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PAGE SIX THE NEWBERRY SUN THURSDAYMAY 30, 195T Serve Dramatic Cherry Angel Loaf A dessert that calls for your best silver and company manners is Cherry Angel Loaf. It is a combination of a few simple foods, which, assembled in this artistic creation, give a dessert that is beautiful to look at and almost too good to eat. This is just one of the many truly creative dishes you can conjure op with the help of canned sweet cherries, for they lend them selves to dramatic dishes of all types. Sweet cherries, though universally popular, are a Western fruit. Modem varieties are the result of the ingenuity of western pioneers, who experimented with cherry seedlings until the big, juicy Bings, Lamberts and Royal Annes emerged. These cherries are grown and canned almost, exclusively on the Pacific Coast where the rich volcanic soil and moderate climate make for bountiful crops of the highest quality. Besides desserts, canned sweet cherries are used in salads, cauces, fruit cocktails and pastries. A dish of cherries makes a welcome fruit sauce. The syrup need never be wasted for it lends color and flavor to molded gelatin salads or to fruit punch. Cherry Angel Loaf 1 No. 303 can dark sweet 1 cup.(H pint) whipping cherries cream 1% tablespoons cornstarch 1 3-oz. package cream cheese 3 tablespoons sugar 2 tablespoons sugar % teaspoon vanilla 1 cup coconut, tinted pink 113-oz. oblong baker’s angel food cake Drain and pit cherries. Reserve syrup (about % cup) and com bine it with cornstarch and sugar. Heat to boiling and cook until thick and clear. Add pitted cherries and vanilla and cool. Scoop •hallow center from angel food loaf, leaving about % inch border •round edges. Frost sides and border of cake with softened cream cheese to which whipping cream and sugar have been added and beat until frosting holds its shape. Sprinkle frosted sides of cake with tinted coconut and fill center of cake with cherry filling. Chill. Serves 8 to 10. OLD FASHIONED HOME By Fran Pachter CJ HIRLEY’S return from Briar ^ College for summer vacation made the change in her very apparent and real to her parents. They had an inkling from her let ters that college had altered her views, but had expected some change as is was her first time •way from home. Little did they expect to meet up with crit ical comment as to their mode of living the minute she entered. It aeemed that a fellow named Jim Sutherland was due to visit her •nd he, being very wealthy, would look down on her to find her par ents living as they did. Her moth er bore her comments in silence but her dad refused to take it lightly. “That danged school and that fellow has made a snob of our £irl and I don’t like it.” Martha attempted to calm him by saying, “Now Ed, don’t fret. I understand Shirley. All girls go through a period like this.” *T understood too but there’s • limit. Why just last evening suggested I dress for dinner that I put my shoes on when Elders came to visit. Why »'ve known them for years and Elder don’t care if I keep my shoes on or not.” Shirley entered in time to hear her dad’s comments. “Oh dad, don’t make such a fuss. It wasn’t just because the Elders were com ing. Its just that I want to get you cut of some of your habits before Jim comes. They live in a pent house and they’re just not used to living as you do. As time grew near for Jim’s visit Ed began to notice definite changes taking place in his home. Gone were many familiar objects ghat were Martha’s dearest pos sessions. First to disappear was fhn stitched motto “God Bless Our Borne” that had hung over the mantle for as long as he could re- —mber, then the antimacassars . ^ off the furniture. He seethed inwardly but kept qifiel until he saw Martha’s beautiful patchwork quilt replaced by a luxurious nylon spread with match ing draperies. He blew up, threat ening to take Shirley out to the woodshed and beat some sense into her. His comments as to their guest were unprintable. A letter came announcing that Jim’s moth er would be coming too and this made Martha and Shirley work all the harder to ready the place. On the day of their scheduled arrival Ed was very quiet and his wife knew that he was cogitating and that brooked trouble. Jim’s mother proved to be a charming person as did her son, but her com ment, “This place is so charming and quaint,” did nothing to en dear her to Ed. At dinner all ate with evident enjoyment and with the meal over Jim’s mother turned to Ed saying, “I’ve a hunch our coming has disrupted your home life. There’s a discordant note here and I think I know what it is.” All stared at her in surprise as she continued. “I grew up in a home just like this. Loved every minute of it too, but there are things missing that belong here.” She turned to Martha, “For example, there should be a motto over that fireplaces and antimacassers on those chairs. Til confess that while upstairs I peeked into your room and saw that beautiful quilt on your bed. With our room done so moderaly I suspect that Shirleyt had a hand in this. Am I right?” Shirley had the grace to blush and Ed spoke up bluntly. “You giiessed right Shirley felt we weren’t toney enough for you folks.” Jim spoke then, looking direct ly at Shirley, “ShirL you’re a dope. Mom’s mother has a place just like this in Connecticut and we love to spend time out there. Come on let’s make this place look like it should.” Apron Pattern No. 1557—A BIG covor- all apron that Is a handy k itch on aidm. Bright scraps from your workbaskoi can bo usod to trim tho bottom and for tho tulip pockot. No. 1557 with PHOTO GUIDE Is in sizos 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48. Sizo 36 bust, 3 yards of 35-Inch/ scraps or V/s yards contrast. Noodlowork Pattern No. 104—Toys that are just big enough for small hands to hold and cuddle are fun to make. No. 104 has hot-iron transfer/ full directions. Send 35c for each apron pattern, 25c for each needlework pattern to AUDREY LANE BUREAU, Dept. “NWNS," 367 West Adams Street, Chicago 6, Illinois. rt ■puTLer^FAce ir' U/OVldh - to ted with the chickens if 5he?d Just hook a 9 V V! ' O o o o WHITAKER FUNERAL HOME AMBULANCE PHONE 270 MOW! E.foy the FLORIDA vecetiea you've treated bet ceeldn't afford! IT FLORIDA’S GLAMOUROUS ^ «— v *.v'. FREE EXCITING EXTRAS Beech Cabanas at Sarasota Beach Horn's Cars of Yes terday Circes Hall of Fame Hotel Swimming Pool Yachting cruise thru Florida Kays Water tour to Sun shine Springs with 4 water shows daily 1 wonderful DAYS-6 romantic NIGHTS $24.00 Summor-FeH Rates per person, double occupancy. April 16th Hwe December 15th Swimming in the turquoise waters of the sparkling Gulf of Mexico . . Golfing on the world-famed Bobby Jonas course . . . Relaxing amid palm and sweetly scented masses of flowers . . . Dancing and row your Millionaire's vocation at the eeiebrity-flMed new Sarasota Terrace Hotel! Yet el this fab elans luxury will cost you as LITTLE as $24.00!. So don't wait another minute for reservations! SEE YOUR LOCAL TRAVEL AGENT FIRST. NEW SARASOTA TERRACE HOTEL r. O. BOX 17*0 — SARASOTA. FLORIDA _ TEL SINGLING —6-4111 TELL US V0UR PROBLEIR AW tST MS FAK IT M TSMir OTNHS M MM.VMC THCMtS. BY JOHN and JANE STRICKLAND W ALTER HARRISON. R.F.D., Rochester, New York, was beginning to feel that his marriage may have bedn a mistake. His wife was no longer the happy, co operative girl he had married twelve years before, and who had borne him two .fine young sons. Instead, they didn’t seem to agree on much of anything. He would explain his point of view only to find that she had one of her own. Even in small matters she wouldn’t give in! It came to a head one day when one of the boys wanted to wear a gay and large patterned shirt, tail out, to Sunday School, while his mother wanted him to wear a shirt all of one color, and tucked into his pants. That was a small matter. Why should she be so fussy about a few flowers on a shirt? Let the boy be happy. He spoke sharply to his wife about this, told her that she was acting foolishly, “plumb silly,” adding that he “had no idea when he married her that she was so stubborn. If he had—” The matter was settled by his wife crying—and. the boy hlmyyif gave in. Walter didn’t like that A woman taking advantage through a few tears. He left the house angrily. As he went down the street he ran across two little colored boys hav ing a verbal fight The last words of one of them was:: “What you say I is, you is.” That made him laugh, and his anger was dissi pated. And it also made him think that his wife was probably echoing the same sentiment He kept on thinking. He knew he had always been an arguer. His mother once said if he didn’t have anyone to argue with, he would say something to himself and then dispute it. He didn’t go home until for din ner. There was the usual well- cooked, well-balanced meal on the table. Walter was particular about balanced meals. As he ate in si lence, he decided he would stop arguing. Certainly about such small matters as flowers on a boy’s shirt The next day that resolve was strengthened by being carried out And the next day, and the next In the matter of a week or so, he and his wife didn’t argue. In stead he looked bade and saw that most of the things they had argued about were insignificant Since that day he has several times told his wife that “it was a darned lucky day, the day I xnar- mied you.” "I REMEMBER BY THZ 019 TIMERS From Margaret Sullivan Woods, Julip, Whitley County, Ky.: I am now 90 years young ard remem ber my childhood years when there were ten of us children, equally divided, five boys and five girls working around a big wood fire. During school days when our evening chores were done and supper over, we each had a job to do till bed time. The girls picked cotton, carded it in rolls, or spun it into thread. Our allot ment was enough to weave a yard of material The boys made shoe pegs from blocks of maple wood, as my father was a shoe maker for us children es well - the community at large. One night he got up from his work, rubbing his eyes and nose with his handkerchief and started shaking hands with the family. My mother asked what was wrong and he said he was “starting around the world” and did not know when he could return. He was at the time^ starting to peg soles on a pair “of shoes for our County Judge — the shoes were about size 12. Quite often, my job was to hold a pine torch for a light for father to work by. My mother wove cloth for all our clothes, as well as suits for the boys. We only had one (as we called it) “Sunday Dress.” In later years, the railroad came through this country and we got one calico dress a year. Until then I had never seen a glass jar—all our food was dried then. (Send eontribntiens to this column to The Old Times, Commenlty Press Serv ice, Box 89, Frankfort, Kentucky.) REV. R. H. HARPER PATIENCE S EVERAL times in recent weeks the writer, driving to town, has been annoyed by a mo torist behind him who sounded his horn as he glimpsed the yellow light just before the green light came on. And the writer drove on with the green, trying to subdue his feeling of resentment toward the driver behind who se#med to imply that the man ahead of him was half blind or was looking else where. Perhaps the writer did attain, in this instance, to the “exercise of forbearance, under provocation.” And there was fur ther strain upon patience by the fact that nothing could be done about it. This is but one instance of the many ways that patience may be strained in the everyday. By far the greater patience is exercised day* after day v even year after year, in the attainment of eome great objective. Many difficulties must be overcome, many tasks must be mastered. We may see the patience of some great man in the task he has set himself. Think of a boy who lay one day in a meadow and looked across to an estate that had been lost to his fathers, resolving that he would one day restore his ancestral home. And he died Hastings of Dalesford. In the present time of stress and strain, let us exercise great pa tience in all the things with which we do have to do. Indeed, as the good Book teaches us, “let pa tience have her perfect work.” SUBSCRIBE TO THE SUN THE BAFFLES By Mahoney i LOSE WEKHT THE ' CUREET WAY CURBET IS AN APPETITE SUPPRESS- ING FORMULA PRESCRIBED MOST BY PHYSICIANS BUT NOW AVAILABLE WITHOUT PRESCRIPTION When taken os directed, CURBET causes less desire for food, letting you loose ugly excess fot without discomfort or incon venience of hunger pains. CURBET is sold in bottles of 90 only at drug stores. Buy oil your drugs ot your druggists with confidence, and take only os directed. MIDGET VIOL ... . Martin Zahl, West Berlin watchmaker, learned to make miniature musi cal Instruments while World War II prisoner of war In U.S. camp in France. 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J'urce lid ‘'Your Private Banker*” 1418 Main St. Newberry , Extra-tough finiih resists hard knocks, smudging, grease, stains ... perfect for bathrooms, kitchens, walls, woodwork—furmture, indoors or out... easy to use ... covers most surfaces in one quick ooat.. • dries fast washes like a dish . . . dozens of beauty-planned colors ;. . spar kling Gloss and satiny Semi-Gloss. CNTITLE® YOU TO OM * quart or ou roNT ooco bnamci. Tafct Vita CGftWicGU to yoor Ou Pont Point r, en4 gat a quart of OUCO at % off tha rkfular prica. Only ona to a cuttomar. mlm Frank Lominack s Hardware 1403 MAIN STREET We o* '■’'A ’■ ■ ’g! PHONE 159 a a a a