The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, June 25, 1926, Image 8
ii w i ?i 1 r~~i?^
? Cfa the Kitchen )
\s^6 Famous (bote/'
MEATLESS MEAL. "FIT
FOB COMPANY"
(Ii Not*: Tbb U ona pf a sp?-< Ul
mmnm *f articlaa (oaUlbuUd by 4 Kstnou* I
Gssfcs. Tbslr ar* "dlffsrsnt. Cut
tfcsss out and feast* tb?w in your cook
At the Battle Creek College
of Home Economic* they ?pecializc
in planning and preparing
well-balanced meals which
are both attractive to the eye
1 and nutritious
Jkurmk to eAt
MIO Miss MarJ
garet, Allen
/T -Z Hall, dietitian
/ V f~ \ a n d nutrition
\./ jf expert of the
\ c o 11 e g e , has
prepared for
MArtr.ARLT our readers a
ALWNHAU. ? company"
menu which is particularly
palatable, even though it is
absolutely meatless. Proportions
are given for the serving
of ten.
, JSgga a la King
Glased Sweet Potatoes
. Illtsl Totnntoe*
Fruit Hultt'l u Ia Ctom*.
Bread Beverage
Butterscotch J'l*
Directions for.each <IIf.Ii follow.
Egg9 a la King
S tablespoons butter
4 tawlespoon* minced sweet pepper
4 cups (otto qu*rt) inlll;
t tablespoons flour
, 1 cups mushroom* (fresh or canned?
It had boiled eggs, cut In pieces
2 teaspoons salt
Kelt butter, add pepper and mushrooms.
and cook until soft. Stir In
fftomr and add milk. Stir until thickaasd.
Add seasoning and , eggs.
Heat very hot end nerve on square
of toast; or po*r into a baking tl sh
sprinkle with liu'Ifcrcd crumbs and
ttroprn in a quick ?vou. ;
Glazmd iu.eef Potatoeg
? IS medium-sized sweet potatoes
1M cups sugar
yi cup water
I tablespoons butter ?
Boll tha swoet potatoes In salted
rater for ten minutes, remove the
kins and cut in halves lengthwise.
Arrange In u buttered pan. Make a
yrup by boiling the augur and
water for three initiates. Add the
Imtter. Brush potatoes with syrup
and bako until brown, heating with
remaining syrup. Serve in a hot
orsred dish. *
Ritml Tomato?s
lice bread in usual manner, shape
with thre?-tnch biscuit cutter and
toast. Slice ripe totr-itoos. place a
Gee on toast, sprinkle with salt,
gmted cheese or cottage cheese and
?4sn. and finely chopped pepper.
Hake in hot oven until tomatoes are
oaoked and slightly browned.
Fruit Salad a la Cram
1 large bananas
1 pint sliced pineapple
1 yound Tokay or Malaga grapes
1 oap Cream Salad Dressing
Drain the pineapple and cut into
omall pieces. Peel the grapes, cut
Into halves and remove the seeds.
Peel the bananas, scrape off the
fsuy portions, and dice. Mix with
the Cream Salad Dreeulng and serve
mm a plate garnished with lettuce,
r place a spoonful of fruit on the
lettuce leaf with a smaller spoonful
of the dressing.
Cream Snlud Dressing:
2 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons flour
'1 cup cream
to cup lemon Juice - .
2 egg yolks
to teuapoon salt
2 tablespoons nifir
2 cups w rupperf ar?*a
Iff cut the I-hh." '* e *< ?**> hollor,
nti*- in the n.- - -? '.mm ??iis (sour
milk being -W kh wall '
ix oegfnr to thicken. " neat the egg'
yolks, add to them the salt, sugar
and lemon Juice, and turn Into the
thickened cream. Cook In a double
holler about Ave minutes, or until
the eggs begin to thicken. Cool,
and fold In the whipped cream.
BuffertcofcA Pirn
Plain Pastry:
2 cups flour _____ .........
% cup fat
1 teaspoon salt
Ice water . I
Mix salt with Hour. Cut fat Into
flour with two. knives. Add Just
aough Ice water -to hold mixture
together without Its being sticky.
Itoll lightly from center outward.
This Is sufficient pastry for doubls
crusts of one large pie, or two pastry
sheila
Butterscotch Filling (for two pics)
t egg yolks
4 cups dark brown sugar ,
4 cups milk
1 cup flour
V4 cup butter
X teaspoons vaniUa extract
Boat yolks of oggs~Tn "Inside or
double, holler, add milk and butter.
Mix flour with sugar, and add to
mltk mixture. Cook until thickened,
llemovo from ttro and cool. Kill j
cooked partry shells Cover with
whipped cream or meringue. i
Make a "meringue with the four
egg whites heat.-n until stiff, fold
In four tablespoon fuls powdered
sugar, pile Irregularly on top of the
i?te and bake in moderate oven until
brown.
A meatless meal, yes But who
would ever miss the meat?
(flc axtrm to read nex t u><* kf? special cook'
mwticle.)
Why Long Chimneyk?
Many women wonder why oil
stoves with long ah in neys are superior
to those with short ones. It Is
because the long' rhW; leys Insure
perfect COWihusfIon .n other words,
ivory dron of oil is completely
burned before the host roaches the
cooking. There la no chance for soot
i?r odor. \
Short ehtmnojr stoves as a rut a
focus the heat lb' 4>na point?ths
v^ry center of the burner. Bong
rhtfnnAy stoves focus tha h**t on
the bottom of the kettles, but dlfTuse
If over the ent're kMtlff bottorn.^j
CALIFORNIA OR BUST."
Camden Boyu Form Trio Taking Long
Westward Trip.
"Billy" Reamer, son of Mr. and
Mrs. C. Y. Reamer of 1507 Pendleton
street, accompanied by "JIank" Savage
of Camden, and Ralph Kaaon of
Providence, R. I., bade Columbia
good-bye just after daylight Tuesday
morning and turned the radiator of
their heavily laden Dodge touring car
"Westward, ho." Bound for California,
and the west coast in their modern
"covered wagon" the young nomads
expect to be gone until the middle
or latter part of August.
On the trip out they are takBuf the
southern rout^frdTrTColumbia t?T Macon
and through I'Ouislana, Texas
and thence into California. On their
return trip, they will use the northern
route, so that when they get back
to Columbia, they will have made n
complete circuit *of the edges of the
United States.
Young Reamer, who is 18 years of
age, is a sophomore at the University
of Virginia, us is Easton. Savage finished
in law at Virginia the past commencement
and is a Phi Beta Kappa
man. All of them are members of
the same fraternity, the Phi Sigma
Kappa.
The boys plan to follow the real
out-door life en rpute to the coast.
They are carrying with them all necessary
equipment for camping, so
that they can pitch' their tent whereever
the fancy strikes them. They
have no definite schedule to make,
but will go as fast or as slow as they
wish, getting all out of their trip that
It affords. They will doubtless visit
the Grand canyon as^they go through
the Southwest as well as other famous
scenic points touched toy the
southern route.
The three young travellers, while
seeking "the wide, open spaces, where
men are men and women are governors"
have agreed to have at least
one of their aey^ral daily meals at a
hotel or restaurant, so that they can
break the monotony of cooking and
dish-washing, the latter of which is
the one thing that male campers like I
to dispense with.?Columbia * Record
of Tuesday.
The temperature of the moon at its
noontide Ais 260 degrees Fahrenheit.
v,y . '
Wants?For Sale |
On account of our inability to collect
for advertisements appearing in
this column all Want Ads in -the
future must be accompanied by cash.
The rates of the ads are 25c each
insertion of 25 words or less. Each
additional line 5c. Please do not ask
us to credit classified ads unless you I
run an account with this company.
LOST?A small tooy's brown tweed
overcoat in northern part of city
last Monday. Will appreciate return
to Mrs. W. R. Zemp, Phone 83,1
Camden, S. C. 13-sb
L. I. GUION'S PEACHES will be
sold at J. K. Lee's Market during I
. .the months of July " and " August. |
Wholesale and retail. Phone No.
350. JOS. M. SMITH, Mgr.
13-15-pd.
FOR RENT.?Wanted to rent out a
' well located and completely equipped
Filling Station. Will lease to
reliable party practically free of
rent. If interested, call at Carolina
Motor Company, Camden, S. C.
13-sb
FOR SALE?"PEAS"?Sound speckled
$4.50;.Mixed, $4.75; Clays $5.00;
00 Day Velvet Beans, $3.00; Span-1
ish Peanuts, 7 \<2e? Check with I
order. J. T. FULMER, Bethune, I
S. C. 13-14-ab
ICE, ICE, ICE!?The Camden Ice
Company Service Station, corner of j
Market and DeKalb streets, under
management of Mr. Haynes, will
appreciate your patronage. <,Open
all day Sunday. Prompt and certain
service. 12sb
VACATION TIME?Why not spend
it at Attakule Lodge in Jocassee
Valley,? Now open to guests, all
modern conveniences, reasonable
* rates. For reservations apply to
M iss Ila Bearden, Jocassee, S. C. j
12-sb. FOR
RENT?Two furnished rooms
and meals, if desired. Address 1210
Broad street, Camden, S. C. i
12-14-sb
FOR SALE?One million feet of pine
timber, 10 miles of Lugoff, or will
contract to have it sawed. E. L.
Propst, Charlotte, N. C. 12-15-pd I
VISIT THE SINGER STORE?Bring
your hemstitching and ptcotlng 1
here. Sewing machines sold and I
repaired; electric fans for sale. J
R. A. Purser/ proprietor, 943 Main I
Street, Camden, S. C. 11-13-pd
SITUATION WANT E I)?Young
married man wants job driving
truck. Oall for Fred Wilson, Wilson
Filling Station, Corner DeKalb
and .Mill streets, Camden, S. C.
11-13-pd
MY PIAN6?Surely sounds good
since having it tuned, regulated and
voiced by Lewis L. Moore. - ;
11-13-sb I
FOR RENT?Two-story house oh
Broad Street, opposite the Court
House. Apply to L. A. Wittkow- J
sky, Camden, S. C. 9-tf
FOR SALE?One "Majestic" double
oven range, center tire, double water
backs, insures plenty of hot
water. Suitable for cafe, boarding
house or hotel. In excellent condition.
Apply to A. A. Shanks, Cam-|
den, S. C.
WANTED?No. 1 pine logs. Highest!
cash prices paid; year round de-1
mand. Sumter Planing Mills and I
Lumber Co., Attention E. S. Booth,
Sumter, S. C. 1-tf-sbl
66(5
is a proscription for * 1
- Malaria, Chills and Fever,
Dengue or Bilious Fever. I
It kills the germs.
?
(tell* Afcnoaace I?4^m4mc? Week.
On next Monday morning at 11:11
o'clock the city bell and all' church
bell* of Camden will begin ringing,
announcing the celebration of the
160th birthday of of the Declaration
of American Independence and commemorating
the centennial of the
death of it* author. Thomas Jefferson.
Following the ringing of a bell by the
President in Washington, at the same
time each Governor and Mayor may
do likewise in their respective state*
and cities, the mayor or Philadelphia
ringing the Liberty Bell. .The ringing
of these bells will be the signal for
the ringing of bells in schools,
churches and everywhere throughout
the Nation as the "Echo of the Liberty
Bell." A program for July 4th will
be announced at a later date.
Former Citisen Dead.
Captain Wesley O'Cain Smith, aged
54, for many year/ a conductor on
the Southern railway, died at his
home in Rock Hill Saturday afternoon.
He was born at St. George,
Captain Smith at one time resided
in Camden, where he was freight conductor
from Camden to Kingville, and
made his home here for a number of
years, where he made many friends.
He is survived by his widoyv, Mrs.
Blanche Altman Smith.
The funeral was held at Rock Hill
Monday and the interment was in
Laurelwood cemetey at that place.
Captain C. H. Fouts, Messrs. W.
Evans and Charlie Kirkland, Camden
friends of Captain Smith, attended
the funeral service
Be?md Wwk Criminal Court Jurors.
J. E. Jackson, Lugoff; J. E. Rush,
Camden; R F Taylor, Kershaw; J. D.
Motley, Blaney; H. L, Smyrl, Camden;
W. T. Holley, Jefferson; J. C.
Gillis, Camden; J. R. Bel), Logoff;
John Rabon, Jr., Lugoff; T. H.
Young, Kershaw; W. II. Koon, English;
George Branham, Lugoff; H. G.
Bell, Lugoff; H. C. Krepps, Camden;
S. E. feelvin, Camden; WT F, Nettles,
Camden; J. Burwell Branham, Lugoff;
W. L, Klnard, Lugoff; D. L.
Sowell, Camden; L, L. Truesdale,
Westville; N. B. Welsh, Kershaw;
Wesley Boone, Westville; P, N.
Smith, Bethone; J. (-'. Robinson, Kershaw;
H. C. Hardy, Camden; H. C.
Crouton, Kershaw; James- N. Taylor,
Kershaw; L. C. Clyburn, Westville;
J. E. Jeff era, Lugoff; T. D. Branham,
Lugoff; Luring Davis, Bethune; A. L.
Young, Cassatt; M. M. Evans, Camden;
Willie Sanders, Westville.
A negro baby, four months oflP'
was burned to death when a tenant
house on the farm of Hugh Henderon,
hear Blairs, Newberry county,
was destroyed by Are a few days ago,
L. C. Boozer, Newberry farmer, lost
a large barn by fire Tuesday morning.
_ Joe Gaskin, 56 year old farmer, was
shot and killed by his son, Troy, 26,
late Wednesday afternoon. The tragedy
occurred in Williamsburg county,
noft far.from Lake City. The elder
Gaskin is said to have-been mistreating
his'mother and later attacked his
son. when the ,son drew a gun and
fired.*
Returns Thanks.
The children of the late Mrs. Annie
Turner request that The Chronicle
publish the following card of thanks:
"We wish to use this means to express
our appreciation to our many
friends arid relatives for their kindnesses
rihown in the long illness and
death of our dear mother."
David Duncan, 60, postmaster it
Whitmiie, for the ,prit<twelve year*
died Friday morning following a
stroke of paralysis.
Another Bloom i
Mr. C. B, MeCaskiJl, manager of
the Kirkbride Farms, northeast of
Camden, reports a potion bloom
picked on June 22nd.
11 I , ' ' . .1.11^?p?i
I For Rent
m
Wanted, to rent out a well lbcated and completely
equipped
FILLING STATION
Will lease tor reliable party practically
FREE OF RENT
Station lias Free Air, Wash Rack, Rest Room, License S
0 ' %
has been paid and is doing a good business at present.
'
If interested, call at Carolina Motor Cpmpany at once.
' \ 0 ' ? Jr * -1 C/1' J
A5 .v.-. ' v '" v; ?" ';:>r'V- v v
<A ' ' /- . . . < '
Miss Margaret Hall, nutrition
m^ert of the Battle Creek
College of Home Economics.
Scientific Battle Creek
was more than satisfied [
Great institution recommends
Perfection after exacting tests
TRULY scientific is theBattleCreek
College of Home Economics. Its
nutrition expert, Miss Margaret Allen
Hall, cooked many meals on a Perfection
in a nation-wide cooking test
conducted by six famous cooks. Miss
Hall expressed the most complete
satisfaction with the Perfection.
The results were fine
"Whether I broiled mushrooms, foiled
- - * peas or fried timbale cases the results
were fine," she said. "The stove s
lighted Ouickly. Its heat was steady
and eveh and so easily regulated that
I cooked all thttse dishes at the same
time, using a different grade of heat
for each.
The flame is steady
"The flame did not creep or criawl. I
tested the oven with a Standard oven
thermometer and found that I could
p keep it any length of time at the temperature
I desired. This is very necessary
fbr successful baking. ?
Odors don't mix in the oven
"One meal I cooked entirely in the
oven, corn and cheese souffle, stuffed
tomatoes seasoned with onions, and
angel food cake. There was no mingling
of odors. This meal saved fuel, too, *
as I used only one burner. Through the
. glass doors I could see at any moment
how every dish was getting along.
''The Perfection is easy to handle and
easy to keep clean. And I didn't have
to scrub pots and pans. The long
chimneys prevented discoloration. *
From the former knowledge I had of
oil stoves, my expectations were
exceeded by the performance of the
Perfection. <
Battle Creek\Recommends
This recommendation came from the
Battle Creek College of Home Economics
after the most exacting laboratory
tests. Scientific Battle Creek
was more than satisfied. And fjie Perfection
was proved ready to meet the
cooking needs of any household.
All six famous cooks recommend the
Perfection. Everyday 4,500,000women
with Perfections in their kitchens are
having real cooking satisfaction.
v ' See
Perfections today
-Sec the complete line at any dealer's.
Sizes?from a one-burner model at
56.75 to a five-burner range at $120.00.
Select the stove that best fit9 the needs
of your family. Cook on the Perfection
?approved by Battle Creek College. '
Manufactured by i_
Perfection Stove Company
Cleveland, Okie
Clean, Even
Cooking Heat
The long chimney* of the Per- '
fection, burn every drop of the cril f
before it reaches the kettle. Thus
you get clean, even cooking heat
free from soot add smoke.
You can be doubly sure, of this
sort of heat *hbn you use a pure
water-white Kerosene that burns
cleanly, evenly and without odor
?"Standard" Kerosene. It is
specially refined.
All impurities thht might cause
smoke or leave deposits Of soot
are removed. This assures the
maximum amount of heat. By
sticking to "Standard" Kerosene
you are sure of best results from
? your Perfection.'Insist on It. <
You can buy it anywhere.
Standard Oil Co.
(New Jerky)
"STANDARD"
KEROSENE :
^ . .f T * v i*32$i
STANDARD OIL COMPANY {NewJersey)
Distributors * 26 Broadway - New York
PERFECTION
OiljCook Stoves and Ovens
[WARNING: Use only genuine Perfection /,
wicks on Perfection Stoves. They are worked L
[with red triangle. Others will cause trouble. /
/ *
fiend for this Free Cook Book C55
% *'* ** "*I V j - %"v3