, they can scarcely expect to hold the heart-whole affection of their partners. Many married couples feel that the benediction the minister pronounced upon them at the time they were married gives them the right to be more discourteous to their wives or husbands than they would be to strangers. That’s a mistake, and one divorce out of every seven marriages indicates that thousands or folks are not aware of this. Dead love is the deadest of anything you can think of. Often when love dies with persons who were married very young, it simply means that they have grown up, developed, and their tastes have developed and changed with them. Therefore the life partner they chose in their callow days doesn’t measure up. Be sure though that you have really lost your love for each other. Maybe you have been together too continuously for a long time and simply need a vacation. Wants to Marry Dear Dartha Lee: I tun a young man in love with a wonderful girl two years my junior. I want to marry her, but am not financially fixed to take on obligations, but I am getting to the point where I’m thinking of going ahead anyway. Would it be sensible for mo to get married now or would I be fooliBh? • MICHAEL. The wise thing to do, of course, Is ! o wait, but many circumstances al•r cases. If you ape on a regular clary and the girl is fairly sensible and willing to buckle down and help < u get ahead, you might risk it, but xtremely limited finances are a ivy strain on romance, so be sure *:• i you and the girl are deeply and r,i in love if you do take the matrli; ' ■ step at this time. Hard Worked and Lonely 1 ir Martha Lee: Please tell me what meat there is in the werl for me. i.v father lias been a widower for four • cars, and I have three little brothers. I work in a store and at night have to clean bouse, sew on buttons, mend. etc., and the only place I can go to is church Sunday night, and X have to take my brothers there with mo. I have only cheap clothes and I’m not good-looking. I'm getting so if there is not a change in my life soon I feel >ike I’ll do something I'll be sorry for later. I’m in my early twenties. ■ I try to smile and be pleasant, but it's hard to bear up. ALICE. My dear girl, I’m not going to say you haven't a tough problem, but let’s see if there are any points of light. You’re young. That’s possessing a valuable asset. You’re do Inga noble work, bravely—taking care of those brothers and what an Image of light you can enshrine yourself in their boyish hearts. You’re helping your father. No telling what you mean to Mm in holding the home together. You’re a real heroine in life's battle. Dear, perhaps I can be of some personal help. Let me have a chance to talk to you. Write me your address. It’s confidential.
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mm and cjUUuUuLbLH “■ By Anne Austin
THE STORY SO FAR RALPH CLUNY. 08. 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. FAITIi. stying she could not go on with the wedding. Later it was discovered Cherry had run away and marned CHRIS WILEY. News of the murder is kept from Mrs. Lane, Cherry's mother who is in a hospital suffering iron) heart trouble. All she knows is that Cherry has run/ away and married CHRIS WILEY. 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 young 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 want to announce it yet Bob has told the police and the world In general. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY "Well, sir, I couldn’t exactly say," Mary Kearney answered, then began a maddening process of trying to count up the distance on her fingers. “All right, Mary, that will do," the coroner interrupted Impatiently. "I gather that with the kitchen at the extreme end of the long hall that gdes the length of the house, and the front stairs almost at the beginning of the hall, you couldn’t hear any one leaving by the front door, unless the door was slammed. Is that correct? “Yes, sir,’’ Mary answered eagerly. "The ldtchen door was closed anyway, and I was bilsy making sandwiches and cuttlrig cake." "Sandwiches? Cake? With the servants off for the evening and Mr. Cluny not expected back after the ceremony?" "Well, sir, you see, sir, I was expecting my—my gentleman friend,” and again Mary cast a furtive, blushing glance at the doorway, where a red-faced officer was shifting from one foot to another. "And I was fixing up a little snack, as you might call it. I didn’t have the evening off like the others," she explained resentfully. "Mary,” the coroner thundered suddenly, "just how angry were you at Mr. Cluny for letting the others go and making you stay on duty? Mad at him; were you?” Mary Kearney turned wide, entirely unsuspecting eyes upon the coroner. “Yes, sir, I was pretty sore. You see, sir, all of us had looked forward to going to the wedding, and while I knowed somebody had to stay at the house, I didn’t like it much because It was me.” "And, Mary Kearney,” the coroner leaned forward and pointed a finger In Mary Kearney’s honest, sullen face, "you were madder than ever when ho scolded you for listening at the door and sent you packing off to
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Boots and Her Buddies
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the kitchen In disgrace, weren’t you now?” Something warned Mary Kearney then. Her broad face turned red and she half rose from her chair. “Now, looka here, sir, don’t you go trying to lay the blame on me! I didn’t do nothinfc to Mr. Cluny. We was all crazy about him, even If he was a little —a little strict on us sometimes. The poor dear man had enough on his handp, with his bride cutting up tantrums, without me getting sore and acting ugly to him. Now that's the truth and everything else I been telling you this morning is the truth and you’ve got to believe It.” “I’m not accusing you of anything Marp," Coroner Murchison smiled leaned over to pat the red hand of the parlor maid. “Now, go right on with your story. What happened next —to your knowledge?" "Well, si, It was Just a quarter to nine by the kitchen clock when the door bell rang/ I went to answer it and it was Mr. Bob Hathaway, like Mr. Cluny had said it would be. I done like he told me—l told Mr. Hathaway to go right on upstairs, and I went back to the kitchen when I heard Mr .Hathaway yelling at the top of his voice for me, and I come a-running. Mr. Hathaway was standing at the head of the stairs, looking wild and scared to death. "I ran upstairs and he said, ‘Mr. Cluny is dead. Mary. What in God's name has been happening here?' I told him I didn't know, that Miss Cherry had been here. He yellled out, ‘Cherry! Oh, my God!’ Then I heard him mutter in a low voice, ‘This will kill Faith!' He looked at his uncle again, and I went in, too, and saw him lying there on the floor, with his head all bloody—lying on his face, he was—" Mary Kearney began to sob. The coroner was a good stage manager. "That will be all for the present, Mary. Mr. Robert Hathaway will please take the stand." NEXT: Faith and Bob testify. But what about the footprints? (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) REMOVES STAIN Equal parts of egg and glycerine applied to grass stains will remove them. GOLD AND BLACK A dress of gold brocade combined with black velvet is almost indispensable to the women who has many afternoon engagements. The blouse of gold may be separate from the black skirt, or fastened to it with a shirred girdle.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
TRIBUTE TO WOMEN OF COVERED WAGON
Oil Magnate Erecting Monument to Mothers of Pioneer Days. By Mrs. Walter Ferguson E. W. Marland, millionaire oil magnate of Oklahoma, has engaged a world famous sculptor and is having erected a statue In memory of the women pioneers of the West, It Is to be built upon a hill overlooking that part of lone of the last frontiers of porgress. Surely no person deserves this honor more than those women who plunged Into the wilds with their husbands and helped evolve a civilization that is now the pride of the world. When we think of them, their high courage, their abiding faith, their broken bodies, a continual procession through the years, a lump comes into the throat and a feeling like prayer floods the heart. They left all the comforts of civilization. With their few poor belongings piled high in a covered wagon, they turned their faces to the great lonely West and trudged Into unfamiliar places. They endured hardships which the modern woman can scarcely imag Ine. Hundreds of them died because they had no green foods, no warm clothing, no medical attention. The grain and the oil which bless us now so richly comes from land wherein their tired bodies sleep, and the bones of their babies fee-1 the prairie flowers which grow so sweetly there. They lived in sod houses, mere holes in the ground. They looked out over hot. wide plains when their eyes ached for the sight of cool forests. They drank warm water that had been carried for miles in a barrel. They had no ice, no butter, no fresh milk, no comforts, no pleasures, no amusements. They bore their children without a doctor. They endured loneliness, monotony, bitter grief and tragic fear. Their lives, if properly portrayed, would make a Saga that could put to shame Homer’s Immortal lines. Without them, their loyalty, their courage, their dreams, the West would still be wilderness. The men, born with adventuring spirit, were noble, hardy and brave. But the women, whose hearts ever hover
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above the hearths of home, displayed a hlghed fortitude. Against their instincts, through the mist of their tears, they marched bravely into anew world, and their footsteps paved the high road to a more perfect civilization. \ SAVE THE BRUSHES All brushes should bo kept clean and scalded by dipping to the back and nd deeper In boiling water. Then dry In the open air, with the brush side down. CHANGING COI/ORS Before attempting to dye any fabric, wash it thoroughly and see that all spots have been removed.
FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: n*a AMO Cl IS tv MCA SCTVgg, INE.
A winsome look will usually win some friends.
rVanfads W/ Sell it
Baby Buggies, Bicycles, Furniture, Saxophones, Lamps, Wearing Apparel, articles of every kind that you no longer need or use, but are still just too good to throw them away, can be sold for cash. People daily watch the miscellaneous for sale “Want Ads” in The Times to buy for cash, just such articles. Cost 28c to Sell Baby Buggy ' Mrs. E. Prange, 3030 N. New Jersey, ran this two line ad 1 day at a cost of 28c. Two people called to buy the buggy. BABY BUGGY, beautilul reed; cheap. Ran. 6769. , Look about the house, make a list of the articles you can sell; then order an ad in The Times. Call Main 3500; Your Credit Is Good—Just Say Charge It! Better Results Quicker Results Cheaper Results
MENUS For the FAMILY By 6lsUr Mai y ■■■
By Sister Mary BREAKFAST—Grape juice, cereal, thin cream, creamed eggs on toast, graham muffins, milk, coffee. LUNCJHEON Beef broth with noodle balls, hearts of celery, brown bread and butter, sandwiches, milk, tea. DINNER Broiled porterhouse steak, mashed potatoes, creamed onions, quince salad, chocolate marshmallow roll, brand bread, milk, coffee. The soup suggested In the luncheon menu is extremely hearty. Home-made noodlo# must be used, so the rule for noodles as well as the filling Is given. This is an excellent way to use the meat from the soup bone. Noodle Balls One egg, 1 tablespoon milk, % teaspoon salt, 1 cup flour (about). Beat egg slightly with milk. Mix and sift flour and salt and stir into bowl or folding board. Knead on lightly floured molding board and roll very thin. Cut in oblong shaped pieces about two Inches wide and four inches long. Fill with meat mixture and fold nooodle paste to completely cover meat. Dampen edges with a little cold water and press firmly. Drop into boiling beef broth and boll fifteen minutes. Serve In the broth or on a platter garnished with parsley as preferred. Luncheon dishes are saved if the balls .are served In the soup, and this Is really the best way. Meat Filling One and one-half cups finely chopped meat, V teaspoon onion juice, 1 tablespoon minced parsley, 1 egg, milk. The amount of salt needed must be determined by the amount used in cooking the meat. The mixture should be well seasoned. Onion juice
is used In place of minced onion because the Juice flavors quickly. Combine meat, seasoning and unbeaten egg. Mix thoroughly and add a few tablespoonfuls of milk, enough to make moist enough to hold together. Any kind of meat or combination of meats can be used. If left over, roast meats need to be used up and no soup stock is at hand, boiling salted water can take the place of the stock. In this event, the balls must be served on a platter garnished with parsley. (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.)
Recipes By Readers
NOTE —The Times will give a recipe filing cabinet for recipe submitted by a reader and printed in this colunm. One recipe is printed daily, except Friday, when twenty are given. Address Recipe Editor of The
Decoration
a \ J, 7\ r V <*• A \
Reboux sponsors tortoise shell as the smart successor to crystal In hat pins. They are in feather design etched In gold.
PAGE 7
—By Martin
Times. Cabinets will be mailed to winners. EGG PLANT A. LA CREOLE Take one egg plant, peel and par*boll in salt water. Then take a layer of egg plant, salt, pepper and butter to taste and alternate with a layer of salmon, sprinkle with crac-ker crumbs and pour over one cup of milk. Bako until a golden brown. This Is one of the most dollcious ways of preparing egg plant. Mrs. W. L. Dodds, Orleans, Ind.
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