Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 10, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 May 1927 — Page 7
MA* 23, 1927
VISIT TORNADO AREA FOR YOUR CHANGE OF THOUGHT
There Is Exemplification of Kipling’s ‘lf’—Faith in Human f Nature Surely Restored. By Martha Lee If there are any pessimists in Indianapolis who would like a change of thought, they should lose no time in going into the tornado-visited area. Their faith in human nature would surely be restored there. Folks are there who are brave as those Kipling referred to when in his great poem “If” he says:
“If you can meet both triumph and disaster. And treat these two impostors just the same. . . . If you can lose and start again at the beginning. And never talk again about your loss. . . . yours is the earth and everything that’s in ft.” If wo could have a wish granted these days it would be that the man who wrote, “The more I see of human beings, the more I think of dogs’’ could be in Indianapolis these days. He’d certainly change his mind! Storm Is Savior Dear Martha Lee: Some time ago I wrote you and asked your advice about leaving my husband. I told you that we were not getting along well together although I couldn’t say I didn't love him. You advised me to wait a while. We live out east on Hamilton* Ave. Wednesday night, the storm did terrible things to us. In fact, we’re just about in the position that we were when we were married and had nothing. But what I wanted to tell you is. that all this terrible thing has brought my husband and me closer together. "Well help each other,” he said. I wanted you to know that I wouldn’t leave him for the world now. Because now I'm sure that I love him and I'm glad I did not leave him. I'm taking the time to write you even in all this. A STORM SUFFERER. I appreciate your telling me about this and I think many readers who -are uncertain about their feelings toward their life partners can draw w a lesson from your experience. At the time you wrote I think you were simply suffering from house nerves and ennui. Trouble often brings people into a mutual understanding of each other. You are proving It.
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“Betty Lou" complains a young man she has been close friends with since February has suddenly stopped coming to see her. As he was in good humor the last time she saw him she can not understand this and feels that she should make some move to understand his actions. There is nothing that you can do with dignity, Betty Lou. If he has stopped calling, it’s because he has wanted to stop. You can not force interest. Better try to think of other things, dear girl, and forget him. “A -B C” and “X Y Z” are sisters and declare that while they have the dearest mother in the world, they are greatly bored by the fact that she still thinks they are little children and give them too close attention. She also brags about them to everybody. Well, girls, be grateful you have someone who so thoroughly appreciates you. A lot of people would be glad to have an admiring mother. You can not do much to chapge her too loving care over you. It’s a habit /some mothers never get over as long as their children are at home. STATE PUPILS THANKED Flooded Districts Acknowledge Contributions From Indiana. Superintendent of Public Instruction Charles F. Miller received the following telegram from Superintendent W. O. Bond of Mississippi: “Money from Indiana will go to school in greatest need in Humphries county, now completely under water. God bless the boys and girls of Indiana." The message referred to the collections taken up in Indiana schools for rehabilitation of a school in the Mississippi flooded area. The contribution from Kokomo was more than S3OO and many other schools In the State are still collecting, .Miller declared. APPLIQUED TRIMMING Appliqued work Is a favorite trimming, chiffon taking velvet appliqued flowers, georgette s satin. Even stz - aw hats have appilqued flower trimmings.
FARMER WOMAN IN OKLAHOMA Praises Lydia E. Pinkham’sVegetable Compound Because It Gave Her Health and Strength In a sunny pasture in Oklahoma, a herd of sleek ?ows was grazing. . They made a t woman in the blue checked apron sighed as she looked at them. She was tired of her tedious work in the dairy. She was JBR Yf - tired of cooking * v 'I for a houseful of boarders, besides caring for her own family. The burdens of life seemed too heavy for her failing health. She had lost confidence la herself. One day she began taking Lydia E. Pinkham’a Vegetable Compound and her general health began to improve. She took It faithfully. Now she can do her work without any trouble, sleeps well and is no longer blue and tired. This woman, Mrs. Cora Short, R. R. 9, Box 387, Oklahoma City, Okla., writes: “Everybody now says: ‘Mrs. Short, what are you doing to yourself?’ I weigh 135 and my weight before I took it was 115. I have taken seven bottles of the Vegetable Compound.” Are you on the Sunlit Road to Better Health? —Advertisement.
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Lilly Dainita, 20-year-old French cinema star, is a great success in the new French film, “Toys of Paris," ’tis still In news from’across the water. Who wonders, after seeing this charming photo of her?
‘UNBURNING’ POTATOES IMPORTANT KITCHEN ART Sister Mary Gives Cures for Salty Soup, Cake That’s Too Hot, Curdled Sauce, Liquid Gelatine.
By Sister Mary XEA Service Writer Very often the bride in the kitchen decides that sauce pans and spiders and oven are bewitched. Everything burns for her. "Things” never burned in her mother’s kitchen. She must remember that her mother learned through years of experience exactly the amount of water needed to cook potatoes Just right. She must learn that time flies “when her back is turned” and keep close watch of the minutes until her ex perience has taught her to gauge time. “I nhuming” ’Em But when the potatoes do boil dry and start to burn, put the pan at once into a larger pan of cold water and then shake the potatoes out in a clean pan or bowl for mashing or creaming. If the scorching has not been great, no one will ever know It happened. If, however, there is a hard dark brown crust burned on one side of the potato, carefully cut away the burned part and after mashing and seasoning as usual, add grated cheese and one * well-beaten egg. Pile in a baking dish and bake in a moderate oven for fifteen minutes. Don’t Scrape Any vegetable that has just started to burn can be placed in the pan of cold water and shaken, not scraped from the burned pan into a fresh one for reheating and seasoning. One precaution to keep in mind when cooking potatoes that have been cut in halves leaving a smooth flat surface, is to be sure that the rounded side of the vegetable rests against the sauce pan. Acquire the habit of shaking any pan of vegetables cooking on the stove. Use extreme care in salting deliShe Says:
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TtMES
cately flavored vegetables like asparague and peas, asparagus especially, requires very little salt. If the soup has been salted too generously, add from half a cup to a whole cup of sliced raw potatoes. Let stand ten or fifteen minutes, remove and serve. The potatoes will absorb the excess salt. If the cake burns on thd bottom, the burned part will usually “peel” off while the cake is warm or it can be grated off after the cake The next time you bake, put the grate up one or two notches in the oven or put a shallow pan of water directly under the cake. This will temper the heat at the bottom of the oven. If the mayonnaise separates, take another egg yolk and slowly beat in the curdled dressing, then continue until all the oil and lemon juice is used. Curdled Custard If a custard sauce curdles beat it hard with a wheel egg beater. This same egg beater will often beat the lumps out of a white sauce that has refused to come smooth. If the sauce is very lumpy it can be put through a sieve and reheated. Sometimes a gelatine Jelly refuses to stiffen in the time required. If it’s quite evident that satisfactory results are not going to be obtained, more gelatine should be softened in cold water, dissolved over hot water and added at once. There is seldom need to have a tragic failure in the kitchen. Cream on the verge of souring can be sweetened by stirring into it a “pinch” ot baking soda dissolved in water. Then it can be used over vegetables or over dessert as planned.
FASHION v. HINTS NEW UNDIES Short little panties, of pastel colored voile, linen or silk, or of fancy figured material, gather Into a yoke that fits snugly over the hips, buttoning on the side. PUFF SLEEVE A yoked coat repeats the yoked effect at top of.the sleeve and has an elbow puff of material connecting it with the deep plath cuff. QUILTED TRIMMINGS A smart daffodil yellow figured crepe dress has its deep hem and its small collar and cuffs quilted in geometrical design. SUMMER UNDERWEAR “Shorts" are being favored by women in both the glove silk bloomer with a yoke and the little yoked flaring panties that end midway to the knee. MORE JACKETS Not content to have almost every dress demand its coat, some coutourierg now design separate jackets to wear over sleeveless Jumper suits. NEW EARRINGS The vogue for massive jewelry reaches the ears. A distinguished woman wore a huge pair of silver Russian gypsy earrings that almost reached her shoulders. NEW COLORS Amarille, a sunny yellow, though soft and Nymph pink, a trifle deeper than dawn, are new shades smart for summer.
REALTORS SURE OE SELLING BITS OF INDIANAPOLIS Lay Further Plans—Speakers Announced—sl for Streamers. Confident It will be able to convince Hoosier that the message, “Buy a piece of Indianapolis,” Is profitable advice, the special committee of twenty-five realtors conducting the campaign met in the board offices this morning and laid further plans for the drive. A series of speeches before luncheon clubs and civic organizations by members, and extensive publicity and advertising are to be high points of the drive, which closes Saturday. Others Named Later George T. Whelden, speakers’ bureau head, announced the following club speakers: Joseph H. Schmid, Women's Rotary Club; L. H. Lewis, Altrusa Club; J. Roy Moore, North Side Lions Club; John Springer, Lions Club. Other speakers will be announced later. At the meeting today committee members expressed satisfaction in the manner in whih persons already have received the campaign. The drive opened Saturday with an “early worm” breakfast at the Chamber of Commerce, attended by a large number of realtors and business men. Still at I^arge Ballons, released following the breakfast, hearing streamers with thee “buy a piece of Indianapolis” slogan, still are at large. The Indianapolis Real Estate board is offering $1 for each streamer returned to the board offlcles in the Lemeke Bldg.
BAR BODY LEADER ATTACKS I CRAY Pickens Urges That Pardon Be Refused. Warren T. McCray, former Governor of Indiana, now serving a sentence in the Federal penitentiary at Atlanta. Ga., has met opposition from AVilliam A. Pickens, president of the Indiana State Bar Association, in his most recent attempt to obtain a parole. McCray is serving a sentence for "using the mails to defraud.” The offense occurred while he was Governor. Pickens has written to United States Attorney General John G.' Sargent expressing his opposition to the parole. “I am amazed to see that a pardon for McCray is considered,” the letter read. “There never was a more brazen criminal in Indiana than McCray. He has been known as a dishonest, man for many year.’.” The letter declared that “if the question were submitted to the lawyers of Indiana there 'would not be one who would favor his pardon unless there is one personally interested in the matter.”
HOUSEHOLD SUGGESTIONS BABY GIFT , Left-over bits of silk can be utilized advantageously by making into a smart, old-fashioned quilt for a baby gift. CLEAN GARBAGE PAIL Line your garbage pail with fresh newspapers’ each morning and you will find that the unpleasant task of keeping it clean is mitigated.^ CHILD’S COVERLET A summer bed-spread, fashioned from checked or flowered material with plain goods for border, will be twice as pleasing to little Mary if her name is worked on it. PRETTY GARNISH Slices of lemon that have half their arc covered with powdered parsley and the other half with paprika make an effective garnishing for fish dishes. COLORFUL VASES Tin flower holders, gayly colored and often having pictures of scenes or gardens on them, make lovely vases for summer porch use.
INFLAMED BLADDER Keep your kidneys active and healthy and your body free from uric acid. Mountain Valley Water—from Hot Springs, Arkansas —assists Nature to preserve normal functioning of these organs. Physicians tell us that inflammation of the bladder is usually due to irritating acids allowed to remain in the body by diseased, overworked kidneys. A. P. Shalley Says: (Indianapolis) ‘‘Upon advice of my physician, I purchased a tank o. Mountain Valley Water for iny ailment, diagnosed as Bladder Trouble. It is on the firm conviction of the benefits I received from the Water that I testify in its behalf." ASK YOClt DRUGGIST OR GROCER OB PHONE PS FOR MOUNTAIN VALLEY WATER From Hot Springs, Arkansas Local Distributors, 911-918 Massachusetts At*. Phone, UA in I*B9
A . Conan Doyle Lays Corner-Stone
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, creator of Sherlock Holmes and one of the world’s most distinguished believers in spiritualism, laying the corner-stone of the new Spiritualist Church at Kingston-on-Thames, Surrey, England. Watching him from the left background is his son.
Gone, but Not Forgotten
Automobiles reported stolen to police belong to: Jessie Burch. R. R. 4, Overland, 526-038, from Delaware and Washington Sts. Hazel M. Waterman, 234 Dorman St., Chevrolet, 506-265, from Michigan and East Sts. H. A. Boren. 1209 Wright St„ Ford, 501-799, from Ohio and Meridian Sts. O. L. Booher. 2034 Mable St., Chevrolet, 537-535, from Virginia Ave. and Washington St, William K. Hermann, 633 Congress Ave., Dodge, 28-518, from Twenty-Seventh St. and Northwestern Ave. Bivin Cab Company, 404 Massachusetts Ave., . Buick, i>l2-014, from 25 W. Michigan St. Harry B. Williams, 1264 N. Belmont Ave., Ford, 518-812, from 800 N > Pennsylvania St. George De Motte, 1107 English Ave.. Ford, 560-355, from Morris and Charles Sts. Kirby Barnett, 835 E. Morris St., Ave. Dodge, 49-064, from in front of that address. Mose Tucker, North Salem, Ind., Ford, 409-789, from 1433 N. Capitol John Buen, 450 E. Tenth St., Chevrolet, 507-357, from 417 N. Gladstone Ave. Mayer Ladin, 2740 Cornell Ave., Essex, 580-J36, from garage in rear. Dr. Fred E. Giffors, 2714 N. Pennsylvania St., Buick, 460-089, from 122 E. Pratt St. A. U. McGaw, Beech Grove, Ind., from Capitol Ave. and Market Sts. W. Thiltott, R. R. A, Ford, from Vermont and Illinois Sts. John S. Cook, 5120 Broadway, Stutz, 19-731, from 5120 Broadway. G. J. Tobin, 5102 Park Ave., Lincoln, 5102, from garage in rear. Alfred E. Sigler, 929 E. ThirtyThird St., Ford, 525-845, from in front of address. John J. Ryan, Spink Hotel, Oldsmobile, 123-926, from Vermont and Meridian Sts. W. F. Poss. Greencastle, Ind., Ford, from Market St. and Capitol Ave. Lucille Wann, Danville, Ind., Ford, 660-562, from Capitol Ave. and Ohio Sts. Wesley Shea. 4366 N. Meridian St., Buick, from Vermont and Meridian Sts. Moran Trucking Company, 1027 E. Georgia St.. Chevrolet. 512-498, from Twenty-Fifth and Illinois Sts. Harry Burns, Lawrence, Ind., Ford, 581-198. from 315 W. Ohio St. William Kidwell, 616 N. East St., Ford. 574-607, from Washington St. and Capitol Ave. Arthur Sahm, R. R. P. Box 174 B, Hudson. M 2139. from Indiana Ave. and Ohio St. Arnold Nash Sales Company, 163 Kentucky Ave., M 1673, Nash, from Meridian and Ohio Sts. Howard Jessup, Noblesvtlle, Ind., Ford, from Senate Ave. and Market Sts. A. R. Kennedy. 321 E. Fall Creek Blvd., Hudson. 27-262, from Louisiana and Illinois Sts. Joe Boyer. Knightstown, Ind., Ford, from Capitol Ave. and Ohio St. BACK HOME AGAIN Automobiles reported found by police belong 1o: John Doane, 1919 S. Capitol Ave.. Ford, found at New York and Illinois Sts. Bivin Transfer Company, Massachusetts Ave. and Alabama St.; Buick, at Minerva and Coe Sts. Richard Marquis, 715 E. ThirtySecond St.; Ford, at 115 E. New York St. Sam Shelby, 2229 N. Arsenal Ave.; Studebaker, near that address. REDECORATING PLANS In redecorating your home remember that light ceilings, medium walls and dark floors without too much contrast or conspicuous figures form hte most livable rooms.
WHERE ARE WE GOING? AND WHY? ASKS WRITER Modern Women, Reforming-, Revising, Re organizing Victims of Madness, in Opinion of Observer.
By Mrs. Walter Ferguson Ours is a wild, wild world. How we dash about doing nothing, and with what frantic eagerness do we set about reforming, revising and reorganizing everything. The telephone jingles incessantly, the cars whiz by, a hundred duties call. We must look after the children and atend our committee meetings and vote and keep up with the latest fasholns in dress and furniture and books, and remember who Is married to whom in Hollywood. It is a strenuous job. this life we have chosen for ourselves. And I ask you, in all seriousness, is it worth while? Where are we going, and why? This is a good ques-
Viur Brains
Today’s list of questions isn’t so hard as it looks. The answers are printed on page 12: 1. Check the correct word in each of these sentences: (a) Cclumbus discovered America In 1366-1492-1620. . (b) Roger Williams founded the city of Salem-Newport-Hartford-Providence. (c) Minneapolis is noted for Its manufacture of autos-shoes-flour-cotton goods-steel rails. (and) The poem “Israfel” was written by Pope-Tennyson-Foe-Whitman-Arnold. (e) Abraham Lincoln held an important series of debates with Stephen A. Dougias-Lewis CassFrankiin Pierce-Jefferson Davis. 2. What famous Confederate general became a college president after the Civil War? 3. A great deal is said nowadays about New York’s "tabloid” newspapers. Name one of them, 4. What have Adalph Ochs. William Randolph Hearst and Robert P. Scripps in common? 5. What is the “Golden Gate?” 6. How many courts are housed in the Marion County courthouse? 7. By what titles are these courts identified?
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tion to ponder when your nerves are worn and you snap at the children or decide that you are too busy to have any. We have but one life here, and how do we spend that? Mostly In foolish illustrations that get us nowhere. Women, with all the new and alluring occupations which have been put befo. c them, are in grave danger of losing their heads. In the first place we are consumed with a desire to keep up with the neighbors. We want our children to be in the public eye. We struggle in a perpetual hideous competition that destroys our individuality and kills our peace. We must have things Just like Mrs. Jones has, regardless of whether they are suitable to our persons or our purse. These battalions of brides who work down town because they feel they must have more silk stockings, are the victims of our general madness. They use their talents to increase the family income, but believe it degrading to utilize them in the practice of such economy as would enable them to live on less, but create a home. Where are all these young wives going? Have they thought about their lives as things that they themselves may make perfect or ruin? Do they feel they will be most valuable and happy as salesladies or stenographers, or housewives and mothers? For these empty activities in which we indulge never fill that groat hungry void that is in each human soul. They neither appease our longings nor satisfy our dreams. Never have we been so avid for happiness and never have we gone searclJng for it so foolishly. What we women need is more leisure to study ourselves, more quiet moments when we can consider what real living is, more sweet peace wherein we may search for the truths of life which are, after all, the only things that ever satisfy. “Quo Vadis’’ Whither Goest Thou? It was asked. Shall we not also ask ourselves that question? DOOR KNOCKERS A knocker gives an intimate, personal touch to a door. Chinese junke, baskets of flowers or designs that have meaning for the family are always good.
