The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, August 18, 1920, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3
MISS CROWTHER SUBMITS
RECiPES FOR HOUSEWIVES
Many requests have come to Miss
Giwvjher, Home Demonstration
Agent, for the following recipes, so
for the benefit of any interested
sh'. is giving them f<Jr publication,
hi this Jay of the high ( cost and
scarcity of sugar, the economical
housewife rejoices to find appetizing
products using little of it.
Peach Butter
:j pounds ripe peaches, 1 pound
apples (put through meat chopper.)
1 1-2 pounds sugar, 1 l-z pourr.s
cane sirup. Cook until products
form a smooth red paste.* Pack in
sterilized jars and seal.
Apple and Carrot Conserve
1 at. ground carrots, 1 qt. tart
apples, 2 sliced oranges, 2 cups
sirup. i '
Ripe Tomato Mince Meat
I pt. chopped tomatoes, 1-2 pt.
chopped raisins, 1-2 pt. chopped
apples, 1 lemon (whole, chopped),
1 t. cinnamon, 1 t. nutmeg, 1 1-4
cup karo or 1 cup sugar. Mix and
cook : 1*5 minutes. Pack in sterilized.'
jars and'seal.
Green Tomato Mince-meat
/ -1 1 \
.1 qt. green tomatoes icnoppeu/,
1 cup of sugar, 1-4 cup chopped
raisins, 1-4 cup cocoanut, 1-2 . cup
chopped apples, 1-4 cup vinegar, 1-4
t. cinnamon, 1-4 t. cloves, 1-4 t.1
nutmeg. Put all ingredients together
and cook 30 minutes. Pack and
sealvin sterilized jars.
Preserving Fruits in Dilute Vinegar
Solution !
Kfcefer pears and White Heath
Cling Stone peaches^ give excellent
results when preserved in a solution'
of half vinegar and half water.
They will keep satisfactorily for'
* |
some months, but should not be
kept more than six to eight months
before being made up into finished
products such as sweet pickles and
other relishes'. At the convenience of
the housewife these fruits may be
taken from the vinegar solution and
utilized as follows:
. * Peach Pickle
1 pound peaches, 1 cup water, 2
cups vinegar, 1-2 pound sugar/- 1-4
teaspoon whole allspice, 1-4 teasI
po<?n. whole mace,; 1-4 teaspoon
cloves) 2 1 inch pieces stick cinnamon,
3 1 inch pieces ginger root. i/
Your
I Home
v 1
| AND ?IT'S
I Furniture
m All the land istechoir
St everywhere. Heed t
I His Castle." Make 3
more properly speal
Let your Home re
more important, you
and children, the H(
Womankind.
Make your. Home
earth for your wife ;
Call In And Let L
nish or Beautify Y01
PRICES R I GI
I Kerr F<
THE ONI
20-22-24 NORTH i
J
T
Sweet Pear Pickle
j 1 pound pears, juice and rind of 1 n
lemon, 1-2 cup sugar, 1 cup vinegar, |
:i cup water, 1-4 cup ginger tea, 1-4 j
1 # .1
ounce stick cinnamon.
Remove pears or peaches from a
the dilute vinegar solution in which !
they have been preserved. Peel andj
halve the pears; then boil them 10'
minutes in dilute solution. Remove '
and add sugar, vinegar, water,'c
ginger tea, cinnamon and lemon.
jCook for 30 minutes. Remove and ^
let plump for 2 hours. Pack in steri- jlized
jars and process for 10 min-'
i
utes. - 's
WHISKEY PEDDLER ,h
BROKE HIS NECK r
r
t
An Incident of 184C That Happened ^
j In Eastern York County?"Them I
Waa Wet Days"
C
lv
i I
Traveling along a road through |
Eastern York County the venerable'q
guide pointed to the spot where j
some eighty years ago a North
Carolina mountaineer broke his
neck in a most -unusual raawier.
Eighty years ago it was quite ordinary
for North Carolina distillers to
bring wagon loads of liquor, mostly ^
brandy, for sale to the Vitizens of ^
SoutK Carolina. Peddling of whis-j
4 c<
key was as common then as is the
peddling of apples now. This North I
Carolinian, whose name has long I
since been forgotten, was bringing
liquor into York county. He was
driving a team of mules and he had |
a little bo/with him. Great chestnut',
trees grew in all of York and ChesJ11
ter counties in those days. Theyi*
were as common as are the elmjC<
trees in Yorkville. This mountaineer'.
stopped beside the road in order tol"
climb a chestnut tree after nuts. |
Perhaps he had been imbibing tooiP
freely of the goods which he had
for sal?-. At any rate he fell from,**
the top of the chestnut tree. His '
neck was broken by the fall. The
' w
body was carried back to North ^
Carolina for burial. There is no re-1
C(
cord of what became of the liquor.1.
IS
It is hardly probable, however, thati
it was carried back to North Caro-I ;
8.
lina, and there is no information to
the effect that it was used as a ^
preservative for the body of the
owner on its long journey back to
; ' " . b
; ?
SaWjliSliliillwBIlM WJ!!![E11
4
/
I
.1 11 t .. (iD-ii I_I
ig tfie can ror peiccr noi
he call and be happier, "j
/ours worthy of its King*
*
king. ' v <
fleet your culture^and refi
ir wife's good taste. Aft
)ME is the greatest and ?
f
the most charming and c
and family. IT WILL PA
fs Help You. We Have Ei
ur HOME.
I
i T. GOODS DELIVER]
urniture C<
i PRICED FURNITURI
MAIN ST. A1
*
forth Carolina, there* to rest in his
ative. sod.?Yorkville Enquirer.
FORWARDS *$1,000 CHECK
1oney Sent to National Democratic
Headquarters
Columbia, Aug. 17. ?Announcelent
was made tonight by ' Joe
Iparks, director of the dollar Demoratic
campaign, that a check for
1,000 had been sent to a national
)emocratic headquarters to help
lect Cox and Roosevelt. Mr. Sparks
aid that several thousand dollars
ad been raised in the State, but
lot ^*et reported by county chairmen
t is planned.to. send $1,000 a week
o national headquarters until the
lovember elections.
:OX WILL REVIEW
HARDING'S RECORD
kovernor To Parallel His Service
With Republican's?State Campaign
in Ohio to Qe Formally
Opened in Address By Nomi- pee
Today
Columbus, Aug. 17.?Governor
ox indicated today that his adress
before the Ohio Democratic
jnvention tomorrow would parallel
is six years of record in the State,
ith that of Senator Harding, the
/epublican Presidential candidate"The
reactionary candidate was
n one side and I was on the other,"
tid the Democratic nominee, addig
that "the eyes of the country
re 6n Ohio," in the Presidential
jntest.%
^ /
The league of nations'is another
isue the Governor will champion in
jmorrow's address with the suport
of Newton D. Baker, secretary
f war, who is to appear on ' the
latform with the Governor. ' _
Encouraging reports of prospects
>r Democratic success in Ohio
ere received by. Governor Cox
:om party leaders arriving for the
invention. The (governor's address
i to open the State campaign for-|
lally and the organization matters [
re to be taken up. The convention I
rogram is routine, adoption of a
tate plaform and nomination of
wenty-four Presidential electors
cing the only work schedule^. ;
mmammammmm
lies." You hear it g
\ Man's House is jj
?or its Queen? |
E
nement, said still Jj
er love for husband jjj
grandest thing to
lelightful place on j||
Y YOU WELL. 1
rery Thing to Fur- ??j
ED ANYWHERE, 1
)mpany |
L STORE. I
3BEVILLE, S. C. |
I v
v Kynnenhein
1 A
It Takes Tinges Like T
To Assured Sources f
Are All Wool, the Pro
Style, Quality and Ta
You'll,Find Full Lines
... ?
. *.
| Parke
i
Spends Day at Office
Governor Cox spent the day at ws
the executive office, engaged with
State affairs and politicians. He received
no more word' officially re- ?
garding the automobile speeding I
'charges made yesterday "at Jackson- I
[town, Ohio, as he was returning X
from Wheeling, W. Va. Action^ I
-against the Governor was deemed I
improbable, although reports ' were 1
current that chauffers of his party I
were to be prosecuted. *!
Lorg distance telephone ( reports 9
received by Governor Cox today re- H
garding the Tennessee woman suf- 9
frage fight stated that "a very hard 1
contest" was in prospect, the Gover-^ I
nor said. Louisville and Nashville ?
Railroad interests, Governor Cox 1
said, he had been advised, were in- I
tervening in opposition to ratifica- I
tion of the federal amendment. ^
j Governor Cox today added another
address to his itinerary for this
Week. He will speak, at 2 p. m. |
next Saturday at Orrville, Ohio, I
while enroute to Canton. I
I . J
I
BROTHER KILLS BROTHER
?
i
Shoot* At Another Man, But Hits
Wrong Person, Charge
'I
Edgefield, Aug. 17.?Quinney 1
Moseley Sunday afternoon, it is alleged,
shot and instantly killed his
"brother John, the homicide occurring
at Pleasant Grove Baptist
Church, three miles west of this
place, where a revival service was
in progress. The facts atending the
homicide as told by several eye-witnesses
are that there was a strange
man on the church grounds playing
a guitar, singing vulgar songs, cursing
and otherwise creating a disturbance,
that the Moseley brothers,
with others, approached him for the
purpose of putting him off the
grounds, that the unknown man *
;showed fight and made at Quinney
,with a knife, when the latter drew
his pistol and fired at the former,
the ball taking effect in the breast
of the deceased who was there to assist
his brother in an effort to quiet
the strange man. Quinney has been
arrested and will be held to answer
to the charge of murder. This is the \.
second homicide that has taken j
place at this church this year. i I
\
ter and Stylep
hese to Show Men the i
or Their CLOTHES,
ducts of Established H<
iloring?and how to Cc
of These GOOD CL(
. 'i V
* \ .
r and 1
\ ' '
' ' " Miss
Belle McKenzie- of Sharon
is shopping in the city Monday. t
WHSBHnHHeflBHBi
Rough
100,000 Feet Ro
Hand. Will Sel
All at Reasonable
W. A. G
! I ? ?I?
j > ' i
THE FN IVE R
The Ford On? Ton Tru
just as faithfully and ecoi
Ford Touring Car serve al
n nni r?
and economically, ine r
sity to the grocer both in
in bringing goocjs from th
from the country. It is
because there isn't a wa
business man that it doesi
of quick transportation at
Come in, examine the Ti
over the subject.
9
Going |
T? ' '1
Assuredj|
Sources J
:-3?
Fhe temptation to , |
>uy unfamiliar |
nakes brought out
0 meet the unusual . ,1
:onditions will be ^
ivoided by the man if
vho wants his full
noney's worth this . ^i
>eason. v- ; i
1 o
ius dims
Evidence of Going J
rases That Know
imibine Them.' j I
)THES Here. |||
\eese .M
' 11
Master Norwood Rambo of Greenrille
is visiting Miss* Ira Hamilton; / '
prf
ugh Lumber on I>i?j
1 Any Part or I
e rrices. <
\ :*? p|j|
\LVERT
, .
r...
wC
SAL CAR |||c |
fck is serving ousiness J
lomically as does the
1 the people faithfully III
ord Truck,is a neces- {
delivering goods and II
e stations, docks and . H
an ideal motor car [j|
,nt of the farmer or III
i't supply in the way [I
a minimum expense. [11
uck, and let us talk j
Arnold I
J** 1. -IJ
/ ;