The Barnwell people-sentinel. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1925-current, July 07, 1927, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

V- Load and Personal W' i. i. ■ New* from WiUuton wm m July 2.—Mr. and Mrs. of Oraonville, were visi- tKU nook of Dr. and Mrs, J. L. ■- } l* X>4rHo Smith, Jr., vUited Mr. and Hli. A. E. CoHey this week. Mr*. John Bracey, of Augusta, ■pent Fr|d#y with her parents, Mr. unff itn. J. C. Hair. of Augusta, of Visaes Lily and Bogol Met week. A^iee MdCue spenlt several days last week with Mrs. £ 0- Kearsh In Bamberg. Mrs. Fred Bchroyer, of Valparaiso, Ind., is visiting het- sister, Mrs. E. Mae Beatrtee Givens is spending | Ode week with her aunt, Mrs. C. B. •a Ines Hair returred to Bates- ..drith Mary Eva Hita, where she M laps - ~»~ $ , Miss Alice Scott returned from Bpeftanhurg Tuesday and was accom- , parded home by Alice and Ensley J Fletcher, Jr. Mr. and Mra.* C. B. Johnson, of r , Allendale, spent the. week-end with [ thetr parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W Johsmon. ^ jjfc. WBMeip. Melvin and children, LUBan and r 0ntf, visited her parents. Mr. aad ,Cfrs. W. I. Wilson in Au- Kennedy will attend the meeting of South Carolina Bankers association in Aaheville this week. Walter Givens and his father, A. C. Givens^ of Springfield, motored to LaUrinburg, N. C., last Saturday and returned Sunday, and were accom panied by the former’s daughters, Misses Thelma and Grace Givens, who have been visiting in Laurin- burg. ; v • "r • •»' Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Lewis and chldren have returned from Frost proof, Fla., and have been visiting relatives in this section before going to Aiken, where they will make their home for the winter. « ■; Misses Ruby Parker and Dorothy Kitchlags are the guests this week of Mrs. Chesley Bates, of Blackville. Among those from Wilfiston at tending the Martin-Powell marriage in Cheraw Thursday were Mr. and Mr*. W.- C. Smith, Jr., and Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Rountree. Mrs. Edna Faulkner and children, NEW SUGGESTIONS for the - SUNDAY DINNER No. 1 Roast Beef with Browned Potatoes and Pears Cauliflower au gratia Prunes Stuffed with India Relish Lettuce Salad French Dressing Coffee Charlotte Coffee No. 3 • Roast Duck with Prune Dressing Glased Sweet Potqfoes Creamed Spinach i Cabbage and Pineapple Salad Sunshine Creams , Coffee —vt I- ' Mrs. Q. A. Kennedy, Jr., and her auifl, Mrs. J. L. Mallally, of Macor. Ga., Mrs. W. R. Kennedy and Mrs. Q. A. Kennedy, Sr, motored to Allen dale Thursday for the day. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Cunningham children motored to Liberty Hill Irv. Mrs. Cunningham will *o- there for a visit with Mr. and W. A. Cunningham. D. Carter and little daughters, Jean, of Bamberg, sy with Mr. and Mrs. J. Sara and Berte Dean •pending the week with Agnes Her. •Mrs. J. W, Floyd, Miss Nannie Floyd and Ned Cuningham left Mon day for a visit*to Mrs. J. L. Lewis st Tfcbor, N. C. A fter a visit of a week nr ten days, M^ss Floyd will go to ,M<L, where she will spend P. F. Parker spent tn Bishopville with an invadin^M. Givens. 1,000 American ^en Parker is on an again net) friends and rela- »k the people w^e. sleep? Thatohn G. Fearing and Jolhejj. Jr„'bf Charleston, L. F. ArVrcwet of Johns’ spent Sunday With their par- and Mrs. L. S. MelHchamp. and Mrs. A. M. Kennedy, Miss Dixon and Billie Patterson the week with Mrs. Hendersonville, N. C. Mr. week with Mrs. J. E. Bolen. Mrs. Nellie Johnson, of Eastman, Ga., is visiting in this section. She wag formerly Mies Nellie Wade, of this community. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Hair spent Tues day and Wednesday with their daugh ter, Mrs. J. V. Bracey in Augusta. Their little granddaughter, Annie Rose Bracey returned home with them. Information reached Mr.- A. N. Garber, of Williston, last Saturday of the death in Asheville, N. C., Sat urday afternoon of Mrs. Garber’s sis ter, Mrs. T. L. Kahn, who will bei re membered in Williston as Miss Re becca Mazursky, « former resident of Williston. At the time of her mar riage, which was a double wedding of Iwo sisters, Mrs. Garber and Mrs. Kahn—Mrs. Kahn's parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. Mazursky were residents of Williston. Mr. and Mrs. Garber and Mr. and Mrs. Mazursky and other members of the Mazursky family left Saturday to drive* to Asheville to attend the funeral which was held Monday. Mr*. Kahn is survived by her parents, her husband, several children and several brothers and sisters. The executive committee of the Bamwell-Bamberg Sunday School convention, through its secretary, 'mm By CAROLINE B. KING .a Culinary expert and lecturer on No. 2 . Fruit Cocktail Deviled Lamb Chops Duchesse Potatoes Brussels Sprouts Prune Relish Celery Salad Lemon Cream Pie Coffee , enough sweet cream to moisten delicately and whip in the yolk of ooc P REPARE and roast the beef as usual, arrange the potatoes about it, alternating them with halved canned pears drained and dried, then dredged with a little flour. Brown nicely and serve as a garnish about the roast Prunes Stuffed with India Relish Soak and steam large meaty prunes, cool and extract the pits from slits in the sides. Fill with finely chopped pickle. India Relish or Piccalili. Serve as a part of the salad course^/ as a relish with the meat. Coffee Charlotte glasses with split lady fingers, and fill with stiffly Line sherbet stittiy whipped cream to which enough clear black coffee has been added to color and flavor well, sweeten to taste with powdered sugar and whip in half a teaspoonful of vanilla-ex tract. Top each serving with a blanched almond or a cherry. Deviled Lamb Chops Mix together tw<r"tIblespoonfuls melted butter, one tablespoonful Worcestershire Sauce, one table spoonful lemon juice, one tablespoon ful catsup, one teaspoonful mixed mustard and a few grains of cayenne. Score rib or loin chops lightly and place in the sauce for ten minutes. Drain and pan broil quickly. Serve on a hot platter, sprinkle with salt and pepper and pour the rest of the sauce around the chops. C Duchesse Potatoes Boil and mash the potatoes as usual, beat well. and. add a table- Prune Relish .. Wash half a pound of soak in two and a half cupfuls of water, and cook till tender. Drain, cool and cut in small pieces. Return to liquid, add one-fourth teaspoon ful cinnamon, one-fourth cupful sugar, one-fourth, cupful tart jelly, and two tablespoonfuls orange juke. Cook till thick. Roast Dock with Prune Dreeshtg Wash and singe a four pound duck, wipe well, inside and out For the filling mix together one cupful of soft bread‘crumbs, one-half tea spoonful of salt, and a pinch each pepper and paprika. Add one cupful steamed chopped prunes, one cupful chopped apples and one tablespoonful melted butter. Cabbage and Pineapple Salad Shrecl a small hard head of cabbage fine and mix with an equal quantity of canned pineapple cut into dice. Add half a cupful of chopped Eng lish walnuts or almonds and moisten with mayonnaise or French dressing. Serve on lettuce leaves. Sunshine Creams Soften a tablespoonful gelatine in two table spoonfuls of cold water. Boil together one cupful granulated sugar and half a cupful of water :6 the thread stage, pour slowly over the well beaten yolks of two eggs, add the gelatine and the juice and grated rind of. an orange. Whip till almost congealed,-then fold in a cup ful of whipped cream and the whit How Is Business? Undertakers are doing a dead busi ness with things looking black. Bottling companies to the contrary report a corking business. Bootleggers report unfair compe tition by varnish makers^'Naturally, they are lacking. „ Tailors repost pessimism inasmuch as business is pressing with the mar ket all sewed up. , • q : . Police are looking for the leather dealers who are now in hiding as a result of their skin game/ Shoe dealers ame on their uppers, hence preachers give up trying to save their soles. Granite dealers are preserving stony silence regarding the strike sit uations. Laborers are still blasting for more. The flower business has a rosy out look. Do you remember how enthused the people were back in May, 1927, when a flyer by the name of Lindbergh made an airplane flight from N. Y. to Pairs? Huh, the gang was laugh ing about it this morning when we hopped down-txx Afyka for * little elephant hunting before breakfast. .< T. & BUM J. H EDM t I ELLIS ENGINEERING CO. • - : Land Surveying a Specialty. < ► Lyadharst, & CL »»»»•»••> ;c HALL & COLE, Inc. 94-102 Faneuil Hall Market BOSTON, MASS. _ Commission Merchants and Distributors of ASPARAGUS. One of the Oldest Commission Houses in . the Trade.. Send for Shipping Stamp. meet in Olar on August 4th and 5th, a week earlier, so as not to conflict with the Baptist assembly. Celebrates Birthday. dash of white pepper. Pour in I a cherry. Hercules, July 4.—The Glorious Fourth was celebrated at the home of J. A. Tucker, of this section, when the day was observed not only as a- national holiday but as the birthday of his son, J. 0. Tucker, of Durham, N. C., who was present for the occas ion. Everybody present had a most enjoyable time. Chevrolet Stands Withering Strain A romance of the General Motors Proving Ground at Milford, Mich., comes to light today with the an nouncement that Chevrolet test car number 112 has been retired from the Proving Ground service after with standing the withering test strain of 46,150 miles in four and one half months over various types of roads and a wide range of driving condi tions. Number 112 had a standard light delivery panel body on the standard commercial car chassis and had been taken out of regular production at the Flint plant When, in the course of the usual routine, it was replaced at the Proving Ground by another Chev rolet, it still had in it many miles of unused transportation, engineers de clared, despite the gruelling exper ience of so many miles of terrific test driving. Forty miles out of Detroit in the hills and vales of Livingson County, where the great outdoor automobile laboratory is located, this Chevrolet, like others there, underwc’.t su preme tests in the cause of improved automotive transportation. In the course of -these tests, the car was called upon to go through all the types- of service an automobile may be heir to—and more. It was kept bn test for 1S5 days, “working” on an average of 841.8 miles a day. There were days when it was driven more than 500 miles in order to try its stamina. In ad dition to the test work at the Prov ing Ground, the car carried mail to Detroit and return each day, permit ting of a study and check of the car under actual road traffic conditions. Engineers and technical men who drove and checked the car at the Proving Ground had in mind the many difficulties an automobile has to con tend with in its lifetime They Ithought of the driver who speeds his car over rough, rutted roads; they considered the motorist who rides his clutch; they had in mind the man who habitually tramps on hu brakes, another who races a cold motor, another Who asks his car to ipull out of a mud hole in high, and so op.. Although they realized at the same time that only a very small minority of drivers do these things today, they wanted to study th* ability of the Chevrolet to withstand these abuses and to be constantly on the watch for developments ‘that might further improve the product. * Although the Proving Ground boasts some fine stretches of pave ment, number 112, during the four and one half months it was on test there, never left the gravel and dirt roads, except on its trips out of the grounds as a mail car. - Asked why, a Chevrolet engineer replied; “Concrete makes it too easy!” SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN’' and INSIST I Unless ^ see thf " mine Ifayer ’ Aspirin proved safe fry mfllions and prescribed by physicians 24 years for ' Colds Headache Neuralgia Lumbago • -1 Pain Toothache Neuritis Rheumatism • So/*-'* Also only “Bayer” package contains proven directions. "Bayer* boxes of 12 tablets, of 24 and 10O-—Druggists^ et SAiicrUmd* ************* •********" 11 ■■ f mt-ttt Him nfior o#o poo jagg i LONG TERM MONEY to LEND i I 6 per cent interest on large amounts! Private funds for small loans. BROWN & BUSH LAWYERS BARNWELL. SOUTH CAROLINA. # NOW— That the Easter rush is over—i* the best time to get a permanent, wave. You will enjoy it through the Spring and Summer month*, Phone or write for an appointment. Leonard Beauty Shoppe i: Q MRS. A. DBAS, Prop. ...as#?’ .