The Barnwell people-sentinel. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1925-current, June 23, 1932, Image 3
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THURSDAY. JUNE 23RD, 1932.
THE BARNWELL PEOPLE-SENTINEL, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA
FAX}* n
STOWAWAY ENJOYS
SIGHTS OF LONDON
Very Simple the Way La
Raviere Tells It.
London.—Strict as immigration offi
cials and steamship officers are, it is
still possible to cross the Atlantic
as a stowaway, eat two square meals
daily for seven days while mingling
with the passengers and' crew, and
then enter -Great Britain without so
much as a question- from the authori
ties.
Raymond La Raviere, twenty-eight,
who says he lived at lH.TJ Marquette
road, Chicago, did It. Travelers who
have experienced the thordughness of
the European investigations of foreign
ers at ports and frontiers, plus the
usual ticket and passport inspections
of stewards and others aboard ship,
. merely go through formalities in no
way essential. La Raviere proved it.
He boarded* the Olympic - in New
York 15 hours before The vessel soiled,
made himself comfortable,‘traveled to
Southampton, landed, tramped to Lon
don, and was going for a walk with
two newly-found girl friends in Drury
Lane some time later before the police
called him to account. Then he was
fined $10 or given one month in Worm
wood Scrubs prison for the offense of
entering England illegally.
Set th« Sights.
Afterwards he restored himself to
the trust of the officials and spent a
month doing the tower, houses of pag-
(lament, Westminster abbey, Kevv gar
dens. and other points of interest
La Raviere was even given u police
registration card such ns all Ameri
cans and other foreigners who stay in
England any length of time must
hnve. # •
It all sounds easy as he explains
it.
He walked up th> Olympic gang
plank, ston'd his. luggage in the crew's
quarters, and went for u Walk. He
came hack at eight, got his bag. and
picked out an unoccupied third-class
' stateroom. Mattresses and other uYi-
used bedding were stored, !• the room,
and out of these he huilt a screen to
shield himself fnun the door. Then
he made his ^<-1 Itehiml and turned in
for the night. When l.e woke up next
morning he urus at sea.
- lat Raviere stayed iu Ms statenstai
until evening, when lie grew hungry.
So he .changed his clot lies and went
on deck. Then he learned tiiat the
night crew was atiout to l*e fed. so
he dashed hack and got into his sea
man’s clothing In time to follow* the
. crew In to siipi*er> lie liel|>ed him*
«4f and nobody asked tiny questions.
He made this quick change tw i«e a
day for seven days. He ate lunch
with the day crew and at night he
fed with a different watch. Noltody
suspected. The rest of the time he
lolled In deck chairs and mingled with
' the passengers.
Id! Kuviere meant to debark at (’her-
fcourg, hut found this Impossible be
cause of -the landing ‘‘ard necessary
to hoitril the tender. So he went on
to Southampton and was unlucky
enough to arrive there In mjd-after-
noon. He saw two ga.iaplnnks taken
aboard, one fog the. passengers an 1
the other for the crew, who Immedi
ately began unloading laundry. Then
he did his quick change for the last
time. He left his bag behind to avoid
customs officers and walked off the
ship with the crew.
On to London.
He was unable to get out of the
dock jnrds at Southampton because
the only exit Is through a gate in a
high steel wire fence and this is guard
ed by immigration officers.
But he waited until dark and then
Jumped the fence, the last hurdle of
his crossing taken. Then he walked
to London, a fraction less titan 80
miles away.
He confessed to a policeman guard
ing the door of an American organiza
tion In London that he entered as a
stowaway without a passport. This
policeman. I^a Raviere claims, refused
to arrest him then, but when he saw
him on the following day strolling with
two pretty English girls he put him
under arrest and took him to the im
migration office in Bow street He
was cbnvicted of entering the country
illegally and on the same day they
took' him to Wormwood Scrubs, a
prison on the outskirts of London.
There he says his treatment was
of the best
After his sentence was finished La
Raviere was sent automatically to
Brlxton prison to aw-ait deportation.
He 'appealed to the home office for
release and to twMsh off his experi
ences he was allowed his freedom in
the name of Sir Herbert Samuel, home
secretary. Throughout his difficulties
American consular officials were anx
ious to help him, but. they could do
nothing without proof of his Ameri
can citizenship. This he could not
supply without a passport, and it was
necessary to write to Chicago for his
birth certificate.
New Yorker Owns Goose
That Lays 11-Inch Egg
Reii Yan, N. Y.—I’egg® J.. owned by-
Mrs. J. F. Goundry, is no ordinary
goose. „
Peggy lays eggs so large that one
of them, mixed with two quarts of
milk. wjiM make enough custard for
“the %mily.
Every spring Pegg$ gobs on. an ec
centric production scheclnie. On al-
ternatt clays she lays * huge dpilbfe-
.yolked egg weighing ten ounces. It
measures 11 indies around.
Wheu hot went her sets in, She set
tles down to juie normal egg a dhy.
'
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Nwwmia———wgw**»»»**(
LIGHTS ► nUMMIU
0/ NEW YORK
At his home in the East Fifties,
John D. Rockefeller, Jr„ has a truly
magnificent pipe organ. He is a pretty
fair amateur organist himself, but fre
quently he calls in a blind man to "piny
for his family and friends. This
blind man is a fine performer aud
knows any amount of classical music
by heart.
• • •
Probably one of the finest private
libraries in • the United States is
owned by Walter I’forzheimer, the in
vestment broker. They tell me he
keeps most of. his books at “Hidden
Brook farm," his place iu 'Westchester.
The name of that farm should itself
make a good title for a story.
Nobody’s Business I Tomato
By Gee McGee.
A DVAXCE fashion Information
Z\ indicates that bathing suits
•* A. win i)« Bcantier than ever this
year—mere wisps compared with
the billowy garments worn on the
beachee only a few years ago. Pic
tured above are two of the very
lateet styles in bathing suits which
suggest that coats of tan will be
more extensive this summer. And.
In these modern days, of coarse,
while enjoying the sunshine between
swims, both men and women bath
ers will be reacting for cigarettes
and inhsling the toasted smokes
that are vp kind to their throats as
Ikeee 1932 bathing su^ta kre to the
eye*. The modern garments how
ever are not only ornamental.
Fashion experts say that the 1932
bathing suits are designed with an
For example. Miss Dorothy Shaver,
vice president of Lord and Taylor,
one of New York's greatest depart
ment stores, and an acknowledged
authority on styles, says. “The mod
ern woman wants to swim when she
goes to the beach and she can't do
much swimming if she is burdened
with ysrds and yards of doth. The
1932 suits, therefore, are swimming
suits. The new strap back design
illustrates this. Solid colors will be
popular this year, ae usual, although
the new suits offer many striking
color combinations.”
Just as soon as the weather geta
a little warmer, the new styles In
swimming suits will be making their
appearance on sun-kissed beaches
from the Atlantic to the Padflc
and it looks as if It would be an in
eye to utility as well as to beauty, j terestlng summer.
CULINARY TRIBUTES TO
GEORGE WASftUSfGTON
i a os
T HIS year al celebration in honor
of Washington brings to mind
the cherry tree story so familiar
to every American school child. So
that cherry recipes might almost seem
to be an essential part of any patriotic
celebration In 1932.
Fortunately we need not be patriotic
at the expense of enjoyment, for the
cherry is one of the most delicious
and refreshing fruits. And still more
fortunately, cherries lose little if any
of their deliciousness in canning.
The deep red of these cherry dishes
will lend a festive note to your table.
They are amply nourishing, tempting
to the appetite and yet their cost is in
harmony with the economy we are
all practicing nowadays.
Masquerade Pudding
% cup quick 1 egg yolk,'
cooking tapioca
% cup sugar
Vi teaspoon salt
3% cups milk,
scalded
slightly beaten
1 teaspoon
vanilla
1 egg white,
stiffly beaten
Add tapioca, sugar, and salt to milk,
and cook in double boiler 15 minutes,
or until tapioca is clear, stirring fre
quently. Pour small amount of tapioca
mixture otfer egg yolk, stirring vigor
ously.. Return to double boilef and
cook until thickened, stirring occa
sionally. Remove from fire and add fla
voring. Fold in egg white. Turn into
molds. Chill. Unmoid. Serve with
Cherry Rjed Sauce, or with sauce of
apricots or prunes. Serves TO.
Cherry Red Sauce for Masquerade
Puda'inq '7 • ’
IVfe cups canned 1 cup sugar '
red cherries 1 tablespoon flour
(Juipe and fruit) Dash of salt
Heat cherries to boiling. , Combine
sugar, flour, and salt. Add to cherries
and cook until slightly thickened, stir
ring Fell. Chill. Makes IVfc cups sauce.
Deep Dish Cherry Tapioca
V4
teaspoon nut
meg
Vfc teaspoon cinna-
‘ mon
2 tablespoons
melted butter
2% cups can bed
sour red cher
ries
V& cup quick
cooking tapioca
1 teaspoon salt
4 cups hot water
and cherry
Juice
1 tablespoon
lemon juice
1 cup brown sugar,
- firmly packed
Add tapioca and salt to water and
cherry juice and cook in double boiler
15 minutes, or until tapioca is clear,
stirring frequently. Add lemon Juice,
sugar mixed with spices, butter, and
cherries. Pour into greased baking
dish and bake in moderate oven (SSO*
F.) 45 minutes. Serve plain or with
cream. Serves 8.
- ' . * * *
In this cherry pie none of the re
freshing Juice is lost by boiling over
in the oven. The small quantity of
tapioca used is just sufficient to bind
in the juices and yet in no way is the
cherry flavor altered. .
This Way Out, Please.
my platform: Abolish
congress. , : fLet the presiden’s cabinet
handle the work that the upper and
lower houses ' have been doing
‘Counting graft, waste, rot and red
tape at actual cost, our country would
save $777,6Gfi,5$£,444,333,222.11— in
the future.
Plants!
In these troublous times, members
of the senate and bouse are getting
the largest mail in history. Letters
nad telegrams from constituents pour
In Washington in a never ending
stream. One day, by two o’clock In
the afternoon, 3,000 telegrams had
been delivered to the office of Royal
Copeland, senator from New York.
Secretaries classify these telegrams
and letters and it takes au efficient
service to deliver them, to say noth
ing of handling them later.
• • •
Before his death, Coleman Du Pont
owned a number o^ftw York hotels,
ns well as hotels in other parts of the
country. He qsed to stay at his suite
In the McAlpiii^ when he was* In Man
hattan, but he -also kept u suite at
the old Waldorf, and it was there that
he used to give some of his famous
.dinners. The Empire State skyscra
per is many stories taller than the
old Waldorf, hut It never will hu|e
the atmosphere of the building it re
placed.
Collecting watches Is a fad with
several rich men. but there is one ex
tremely wealthy gentleman who goes
further. He not* otdy collects watches;
lie repairs them. For some reason he
never is so happy us when ofieratlng
on a watch or a clock. It Is his re
laxation and he »|»eiidk hours at it.
One day he rode iu tiie roadster of a
friend. The dash dock didn't work.
The rich man managed to get It loose
from its moorings, took It home, and
a week or so later slipped it Hick to
the owner in |*erfeet running condi
tion.
• • •
Florenx Ziogfeld Is continually be
ing asked by coeducational universi
ties to act as a judge in beauty con
tests. Some of the girl undergradu
ates prohahly tielieve that Zlegfeld has
only to see them to offer them a lead
ing parr In one nf his sImmss.
The farm hoard should .oLso be
0bil$hed. The work (?) this board
has 'been doing should be placed in
the hands of 6 v «r 8 high-school boys—
to be looked after—after gchcol hours,
not only affecting a great saving,
but preventing" further great losses.
iT...Consolidate the pest office depart
ment -and the veterans bureau, and
put these affair* in the hands cf 10
petjBca- now in the ojd soldiers' home.
We consider such a movement imper-
ativ e at this time, and, if an immed
iate improvement in these depart
ments is desired, help could be had
from an orphanage—in the form cf a
few babies that have learned to-walk
—but not to taik.
Hastings' best varieties, such as
Brimmer, Norduke, Red Rock,
Redfield Beauty and Marglobe.
Dozen .... 10c
f.
Hundred ... 30c
Special prices on quantities.
NOW 18 THE TIME TO SET
TOMATO PLANTS FOR A
LATE SUMMER AND FALL.
CROP. ENGAGE ALL THE
PLANTS YOU WILL NEED
NOW BEFORE THE SUPPLY
HAS BEEN EXHAUSTED.
E.E.GOODSON
Barnwell, S. C.
6 66
The department of agricultu^
might be synchronized with the im
migration- bureau, and the help of 2
or 3 old maid- from the* <>ffice a of the
department of justice, if justice is
still bring administered, could be
procured.
LIQUID . TABLETS . SALVE
$66 Liquid or Tablets used internally
and 666 Salve externally, make a
complete and effective treatment for
Colds.
MOST SPEEDY REMEDIES KNOWN
-_..The I. C. C. shruld be done away
with and the rtilroad* returned to the
stock-holderii who paid for them, the
tna.-ury department could b v merged
with J. P. Morgan and Co., to a great
M dvantag., abj let Morgan ban'le the
entire mtput of bvth concerns. J hn
J. Ruskob ami Al. Smith would glal.y
take over the prohibition enforcement
affair* an I then they c.uld ell out
the
rel.
Ihj
•ggtrj
*k (
:k and
I still think the prettiest “Ml** Amer
ica" I ever saw was the little Camp
bell girl, from Columbus. Ohio. She
married an Ohio State football player
and retired from the profes»ional
beauty business.
The prettiest Italian woman I ever
saw was in Naples; the prettiest
French woman was In Aix le* Bain*;
the prettle*t English woman wa* In
London; the prettiest Scotch woman
wa* in Chicago; the prettiest daugh
ter of Sweilen was In New York. The
loveliest Russian woman I ever saw
was in Paris. But walk up and down
Fifth avenue and yon will see a* beau
tiful women a*- there are anywhere In
the world. '
(©. mi. B«4I Syndicate.)—WNU Service.
mimerct
i >iidated
The' department cf- ci
could advantageously he c->m
with the meat packers and the chain
store*—as they already own all cf
the busine-s. The department of
lab r could b« denat.-d to the unem-
ph yed and then the bureau of statis
tics could f rre thwmto meige with
the non-hording bureau. The fish-
hatchery rigamzation might be for-
g<Utn; those boys can make a living
fi»hing—as there are lea* than 2,00,000
men engaged in that undertaking.
Airplane Fares Are
Now Lowest in History
New York.—Airplane fares are now
the lowest In their history. They are
approximately one-half of what they
were three years ago. - In lOtfl) It cost
$300 to ride in a mall plane between
San Francisco and New York. Today
the fare in 11 passenger tri-motored
planes with free meals aloft on a 28-
hour coast to coast schedule is $1G0.
With the reduction In fares, speed of
flight has been increased and added
comforts offered.
Cat Mothers Fox Brood
Grants Pass, Ore.—When a mother
silver fox owned by Ellis Phillips was
unable to care for her offspring, an
old mother house cat took up the bur
den. Kittens and fox pups now crowd
in friendly fashion at meal times.
Red Cherry Pie
1 can seeded red IVfe tablespoons
cherries, drained quick cooking
(Uis cups) tapioca
cup sugar 1 recipe Pie
cup cherry juice Crust
Combine cherries, sugar, cherry
juice, and tapioca and let stand about
15 minutes, or while pastry is being
made. Line * 9-inch pie plate with
pastry rolled to V^-inch thickness.
.Moisten edges of pastry with cold wa
ter. Fill pie shell with cherries. Adjust
top crust. Bake in hot oven (450 8 F.')
20 minutes, then decrease heat to mod-
erato* (350° F.) and bake 20 minutes
longer, or until filling is cooked.
: SEND US YOITR ORDERS FOR JOB PRINTING, i
•>x-*x~x*<~x-x-:~x~x~x~x~:'<-x~®
t-
Ncwborn Babe Given
Intelligence Test
Iowa City, Iowa.—Dr. Orvis C.
Irwin of the University of Iowa
believes that v it is never too
young for an infant to start to
learn.
Acting upon this theory, the
psychologist has begun a scrips
of experiments with babies who
are less than 15 minutes old. and
expects to begin educating cliil-'
dren when they are still ip the
crib. '
A stabiiimeter,' attached to the
child’s crib in a cabinet in the
University hospital.' obtains r? a
perfect record of the child’s ev
ery movement. The breath ffig
also is recorded. These records
ora supplemented by pictures
taken with .high-speed cameras.
Doctor Irwin believes that the
scientific studies will enable cfail-
dren to be taught self-feeding,
walking and talking at a very
early age.
Yep, friends and taxpayers:
them’s the thing* that ought to be
done. The extra help employed as
secretsries snd ft-'sistsnts to congreis-
men and senators could be diverted
into the army and navy forces—snd
thus fetch them up to a war basin,
vix 25,666,777. All bell weevils, fruit
flier* and other in-ects should be
merged with Muscle Shoals. Those
change? and consolidations would pos
sibly put our country back on its
feet within 300 to' 500 year*.
TAKE A
WEEK-END TRIP
^ Round Trip Tickets
FARE and ONE FIFTH
Between All Stations
On Sale
FRIDAY,
SATURDAY and
SUNDAY,
Return
Limit
Follow irg
Tuesday
Midnight.
Take a Tram Bide
and Visit Year Friends.
"SAFER THAN STAYING
AT HOME." *.
0
Ask the Ticket Agent
SOUTHER RAILWAY
SYSTEM
.
l • ti
Fertilizers-
Harvard Moving Historic
Bell to Memorial Chapel
Cambridge, Mass.—What might be
called the official clock of the nation’s
oldest university has been transferred
from its traditional position In Har
vard hall to the l>elfry of the new
million-dollar World- War Memorial
chapel in the Harvard yard. Hie bell,
which for decades has tolled tl>» hours,
weighs 4.600 pounds and has a 100-
pound clapper.
MIXED FERTILIZER
MATERIAL—ACID, MANURB
SALT. SULPHATE, ETC OUR
PRICES ARE RIGHT.
Farmers Union Merc. Co.
Barrs* el I, S. C.
What a Man
Your Boy
Will Be
If he regularly ha? milk from
our SANITARY Dairy Farm.
Our JERSEY COWS are free
from disease, our employees are
healthy ^men, and experienced.
All bottles and uten-ils
thcroughy sterilized.
are
Drink Milk from CONTENT
ED COWS, grazed on BARN
WELL COUNTY PASTURES,
a HOME Product. - •
NOTE:—To re~klents f Barn
well - :—Leave ymT orders for
our products at Deason's. Drug
Store, see our truck or drep us
a card. ■. / '—^—-f
Appledale Dairy
.LAURIE FOWKE, Mgr.
LYNDHURST, SO. CAR.
FOR THAT
SUNDAY TRIP
ONE CENT
PER MILE
In Each Direction
For Distances 150 Miles or Lesa
Good for transportation in
Coaches only, and to return
prior to midnight of date of sale.
Round Trip Fare* From -
BARNWELL To—
Columbia, S. C. $1.25
#
Savannah, Ga, $1.80
Blackvllle S. C. 25
Take a Train Ride and
Visit Your Friends.
•SafFr Than Staying
H: ' i
Ask the Ticket Agtet
SOUTHER RAILWAY
SYSTEM
N
I—
• —f