Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 July 1936 — Page 6
1 "10 3 :
| to Problem of Husband Who ~~ Neglects to Pay Bills, Rent Jordan Suggests That Worrying Mate Let
Partner Fall Into Debt, Then Let Him Solve Own Tangle.
: : 1c | > {But Don’t Nag, | Parents Told|
Advice to Youngsters Can| ‘Be Overdone, Writer "Says.
Shallow Method Easier, Yet Produces Flavor of Deep Style.
BY LOLA WYMAN Here's a way to combine the ease pan frying with the incomparable flavor of deep frying. It is, in fact, simplified deep or French frying, -e‘quiring only a heavy skillet or frypan. Just melt enough shorten‘ing to give a depth of one inch. The recive is a delicious one for| : : : Sati : i ; : —Photo by Kindred. ‘shallow 1 method. a » : marriage Catherine ‘served with pimiento mice, Bis en Da ) to : : - (above Corn and Egg Cutlets for 5 William J. Fitzgerald is to take
3 fablespoons shorsutng place Aug. 18 at St. Philip Neri | Church.
—
3 hard-cooked eggs, chopped : 4 ] ; 1 cup cooked corn 5, ik 1 teaspoon parsley chopped fine Z 7 # i 2 eggs, slightly beaten 12 cup sifted crumbs
Melt the shortening in top of douboiler, Add flour, salt, pepper and pap-
Add milk and cook until smooth - and thick, stirring constantly. Remove from fire. ; Add eggs, corn and parsley. Spread the mixture in a shallow span and chill until stiff. Cut into : Found cutlets with 21-inch biscuit cut
Roll in crumbs, then in eggs beaten with 2 tablespoons of water, then in crumbs. . Fry in hot shortening or fat (375) one-ince ‘deep in heavy pan until brown. Drain on absorbent paper. Serve with this pimiento sauce,
Pimiento Sauce 2 tablespoons shortening 2 tablespoons flour 34 teaspoon salt dash of pepper
for Love RE rng bo Ba
; 0 SUC ; _© 136 NEA Service, loc ’ Just let me keep
BEGIN HERE TODAY JAuzson hesitated. “I—I don’t Helena Derrick, youthful head of the | oJ . know. I guess it would be that women’s sportswear acystiment of | way with any new owhes. He was Helvig’s store, goes on a week-end party | refusing to let Barnes in for any'at Crest Mountain Lodge. There she | thing ond Helena admired him for meets handsome Peter Henderson. It is it. She turned to the stairs which a case of love at first sight between led to the mezzanine offices “ri them. Peter asks Helena to marry him, | a So aaanine, | . He
the ceremony takes place. . : oy the crowd goes swimming, Peter “Yes, Mrs. Henderson , , .” makes a reckless dive and is seriously injured. Lingering between life and death, he asks Helena to summon his lawyer, John Courtney. ya BS Courtney arrives and a short tim later Peter dies. Helena learns she is “sole heir to a large fortune, including the Henderson department store. She meets beautiful Leah Frazier who had expected to marry Peter and realizes Leah is an enemy. Peter's uncle, Roger Barnes, manager of the store, is also hostile. Helena decides to take over mange-. ment of the store. John Lassiter, banker, and Courtney are her allies. Leah Frazier fells Helena that unless she leaves town Leah and her friends
only get weary and inattentive but cease to think
for themselves. “Reminder Is Enough
~The street scene is typical of the child’s whole - existence. If mother calls out to Lucy to pull up her socks every few minutes or for Luke to blow his nose, it isn’t likely that she will stop mentioning small lapses after that stage is past. There will always be something. On the other hand, she is right to d them not to go too near to the curb. It gets to be irritating to children, however, . when -any warning is dinned in their ears. A quiet glance to satisfy herself that all is well will do the work much of the time. If children have been conditioned to dangers and general behavior and know what they must avoid, a reminder when they go out should answer. But their attention should
months ago when I got sick. He told me if I would
I quit and I've never seen anywhere near that amount. He hasn'g given me money for the doctor so I haven't been to him since I qui work. : : He ‘makes between $125 and $150 month and it looks to me like we could keep our bills paid up and save some. I have worried and struggled until I am almost crazy, I have had enough of a selfish baby. I havé plenty faults, but I'm & good manager and do all my own work. I'd like to goon a big spende: ing spree, too, but two in one fame ily deing it might prove disastrous, Will you please answer soon? MRS. O.
seemed about to say something | more, thought better of it — then finally blurted out: “I , .. I was terribly sorry to hear about Mr. Henderson. I didn't know him very well, but—" “Thank you, Mr. Jameson. I appreciate what you say.” : UT, Helena told herself as she P- climbed” the stairway to the mezzanine, she didn’t really appreciate what Harvey Jameson had said. The truth was that his condolénces embarrassed. her. And why? Resolutely she faced this question. . “It’s~because—because I feel so little for poor Peter . . . no,
RY MARJORIE BINFORD WOODS
1 cup of milk or thin cream 1 pimiento
Melt the shortening, add flour, Salt, pepper and blend well. Add milk gradually, stirring until thick- - ened.
Add the pimiento forced through a sieve and blend. This makes 1 cup of sauce.
Personals
Miss Kathryn Bowlby is on a vacation in Los Angeles, visiting her aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Daniels.
Miss Peggy Bosart, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Bosart, is at Lake Maxinkuckee, visiting Miss - Eleanor Winslow, daughter of Mr. “and Mrs. Walker Winslow, Dr. and Mrs: Alonzo B. Chapman took their house guests, Mr. and Mrs. - Robert Townsend and children, and ‘Mrs, Paul Townsend, all of Chicago, 10 their Brown County cabin for the “week-end. f Miss Peggy Johns, Fort Wayne, is visiting Miss Martha Ann Rupel, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Ernest - Rupel. Mrs. W. R. Turman, Marshall, Ill, is staying with her grandchildren, Mary Lee, Sue Ann and Catherine Layman Schell, while their mother, Mrs. James Layman Schell, is visiting in Wisconsin.
Times Fashion Editor
ERE'S a turban (above) that is truly a beau-catcher!
In an advance
season raging with patriotic fervor and Napoleonic influences this carnival black velvet topper with its peaked crown is a high note of
fall fashion designed by Lily Dache.
Almost before you know it local leaders of style trends are going to be appearing ror luncheon in cool air-conditioned places in dark fall
hats. With black sheer frocks taking the lead . .
. next to follow will
be matching velvet and felt hats. Already the shops are showing exciting new millinery models and you'd better look about a bit to belter adapt yourself to the extreme high crowns and brimless types.
A velvet gilet and gloves match this enchanting hat with its quartet of bow-knots, put on at a racy angle. » 2 ” » X 7ORN with a tailored suit, an ensemble like this has travel possibilities if you are an early fall bride in a quandary over your go-ing-away outfit. The new bengaline peplum suits of black, or sheer tunic dresses promise greater midsummer success when worn with tiny velvet caps of this type. : Beige accents with black are finding. acceptance in gloves, feathers and flowers. There are seduce tive shades from biscuit-cream to
iced-coffee and they are as pro= phetic as the first brown leaf...
X
Marriage 1s Announced Mr. and Mrs. Charles Donnelly announced the marriage of their daughter, Miss Eileen Donnelly, to Raymond Sutphin, which was solemnized July 18. Mr. Sutphin is a son of Mrs. Emma Sutphin.
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[Today's Pattern]
Three Factors in Good Foods
Shown in Tests
. Food scientists tell us that there are three important factors in what we eat. - These are, first, the main constituents such as carbohydrates,
proteins, etc., second, the vitamins, and third the tastiness or fiavor. For the best nourishment all thre
| factors should be present.
The present generation of cooks is well schooled in the matters of food values and vitamins and chooses its menus with much greater knowledge than did our grandmothers. : In the matter of tastiness, however, grandma had a master touth that frequently is missing in our modern meals. Grandma may not have been conscious «that the well-flavored dishes were stimulating the secretion of the gastric juices and so helping digestion, but she knew that they tasted good, and gave folks who ate them pleasure.
Insomnia Is Held Serious Handicap
!
* to Pulchritude
BY ALICIA HART NEA Service Staff Writer Insomnia is one of the deadliest enemies Jf beauty. You simply can’t look your best if, the night before, you tossed about for hours before falling asleep or. if the bed was so uncomfortable that you couldn’t really rest even after you did go to sleep. - As for sleep-producing secrets— here are several hints that readers have sent to me within the past month: A woman in Kansas says that a glassful of grapefruit juice taken immediately before retiring makes her sleepy. ; A New York girl solved her insomnia troubles when she learned to cover her eyes with tiny cotton
g is
s55i E
FLAPPER FANNY SAYS:
Stuck up girls are likely to lead a thorny existence.
Yeddo Straw Cool Many men are becoming aware of the fact that one of the coolest types of straw hat is that made of Yeddo straw. Woven of hollow straw stalks, the Yeddo has an all-
around layer of “dead air cells,” one of the best insulators known to engineers.
Washable Evening Gown
A flattering summer evening ensemble that will come back from the laundry looking fresh ‘as a daisy includes a gown fashioned from flowered cloque pique—a jacket from plain pique in May wine, the predominating shade of the print. Both are completely pre-shrunk. i
Arranging Flowers It is seldom advisable to arrange flowers in a bowl or vase without’ first off all leaves which would be submerged in the water.
and
at any age. mother seldom knows
be right on the matter in. question e mother should be sure. If the risk is too great, then the children are too young or the playground wrong. : Acquire Judgment Age has everything to do with it. We know that a child of 2 can understand very little about warnings. At 5, he may understand certain things, but not others. At 7 or 8 when he is able to see reasons he
is far more likely to be careful be-
cause he adds judgment to orders. But all children are e ental And of course, the
exactly what they will do next. : This is where the trouble les. Her protective instinct, removed from mere nervousness, urges her presence. She knows what a ter-
rible teacher experience can be. Yet |
the child won’t learn self-defense thoroughly until a few bumps and bruises come along to teach him. - The caution that develops by words from his ‘mother may be
a pseudo affair unrelated to real life. This is not caution at all, but
inhibition. And life goes pretty flat if one grows up on a little island so surrounded. Small children should have some older person near if possible. Those
a little older may be trusted in a safe place.. And so on up the line.
Physical protection is wise, but at
the same time, they should be learning wisdom on their on. Too much interference is a weakening process.
Character development is pretty
much the same. The young person too insistently supervised instead of acting and thinking for himself is slow to mature, and indeed many people stay babies forever.
(Copyright, 1936, NEA Service, Inc.)
AMERICAN DRESS DESIGNS IN VOGUE
American fashions, created American designers, are important
right now.
Dude ranches and the golden west
inspired a group of lively, sparkling dresses
which make one think of
wide open spaces. Renee Mortague.
nted a group of youthful eve-
ning dresses that are reminiscent of the Mississippi showboat. Dorothy Cox has given us a collection of quilted fashions.
Butler Graduate to Wed in August
will boycott the store. : Sy This makes Helena more determined to win Ber fight. She tells Lassiter and Courtney that, once she has won, she intends to give up the store. \ NOW. GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER IX oo OHN LASSITER turned to Helena in astonishment. “Turn the
store back?” he repeated. “You can’t really be serious. To whom
would you turn it back? Certainly:
you wouldn't hand it to Roger Barnes on a silver platter!” Helena smiled. “No, I don’t think I'd do that. Why couldn't I turn it back to the employes? Give them stock according to the length of time they've been with Henderson's. You and Mr. Courtney could run it. I've heard of such plans working out very well.”
ing to her. stay here.” Courtney guided the coupe out of Main-st and {toward Helena's apartment. “Indeed, we do.” i “Who'’re ‘we’?” Helena demanded. “I'm afraid it’s only you two.” Lassiter grinned. = “Isn't that enough?” “Of course,” Helena laughed. “It’s enough for me. But a store has to have the good will of the town. Barnes was right about that. Do you think I've really: destroyed a
“But we want you to
lot of good will by having him write |
| those letters suspending credit?” “No,” the banker told her flatly. “That’s just good business. : You never destroy good will with legitimate business practices.” : » 8 8 “BUT I had ancther reason, Mr Lassiter. Just before I camc to the store this .afternoon Leah Frazier called on me. “She threatened to boycott the store, and to urge all her friends to do the same. I wanted to beat her to it, make her
by | and her friends feel that Hender-
son's isn’t anxious for the type of business they have to give.”Courtney brought the car to the curb before Helena’s apartment. “You don’t need to go up with me,” she told them. “I'll see you both tomorrow—and thanks so much for your help and encouragement.” The two men watched her to the door, then turned to face ‘each other. “Shes certainly got the stuff!” exclaimed Lassiter admiringly. 5 ! The lawyer nodded. better,” he admitted.
“There’s no “But . . .
Lassiter, you know she’s going to| have
one hell of a time in this
“That may be,” said Lassiter turn--
that’s not true. I do feel a great deal for him. But not enough. Not what a widow should.” A widow! An odd word—a word which did not, really, belong to her at all. Looking back now at those hectic days at Crest Mountain Lodge, she. realized that what had happened to her could never had happened had she met Peter Henderson in. town. It had been a—yes, a summertime infatuation. ‘And Sandra Leigh’s enthusiasm had helped to carry her away. ; 2 ” »
late now to ponder over
this. With the heartlessness of
reality, a row of office doors confronted her. As she stood there, looking at them, she was startled by a footfall on the stairway. She turned to see Roger Barnes. : “Good - morning,” he said. His whole manner had changed ‘from the day before. Now he was pleasant — almost too pleasant, Helena thought suspiciously. “Down early, I see.” He came toward her, grasped
Ther hand unnecessarily. “I planned
to. get—ah—Mr. Henderson's office 1~ady for you before you arrived this morning.” “Would you mind very much, Mr. Barnes, if I took another office?” He seemed astonished. “Why—
why, that office is\the largest and has the best light. And the furni-{
ture is very comfortable. I—" “Why don’t you take that one, then? I could go into yours.” . Barnes was obviously delighted with the “Well, now, I—” “Let's have it that way,” Helena “Assuming, of course, that you have decided to stay—that you believe my policies will compatible with your ideas.” He shrugged the remark away. “I'm sure we can get along, Mrs.
Hnderson. I—I'll ‘be only too glad | band
to carry out’your suggestions as best I can.” \
: 2 ® » Wik the help of the janitor, Barnes lost no time in moving
son’s on those rare occasions when he spent some time. at the store. Thus Helena soon found herself seated at the desk which had Barnes’. “With,” she told herself, ‘nothing to do.” But she quickly de-
be | passing time.
; fortunate accident.”
wel wonder what would nhappen if you quit worrying about bills and. let him drop ‘into debt as far as he likes and then face the
co ences without aid from you? J consetue you?
would he do, for example, if he was put out of his home because he didn't pay the rent? Would it teach him anything or have you ever tried this method? Something in your relationship reminds me of an anxious mother trying to inculcate a sense of ree sponsibility into her heedless son, She will plead, argue, reason, insist and even nag at the boy in order to make him take care of his money and avoid going into debt, but her Pleas fall on deaf ears. Usually her attitude alternates between severity and swee , but in a pinch ‘she always comes to the rescue, stande ing between her son and the cone Sequences of his own behavior. Thus he never comes in contact with reality but lives in a cozy lite tle universe of self-indulgence. ; I wonder if you've done this with your husband. He doesn’t have to worry because you do all his worrying for him. You pinch and scrimp and save that he may spend. You furnish the brakes that keep him from colliding with his creditors. If the bills stack foo high you go to work to pay them off for him. For all your good intentions, aren’t you keeping him in an infantile state by constantly saving his face? I od Ehow whether it would cure | if you stopped carrying his responsibilities or 3 but IT imagine it is worth a trial. I remember a mother whose son loafed along in school all term and called on his mother for tutors just before One term she let him flunk and the humiliation cured the loafing along. Perhaps the same method would work with your huse
VIAL FOR PERFUME CARRIED IN PURSE
A tiny perfume vial which fits ‘into a corner of your purse is worth consideration. : Fill the little bottle with the scent you ordinarily use at home. Then, during the day, you can apply a big
been | of perfume without mixing a new
odor with the old. ee ———— Glass Drawer Fronts
Nuts in Syrup
Try putting ground nuts, either walnuts, almonds or pecans, into your waffle or pancake syrup.
She turned to her daughter. “Come, Leah!”
