The intelligencer. (Anderson, S.C.) 1915-1917, July 25, 1915, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3
Recipes for V
Written for The Intelligencer
In Charge of Tomato i
In Ander??
Ripe Tomato Sweet Pickle.
Pour boiling water over ripe toma
toe? and remove ekln, place them in
Jere, cover with apple vinegar and lot
them remain three days. Take out ot
Vinegar and put in a preserving ket
tle, add three ?ina-ter? of a pound o'
mular to each pound of tomatoes; add
teaspoonful each of rhiamon, clovc-3,
allspice and mace not ground; let
boil several hours until tomatoes are
clear, then seal.
Blow to Georgia Marine.
Atlanta. Ga., July 21.-What might
have been a long sten toward creat
ing a merchant marine of Georgia's
own was lost in the house Friday
because ther0 were so many absen
tees that the necessary two-thirds
majority for a constitutional amend
ment could not be mustered. This
wan the Shuptriue bill, exemping
from the taxation all G orgia owned
and operated ships engaged in foreign
commerce exclusively.
Royal. Chow Chow.
One quart of cabbage or cucumbers
Condensed Passenger Schedule.
PIEDMONT & NORTHERN
RAILWAY COMPANY
?. Effective June 6.1916.
'* .. ANDERSON:
J Arrivals
vv ys}j
No. 81.7:35 A M.
No. 83. 9:35 A M.
No. 35.11:40 A. M.
No. 37.1:10 P. M.
No. 39. 3:40 P. M.
No. 41.6:00 P. M.
No. 43. 6:50 P. M
No. 45.10:20 P. M.
Departures
No. 30. 6:25 A M.
No. 32. 8:25 A M.
No. 84.10:30 A M.
No. 36...12:10 P. M.
No. 38... 2:30 P. M.
No. 40. 4:50 P. M.
No. 42. 5:40 P. M.
NO. 44.. .. ...9:16 P. H.
C. S. ALLEN,
_Traffic Managdr.
Charleston & Western
Carolina Railway
To and From the
NORTH, SOUTH,
EAST, WEST
Leaves:
No. 22 . .6. J6 A. M.
No. 6 . . . .3:37 P.M.
. Arrives:
No. 21 . . .11:1$ A. M.
No. 5 . . . . 3:07 P. M.
Information, Schedules,
rates, etc., promptly
giv?ii.
E. WILLIAMS, G. P. A.,
Augusta. Ga.
WOODMEN Ol
AND FF
E X C U 1
CHARLES'2
And R
Tuesday, Ju
? Vi
Blue Ridge Railway a
Premier Carrie?
The following schedule and low rom
named below.
f<e*ve Andersen .
Leave Belton.
Leave Honen Path ...
Leave D?nalos .
Leave Shoal's Junction .
l eave Hodges.
Leave Greenwood .
Leave Ninety-six.
tieave Dyson .
I*ave Chappell ... I.
. ?|i?ve OM Town .
Lento samt*?*.
Leasre H?w*?r*?r .
.Leave Prosperity .
.Leave Po? ar la-.
. Lefcve Peek.
Mate.Afcrtt*.
Arrive Charleston.
Returning exenrslon. train will leave I
day, ?5& ?th, arrlThtg NowhwrytriO
Mk A. ***** Anderson 5t80 A? X? T
Tickets geed ?al* on special train I
?o t?ekets wi? vo sold on train.
This train vffl he ra* nader the a?
edd for the members sf ?he vadeas C:
white rteople are Invited te go with as.
. ly of rae? vdil ne provided for all, an?
eider ?Bl be kent by special eftteere,
A splendid opportunity te visit the 1
many attractions, inelndlng the 17. H. 1
Hcashort resort. Fine surf, good flshini
Band, dancing, etc.
arious Dainties
hf Miss J. C. (.arlington,
md Canning Club Work
m County.
two quarts of green tomatoes, three
rod poppers, one quart of onions, chop
fine, cover with weak Bait water, let
Ktand twenty-four hours, scald in
salt water and drain. Doll (he fol
lowing mixture until it begins to
thicken; six tablespoonfuls ot mus
tard, ono of tumcrlc, two of corn
starch, one of spice, two quarts of
vinegar and onc cup of sugar. The
add pickles and boil ten minutes;
seal.
Tomnio (nt-up.
Use first class tomatoes, remove
peelings and defects. Place ih cook
er and boil for twenty minutes, UBing
nieve for mashing finely. To ten gal
Ions of pulp, add: one-half gallon of
vinegar, three pounds of sugur, one
pound of salt, one pound of onions,
once ounce of ground! pepper, pinch
or cinanicu. Cook until tho desired
?thickness ls obtained (usually re
quires from two and one-half to three
hours.) Fill bottles .and seal with
paraf In.
("reen Tomato Preserves.
Slice rather small tomatoes and cut
cross-wise. To each pound of fruit
add three-fourths pound of sugar, one
half of a lomon cut in thia slices, us
ing lemons that do not have a hitter
|jind. Put with tiio sugar enough wa
ter to dissolve lt in the preserving
kettlo and when it reaches the boiling
point adit tomatoes and lemon. Sim
mer gently until the tomatoes are
clear and tender and then seal.
[ Th? August Woman's Home Compan
ion.
In the August Woman's llorac Com
panion, which ls called "The Vanity
Number," Anne Bryan McCall writes
an interesting page entitled "Valu
able VanSty" In whlc?i she makes the
point that pretty clothes and gentle
pleasures, if moderately indulged in,
are valuable vanities, because they
add to one's selfrcspect.
Alice Farnham Leader, a New York
physician, writes an interesting ar
ticle Tull of sound advice entitled
"Health and Good Looks" containing
simple rules for the girl who wants
to look he rbe8t. Rollin Lynde Hartt
writes an interesting page entitled
"Let's Talk About the Weather" In
which he tells how to guard against
lightning, how to tell when it is going
to rain, and so on. Anna Stcesc Rich
ardson makes another contribution to
her series entitled "Mrs. larry's Ad
ventures in Thrift;" Helen Marvin
writes about "Tho New Crochet
Work;" Caroline French Benton
writes on "The Summer Sea, Festi
val;" A. L. B. King writes on "A
lief ere-Br hi ge Luncheon;" and Robert
Lane Wells makes another contribu
tion to his "alderbroog Farm" series.
Was Ruskin Conceited When Ile said
This?
In the August Woman's Home Com--1
panton, Anne Bran McCall, writing a
"Tower P>3om Talk" entitled "Valuable
Vanity," make sthe point that whole
some se' f-con fide nco is most to be de
sired. In connection with this, subject
M bin McCall says In part:
"In one of Ruskin's lectures, though
I cannot quote it exactly, he says in
effect this.-and *t ls Bald with great
earnestness,-'Because I have done
harm to no one and good to all, be
cause I 'have loved truth and hated
falsehood, because I have regarded the
happiness of others more than my own,
you can trust what I say to you, and
you will be glad In later years that you
have trusted me.'
"I have heard ?lt quoted as an ex
ample of It ashia's great conceit. But j
to me lt has never seemed to be that;
lt lias seemed to me. rather, a just, and
not a vain, measuring of his powers.'
? TOE WORLD
MENDS
I S I O N
TON, S. C.
ly 27,1915
a
nd Southern Railway
r of the South
id trip fares will apply from points]
,..Stott A. M...?Litt
..Stitt A. BL. .Mt
. .6:4.? A. M.8A0
..?:5B A. H..Ml
..7?8tt A. M..". S??
..?tW A. M.......Ml
..?tttt A. jr........M,
..?ttt A? M../..v. Mt
.1*5 A. M.. UW
..8t? A. M..ail
..B?15 A. Sf..Ut
..?t26 A. M.....
..fillS A. M..*M
..8i5? A. M..?
..ttttt? A. BL.?.1
..ti* A. lt......J.m
..9:33 A. M... Mi]
. .2:30 P. K.
bkarieslea 9:00 o'clock P. ?, Wedne*.
A. IL* Greenwood ?it* A. M., Belton
hursdey, July ?th. ' .
ia both directions. Bay frail agents.
spites af the Woodmen et the World
attn, their families had friends. AU
FOE WHITE PEOPLE ONLY. Pirn
I a comfortable trip Is assured, dead
Wstorleal City of Charlton, with Ha
(arv Yard, Isle af Palms, the famous
g. ??tie by tb? noted Setae MUitery
J. fi, AKBKIRSON, iSnpL,
Anderson, ii? C.
GEN. PORFIRIO DIAZ
POPULAR IN SPAIN
Spanish Press Foll of Admiration
and Praise for Late Mexi-,
can Dictator.
Madrid July 22.-Thc sympathy and
warm regard of the Spanish people for
the late General Porfirio Diaz, lt
seems, could' have scarcely been
greater had he been s Spaniard. The
newspapers of thc capital are filled
with laudatory appreciations of the
things the former resident ot Mexico
accomplished for his native land and
refer to "the cloao ties of friendship
and mutual understanding which al
ways bound bim to thc mother coun
try . "
The morning after his death El
Imparclal, which iis almost oftlcial in
character, published a telegram brief
ly announcing the demise of the great
Mexican. Under the telegram was
printed an editorial note: *rAt the mo
ment of cloving the forms of this edi
tion, we received the above telegram.
Wc have not timo to render due to
homage to thc good friend of Spain
who has just did, but wc shall do so
tomorrow. It were a debt of grati
tude for our country to celebrate the
praises of this mau who loved lt so
sincerely."
True to Ita promise, El Imparclal
print? i the next day a long arlicle
by Mariano de Cavia under the head
ing "A Sketch of Porfirio Diaz",
which is full of admiration of thc dead
soldier and statesman. Thc old an
ecdote of Bismarck is recalled-that
tho iron chancellor said of Mexico's
man of iron: "He is a man who should1
have been a German, and my succ?s- ;
sor." To this Btory de Cavia adds
another, less familiar, to illustrate the
the pride of don Porfirio in what
blood of his was Spanish and in the
common tongue of thc new and old
Spain.
According to the story of the shop
keepers of tho city of Mexico were
won't to entice the trade of the many
foreigners in Mexico by printing their
signs lu French, German, or more of
ten "Gringo"-English. On one of his
dally walks, the fact ?truck the "dic
tator" as Incongruous that tho shop
keepers of Mexico should print their
signs In anything but the tongue of
Hern?n Cortes-and this own. On his
return to "Cadena 8," as his private
residence was known to every shirt
less peon of thc land, he Bent for
whomever happened to bear the de
signation for the moment of "compe
tent authority."
"My dear governor," the president !
1B quoted as saying, "in a week's time.
I want all tho signs in this city in
outr national language." Tho gov
ernor objected that foreigners and
companies had tho right to have their ]
signs and their advertisements in oth
er tongues than Spanish, and that, re
specting the Mexicans themselves,
there might be constitutional difficul
ties In the way of the president's or
der.
"What you mean is that such an or
wer smacks a little too much of ty
ranny,' mused the "dictator." "Very
well. If a Mexican citizen wants to
use a foreign language In his adver
tising, 1 cannot constitutionally pre
vent it. But you, as tbe head of the
municipality, can levy a tax on the
luxury of using a foreign language-a
tax of or four pesos per sign, say.
You know my wishes, my dear gov
ernor; tho matter is in your hands.
Are wo living in Mexico, or .in Babel?"
"For more than thirty years," writes
de Cavia, "he gave Mexico peace, and
with peace a wonderful development
of the fertile riches of the country
and a solid respectability before the
world. What an unhappy .mange
since his departure- The anarchy In
which Mexico is plunged today is con
clusive proof-doctrinaire opinions
and subjective criticism laid aside
that don Porfirio knew bis complex
and mixed-blooded people better than
anyone else-that he knew their over
weening propensity towards internal
revolution well enough to applly to
them this homely phrase, a favorite
of his when speaking of his compa
triots: "When the bars of tho corral
are let down, the colts go astray."
How to Make "Eyes* ia Cheese.
In the live stock and dairy depart
ment of the current issue of Farm and
Firosldo a contributor gives the follow?
lng entertaining account of the process
by which "eyes" aro put tn cheese:
"Putting 'eyes' Into 'blind' Swiss
cheese is one of the late achievements
of the dairy-products experts of the
United States department of agricul
ture. Hitherto tho bane of the Ameri
can maker of Swiss cheese bas been
the occasional blind ' cheese-tbs
cheese lacking tito big ho.es, or eyes
tJhnt characterise the genuino Emmen
tal cheese from Switzerland. Eyes
have boen a sort of a Hit-and-miss
proposition with tho American manu
facturar. Now the government ex
perts of the dairy division bf the de*
partmcut arc in a position to insure
eyes, without, however, being able to
go so far as to control their number
braise.
"Briefly, the process is to macerate
a email piece of good Swiss chees?
and incubate lt in when at room tent-?
porature for twenty-four hours, af- ?
ter which the culture is added to the
milk before lt ia set with rennet. This
system will give (practical insurance
against blind cheese, but it won't In
sure eyes of the precise Emmental
type. Sometimes there are too many;
sometimes they are too big. The eli
mination ot blind cheese, however, bi
a long step ahead in the manufacture
of domestic Swiss.
"The department experts are experi
menting now' with a view te finding
pat how to control eyes as to number
and sise."
rnusi A
WANTED
287
New Subscribers
ro GET
A SET OF SIX
Oneida - Community Souvenir Spoons
Guaranteed Forever.
PAY SIXTY-FIVE CENTS
Atid Get Spoons
To the first 287 responsible and reputable citizens of Anderson who sub
scribe for the Daily Intelligencer for THREE MONTHS, pay 65 cents, and
agree to pay ten cents each week for twelve weeks we will deliver this hand
some set of Six Souvenir Spoons FREE.
This offer is LIMITED to TWO HUNDRED EIGHTY SEVEN New Sub*
scribers. First come-first served.
Spoons on this proposition.
en quota is finished no more
Out-of-Town Subscribers
Owing t6 our inability to collect from weekly sub-oriners by mail we
would have to have the money in ad va nee from all? out of town patrons.
Daily Intelligencer
Anderson, S. C.