The Barnwell people-sentinel. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1925-current, August 18, 1927, Image 2

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PrmmdinU fkr 0 Day to Mtrcfc, iNp. the United State* had three eoeceeMve President on as many sncceaelr* days. James A. Polk ended Ids term March & President elect Zachary Taylor refused to be InaofUfsteOo Snnday. and he dldJ not .take oflce nntll March 8. As neither administration was in office, David Rice Atchison of Kentucky, president pro tern, 'of the senate served la the Interim. — The Meal Mali R EMOVE the pits from large, meaty prunes, which have been steamed and allowed to cool. Mix cream cheese with a little cream, mayonnaise and nut meats, and mold in prune form. Place a slice of pineapple on a lettuce leaf and alternate the prunes and cheese on the pineapple, using three prunes and three cheese prunes. In the center of the pineapple place a maraschino cherry. Serve with s mayonnaise dressing Pear and Pineapple Salad in Paatry Shells Make the shells of flaky pastry baked on the outside of muffin or patty tina. When b^-ed, slip the shells from (he pans and set aside to cool. The filling will requirj: 2 Large Mellow Pears or 6 Halves of Canned Pear 2 Slices of Canned Pineapple 1 Copfnl of White Crapes Halved and Seeded yi Cupful of Maraschino Cherries Cut the pears and the pineapple in dice, mix the three fruits to gether and set away in a very cold place to drain and ch'lt. Add half .ji cupful of maraschino cherries cut to bits, sweeten slightly and mix with a little whipped cream dress ing. Fill the pastry shells, serve on lace-paper doilies, dot each serving with a spoonful of the dressing and garnish with a halved maraschino cherry. Tomato, Lettuce and Tuna Pish Salad Select large, firm, regular sized- tomatoes; scald, peel and remove pulp. Drain and flake a pound can of tunatish, mix with half a cupful of stiff mayonnaise or boiled dress ing. adding a tablespoonful of capers and half a cupful of chopped celery; fill the tomatoes and serve on lettuce leaves garnished with whirls of the dressing. Belgium Prune Salad Soak, steam and chill large Cali fornia prunes. Remove the stone from a slit m the side of each and fill with the following: Two stalks of celery chopped very fine; one tahlespoonfui finely chopped wal nut meats, two stuffed olives finely chopped Moisten with mayonnaise and fill the prunes. Stand on tender lettuce leaves and place a star cut from canned pimento on each. Tropic Salad Select half as many large ripe bananas as there are irtests to be served. Cut them in halves length wise. and remove the fruit without bruising the skins D ; ce the bananas and mix them with half their quantity each of diced celery, pitted white “Or red cherries, canned or fresh, and grapefruit cut in small sections. Moisten with fruit mayonnaise and heap fruit in the banana boats. Serve on lettuce garnished with bits of pimento. Orange Sandwich Salad Cut large seedless oranges which have been peeled into quarter inch slices. Put these together, sandwich fashion, with the follow ing mixture between: Mix. together a cupful of chopped canned' pi|»e- applr, half a cupful of very finely diced celery, and half a green pep per, shredded; moisten with French fruit dressing.' Place the orange sandwiches on crisp lettuce leaves garnished with sliced maraschino cherries. Prune Tulip Salad Large, meaty prunes are required for this salad. Soak and steam the prunes till tender, cool and remove pits carefully through slits in the ends. Then cut the prunes- down from 'the top almost through, in four quarters, spread open in tulip shape, and arrange on lettuc- leaves. Ih the renter of each prune place a small ball of cream chee«e sprinkled rather thickly - vrith nmrika. Sen e w ; th mayonnaise or fruit salad dressing Local and Per»onal News of Blackville Blackvilk, August IS.—Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Still, Eleanor and Leroy Still, are spading a few weeks mo toring in C«nada and Western New York. Tom Murray Walsh, of Savannah, ia spending a few days with Mr. and Mrs. J. Wyatt Browning The Misses Eli.ne Miller, of Au gusta, (la., Marjorie King, of Miami, Fla., and Cailie Roylston, of Spring- field, are the guest* of .Miss Myrtle Altman. M ms Fiances Ilum-an and Mis. Harold H«>dget. of Sumter, are the guest* of Misa Cecfle pickling. The Misses Louwe Holmes, of John ston, and Elisabeth Riser, of McBee, are spending the wesA with Min Myitire Boland. . Mr. and Mrs. G. Frank Po-ey ha/e arrived in town and are with Mr» t Pearle Mathis for the winter. Mr. Posey is superintendent of the Black- ▼lie schools a nd Mrs. Posey, former ly Mi» Martha Bruce, taugiu music for the past year. They were recent ly married and have J6»t returned from their wedding trip. The Busy Bee Club was entertain ed e*i Thurnday afternoon by Mrs. T. O. Boland. Several contests were en joyed after which the hostess, as sisted by Mrs. A. H. Ninertein served a tempting*xalad. Mesdames George Gouper, of Portland, Me., Cleveland Rieher, of Athens, Ga. t and Charles Mathir. were guests of the club. Mrs Cleveland Risher, Margaiet and Harriet Risher, of Athens. Ga., are visiting Mrs. Joe Risher and Mrs. Alfred Gyles. William Altman is spending (he wvek with his sirter, Mrs. Joe (hap- man, of Florence. Mr. uiwl Mrs. T. L. Wragg. Miss Doiothy Wragg and Mrs. Ia*roy M >- lair.of Barnwell, are on a motor trip to Washington and New York. Mr. and Mrs. J<*ho O’Gorman and Fairell O’Goiman, leave Sunday for Baltimore to visit Mi.-s Eleanor O’ Gorman. Mr. ani Mrs. A. B. Hair, Jr., left ‘.his week for Ridgeland, where Mr Hair has been appointed county sup erintendent of Jasper County. Charles Aycock, of Birmingham, Ala., is the guest this week of Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Weissinger and Misa Helen Weiasinger. Covan News Govan, Aug. 14.—Miss Guasie and * • ■ 4 Rita Seabrook, of Columbia, are spend ing their vacation here. M. B. Kennedy spent several days of this week ip Union with his daugh ter, Mrs. Eugene Gilbert. Mrs. Vernon Huggins has returned to her home in Rocky Mount, N. C., ii LONG TERM MONEY to LEND 6 per cent, interest on large amounts! Private funds for small loans. BROWN & BUSH LAWYERS BARNWELL. SOUTH CAROLINA. ^ <‘-x»*x-X"X~x*< m X-<~x~X“X--x--x-- ‘^^X"fr->^^<-->«<M{-<*<-<-*>^^*X*<!MX-*X"X~X»*X~X~X"X-<-<*X~X~X-*X‘ . NOV/— N That the Easter rush is over—ig the best time to get a permanent wave. You will enjoy it through the Spring and Summer months. Phone or write for an appointment. Leonard Beauty Shoppe hRS. A. DBAS, Prop. Phona No. 2237 Augusta, Ga. after visiting her parents here. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hutto spent the week-end m Guyton with Mrs. Thomas Shearouse. Mrs. Jennie Kennedy has returned home after an extended visit to her daughter in Augusta. Georgia. Russell and Ed Browning, of Colum bia spent Sunday here with Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Browning. Mrs. A. R. Lancaster and daughter, Alma, have returned home aP«r via iting Mr. ami Mrs. J. F. Craig, of Eastover. Judao Browning, of Durham. N. C M is spending his vacation here with his parents. Mrs. Annie Lancaster and ftimily viuted Mrs. P. A. Bolen, of'Orange burg. Sunday afternoon. Eva Mack has returned to her home ait Swanson after visiting her sister, Mrs. Lola Hoffman. Flemm CoIKna, of Rocky Mount, N. C., was at home a few days last week. Oscar W. Lancaster has returned home after apending several weeks at Pensacola, Fla. Kittffh -Fwnst; rrf Baitlbtfgris spend ing some time here with relatives. David Zorn, an employee of the S. A. L: Railway spent last Wfek here with his parents. Blackville Man Is Supt. of Education % Ridgeland, August 6.—A. B. Hair Jr., recently elected superintendent of the Ridgeland Schools, has been chosen by the Jasper County Board of Education to succeed Mrs. Mary G. Ellis as county superintendent of education!. Mr: Hair spumed duties on Monday. Mr. Hair was graduated from Clem son College with the class of 1922 He holds a bachelor of science de gnee in engineering. For two years after his graduation from Clemcon Mr. ^air taught in the schools of Blackville, his home town. Upon leav ing Blackville, he went to Bamberg as principal of the Bamberg schools, where* he has been for the last four years. aosswc THE OCEAN. ' DEATH AND ATIV TO EUKOPE. NEWS FROM BOTH SHIES. PERHAPS WE COME RACE? > Written on the Aquitania on the way to Paris, -by way of Cherbourg, leav ing New York jnst after midnight yesterday morning. No matter how often-you cross on big ships like this, or little ones, you arc reminded that the long trip called death and an ocean voyage are not unlike. . You take your “last dinner” in New York, friends are more or less sorry to see you go. That’s the death. On board ship you sail through space for some ‘thousands of miles, with only water all around you. That’s the trip from here to the next world. In due time you land in that next world, to ffad it different from this, and very interesting. 1 -—— If you g<f to Paris—this writer is going there—you reach what many Americans consider a fairly good imitation of heaven. The safety in crossing our little ocean, the certainty of landing on the ether side, should make us worry less about the big crossing over the ocean of ether. Once we knew as little about an Atlantic crossing as we know now about the "final trip” that each must take when his tura^ comes. When Columbus started, they told him'he would fall over the edge of the ocean. When the Phoenicians, ancestors of many energetic Jewish cititens, first sailed from the Mediterranean, through the-5tr*t*» of Gibraltar, past the gigantic rock and into the Atlantic Ocean, friends thought that was the end of them.* Mistress—Can ytfu serve comp New Maid—Yes; either way. “Either way?” “Yes, ma’am; go’s they’ll come a- gain, and no’s they won^t.«, Advertise in The >le-Sentinel. ■ Now crossing the ocean, h like go ing from New York to Chicago. You hear from your friends on both sides of the ocean. Business messages come from the United States side, other messages from the European side; when 1,000 miles from short. Science has conquered this little ocean, intelligence has made it famil iar, cleared out sea serpents, taught us we need not put wax in our ears to shut out the singing of sirens, convinced us, to our sorrow, that no mermaids are waiting to pick us up when we fall overboard. All fear and superstition are gone from these floating cities. A preacher on board does not worry the sailors—there are no sailors. Our oceans and our land have been cleared of all superstitions, unreal horrors, chimeras, hydras and gorgone dire. It has taken mm all of the million years they have lived on earth to change from cacemen cannibals to modem exploiters of their fellow men and to get rid of earthly supersti tions. Many haven’t even done that yet. Eventually we shall get rid of all the superstitions and look forward to death and the voyage that comes after it as calmly as wc now j»repare for a trip across the little Atlantic. As people go to Paris and come lack none the worse for the trip, and take up their activities again, many briirve those that take the voyag death come back from fta earth and take up their work adhere they dropped it. To them it seems reasonable to credit Eternal Justice with wise economy, and it would seem useless waste of time to send billions of imperfect creatures'to work in another ccmcr of the universp when the work , here isn’t finished'. Some Other Time She—I’m sorry to disappoint you, but I became engaged to Dick .last night. He—Well, how about next week, then? Mi*s Marion Spigner, of St Mat- ttows, ia the attractive guest of Miss Martha Moon this week. We are only twelve thousind years fronv the late Stone Age, not two hundred years from the stage coach and sa!!ut*nt . A simple i<!ea like putting the eye of a needle ihsthe point instead of the thick end trade the sewing ma chine possible and v frced millions of women from slavery. We should believe that other ideas will free 9s from the slavery of superstition, which has driven us hard thrbngh the centuries and caused more brutality, fear, cruelty and murder than ’ othe^ causes together. Tennyson hoped there would be no moaning at the bar when he put out to sea, and Wrote prettily about "Twilight and evening star.” Typical mid-Victorian, that last trip worried him. . . . Each’s citizens of the year 10,- 000,000 may think as little about that ‘last” journey, feel as sure about it a$ a. modem thinks and feels about his trip to Paris now. As Per‘Usual She—Spent my vacation up in the mountains. He—Really. t)id you have a guide ? She—WeR—only my conscience. . Ed Purdy’* Advice . Don’t go around with a man’s wife umlea: you can go ten round* with him. l!l,n *ri!iitu»oniinitti« ,|, fv v V\\ \ ^ ~ illu'ilLjS USC v ClanSSmS bread , - has mote feed i jIkc, INSURANCE , IRE ! WINDSTORM f PUBLIC LIABILITY ACCIDENT - HEALt, SURETY BONDS AUTOMOBILE THEFT Calhoun and Co. P. A. PRICE, Manager. MONEY TO LOAN Loan* made same day application received, i ' No Red Tape HARLEY & BLATT. Attomeys-at-Law BamwelL S. C. * KODAKERS! A Send your film* to us for develop- Jng and printing. One day service. Write for price*. Lollar’t Studio 1423 Main Street COLUMBIA SOUTH CAROLINA We sell Eastman Films V HEADQUARTERS • •. FOR ^ Metal Roofing We buy in large quantities and sell cheap. SEE US! SAVE MONEY!! Williston Hardware Co. Wiliiston - South Carolina Summer Trips ' * BARNWELL to Atlantic City Niagara Falls and return $26.40. Tickets on sale: July 27 August 2, 10, 16, 24, 30 September 7 and return $36.25 Ticketa on sale: July 28 August 3, 11, 17, 25, 31 September 8, 14, 22, 28 October 6. Low fare* to other New Jersey Points. Fares from other points in proportion. Return limit 18 days, including date of sale. ! Stopovers on return trip ah Baltimore, Philadelphia, W ashmgton and many other points. Tickets, information and schedules from f. MAHAFPFY TllaiMi > ■» nainiaff T Phone~ No. 5 Y “BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST! Unlc&^you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are not getting'the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions xpd prescribed by physicians 24 years for Colds Headache Pain Neuralgia i V. ^ ^ /_ iche Lumbago Nei Ri • f M If *< tism Accg only “B^er" lactw vfck* contain, pram dhedloM. Handy ^^ho^oM^i^Alae Mtlss ef M