Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 275, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 February 1927 — Page 7
FEB. 22, 1927
Jbiftts. ■—— ;; _ GOAL IS NECESSARY IF YOU WANT TO WIN LIFE’S RACE
To Have None Handicaps Your Efforts, Martha Lee Tells “Rose Marie,” Who Thinks She Might Like • to Take Up Nursing. By Martha Lee At what are you aiming? Where is your goal? To have none, handicaps your efforts, for there isn t much point to striving, unless you have a goal in sight.
Imagine a runner who didn’t know point for which he was headed! §trong he might be, and in the 3£st of form, but there’d be a falterjitg at critical moments, a lack of the steel thread of determination that marks the person headed for a certain coveted spot. If you’re just marking time, working without a definite aim, stop long enough to size up the horizon, and find a goal for your efforts. It will pay you to do so. Shall She Specialize? Dear Martha bee: lam almost JO years old. I was irraduated from high school a year and a half ago. and have been helping mother, but I want to do something for myself now. What do you think would be a good profession for me. Don t you think a person should have something definite in view and specialize in that, rather than just taking up what happens to come up? I've alleys felt greatly attracted to being a nurse, hut mother thinks 1 should take up something less strenuous. What do you think? ROSE MARIE. I’m a great believer in one following the profession which appeals to him most. Certainly, the person who does this has an advantage. Hard work, extra hours, much that would weigh him down, if he were engaged in uncongenial employment, do not disturb the person who truly loves bis work. If nursing attracts you above other things, I should advise following it, all ofoher things being equal. Her Husband’s Mistake
Dear Martha Lee: lam a girl 19 yean* Old. My husband X& 3(5. We’ve been marriSd five yeflhs, and it’s just been one h — 1 of *, life. Ha got so be wouldn't go any plaoe with me. and some months ago ho ggkert a mutual man friend of ours to take me places, well, this man has grown to love me, aq<J I love him with all my heart. My husband knows it. and admits b<ma.& a mistake in throwing us together, •jf ins married so young and my piarried fiftejias been so miserairlp. am I not justiP® hWme t 0 tlie browSPeyes. Kit’s almqst always possible, when Ma*want to db something we know Kfl Shouldn't, to find some reason Sjhjat seems to justify our actions. Est ftayen’t said how much this japans to your husband, but as his fnietakp in getting you in the man’s Kisipany seems to have come from ■ desire to add to y’our good times, R yvould seem right to go slo 4 wly on you are.confronted with.' W |Ws in Trouble Pj*diseax Martha Leei bast November, a jail friend persuaded me to go to a dance Seth her in a hall on tne south side. Aft. Wwards, there didn't seem aliy harm in gftlng riding with two boys she knew. They Sad flasks of some kind, of drinks along
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A Child Doesn't Laugh and Play if Constipated JiOOk, Mother! Is tongue coated, breath feverish, stomach sour? ’'California Fig Syrup” can’t harm tender stomach, bowels
A laxative today saves a sick child tomorrow. Children simply will not take the time from play to empty their bowels, which become clogged up with waste, liver gets sluggish, stomach sour. Look at the tongue, mother! If coated or your child is listless, cross, feverish, breath bad, restless, doesn’t cat heartily, full of cold or has sore throat or any other children’s ailment, give a teaspoonful of “California Fig Syrup,” then don’t worry, because it is perfectly harmless, and in a few hours all this constipation
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and although I didn’t care for it. I drank S °l ie wasn’t used to it, and I didn t quite know what was happening, until it was too late. I will have to leave home soon, or he publicly disgraced. What could Ido about getting a job in another city where I could take care of my baby? My folks don t know. MISE RABLE TWENTY. Tell your mother, dear, right away. Going to a strange city, possibly with little money and the heavy trial before you, would take a world of courage—too much for a girl delicately reared, as the rest of you,r letter indicates you have been. Tell your mother. I can’t say this too emphatically. Your folks have to know it in time. You need their advice and help. I hope many girls in the habit of going to dance places alone will read your letter. 1 A young woman signing herself “Cherry Lou” is in love with Lon, a charming young man who “rushes ’ Helen, a friend of “Cherry Lou.” The latter admits Helen’s attractiveness, but wants Lon for herself and wants to know how to take him from Helen. I don’t know, Cherry Lou, and I wouldn’t tell you if I did, because I don’t see any difference between taking Helen’s beau and taking away anything else that belongs to her. I don't believe you mean what you say.
The Fear of Death
By Mrs. Walter Ferguson In a certain section of the land a strange case has arisen. An old man committed a murder, shooting down without warning a youth of 14. The criminal gave himself up, refused legal counsel, and asked for execution. The judge, evidently deeming the crime deserving of such punishment, acceded to his request, and the general public immediately started to clamour for a commutation of sentence. The old man still insists that he longs to die because he Is tired of life and knows that shortly he will be blind. Are we so contrary that because a man asks to be killed we are de-
poison, sour bile and fermenting waste will gently move out of the bowels, and you have a well, playful child again. A thorough “inside cleansing” is ofttimea all that is necessary. It should be the first treatment given in any sickness. Beware of counterfeit fig syrups. Ask your druggist for a bottle of “California Fig Syrup,” which has full directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown-ups plainly printed on the bottle. Look carefully and sec that it is made by the “California Fig Syrup Company.”—Advertisement.
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Boots and Her Buddies
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termined that he shall not be? Do we believe that even a short span of a few unhappy years is better than speedy annihilation? Are we really being kind to force life upon one who longs to be rid of it? These are the questions heatedly discussed. But underneath all of these outward manifestations of kind-heartedness, does there not lie a shameful fear of death? It is a peculiar and yet a noticeable thing that the very people who profess to believe in the everlasting mercy of God, a rqansion iri the skies, a place where there will be no more sorrow or tears, in eternal peace, are often the ones who seem to dread leaving this existence most. The agitation by good and pious persons in the neighborhood where this aged man begs extinction emphasises the fact that down in their hearts few of them believe the things they teach. The Rev. J. Frank Norris, recently vindicated in Texas on a murder charge, loved this pitiful life so much that he guarded it with a gun. And yet he has preached to others innumerable sermons of the triumph of death over life. His creed teaches that. But do not his very actions refute these assertions? If we actually believed the things we say we believe, would we not spring into any danger and court sweet death like Christian martrys of old, and would not our religion be aided if we did so? Asa matter of cold fact, we are alike, no matter what our creed may be. Death is the crudest, the bitterest thing we face. Annihilation terrifies us. And though we may pray, and though we may go about doing good, and though we may have all charity, yet is our faith too weak. While we clutch it with desperate fingers, grim doubt walks beside us. Do we honestly believe in God’s mercy and a future life? It is for you to answer that question. LARGE FLOWERS Prints and lining materials show designs using huge flowers as a motif. FOR STOUT WOMEN A slenderizing line for stout women is the surplice closing of the blouse, sometimes edged with shallow scallops. SIMULATED TWO-PIECES Many frocks which seem to be in two pieces are actually in one this season.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Saint and Sinner By ANNE AUSTIN
Wealthy RALPH CLONY. 68. was murdered just before he was to have married frivolous CHERRY LANE, 18 Immediately Cherry dUappearß leavmß a note for her slater. FAITH, saying she could not go on W‘th the weddinkCherry s elopement With CHRIS WILEY becomes known. . . , ~ Cherry has been engaged several times Once she tried to run away with ALBERT ETTEL3ON. a married traveling salesman, and was rescued by her elter and 808 HATHAWAY. Faiths fiance and nephew of Cluny. _ Cherry admits that Cluny attempted to force the marriage, but protests her innocence. ... Faith suspects Chris Wiley, thinking he know that Cluny had willed xnucb money to Cherry. Charles Re 11? Neff who drew up the will, testifies that Cluny made Cherry his chief beneficiary whether or not she married him. Tbo coroner’s jury releases Cherry, but immediately she and her huphand are arrested b.v DEVLIN, deputy district a furious when Bob tells her ATTORNEY STEPHEN CHURCHILL, whom he employed, thinks circumstances are against Cherry and suggests a pies, of self-defense as the oest chance of her peculiar footprints ands bit of torn strap suggest that the murderer might be a cripple, but this evidence Is not presented. Cherry is indicted for first degree murC Bob plays burglar In Ralph Cluny's office and finds the threatening letter written him. which Cherry had described. “But what is Churchill doing. Bob?” Faith’s voice was ft despairing wail. ‘Two weeks have passed since Cherry's indictment, and he has only a little more than two weeks before the trial. So far as I can sea he hasn’t done a single, solitary thing!” They were alone in the living room of the Lane home, Bob and Faith, staring at each other with tired eyes which they had stopped trying to make beam cheerfully. But beneath this despair and weariness love glowed steadily, unfalteringly, deeply. Sometimes, during these hard days. Faith felt as If Bob were as much a part of her as her always busy hands, or her very heart. No matter if their marriage might •be delayed, Faith told herself, they had fused into a truer marriage than any man of God could sanctify. They had become one in service and tenderness, fear and hope. Strangely enough, it had been Cherry, who had once tried to got Bob for her own, who had brought them together. “Oh, I guess he's doing the best ho can,” Boh answered her dispiritedly. “Justice—or the legal Interpretation of justice—seems to me immensely unfair. The law says that a defendant its presumed innocent until proved guilty, hut it turns right around and offers all the machinery of the courts to the prosecution. The defense has no help whatever from the law. In preparing a case, the district attorney has everything and everyone at his disposal. The defense can’t even get hold of the grand jury minutes, can’t examine the dead man’s papers, can’t force witnesses to testify, while the prosecuton could subpoena the population of the whole county.” “But hasn’t Churchill made any headway at all?” Faith cried. Her hands trembled over the little pile of soft black crepe de chine in her lap which she was fashioning into a dress for Cherry to wear at the trial. “He’s found an old man who will testify that he saw a taxicab parked in the alley behind Uncle Ralph’s house at 8:30 the night of the murder. And a couple of police detectives who were sent to the house right after I reported Uncle Ralphs’ death, will take the stand to say that they saw automobile tracks in the snow. The only trouble is they don’t agree exactly as to the kind of tire treads.” , “Oh, those policemen!” Faith exploded. “They make me sick! Morehouse wouldn’t pay any attention to your story of the footprints under the window and these dim-wit detectives don’t even mention tracks of an automobile until Churchill pumps It out of them. All of that should have gotten before thb coroner at the inquest, then maybe they wouldn’t have Indicted Cherry as the only person who had both motive and opportunity. Opportunity! I’m sick of the word! A dozen people could have snooped around that house, in that quiet street, with all the neighbors gone off to the wedding, and no one would have been any the wsier—” “You forget the snow,” Bob reminded her, with a slight, fond smile at her vehemence. “If someone had planned te ai
—By Martin
der Mr. Cluny—as someone did! —he could have hidden long before the snow started to fall, and even afterward. for fresh snow would have covered his footprints pretty quick. Oh, I know I’m expecting an awful lot of Churchill, but what are you paying him for? Certainly not to sit up In his office behind a screen of cigar smoke and twiddle his thumbs! Have you had any luck looking for cripples yet, dear?” she added ,in a gentle voice. “I’ve gotten so myself that I don't do anything but look at legs and feet when I'm on the streets.” Bob shook his head. “No, but I’ve not given up hope. And by the way, Churchill has been pretty busy on one thing—trying to trace the sender of that threatening letter which I found in Uncle Ralph’s files.” NEXT; A powerful friend to Cherry’s aid. 1 (Copyright. 1927. NBA Service, Inc.) SIMPLE SUITS Simple black tailleurs, worn with white crepe de chine blouse®, are extremely smart in Paris. MASCULINE TOUCH Many of the late street suits have a suggstlon of a man’s dress suit, in the cut of jacket and vest. PLUM AND BRAID Plum-colored serge is trimmed with black silk braid, in a daytime frock, by a prominent designer. PAISLEY PRINTS Paisley patterns printed in authentic colors are to be used In cotton fabrics for spring. SMALL BAGS Bags for evening are small and square, an doften of black satin or velvet.
Reports of meetings, personals, weddings and other social news to Insure publication on the day received must be in not later than 10:30 In the morning. Social news for the next issue will be received all day, but should be sent or telephoned in as early as possible. Phone MA In 3500.
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THE WHEN STORES 83 N. Pennsylvania __
MENUS For the FAMILY BY SISTER MARY
— Shredded pineapple, cereal cooked with figs, thin cream, rich waffles, new maple syrup, milk, coffee. Luncheon—Dried beef with rice, prune and peanut butter sandwiches, orange Jelly, feather fried cakes, milk, tea. Dinner —Boiled filets of haddock, egg , sauce, buttered cauliflower holded spinach, salad, caramel tapioca, pudding, whole wheat bread, milk, coffee. Feather Fried Cakes Three tablespoons butter, 1 cup sugar, 2 eggs, % cup milk, 3Vi cups pastry flour, 4*4 teaspoons baking powder, 1 scant teaspoon salt, Vi teaspoon powdered nutmeg. Cream butter and gradually beat in sugar. Add yolks of eggs well beaten. Mix and sift flour, salt, baking powder and nutmeg and add alternately with milk to first mixture. Fold in whites of eggs beaten until stiff and dry. Put about one-third of the mixture on a well floured molding board and roll very lightly with a well floured rolling pin into a sheet about Vi inch thick. Cut with cutter and fry in deep, hot fat. When fried cake comes to top of fat let brown on one side, then turn and brown on the other side. Remove from fat and drain on brown paper. Handle fried cake dough as lightly as possible during the rolling and
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She Got Rid of Those Two Bad Mornings Menstruation is a perfectly natural process, but the painful part is NEEDLESS. Long study has absolutely conquered menstrual pains. Science now offers women reliable and complete relief —In a pimple, utterly harmless tablet called mirtol. This newest achievement of tha laboratory has nothing to do with drastic, habit-forming drugs tliat kill pain by benumbing the whole system! Mldol acts directly on the organs affecled by menstruation and nowhere else. Yet relief and absolute comfort come in five to seven minutes! So, why have a twinge of pain? Or feel “low” or even uncomfortable? Or take anything to depress the heart or upset the system? All drug stores have midol in a thin aluminum box that tucks In purse or pocket—for 50 cents. Mx&oV Takes Pain OS the Calendar Don't Fuss With Mustard Plasters! Don’t mix a mess of mustard, flour and waler when you can relieve pain, soreness or stiffness with a little clean, white musterole. Muaierole is made of pure oil of mustard and other helpful ingredients, and takes the place of mustard plasters. Musterole usually gives prompt relief from gore throat, bronchitis, tonsilitis, croup, at iff Deck, asthma, neuralgia, headache, congestion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbago, pains and aches of the back or Joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chilblains, frosed feot, colds of the chest (It may prevent pneumonia.)
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cutting. Bo sure to flour the cutter well before pressing Into the dough. The centers can be fried as they are, making tiny balls when done, or they may be worked into the lenialnlng dough to roll and shape again. (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.)
FASHION HINTS
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PAGE 7
Recipes By Readers
NOTE —The Times will give $1 for each recipe submitted by a reader adjudged of sufficient merit to be printed in thia column. One recipe is printed daily, except Friday, when twenty are given. Address Recipe Editor of The Times. Trlzea will be mailed to winners. LEMON CHIFFON PIE * Three egg yolks, one-half cup sugar, grated rind and Juice of lemon. Beat together and cok till thick in double boiler. When cool add beaten egg white and one-half cup of augar. Fold in custard and put in pastry shell and return to oven and let brown. Anna B. Wilson, 1815 Ingram 8t. f city.
DORFMANRUGCO. 207 W. Wlih. "If It cow the* flow w baxa It/*
