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I? - ' HOME DEMONSTRA ?. - ? ~ T%. tn \r m-m | M155 UA13 I m. Sunshine Sponge Cake f6 eggs. 1 cup' sugar (scant). 1 cup* flour (treasure after sifting) Juice from one-half lerfion. "Beat \*:-hites till light, add 1-2 cup ilgar and 1-4 teaspoon salt, beat; * 1 i ^ Again tiff like meringue. * . Beat yellows, lemon juice and sug-j. j|A ar till cream. Add to beaten whites jfB being careful to mix well* Sift flour |B into mixture in third's, mixing lightly |||H with egg beatftr. Use floured tin: HJP bakfrig pan antf ebofc 45 minute? m i very slow oven. Allow to cool in pan * turned upsifte down. A wet cloth put on bottom of pan helps to remove!; cake easily.* I * Swistone sauce for sunshine sponge cake: 2 cups sugar. 1 cup water. * 4 egg yolks. - j I tablespoon lemon juice Or 2 table-11 fcpoons orange juice. 1 Cup sweet cream. Boil sugar and water till syrup j "t^ins/ a thread" when cooled. Beat i yolih and lsmon juice till creamy. Ad'd syrup (while hot) to yolks and 1 ^ stir till' cool. Stir whipped cream rn-'i ?.to mixture and keep Cool. If a de-j * - ? - J? J- ! J 4 'iicious yenow icing is uesucu i omit the cream and youh'ave it. ' jl ' jj The Home . Demonstration depart-; tnerrt, chamber of commerce, has j f some excellent bulletins on the use' ] of muscadine grapes. Those inter-'< i in grape' products can secure i f these valuable "recipes by asking for 1 I . them. 1 Another splendid bulletin- on to- 1 mato products Should interest the ] housewives. Since the boll weevil i i has taken over the "pet" cotton patch it befrooves the ladies to get busy anii $ut up pickles, ketchups, etc., for our tail and winter maTket. Other towns can dispose of Surplus produce, why not Newberry?' Let's make it a greater Nfewberry! -?j? < Towrato Paste ' ? - i li*- Ji. ?L.> J yinln ij I quar: tnicx suranitr-u Luuxacw pu>y. I 4 tbsp. chopped sweet red pepper I pulp, or 1 tsp. paprika; $ slice onion. ' * t-2 tsp. sale. 1 tsp. sugar. . - f f tbsp. mixed spicess I Cook spices, tied' in bag, with to- < mato pulp in a pan" over boiling water < for about 3 hours, or \jntil paste is BBX| thick enough to Hold the shape of spoon when tested by dipping out a Hffi spoonful. Pack~ hot, process small Rffl jars 15 minutes in water bath at 212 Cfln degrees F. ^ rSoup Mixture This should be nhiade in the proportion of one-half ^osnato pulp, onefourth <tiny lima beans or corn, - and one-fourth okra with seasoning added. One slice of onion i 2 inches in diameter should be added : to eaeh No. 2 can. The tomatoes AJ?.w +V>Trvn<rh a iH SilUUiU UC licaitU) _0 - - _ mm sieve and cooked down to about the |l eonsistency of ketchup before measm uring; then the corn, okra, onion j.nd m seasoning should be. added and cooked ? until- the corn and okra are about I three-fourths done. Then pack into cans and follow directions as given B in the table below. Net weight ap pearing on label of No. 2 can should V be 1 pound 4 1-2 ounces. Green Tomato Pickle I 1 gallon green tomatoes. I 1-2 dozen large oi.ions. | 3 cups brown sugar. f 1-2 lemon. 3 pods red pepper. 3 cups vinegar. 1 tbsp. whole black pepper. 1 tbsp. whole cloves. ^1 tbsp. whole allspice. 1 tbsp. celery s^ed (crushed). 1 tbsp. mustard seed. 1 tbsp. ground mustard. Slice the tomatoes'and onions thin. SpfinMe over them' 1-4 cup of gait and' let st'and over night in a crock , or enameled vessel. Tie the pepper eiaves-, allspice an<f celery seed in a " cheesecloth bag. Slice the lemon and ^ ch&p two pepper pods very fine. Drain P the t(5m"ato a&d onion well. Add a:ll I sea'soriing except one pepper pod to the vinegar then add the tomato and V cnion. Cook for 1-2 hour stirring yeMiy 2LZ intervals 10 prevent winning. Remove spice bag to prevent darkening product. Pack in iOonnce jar and garnish with slender strips of the red pepper placing them vertically ort the opposite sides of each jar. Process for 15 minutes. Tomato ICetchup Setect red-ripe tomatoes. The oxtra juice, small and broken fruit i which will not do for canning may be! used" if they are sound and red. Any | green or yellowish parts of fruit will make a ketchup inferior in flavor and T TION DEPARTMENT BERRIE, Editor. * co'or and not good for market. Use whole spices tied loosely in a bag while cooking and remove before bottling to prevent darkening the, ' J : T>u;r. ! product Dy grounu spices ntiz> not apply to red pepper which helps to givs a blight red color. The pulp of sweet Spanish pepper or the ground Hungarian paprika may also j be used to^ give color and flavor. Re- j move seeds from sweet red pepper, j chop and add 1 cup of this pepper and 2 medium s5ze onions to 1 gallon tomatoes before cooking. Cook tlie tomatoes thoroughly, put through a colander or sieve saving all pulp, and measure. For every gaK ton of pulp use th6 following: 2 tbsp. salt. d then. s?<rar. 1 tbsp. mtfstard (powdered). 1 pint good vinegar. 1 level tb3p. each of whole allspice,' :loves, cinnamon, and pepper. 2 small red' peppers sliced and ?eed relieved. After putting tomatoes through a [ :olander add ground spices and spice ! 1 1- ^ ? 1 i o nn- I oag, "ana ccuk iui j. 1 uv/ui op v& t SI nearly thick enough, then add vinegar and cook until' thick. Rapid j :ooking (being careful not to scorch1 Lhe ketchup) will give a better color :han slow' cooking. The finished woduct should be a fine bright red. i Poui' the ketchup at once into hot ;t'erilized Settles. If any quantity is made for sale, set the hot bottles at jnce into a vessel of hot water, hav-, tig a false bottom in it to prevent | breakage, put the cork stoppers in oosely and process at boiling point for SO minutes. Drive the corks in rightly and when cool dip mouth of *1 1 nhvar mottles into men:ea paramu, rath sealing wax. Cooked Tomato Relish 3 pints tomato pulp. ' 1 cup finely chopped onion. 3.4 cup .sugar. 6 heads finely chopped celery. 2 red peppers cut fine and with ;eed remove'd. 2 1-2'tsp. salt. 1 1-2 pints vinegar. i-o cup grated horseradish. 1-2 cup white mustard seed. 1 tsp. black pepper. 1 tsp. cinnamon. 1-2' tsp. cloves. tvcl-v ??:ll i-no-rpdients together, and i ~ - V- , :ook to consistency of Chili sauce'. Seal and process ten minutes. Chili Sauce 1 pint tomato pulp. 2 cups vinegar. 2 cups vinegar. 2 tsp. salt. 3 tbsp. sugar. 3 large onions. 3 green peppers. 1 tsp. grcuntf cinnamon. 1-2 tsp. cloves. Chop' onions and peppers. Add cither ingredients and let all simmer for two hours. Pack into sterilized jars and process ten minutes. Tomator Chutney 3 cups tomato pulp. 3 chopped onions. 3 choppcd apples. 2 tsp. salt. 1-2 lb. chopped raisins. 3-4 lb. brown sugar. 1 pint vinegar. 1-4 tsp. pepper. 1 1-2 tsp. ground ginger. Mix pulp, vinegar and salt. Cook slowly for two hours. Add sugar, raising apples, ginger, pepper and boil 1 1-2 hours. Seal' in small sterilized jars and process 10 minutes. Tomato Jelly 1 quait tomato pulp. 1 cup sugar. 1 tsp. salt. 2 tbs. cornstarch or 1 cup pectin. 1 tsp. ground ginger. Put pulp, ginger, sugar and salt' in a saucepan. Mix cornstarch with 2 tbsp. cold water and add. If pectin is used instead add it to the inn ?: i..? ,1 gredients. rsoii nve minutes anu pour in a mold to cool. Serve cold with meat. PERCENTAGE OF ILLITERACY BY COUNTIES IN S. C. Washington, D. C., Aug. 25, 1921. ?The following statement shows the percentage of illiteracy in the counties of Sou4h Carolina according to the returns of the Fourteenth census, which was taken in January, 1920. An illiterate, as defined in the census, is a person 10 years of age or over who is unable to write either in English or any other language. The percentages are based upon the total population 10 years of age and over, or the total native white, or total negro, as the case may be. County Total Native Negro white State 18.1 0.5 29.3 I !Abbeville .... 17.4 5.2 2G.< Aiken 18.9 8.1 28.1 ;Allendale .... 32.4 4.4 40A 'Anderson .... 12.8 7.4 23.1 Bambtrz 18.5 4.8 25.1 Barnwell 23.8 C.G 32.^ Beaufort 22.G 5.7 27.: Berkeley 38.4 9.1 49.1 I Calhoun 19.5 1.6 28.; Charleston ....16.4 1.5 26.( Cherokee 17.3 11.1 3U i Chester 23.8 5.4 87.( ! Chesterfield ..19.1 13.3 28.^ | Clarendon ....19.5 4.1 25.1 ! Colleton 25.6 7.3 38.' Darlington ....19.2 ' 9.9 26.( Dillon 22.3 10.9 33.1 ! Dorchester ....20.3 3.5 v 32.( Edgefield 20.5 2.6 29.C Fairfield 24.6 2.9 32.C Florence 18.7 7.1 30.? Georgetown ..29.7 7.6 40.1 Greenville ....11.0 6.3 23.7 Greenwood ....16.3 4.7 26.f Hampton 20.4 . 3.5 31.t Horry 16.5 11.9 31.S Jasper 33.0 6.1 43.E Kershaw 16.0 6.2 23.2 Lancaster 17.8 8.1 29.4 Laurens 19.7 5.3 33.6 Lee 25.9 6.8 35.fl Lexington 12.5 5.0 28.2 McCormlck ....20.4 2.4 29.2 Marion 22.5 7.2 So.4 Marlboro 18.0 10.5 23.4 Newberry .... 19.5 5.3 30.2 Oconee 12.5 9.0 25.2 Orangeburg ..18.0 3.7 25.7 Pickens 10.7 7.2 27.2 Richland 13.7 4.0 25.4 Saluda 16.7 4.9 28:0 Spartanburg ..13.7 8.2 '27.1 Sumter 16.4 . 2.7 22.4 U'nion 17.3 8.2 28.2 Williamsburg 21.7 5.3 30.3 ? * - - ^ r f\ 01 n York 17.8 o.y oi.t - ? ? KENNETH GOSSETT GIVEN NEW TRIAL ( Continued From Page 1.) and concluded that he had not. Criticises the Statute The legality of the court \va< among the exceptions taken and the high tribunal criticises .the statute providing for such a court, hoyinjd that the section- of the code undei which such courts are called is noi fair to the defendant.. At present the solicitor merely asks for the court and it is granted, it is pointed out. Prioi to the act of 1900 only the chief justice or the presiding judge holding court in the patticular county couk call the special courts. The law now throws to the wine the sensible and just guarantee offered by the former method of procedure, it is pointed. It makes no pro vision for a showing, a hearing or c determination of the fact that public interest, which includes a fair tria to the defendant, demands a specia court, the opinion adds. The solicitor ha? absolute power under th< present act, the court says. "The defendant is entitled to be tried in an ordevly manner, howevei guilty he niay be, in a calm judicia* atmosphere," the opinion says. Th( nature of the crime, time of trial, cir cumstances of the trial and the public mind are all of gravest concerr to the accused, it is pointed, and wil have a bearing on the verdict. "Whal was the reason for a special court al Abbeville?" the court asks. * There was apparently no crowded docket i as the Gossett case was tne omy oru tried and this could have waited un til the next term. "Circumstances of this trial demonstrate beyond z doubt that Gossett, under the opera tions of the section we are now con sidering, was not convicted by due process of law and was denied equal protection of the law." No Change of Venue 1 A motion for a change of venue was denied and the court points oul !that 100 affidavits were offered tc 1 - - - . . j show that a fair trial couiu nor Dt {had; the sheriff had suggested mili i-tia; foreman of the grand jury mad* an affidavit saying that the two Gos setts could not be brought safely tc Abbeville on account of the sentimen! against them. A request for a con tinuance was- also denied. ;<The fail lire to employ local defense is % striking index to public sentiment X the trial," Justice Cothran says. The fact that ten days' notice i: required by the law for the drawing of a jury and only five were given al I Abbeville was not allowed to stop th< j trial, it is pointed out. If the stat utory notice had been given, the tria | could not have been held at the time jtne court says, "but a slight statutory xegulation must not stand in th( way." The condition of Abbeville a the time is clearly shown, Mr. Coth * I ran says, when after a verdict of no guilty had been directed as to Join Gossett, the defendant had to be slip ped out of town for fear of violence In conclusion, the court says tha ^ - - J-- * n w A n M 4- 4-/ .no renecuon wnatcvci is mcain ia be cast upon Solicitor Blackwell. An optimist is the man who comb: ! a few stray hairs across a bald head When tobacco is prohibited, fathei will find more use for the greenhouse jf DIDN'T HAVE TO ASK FOR IT f| >j (Simple Matter of Finance by Which ? ( j Frederick Became Possessed of - m > | Ail-Day Sucker. !i Frederick has not yet learned the 3 addition and multiplication initios, but jfl ^ l?e has reached such an understand- : Eg -1 ing of finance as a verb transitive ;9 * ~ i..... < / ? l,5c future t , UlclL cur? n umicc.N us n> m.- ?_ ); "il'.M'p, Frederick, yen be mother's | ;! big man and take this empty milk bot^ i tie to the grocery on the corner and . ' bring hack a full bottle of fresh milk , for baby." [ "And I pay the money to the man, ? ' mumsie?'' v "No, dear. You know how we get a > j It sometimes. The man will charge ra I. "Haven't you got any pennies, mum- j B , sie?M . | ".No, Frederick, mumsie hasn't any ja , j pennies for candy this time. Xow be || ! careful. That's a riice little man." 1 j Frederick returned safely with a jy ? bottle of best grade milk. Also, he I had a fine all-day sucker in his mouth, jl ) | "Why, Frederick! I hope you didn't ; i ask the grocer to give you that can- u I 3. IM 53 , The sucker had to be removed be- j I | j fore the youngster could articulate. I "No?I wouldn't ask?i paid for it." "Paid! Where did you get the j| ! money?" . "He give- nie a nickel for the empty E . j bottle and then I pay for the sucker, g i j aud then?then he charge you for the a , J new bottle milk." J WHAT REAL VACATION - WEAMS || Piay Is the Foundation, and That Consists of Doing Anything That Is Not Work. A real vacation, if you can get one, |H I consists of piay, asserts rrestwi oivr.^r- ( ^ ; son in the New York Independent. JjS ! Play is the opposite of work. Piay is [9 whatever is done for its own sweet i p sake. If you build a tire to warm ( yourself or to cook a dinner you are ill at work. If you build a bonfire because you j.B j like to see sparks redden against the , |j | sable background, of the night you are ;g | at play. If you dance to improve g >1 your waistline or to learn a new step ! flj J you are working. ; i If you dunce because you "just 9 rf! can't make your feet behave" when ' i rim orchpstra starts, you are playing, iff It you go fishing to catch lish you ? are as much at work as if you wore ' building bridges or writing editorials g [ to make money. If you go listing in g : j the true fisherman's spirit you won't . j care much whether they bite or not. r j The Vacation fnind is a law unto g j j Itself. If it enjoys an occupation it I ' | keeps on while the enjoyment lasts, I thought every fiber of rhe tired body I ( may be shotting "quit." , '; If it ceases to enjoy an occupation H | it stops at once, though it create con- j I -; sternation all around. A real vaca- ; 8 i tion is a trip into a fairyland, where ; g ;' the natives never heard of duties or || 11 obligations and the only law is "Do I j; what you really like-." Cherry and Plum Trees. j| -1- i H "j Can' you positively (listingUKsn ue- j ; tween a cherry tree and a plum tree jg 1 in the spring of the year before the B j trees carry fruit? You may think ! that you can, yet, fso similar are some S cherry and plum trees that eventual. ly you will surely fail unless you em- . _ i ploy the simple rule that trained hor- R j ticulturists follow. That one infall- g I j ible guide is this: The leaves of the ' I chcrry, both in the bud and just after g : ] emerging from the bud, are folded to- g t gether like the pages in a book, while I ; those of the plum are rolfcd up like H II a magazine. Andt by the way, the E >' leaves of the peach aie folded like j J . ; those of the cherry, and the leaves ! < i of the apricot are rolled like those j 8 5 of the plum. ; Well Supplied. B -J Emery had the whooping cough, and S ? It had hung on for a long time. In the I 8 [ worst of it he'had contracted a bad H i colli tnat aaaea 10 ms uisuumiwu i| ; Allien he. had finally recovered from I l i the effects of that, he was once more [ j allowed to play out of .doors. L j One morning, as lie started out, he * j commenced to sneeze, and his mother ' I exclaimed in despair: Emery, you ! -1 have taken another cold," but did not [ i keep him in the house. -1 He was swinging on the front gate ): as one of the neighbors went by, who f. hailed him with, "Hello, Emery. How are you this morning?pretty well?" I ' Emery answered : "Xo, sir; I've got 11 two colds and the whooping cough." 9 Protects From Corrosion. T*w/Mv?m<r fiipr-trolvticallv is the 11 s method of protecting aluminum and W C aluminum alloys from corrosion pro t posed by L. von Grotthcrs. The tlec- K j trol.vte consists of a sulphur com- H pound of molybdenum, and the metal ;g l' to he protected is suspended in this I ! solution with a zinc anode at a tern- IS ' j perature of GO to 65 degrees C. The [I ' j dark brown coating soon developed ! I 1 j Is not cracked by bending or rolling t j the metal. The aluminum articles fi -! coated in this way are stated to have t been free from corrosion even after ft ! immersion in suit solution for two 8 months. I j. j Los Angeles Gets Its Aqueduct. I Los Annexes' aqueuuci, ?jh ?ao ^'recently completed, is 238 miles in* I j length. It was built by the city of j Q 1 Los Anjreles within tlie estimated cost j gj 5 ??f $2.'?.000,000, and within the time ? limit -allowed. It consists of .">4 miles , g | of tunnel, 1- miles of steel siphon. 00 B r mlle>; o? open ditch, and lOl miles of B .'covered concrete flume. lis capacity B 'is 200,000,UCKJ gallons a day. fl mammta ? ?a? ? ??ate??cm ????? vAn nnv * t t " r / 6 ? ' t I Before you piac< for Letter Head; Bill Heads, Statei i *_- j _? Kiiiu ui r riming with you. ' / We only do firs I ? i r and our prices a with the quality " 1 v V we turn out ? v. * 9 Work Delivered W ' MB m flR , SI mff jjmjl SB S8 JS5 mST MB /-j Jas. L Au! r '' . [ t L' - . ' - r fHSHSHHHHHHHHBHBHBHHHHHHBHBB ' ; your order J >, Envelopes, mentsorany let us figure i \ J ftlr \ t-class work r#? rnnsistent of the work I V jcfli fhpn Promised I Ilvil JBk m W.HUWM :m / JB id News riment J II, Mgr. j .