The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, December 22, 1933, Page PAGE EIGHT, Image 8
I fl n Vf CHRISTMAS FRUITS
LUWIV: NUTS :-: CANDIES
Grapes, Bananas, Oranges, Apples, Grapefruit.
A fruit bowl piled high with Nature's sweetest temptation.
Don't overlook it for the Holidays. NUTS?
fresh and tasty?in variety?Pecans, Almonds, Walnuts.
Fill up the nut bowls and leave some handy for
Santa to slip into the Kiddies Christmas Stockings.
Fresh shipment of Nunnally's Candies, in Christmas-packages.
Home-made Candies. Cigars, Cigarettes,
Tobacco. Schlitz and Budweiser Beer.
CURB SERVICE
CAMDEN CANDY KITCHEN
*
Serving the Trade in Camden for a Quarter Century.
The Mt. Pisgah Baptist Church.
There will he services at the Mt.^
Pisgah Baptist church next lord's
Pay as follows: Bible school at H):00
a. n>.; Church worship at 11 ;00 a.
The pastor will discuss a message
appropriate for the Christ mas '.season.
The B. Y. P. U's will meet at 6:30
p. m. The pastor of this church extends
to you the season's greetings
and trusts you will hnve a very happy
Christmas. As we exchange gifts, let
us remember God's greatest gift to
the world, His own Son, nnd the
spirit which prompted it. May the
spirit of Him whose birthday we celebrate
prevail in ourhearts and
prompt us to the greater ,t (Torts for
Him during the coming year. Expect
groat things for your church and help
translate this .expectancy by giving
Christ your beat. Remember God
gave His only Son for us; what will
we give to Him? Can we give less
than our best?
The public is cordially invited to
worship with us next Lord's Hay.
His coming commands worship. "Wo
hnve keen His* star in the East, and
are come to worship Him." Matt. 2:2.
Luther Knight, Pastor.
Sanders?Leigh
llagood, Dec. 11.?Characterized
by simplicity and dignity was the j
wedding Saturday evening, December
(J, at Shayde 11 i lie, home of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Wessqji Sanders,
when their eldest daughter, Miss Sarah
Gwynn Sanders and John Powell
Leigh, of Portsmouth, Va., were married.
/ Sanitation l/nit Formed
W. M. Shannon has been appointed
by the State Board of Health as
head of the Community! Sanitation
YJnit in Kershaw county. The work
has to do with the- building of sanitary
pit toilets for the curbing of human
born diseases such as typhoid
fever, dysentery, and hookworm. It
is not t'^e purpose of the unit to enforce
hardships on- anyone and the
competent force of this unit will
work with the people to try to save
them as much money as possible. The
unit is not contemplating the necessity
of the enforcement of the state
laws. However, it is well for the
people to know that there is- a state
luw* covering this project. The cost
to the individual property owner will
be only for the material, arrangements
hayjiig been made with the C.
W. A. for the construction and erection
of these sanitary pits.
It. S. Gary, district supervisor, has
been in Camden assisting in the organization
of the.unit in this county.
The office will be located in the
county "health officer's, offices in the
court house.
Grace Church Services
Rev. F. II. Craighill, Jr., rector of
I Grace Episcopal church announces
the following services: Sunday, December
21. Holy Communion at K a.
m.; Church school at D:-15 a. m.; the
Morning prayer with special Christmas
message and music at 11:15; the
children's festival will be held at 9:45
Sunday morning.
Services* for Christmas day, Holy
Communion at 9:50 a. m. Morning
prayer and Christmas music 11 a. m.
FIFTEEN YEARS AGO
(From the Files of The Chronicle of
1 loccmbcr 27, HUH)
Evening Herald of Rock Hill, temporarily
suspended account al the
force down with the flu.
Schools to open December 20, after
heinj^ closed accouunt of flu epidemic.
Memorialn services to be held for
Lieut. \V. Bratton deLoach, Jr.
Dance at Hobkirk Inn for boys in
khaki well attended by Camden people
and men in service.
Community Christmas tree given
under auspices of Civic League.
Red Cross canteen under captaincy
of Mrs. Cora C. Ancrum temporarily
closed, having fulfilled all ardors received
from headquarters. ~
Walter Hines. Page, former ambassador'
to Great Britain, dies.
Dr. S. W. Pryor, of Pryor hospital,
Chester, critically ill with pneumonia.
R. Goodwin Rhett. of Charleston,
urges people to buy war savings
-tamps.
CHRONICLE OF THE WEEK
Un?v more that great da". Christ- t
ma- and- ..ft?-r that New Year 's. '
-a ] opportunities. May it In a j
M < r r\ ? T. r;.-rrnn - :t ILu;.v New .
\ . ar."
\: : :.? < a r,?' ma - play : n : ::e
a-.i-l t '-.um. ;:a. .;tt.r eh.hir-.-n .
a r t 1 . i < a - t' r ;i!>- ;r a pa "t - j
: g b an >. ! ma-'t . ira: w a a
' i t : a : a : * j.e a r. . a < - t
- w a - < : < a * -i > ( a ' leay
a- : a >i go..?i. w m> <> ft.- ? ur .
sake.- .. an.e i!e v. n from Hi- . :tr?>re on
;;g.r ami ana- an-or g>* u- a- a La'>c
\ ng 11 M >t i.i a n:- :v a - a
a: B.tr.a of .la a-.;. !.' : i yoa ago.
t' at ( :- .g; :i ( :t a 1
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i- g r:i." g ?' a " a : :.< r
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t- ' k La ' i - W \\ 1 o: gu -1 n ,
M. K;::-.::. aa-t.tut,
i .? i
Curing Pork by
The Dry Method
'or dry-curing hanrt and $houldorfc,
thorn are many different recipes
that rail for varying quantities of
salt. Five pounds is generally sufficient
if one is sure that all the salt
will be absorbed by the meat. However,
since some salt ordinarily falls
pff or drains away, <> to 8 pounds is
a safer quantity, in. the smith whero
temperatures are often high the H
pounds of salt is probably better.
More than this quantity should not
be used as it may injiite the flavor
and make the lean muscle too hard.
Meat is likely to spoil, regardless
of the quantity of salt applied, if the
freshly slaughtered carcass and the
curing meat are held at too high
tern peratures.
The following curing mixture is recommended
for 100 pounds of trimmed
pork: Six to 8 pounds of salt,
1 1-2 to 2 pounds of sugar, and two
ounces of salt-peter. This is the
well known 8-2,2 recipe and is the
same as that used in making thr
brine cure. * " \
Mix the ingredients thoroughly in
a pan and divide into two equal parts
by weight. Use one part for the
first rubbing; use one-half of the
other for overhauling the meat on
the third day, and the other half for
overhauling on the tenth day. In
giving the first rubbing, sprinkle a
little of the mixture in the 4ottom of
the barrel. Put each ham or shoulder
into the pan of curing mixture
and rub it thoroughly. Force*- some
salt into the hock and along the cut
face of the butt, taking care not to
injure the hand on the butt bone.
Cover the face of the cut with the
mixture and lay the piece carefully
in place. Repeat the same process in
overhauling. The pieces at the top
of the original pack should be at' the
bottom when the meat is resalted.
The same curing mixture, with salt
reduced to 5 pounds, will dry-cure
100 pounds of bacon. Overhauling on
the third day will bo sufficient.
Two days per pound is the standard
curing time for the dry method.
However, it is usually safer to keep
H to 10 pound hams in the curing
mixture for from 25 to 80 days.
Farmers who wish to store, this meat
for summer use often remove the
cuts at full time, string them, and allow
them to hang at air temperature
for about two weeks before smoking.
Fat backs and shoulder plates may
be cured by either the dry or brine
method. They are usually left in
cure until used, says Henry D. Green,
the county agent.
Profits in Cotton
May Be Doubled
Washington, Dec. 13.?Cully Cobb,
government cotton chief, set down
figures today to show that the South
would be paid almost twice as much
for its 193-3 cotton crop as it would
have received without the , plow-up
campaign.
If the farm^price^ averages 9 1-2
cents a pound "as now appears probable,"
Cobb said, the current crop
will bring ^787,000,000 as contrasted
with $307.00tJtf)00 producers received
for lint in 1932. %
Without the reduction program
this year and the assurance of future
control of production, the cotton
chef -aid universal opinion w^s that
the 1933 crop would have averaged
n?.* mo: e than five cents a pound,
which f"r an estimated 17,000.000
hales would have brought farmers
hut $ 1 io.uoo.ooo.
Rooks. Replies)c-d l>> Library
The r.ct Js ,,f *hc Camden Public
Library are -<> maty and varied and
situ.- it is impo-sih'e for the Library
\ s .,,eiaf ion to .oh qtiatt iy supply all {
in' (is w< are requesting the
pubio to a,11 in supplying books '"or
i. youth of ( a aider.
Mac':, .lay !>-y- a: : g.ris from *he
pre age through high s; i0!
1. a e t he . h' a > el* *o r w it h b ks [ .
. V . .. t
u*.,-.:.o : to . r.e.r in.* or wit., t. f.e ( <
..* a'.' 1 ". y a *? * age: and an\ us .
. ,-a.. b .* .b >v i . ma ke-1. ' .'.*e ! >
i
, \ - cc -*:?. - id a* a e. < nt r.a' n- j .
a ii.. . -g ?:. i An.-.loan I..'1. >t'j j
A . at. ' .... ag . " Hie n a ng . ,
, i.-. a r. :. i" t ;> e u : -s, j ,
: t mi -: - a * i a. i?-> -tar.d. i
* - t be- ne | r
; /.>< .. 'a . i .. an: > o be *?le j }
i b, A.H ... . . :. of diff. : It t
- * bild er.'s j o
i * en a ': \ n ? : . an ! 1 u k! be : j j 1,
n* . : ne La .at 1' * h the S -s j f.
f. * .- ling - W:* r.le the 1* ?k j a
ir,.i t *.? i : i -. 'i .. .r.g Fu of the
Van:.* appear equally be[i\e(:
by children of many nations. (
We an li-tir.g the following books o
hat the library actually needs; any s.
orations will he gratefully reoeiv-d: n
"Little Black Sambo." Bannerman; it
Johnny Crow's Garden," Brooke; si
Pinocehio," Collodi; "Heidi,"* Spyri; rr
Winnie the Pook," Milne; "Young ri
Fu of the Upper Yangtze," Lewis;]
"Adventures of Peter Cottontail,
Burgess; "Peter Rabbit,"i? Potter;
"When the Root Children Wake Up," |
Olfers and Fish; "Marigold Garden,"
Greenaway; "Nature Stories for
Children," Albright and. Gordprt;
"Animal Book for Children," Burgess;
"Robinson Crusoe," Defoe; "Water
Babies,". Kingslcy; "Little Lame
Prince," Mulock; "Adventures of Tom
Sawder," Twain; "The Prince and the
Pauper," Twain; "Uncle Remus,
JIarris; "Toby Tyler," Otis; Mrs.
Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch," Rice;
"Grimm's Fairy Tales;" "Gulliver's
Travels," Swift; "Twenty Thousand i
Leagues Under the Sea," Verne; |
"Swiss Family Robinson," Wyss;
"Penrod," Tarkington; "Penrod and
Sam," Tarkington; "Little Lord
Fauntleroy," Burnett; "Huckleberry
Finn," Mark Twain; "Little Minister,"
Barrie; "Lorna Doone," Blackmore;
"Jane Eyre," Bronte; "Don Quixote,"
Cervantes; "David Copperfield," Dickens;
"Call of the Wild," London;
"White Fang." London; "Secret Garden,"
Burnett; "Two Years Before
the Mast," Dana; "Honorable Peter
Stirling," Ford; "Under the Story
Tree," I>a Rue; "King Arthur and
His Knights," Warren.
I)R. WM. RAINSFOIU)
DIES IN NEW YORK
( (Continued From First Page)
ami transferring their allegiance to
more fashionable and conveniently j
located churches. There was a debt 1
with r.o sign, of fundi with .
which to meet it.
Some member- of the vestry, and;
among them J. Pierpont Morgan the
elder, were not ready to give up. j
Several had heard Dr. Rains! ord j
when he had been in New York. The j
young assistant at St. James s was I
asked to come hero and ta.k it over, j
lie agreed to become rector, but laid j
down some conditions.
"I want three things if I come to |
. .. . , ..v- . I
St. >. o sa.d. i ou inu>v i
make the chtn^i f:ee. d:s-,ha*trtr all1 .
committee-; except the vi-'iy, so jh i
to leave me w.th entirely f ee hands,
,r.d give me s'lo.ooo a year^for three;
v<ar- to u-e .n parish work as 1 see.
] without a-king an.vho.iy's < or.-1
Tiie. vestrymen looked a; each oth- .
r arai then, it is reported, Mr. M e- |
ran -ear.! the harga'.fl with -no ,
w?rd?"Done!"'
\S ith;n a month of his .-tart in the
;eu cr.aige. Dr. Rair.sford on o -aid.
le had preached seven of the foureen
families still on the roster - at
the pari.-h. After that the church 1
egan. t<? giow. and when he resign,1
be-.au-e of ill health ;n P. <>?*> it had
member.-hip of more than 4,()<)0.
Under hit> v gorou- dire- tion the i
hj:\ h rapidly w idened its work. .
".ubs. schools, athletic rooms, camps (
n the shore and in the mountains,
anitariums, classes for mothers,
lission* and other activities came
lto being. Dr. Rainsford's love of ,
hooting gave rise to the develop- \
lent of a rifle club with a shooting J
inge in tho basement of the Memo- "
rial House, behind the church. Its
cupola grew to be called "the arsenal."
,
The building of Memorial House
and the uses to which the rector proposed
putting it aroused something
| like consternation among some mem[
bers of his board, but they had bectfrne
accustomed to following his
lead and they did this time.
In the pulpit he dared to talk of
things which were not considered sermon
material forty years ago. He
mentioned such subjects as birth control,
and talked in no uncertain terms
of the city's vice problem. In 1897
he attracted wide attention by his
outspoken criticism of the lavish en-,
tertninment furnished at a society
ball when there was much suffering
among the city's poor, and in 1900 he
astonished Christian hearers by some
observations on immortality and hell.
"There is no terrible judgmentahead,,
no physically burning hell," he
said. "That judgment is a process
here and now. The Kingdom of God
is a spiritual kingdom existing in
men's hearts."
In 1905 Dr. Ransford went to Eu-rope
for his health. After an absence
of nearly a year, he wrote his
letter of resignation. For a time he
traveled and then retired to his coun-,
try home at Ridegfield, but that re- j
tirement was to be brief. While recuperating,
he- went to East Africa
in 1908 and engaged in several lion
hunts, and in 1912 he headed an expedition
into wilder regions of the
same part of Africa for the Ameri-'
ran Museum of Natural History in ;
search of specimens of the black rhi- .
nocerous.
One of Dr. Rainsford's last formal
appearances as a speaker was at the
Town Hall in May, 1925, when ?
chair was endowed there in his honor.
In his address on that occasion
he asserted that young people today
could not accept the old religion.
"Banish the supernatural," he urged.
"I believe in the Lord Jesus as
a man, a real man. I believe ho was ^
born of the love of a good man and
a good woman, as God intended all
of us to be born. I believe he lived ?
as men live, that he died as mep die,
only in unparalleled torture."
In 1912' Dr. Rainsford astonished
his friends by seeking and receiving
from Bishop Greer divestment fronr.
all ecclesiastical rank. Shortly be-'fore
he started on his second African .
expedition he wrote the Bishop
formally requesting that he be deposed.
Such a request under canon
law must be granted, and it was in
his case.
In 1878 Dr. Rainsford married
Emily Alma Greene, in London.
Three sons, Lawrence, Ralph Stewart
and Kerr, were born to them.
Mrs. Rainsford died in 1923. In
May, 1926, Dr. Rainsford married.
Miss Henrietta Rogers at Garrison,
N. Y.
His published works include "Sermons
Preached at St. George's,"
"Preacher's Story of His Work,"
"Land of the Lion," "Story of a Varied
Life" and "Reasonableness of
the Religion of Jesus."
He was a member of the University,
Century and Players Clubi
New York.
Last Minute
! i
"GIFT TIPS"
from Sheorn's
()vci'l11<?k anybody in
mnkinp- 11 j? your Gi_P
!i<t7 It' s??. hero a 1*0 a
' few >.plc-mI i?I h;nf- :
T i 0 s 55c to $1.50 I
Belt and Buckle
Sets $2.00 to $3.00
Bath Robes $7.95 to $10
Socks 25c to $1.00
Handkerchiefs
25c and 50c
Shirts $1.00 to $2.00
Pajamas $1.50 to $8.50
II ouse Slippers
95c to $2.95
W. Sheorn & Son
i
I
?zrmvNmf* r?nap>-?jfflawi .! **??ay~<twKawMCT w?w*rrtaa.-r.i"w
Get Your Famous Lynhaven Oysters | i
From us and he sure your Turkey Dinner is a success.
Selects qt. 59c Standards at. 49c B
Also we have to offer Friday and Saturday?Pompano,
Red Snappers, Flcunders, Salmon Trout, Spanish
Mackerel, Black Fish, Croakers, Mullet, Fillet of D .
Sole, Fillet of Haddock, Crab Meat, Cooked Shrimp, I
H ome-made Devil Crab.
Quality Sea Food Market |
Ikf til tfc llglte
kjpwt
| beat our custom at this time of year to fortftt
\ the .business of advertising Essolene and extend our patrons
the greetings of the season. Jt is even this
year to do so, for we have so many new friends to greet
amongst our great family of customers..So to you, each
and every one, from us Esso dealers, each and every one,
^
comes this sincere wish...a !Merry Christmas, a Happy
INew year.. And may i934 find you on the high road of
Prosperity, in high gear and all the traffic lights green
* -X/ ' V
Standard Oil Company of Wew
J "Out of the Abundance of the Heart J
4 The Mouth Speaketh" 4?
/ Not only as one business organization to an- /
J another, but as friend to friend, we wish to convey j
L to you our sincere wishes that your Christmas will be 4 .
Jj a Merry one and the New Year will be full of Hap- J
? piness for you.
(t Mr. and Mrs. C. Grainger Kornegay u %
fell
DeKalb at Lyttleton CanultDt S. C*