Newspapers / Polk County News and … / Aug. 5, 1921, edition 1 / Page 7
Part of Polk County News and The Tryon Bee (Tryon, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
THE POLK COUNTY NEWS ftfDDAtrriv tnm..... . . . I I i Xhe Galloping Dominoes Br WILLT. AMES ......ninrr Syndicate, i r ,by McC,u Hid Jimmy 1)68 the dice. When the gallop- a Jimmy called them, d01f down' the clubroom table, forteu rtMtrprs. and came to ji and an ace showing then was tne cup or full. And be was 4ia I ill u . i,.,nT)iness 5 T!.rr haM thtt very America cjub." record for 'Pu on in succession. That nVht indeed! Not only had Jren naturals cleaned out the t&le re-st of the club mem- o$ets . hnrl siceoinnllshed nil i"1. r ..ir so early ,utr niul over and Jimmy air on the sidewalk,1 with IB tDU ,.ariv in the ev'enincr that bat .very nm ch on one side of his Mhn Mamie nan came nome raphy lesson over at at a quarter after nine. head, win - "Cpiou ha J had a fancy for Mamie tie some time. nuiwe, ikuuniug.mui' c reputation oeuer uinu sue wiew , hmrpvpr. heen pp. jpiu;. fonfaHvp ndvnnrp . a 1 i . md no notion oi uecomiug in- hfld not. However, Arsive with a young man who had raed the neighborhood sobriquet of Jjick-finger jimmy" in recognition of ell-known attribute of the habitual 0P shooter. Pul . - JJ 1 f t the influence oi uis winning had plumped at Mamie, In the Hn an kivitation to-go to the Hip- podrome next evenings and 6it in a Wo-dollar seat! "Ge!" exclaimea .aiamie. one aia ime Quick thinking and then she said . 1 XI 1 4. Al J. .hp'd eo. wnai-sue uiuugui wus inai tost going to a show with a fellow m doesn't mean anything serious. and how often does she get a chance it a seat? Now, it is one thing for a girl like Hamie to take up with a lad like Jim my-just for once; and it is another thing to get rid of him. Mamie had been sir weeks, now, doing this and lading herself into the, belief that she was trying to do it; and she was no nearer to it than at the beginning. Meantime she had been to five more knewhe did Mamie Now, reader. m - Shane, who HvU ,ss from tht- .? e corridor ouTh. MU mlly' third floor back a? th Miss Shane is but little pleased all"e 8 of Halpin-Hall SSS fore. amIe hcreto- dSAr H. Siven name cwara, who carriM o n an lnd?2ll ?al1' Dame Caroline, an indifferent person. Georee one or a month Mumip'n.n hnnnu-t . . " was me evening t? the Ea We. Every eveninsr wna TimM. . " nt( tl. " evening now, ex cept the stenography evenings, and those were partly his, for he met her h r I tt and walked home with t.I' il!D Came an evening when Jimmy didn't annpnr t t Mamie walked home alone. It seemed (Very stmnco i .- - . v ivuesome. Mamie was in no mood for frivolous converse with mere girls when she found Gertie bhane- standing at the street door of the tenement house, and would have passed on with , perfunctory "Hello, Gert," if Gert had permitted it. But Gertie, effusively friendly, put her arm around Mamie's , waist and climbed the first flight of stairs by her sine. . -Ull. Wwttni Ktwiptner Dnloa.) LESSON FOR AUGUST 7 PAUL IN CYPRUS AfD IN ANTI OCH OF PISIDIA. LESSON TEXT Acta 18:W2. GOLDEN TEXT Ye shall be witness, unto me both In Jerusalem, and In all Juaea, and ln-Samaria, and unto the ut- part of the earth.-Acta 1:8. .,T?FERENCE MATERIAL. -Matt. 11: iT2811820- Ma,k 16:15: Luk 2:. I PRIMARY TOPIC Adventure of Paifl and Barnabas. JUNIOR TOPIC-Saul Silences a Sor eerer. , INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC Paul Begins His Missionary Travels. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC Paul Becomes a Missionary. The Kitchen! 1 Cabinet t nuniiiiHiuuiuiiiiiuniuinnuiuniiimrl CO. mo. Western Newapaoer Union.) wlu can "Paint like nature? ' . Can Imagination boast ; i . : Amid Its gay creation, hues like hers! Or w it fix them with that match less skilf , And lose them in each other, as p- Pears In every bud that blows. Thompson. SWEET8 AND SALADS. Simple Desserts are the, order of the day. during the heated term. Serve fresh fruit at least twice a week, and other days something easy of prepara tion. Fruit Bread Sponge. Arrange cubes of brea.d in a bowl and lpour over them enough hot fruit juice to be well absorbed, iiet stand in a cool place for several hours, then unmold and serve with sugar and cream. Grape Sago. Wash a cupful of sago and let it soak over nieht. Next This marks the beginning of foreign missions as the deliberately planned enterprise of the church. I. The Gifts of the Church at Antl och (v. 1). Young as Antioch. the new relieious At the head of the stairs she center, was. she had nronhets and suddenly oh, very suddenlv h- teachers. Such are essential to church tnougnt herself of something. life. Indeed, they are never absent morning cool until transparent, add- un Mame, she said, "come alonir rrom the true churchy In Kphesians ing a cunful of crane 1utee. When to the back window and see what's :-v faul says that when Christ as- cool turn into a glass dish and serve aomgi And willy-nilly Mamie had cenoed He gave gifts unto men for the with sweetened cream. Any good to go along. x purpose of perfecting the saints unto From just that one window, out of tne work of thev ministry. all the windows In the hi hnrmrts Barnabas and Saul Sent Forth or a tenement, one could look sauare- a) ly into the Young America clubroom While the five ministers were pray- fiavqred juice may be used instead of the grape, adding sugar if unsweet ened. Herring and Potato Salad. -Cook a salt herring in boillne water 15 min- which was at the rear of the cigar- ing and fasting, the Spirit of God com- utes. Drain, cool and flake. Add an store downstairs. That Is. one could. manQea them to send forth Barnabas equal quantity of cubes of coofced do- I . J a. i mm. m t . . I uu oaui. xne wore or evangeuzmg tato, one-fourth the quantity of hard the world was laid so heavily upon cooked esrrs phnnnpri ronrsPlv. Mar- these men that they refrained from eat- hnate with Frpnoh rne nnd iug in oraer to seex tne win or tne if the curtain were up; and tonight the curtain had been forgotten. There was . a long table, and half a dozen of the sporty boys of the club were gathered about it. : And In the very middle of the picture stood Jim my Halpin, with a broad grin on his broad face, rolling 'em and snapping his fingers, and gathering up the dimes and quarters as enthusiastically as If there were no such thing as a girl or a promise in the world; Mamie watched the spectacle' for the space of three long breaths the while Gertie Shane watched her with an evil Joy. "Pooh!" remarked Mamie. Tm go ing along up. Good night!" And in her own tiny coop of a room she cried herself to sleep. It was the very next night that Jimmy got his. He called with a proposition having to do with the movie theatre Lord in prayer. This is the kind of fasting that meets God's approval. From the fact that they were directed to send forth those whom the Spirit called, we learn that the real call to Christ's service comes from the Spirit. The Spirit calls and the church sec onds the motion by sending those who are called. They sent the very best men from the church at Antioch. III. Preaching the Word of God In Cyprus (vv. 4, 5). We are not told as to why they first went to Cyprus, but we Infer that it was because it was the home of Bar nabas, it is most natural that those who have heard good news should go with it first to their kindred and friends. As they went forth they around the corner. Mamie, a bit pale preached the Word of God; not civic and quite scornful, spoke plainly, righteousness, current history, philoso- Tm off you for good, Jimmy," she phy, etc. The great need today is said. "There ain't any use talking. SDirit-called and Spirit-filled men You been telling me you Just dropped preaching God's Word. n down there in the clubroom and iv. Withstood by Elymas the Sor - - ooked on now and then. But I seenJ cerer (vv. you myself seen you shooting and When Barnabas and Saul by invlta seen you taking in the coin. You tlon were telling Sergius Faulus of the nd me Is all through. Mamie's Word of God, Elymas maliciously grammar might have grown even sought to turn his mind from the faith. worse if she . had talked any longer. This is the first obstacle they encoun But she didn't. She shut the door in tered. This opposer Is the same one Jimmy's face. who came to Adam in Eden and to Ensued four wretched days four Jesus in the wilderness. He is the empty, dreary days for Mamie: four enemy of God and man. He now seeks gloomy, somber days for Jimmy; four to bar the gospel as it enters upon its davs In' which young George Hall career or tne conversion oi tne nea looked askance many times at the then. Saul denounced him in the most Dale stricken face of his sister. Then scathing terms, calling him the child of George lay for Mamie down at the me aevu, iun oi guue anu viuaiuy, anu frnf rinnr after sutler. pronounced him the enemy of all right- "TtM ho "von eot Jim- eousness, accusing umi oi perverting K7U, w , V O I ... . I Vio t-1 crYtt -q rc i-i-r tno T.arrl sw Trlfllmed Mamie, whose Happily, the deputy heeded Saul's nerves were at the breaking point, teaching and believed the gospel It "Ain't I got eyes?" was ,u lu";cu1"" "Vpfl-nnd VOU've COt ears.-tOO, and name was tuaugeu i.u ruui. ntr tn listen. Here's What v. in tne oynaflpguc i Mniiocn in .7 v - v O c Mamie Watched the Spectacle. ws and twice more had sat in a $2 Jt-when Jimmy had made a good tuning at the clubroom. therefore Mamie had no right to J surprised when Jimmy, bidding Z ood-py at the bottom of the h ins didn't let go of her hand, Stead. flftPr WQ ll o-nH n rr haiH onH - a Made of nervous tremble in his y good baritone voice, said: iuuo, wnatya say do we .Je U go, you and me for good?" wis seems r crass and flippant u or proposal, remember, please, J over on the East side there is a orJ f sacred that lt is tabo- T1 ?Ve " 11 is t0 be timated, , ed' Proved but never spoken.' have then aRd there MamIe would With fven much to be .able to say, a clear conscience, "Oh, I dun "K. Rtlt Momla mnlHn't diu was: m S(l you can noUce it, Jimmy ft., 1 awt rTe ' us most the time crap-shootlng. seats J much of lt Two-dollar r a show this week, and two t .1"? of cat meat to eat all ' Yo're a snort, and et .1, Up t0 a man that's- going to !le inP!lr. of dice decide whether I The n ur out In the Park " my's poin?1 of this answer, from Jim the rl l of view, was that he knev viow?1 ll- His soul struggh bank undred and a Quarter in wiiJ an(i fortv m I i a 3ob- Go t0 church with Uke a 0iv e you m solemn I'll never 0na th a nickel of our hi? i ivories or any other t him for a long ten serve with the following salad dress ing. Beat one-fourth, of a cupful of cream until stiff, add two tablespoon fuls of canned red pepper, put through a sieve, then an equal quantity of boiled dressing. Serve on lettuce. Raspberry Mint. To one quart of good lemonade add one cupful of rasp- berry juice and a dozen bruised mint stalks and leaves. Let the mixture chill for two hours then remove the mint, fill the glasses and garnish each glass with a fresh sprig of mint. Mississippi Chicken. Put through the' I meat chopper one-fourth of a pound each of veal and fresh pork, two slices of, bacon and a chicken liver, half a green pepper and two sprigs of parsley, a teaspoonful of scraped onion and a tablespoonful of Worcestershire sauce, half a teaspoon ful of salt, paprika to taste; mix well and stuff the chicken. Baste often and cook two hours; serve with sweet potatoes or rice. "Be consistent In ycur economy. Don't try to save on the necessaries of life. To do so Is false economy, but to practice your economies on those things you do not actually need the luxuries of life." SUMMER SALADS. FALL MODELS MAINTAIN THE - BEAUTY OF SUMMER MILLINERY. ( '-mW 1 m-' It AS IF to challenge comparison with the newly arriving hats for fall these late-summer models in sports and street hats maintain the beauty of summer millinery. They are pre sented because they represent styles that have considerable stability and may be made to do service another season. , Every one of the shapes shown above appears with little variations with the arrival of spring or fall, one year after another. They are con servative and may be worn with assur ance. The straw hat at the upper left is one interpretation of the rench sailor which we have always with us. Some years Its crown is a little' lower, or higher, Its brim wider or narrower. Here its crown is high and its brim wide. It is faced with brocaded silk and has a sash of narrow ribbon about the crown. The handsome sailor of black lisere braid with white hemp facing Is a per ennial favorite and it Is always band ed with ribbon, usually finished with tailored bow. By slight but subtle riations of the crown lines It is made to be becoming to both slender aai full faces; bell crowns for the sllns. and straight crowns for the round The silk covered hat with nai piping braid at the center of the is an all-the-year-round pattern. It la ornamented with embroidery done to raffia and faced with silk. It can teee either summer or winter skies wltbect chagrin and belongs In the useftel class of demi-season hats, so dear -to the tourist. Just below it at the left another fabric hat employs duvelyi and silk in its construction and scl dependable trimming as may be xm& of narrow tinsel-edged ribbon an! small celluloid rings. The satin ka at the right has a narrow braid l4d row after row about its crown and Is finished with a wreath of small magie leaves, grapes and garden flowers. Thus the season's millinery makes Its bow of exit to respond to an encore in warmer climes. FALL BLOUSES SHOW LITTLE IN WAY OF STYLE INNOVATION . j honrun T cpt to rouinc em auu luri c w Jlmmv looking on. I lose my coupie rf hocks and then I well, I begins to die into the twenty-two that the old gent give me to hand to Saunders, the insurance man, to pay ror ms m Now that the colorful tomato muy be added to the menu at a reasonable price, if they are not picked from the garden, our salad will take on an added note of color. Ah ordi nary potato salad garnished with a few pieces of to mato will add not Only to the taste but appeal to the eye'. Pineapple and Orange Salad. Lay two thin slices of orange from the center of an orange on the heart leaves of head lettuce, on these lay a slice of pineapple, in the center place an inch strip of celerj, fringed, and al lowed to stand in cold water to curl, After the usual Serve with a rich mayonnaise dress- Pisidia (vv. 15. 16) From Paphos Paul and Barnabas went northward to Perga. From Perga they went into Antioch In Pi sidia, where they entered the syna gogue on the Sabbath day. Though . t lmnw h was sent to the Gentiles he does thpn in the center of the celery Dlace surance. Ana tne urw M""4:- ' : . V .. . . , -1, Knt a wiP bone. He not depart rrom tne oraer or oegin- a small nan or nara-cooKea egg yoiK riniinr and he shoves me out ning with the Jews. a fco savs: 'Lemme shoot 'em for reading of the Scriptures, upon the ing. And he shOOtS a natural, anu tuviiuuuu ui me iuicio, raui ucur- 1 ueucious rruii oamu. law one f that he goes on up till he's got ered the discourse recoraea m verses cupful of candied cherries cut in quar- . , mnnS tWenty-tWO DaCH. auu I ini. "timuu its . . 1 if 1 3, a -unui jl neon uiaiouuiativna ' tn me and tells me he'll "ful study. It consists of four parts: cut hi bits, one-half cupful of shred- break my Jaw If he finds me rolling (1) Historical (w. 17-23); apologet-P-JX tto vpd mv neck, that's ical (vv. 24-37) ; (3) doctrinal, (w. whathe did-and you're a bum sport, 38. 39) ; (4) practical (w. 40, 41). It W," " on him for that!" sets forth the missionary message for GOSm - eicmiiucu - tJ . u An ma so?" snouia ever ue me same, tu ui trrtn cap. anvtmnKf ouw mwu c vv. vv, AW, v-au. j hT-lct as thp Svinr from sin. . ' ' COUia lie . nc. hncitKT hie nrnnf nnnn thp fPStlmonv Of .T,.-,, o vrApri jnamie. 001 """"o ' " -n J.UU13 ov, e- ... n.tft.AAtl anA ha Incnlrod hustle on In there ana ten mm uug B,UJ,:o Mm And nurry up woru. i want vi. The Effect of the Sermon (w. about it. 42-52). Many of the Jews and proselytes speak to, them hpA11(rht pvcry oeain. Almost the whole city came of lost cnuu I. " n cMiaw Chlld'a Trail. in L Australian bush directly the kequested i thein to what he to hear the Word of God the aext This great crowd incited nPWR i iinitv inves up man id . - J- whlch ig Sabbath. 18 " Sg,mVcdlately aa in the summer tho jealousy, of the Jews. This jeal Starnd Tn d?e bf exhaustion In a ousy could not long be restrained ; it a child can die 01 eu hroke out in 0pen opposition. This little wnne. . ".hlark trackers opposition was In turn answered by In the meantime tie black tracke PP , are sent for. J-uese ax . Hi . aborigines kept by the police ana useu lo . vrir hlnodhounds. It la Learn the True Wisdom; hnrrtan bleodhounds. u,v . fft these an extraordinary - - 0 m true wteflpmB trackers creeping rln2 See yon bush aflame with roses. like grunting like annua O""o;; gCe the burning bush of Moses. Listen. tracks 4hat a . white cannot see bu near. tf sonJ De serving. They will pracucau, - not deaff n0w from' out it, soft and ded almonds that have been blanched. Add a tablespoonful of highry sea soned boiled dressing to a cupful of whipped cream and stir into the fruit mixture. v Heap on nests of head let tuce or in orange or apple cups. Chicken Salad. Take two cupfuls of finely minced white meat of chick en, add the same amount of cel ery, one finely diced apple, a table spoonful of minced green pepper and a cupful or more of, good dressing mixed with a cupful of whipped cream. Serve on lettuce leaves. Cabbage Salad. Chop two cupfuls of cabbage very fine, add one-half cup ful of rolled fresh peanuts, ,roll on the bread board with the rolling pin until . like coarse crumbs. Add any highly seasoned dressing and garnish with strips of red pepper. ? Tomato and Cucumber Salad. Chop cucumber very fine and mix with a few spoonfuls of minced onion; fill firm ripe tomatoes made Into cups with the .mixture. Mix with a little dressing before filling, then add a spoonful to the top of each before child in the end ' a Snorting Streak. . "Hiram; said Mrs. Cdrntossel, "our boy Josh seems determined to llvf without workm. d -Humor him Valong. Jerusha, and let's take a chance. xnv either feller always turn- out terribly poor or wonderfully rich. clear, speaks to thee the Lord Al mighty. Hattz. i , : A Question of Right. But Peter and John answered and Laudable Ambition. Marorie--Do you know what I'm safd unto then! Whether it be right oing to do Rosle? rm going to be fi rsight of God, fto hearken unto cook here when I get a Uttie bigger. ln m:Jt t aoA indr- t and then I can boas mamma. Edh you more than unto , God, judge ye, Acts 4 and Knrvh Scot nm an f . - v .,1.,,,, :-mm. - 1 1 z ziri& mm ! 1 -r im?h Mm I V I Miiim W. . FALL blouses have made their quiet entry, with very little in the way of style innovjjlons to herald them, but with interesting new details in construction and trimming to invite at tention. Designers have not Introduced any startllngly new styles, but have con centrated their attention , on making the best of these we already have-f aiat; is. the conservative tuck-in, the popular, over-blouse with peplum more or less i long, and the tie-back styles. Georgette continues the most popular of materials with satin and crepe-de-chine, gaining ground and the knitted silk blouses makuig good headway. Necks' and sleeves are varied so that each woman may choose a becoming line. There are round, boat-shaped and "V" neck openings,' all of them moderately high ; elbow sleeves, many of them bell-shaped, are preferred to long sleeves, and among the fancier blouse sleeves are abbreviated. : For trimming there Is a revival of beads in both the bugle and seed va rieties, used repeati uy together. TiUis make the most effective v borders to the edges of sleeves, and peplunw ar stitchery, of heavy" embroidery jsCk' i ingeniously used with theraf -aocu. times as In the blouse of georgefr pictured above. .Bugle and seed bead make the center of bands 'Sf kltchey,'. crossing . .the blouse at the front add extending up and down the sides. A sunburst of bugle end seed bead z placed at! the center of the front, a the shoulder at. each side and at fie waist line. . Thigv kind - of decorciSa& work on fancy blouses is not dlfSecS to do. and. what .with hemstitehJa-s; bead work and (simple stralgfal-Csi styles, it does not require much age for the home dressmaker to dertake the making of blouses for self. 1
Polk County News and The Tryon Bee (Tryon, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 5, 1921, edition 1
7
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75