The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, July 08, 1927, Image 7

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IWmF ' rv K CENTER HANDY IN r K (rr?p?r*4 by th? United Miaim D?p?rtm?*t u( Agriculture.) rb.? t?, uu oid bureau, and convenient shelves for storing especially H ose needed for making biscuits or pies, may be seen In i uf-a Virginia farm kitchen. The photograph was taken by the ites Department of Agriculture. When It Is also possible to have x)l to sit on while at work the hotnemaker reduces fatigue noticego gets tnore done. The cold marble Is excellent for chilling and t the dough, and la euslly cleaned. .WAITER IS BIG KITCHEN AID limbing-Can Be Reneed to Minimum. L|it* United 8tai?a Department f t! Agriculture.) fmy months of the year In rf/mates, It is unnecessary to specially |f a cool, clean, aci<e Is available for storing would ordinarily go Into utor. Sometimes a window n the purppse, but In many > the cellar Is used bespaciousness and coolness. ruwback to a cellar storage 'board is the fact that stairInvoked In transferring the u Jaelow to the kitchen e Illustration, which was he United States Departtrlculture In a Utah farm iws the best way to reduce imhing to a minimum. By lumb-waiter having several erythlng that is to go up liUr Saves Stair-Climbing. L-an bt moved it one time, one trip on the stairs Is Care should be taken, of have the ropes *9d pulleys mb waiter so arranged that run very smoothly, to avoid Uk of otheis liquid foodg.. ub waiter in ths picture Is 1 wen located with respect u cupboard into the dining to the kitchen cabinet. Cranberry JMy ?"</ ofi Fine Point* cranberry jelly depend* on itolnta, snys the. United apartment of . Agriculture, t the right amount of .hot '? cupfuU to each quart of more; second, boll the * rapidly until, they burst! or you will destroy "bar make* the jelly $?llH;j the fro*'t through s line hr than a eolnndef so that JMl as eklns are removed. ** nipfula of sugar to eoch " nnberrlee, add If,to the Nip, and ??ook until the jelly the spoon. Then mold It holding about the right for ons meal. Cranberry 1*" or run* after It is cut, * m??rs attractive to place a & <>n the table at each serv?bf ry jelly keep* well and r* time to make up a supply Rich in Iron S tr* especially rich In Iron, ?* also a good source of ?d Phosphorus. All three of Wn-rei* Tim the body needt f ,n geOerotjs quantities. CHEESE SOUFFLE , " IS EASILY MADE Delicious Combination ol Cheese, Eggs and Milk. (Prepared by the United State* Departmeni of Agriculture.* Cheese souffle Is a delicious combination of cheese and eggs, bread crumbs and milk, sufficiently hearty to take the place of meut and potatoes once In a while. Some horaeraakers, have the Idea that souffles are difficult to make and'that <*>ly a French, oheT can turn out a perfect one. Oi: the. contrary a souffle is quite slmph to make If one understands two or three points, that apply to almost all good cookery. Slow and thorough cooking In moderate heat Is one of these points, states the United Stale:I Department of Agriculture. You may know cheese souffle undei the name of "cheese puff" or "cheese fondilifcy the name does not matter' especially. To make it you will need 1 pint of milk V4 lb. American S or 4 6KKD cheeg* 1% oupfuls of %, teaspoonful of bread crumbs salt Put the bread crumbs and the milk together In the double boiler, heat them to the scalding point. Grate the cheese or shave It Into thin, small pieces and stir It Into the hot milk and bread crumbs, but do not let It cook. Add the salt. Take this mixture Jrora the heat and white, it is coollAg, heat the yolks and whites of the eggs separately, and butter a baking dish. The souffle will cook best In a good-slxed earthenware or glass baking dish three or more Inches deep. After the bread, milk and cheese mix ture has cooled, stir In the beaten egg yolks and fold In the whites. The air beaten Into the egg whites is what makes the souffle fluffy, so mix them In with the careful folding motion. Pour the mixture at once into the buttered baking dish and bake in a moderate oven for 86 to 45 minutes. Long, alow cooking is o^e of the secrets of making a perfect souffle. The moderate heatmakea the air bub blee in the egg whites expand until the mixture la light and cooka It thoroughly so that even when a spoon Is put Info It for serving It does not collapse like a pricked balloon. That le pi hat, hap pone-to a souffle, e? omelet, or other similar act dish that has been1 cooked too rapidly at too high a tem 1 psieltmti Souffles are not hard toT make If one remembers this Important 'point. | Valuable Food Material in Jatgm of Vegetable* For a long time the Idea has pre Tailed that the juices In which vege, tables are canned should be thrown - awajtr . This, la-entirely erroneous With practically all vegetables, excep' tomatoes, a brine or sirup contalnln small atoonnte of salt or sugar o both la added to the solid vegetable 'n the process of conning for the pur % pose of seasoning the product, produc log a well filled can and assisting li the proper cooking of the produci During the processing treatment. miJerat matters, sugars and other soluh' material* dissolve In the liquor. It I evident that> the discarding of th1 liquid means the loss of vnlush'e foo material, fto nnlena the solid plec* of vegetable* are to be used for ep rial purposes.: Vpch "as the ptvpan Hon of a salad, the throwing SWM.v ? the Juice repfedbnta a toss of the foo mhterlal of the can. , j Raw On'oTt* Valuabl* i Like other fresh vegetables r* i onions are valuable for their.jnlhefM and vltsmlnes and their balk. Th | theory the! onions or other food* nr beneficial to-4be nerves has be?n j ploded. It is now known that a wel. | diet bslpa to keep all part j sf the body healthy. V i+rrff- J f _ ESHiK. e PRIVATE MUSEUM ON TOP OF SKYSCRAPER Bingliani Keep* Rare Mafine Specimens in Suite. New York. O.i'the lop fW of the Wt r11,?11^ Ul 82 ,,ro?^?y. >" the >e*rt Of the flnniiehil district. there Is what la undoubtedly the ou|v *kv. ::rr p,*'",loKr,,?','h- museum Id the r/c??. ,i ,b Hn ,Vv ""iM-um fur It consists of lone I ?f M pr,VM,M "Me* ' .? '* "?l ,,ow? MM(1 I'rohably never wlII he. opei) t0 the puWlc> Hut u? the gla*? en.,,,,, urul ln Kla}iM H Hon W!UUy ui,d ?re some 8000 specimens of marine fife, many of then of hitherto unknown aperies oftlce hulldlnK collection 1h the nucleus of what la expected to grow """ " ort.nl?d pr'X museum, which Harry 1'ayne Bingham, a owner, will house In uii appropriate building. Meanwhile Mr. Bingham la worklug In company with Louis Mowbray, assistant director of the Aquarium, classifying tt?d studying the wealth of marine material they got on the three months' 11,000-mlle expedition they made last spring In the Caribbean and the Pacific. Soma Extraordinary Fish. Hundreds of these specimens already have been mounted and placed in glaas cases ln Mr. Bingham's offlcs ut 82 Broadway. Others are on the wall. Many of them are deep-sea varieties, ln the grotesque shape* made familiar by William Beebe's descriptions Jast year of the ocean treasures he fodnd on his cruise in the Arctnrus. Their range of else is extraordinary. There Is one Ash from the depthh of the ocean only three Inches long. It |? equipped with a tough skin which has prevented it blowing up am most deep-sea fish do when brought to the surface from the heavy pressure of the lower levels of water. And on the wall nearby is a giant sword fish 12 feet long. On the wall also Is a specimen of weakflsh six feet long, weighing 175 pounds, In striking contrast to the six-pound variety caught in New York waters and served on restaurant tables. The skyscraper collection contains even a sea-serpent. It looks like a blacksnake about three feet long, with the under side oj. Its head white. It was caught close to shore In the Oulf of California. All Mounted and Fainted. The fish, as they are seen In Mr. Bingham's office, are In their original shapes and colors. Francis West, taxidermist of the Bingham-Mowbray expedition, made plaster casts of the five fish while they were flopping about the deck. Their skins have now been fitted over these casts and painted by Wilfred Bronson, an artist, who observed them In life in a diving suit and made notes of their coloring. In an adjoining room Is a motion picture projection machine and a screen on which Mr. Bingham and Mr. Mowbray can throw pictures they took on their voyage. With the aid of this they can study again the life habits of the sea animals. Mr. Bingham admitted that It was true that he was planning to establish a museum, but said his plans were entirely vague thus far and that he did not yet have enough material to warrant forming a museum. His office serves meanwhile as a storeroom and workroom. Mr. Bingham formerly was a member of>the New York Stock exchange, but sold his seat two years ago to concentrate his attention on his studies 'of marine life, ln which he has long been Interested. He intends to make another three months' voyage early next year ln search of specimens. He and his party will travel In the Pawnee, his 160-foot yacht, In whirl he explored southern waters this year. The yacht Is equipped with Diesel engines. It contains a laboratory, rmuns for ipounting the specimens and elaborate paraphernalia for exploring the depths. . Church Censors Clothes '* Milan.?Women who dreds too raodenUf Fiji be refused admittance to 'Church, by order of Cardinal Tost, who has forbidden public dances. [ New Milliken Light | Dim* X-Ray's Force j! j, Washington.?The newly dls-"j j |[ covered Milliken light ray has ?' j t the most powerful penetrating j \ {[. force of anyrayCw brougbi H 1. to human notice, \tfc* 8mlthaon- !! )[ Ian Institution announced Is a " 11 bulletin calling attention to the !! J fact that the Jiew ray will pen- j \ * etrate a layer of lead six feer n j [ thick, whereas the X-ray can be j | 11 stopped with a thin aheet of the 1' J | same metal.^ No one can foresee j [ " by what remarkable uses the " I [ ray may be made to serve man !' | kind, the bulletin added, II The extraordinary pe>?e#>iwtlui: ! -f powers of the new r^y depend J >( on the extreme shortness of the 1 \ [ ware length. Ordinary broad- <i [ 11 casting radio, or Herfstan rays 1 jj have waves from 100 to 8.000 \\ 11 meters. Professor T*nngle,i 11 )[ found rays In the sun's anil j! 'I moon's beams, which were In 11 J visible to the eye. of a wave ![ n length of one-hnndredtb of a 11 \\ millimeter, or 100,000.000 time.- j| 11 shorter than 1,000meter radio. J1 \ \ The new rays which Milliken 1! jj has found are 2.00ri tiroes sbor Jj it er ln wave lauglh than th ,11 j [ average X-ray. - - - j J" - -- I^e County Citizen Dead G. Henley MoCutcheon, one of the leading planters of I>ee county died at hi? home near St. Charlea Saturday morning following a stroke of ajn*plexy. I Mr. McCutchen waa a life time rea-' ident of Lee county and waa a leader in educational and religious work, being an ehter in Mt. Zion Presbyterian church and chairman of the board of trustees of Kivergide high school. He waa u aon of the late Win. O. and Klnia K. McCutchen, and waa 49 years of age. With the passing of Mr. McCutchen* Ihj? county loses one of its moat beloved citizens. Mia death coming suddenly has east a gloom over the entire county und I likewise wherever he waa known. He was a man of quiet demeanor and I friendly nature and leaves scores of I friends in sadneaa at his death. Mr. McCutchen is survived by his widow, who waa Mias Ethel Cooper of Muyesvjlle. His first wife, who waa Mias Montgomery, died some 16 years ago. The following children also sur-1 vive: John McCutchen, G. Henly McCutchen, Jr., Miss Elma McCutchen and FraBer MoCutchen. j Alao surviving are three brothers, W. W. MoCutchen and E. B. McCutI chen, both of St. Charles section and I Dr. R, ,0. McCutchen of Bishopville, I and two sisters, Miss Edna McCutchen of n^ar St. Charles and Mrs. Wherry of Cheater county. Funeral services were held at Mt. Zion church at 5 o'clock Sunday afI ternoon and were conducted by Rev. I J. M. Waggett, the pastor. InterI ment waa made in the church yard.? Bishopville Messenger. * * 1 | Barnes-Strange I On Wednesday evening, at seven I o'clock, June 29, at the home of Mr. I and Mrs. D. I. Reardon, 209 S. Salem avenue, occurred the marriage of I Miss May M. Barnes of Camden and Mr. J. K. Strange of Sumter. The ceremony was performed by Rev. E. W. Reynolds, the impressive ring I ceremony being used, in the presence I of several of the relatives and friends of the contracting parties. At the J conclusion of the ceremony light reI freshments were served, after which, amid the congratulations and good wishes of their relatives and friends, Mr. and Mrs. Strange left by motor for Darlington and other points for I a brief bridal trip. Upon their reI turn Mr. and Mrs. Strange will make I their home at 121 N. Salem avenue.? Sumter Item. Eighth City of Jerusalem Writing in The Pee Dee Advocate' of a trip she made a few months ago to the Holy Land, Mrs. M. M. Matheson, of Bennettsville has the following interesting paragraph about the city of Jerusalem: "Jerusalem is built on Mount Morlah and Mount Zi6n and has a popu| lation of 60,000, of whom 7,000 are i Moslems, 41,000 Jews and 1-3,000 Christians. Jerusalem has been besieged and destroyed 16 times and the Jerusalem of today is the eigth city built on the ruins of its predecessors. The city of Christ's day is 126 feet beneath the rubbish of centuries. In 78 A. D. the city was entirely destroyed by Titus and for 60 years was a barren waste without a single inhabitant. Of course this makes it practically impossible to definitely locate any of the places made sacred by the life and death of Christ, and we know that all the socalled places shown to tourists are largely imaginary except the site of the Temple of Solomon. But we do know that this land shall be forever sacred to all Christians because we know that' it was here that Christ was born and lived and died." They may reduce the sice of paper money, but the stuff will make you feel just as big. Clemson College SCHOLARSHIP AND ENTRANCE EXAMINATIONS Competitive examinations for the award of vacant scholarships ia Clemson College will be held on Friday, July 8, 102T, beginning at, 9 a.m., by each County Superintendent ef Education. These scholarships will be open to young men sixteen years of age or over, who desire to pursue courses in Agriculture and Textiles. Scholarships are awarded by the State Department ef Education on the recommendation of the State Board of Public Welfare. Persons interested should write the Registrar for information and application blanks before the time of the examinations. GOccoasful applicants must meet fully the requirements for admission. Each scholarship is. worth $100.00 and free tuition, which Is $40.00 additional. Membership in the Reserve Officers Training Corpe-?-R. O. T. C. ?is of financial assistance. These examinations may also he used as credit toward admission into college. For further information write THE REGISTRAR . Clemson College, South Carolina J 9-14-sb ... LJ.aa J!' i.'I mijj I , _ t _ J , I Prepare For Your Future I Years. I There is no reason, aside from physical j disability, why you cannot acquire at least enough wealth to make it possible 1 to spend the declining years of life in i comfort and without worry or anxiety | concerning the necessities of life. I Loan & Savings Bank I CAPITAL $100,000.00 I i 1. i.11;1 , "* , g The First National Bank I Of Camden, South Carolina ^ [1 I STATEMENT OF CONDITION JUNE 30, 1927 II I . Condensed from Report to the |l Jl Comptroller of Currency j! j I RESOURCES II II Loans and Discounts $475,320.91 II.I Overdrafts . tttt 1,050.30 ll <> I United States Bonds . 79,851.13 - II I Other Bonds and Stocks 34,888.50 II II , Banking House, Furniture and Fixtures... 33,820,28 II i|| , Cash in vault and due by Banks and U. S- !|<; || Treasurer 61,853.34 || I Total $686,784.46 II I LIABILITIES ^ II :II Capital Stock Paid in '. .$ 75,000.00s ||| Surplus and Undivided Profits O 39,020.77 II I Circulating Notes 48,900.00 || I Deposits ;.. 509,472.06 11 I Reserve Fund 11,375.63 * || 11| Bills Payable NONE || || Dividends Unpaid 3,01600 II ;| Total $686,784.46 I#-| | ONLY NATIONAL BANK IN KERSHAW COUNTY *