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Mi l 7 - ' ■ .-; ;■ • '■> •■; THURSDAY, DEC. 31, 1953 THE NEWBERRY SUN PAGE SEVEN Flowers and Gifts for All Occasions CARTER’S Day Phone 719 — Night 6212 i Farmers tee^fuetx < 5W£ Kivs wm ga*// OUR OIL WILL GIVE VOU HEAT AND CHEER, AND MAKE VOU HAPPIER EACH VEAR Start the New Year off right by calling us to fill up your fuel tank with high- heat fuel oil. We’re as near to you as your phone. Phone 155 today .-V. CITIES' ISEMfltE! ICFwHIEU co. UlHOitSALf VtfTRIBUTOH? CITIES SERVICE PHOPUCTf GMOUNE. KEROSENE, FUEL 0IL7 METERED SERVICE 618 DRAYTON ST. NEWBERRY. S.C. I -k 9 m ' r 1 • - .. — w \'// / “It happened right in front of Purcells ... so I re financed my car and had cash left over for medical ex penses 99 These folks are so easy to do business with I had cash for hospital and doctor bills before the ambulance arrived. PURCELLS “Your f»rlva*e Bankers" 1418 Main St. Newberry How Sinclair RD-II9 Saves OIL BURNER TROUBLE Protects against Clogged Strainers v\ With ordinary fuel oil, RUST, caused by moisture condensation, clogs the strainer and burner nozzle of your oil burner. This rust can cause you trouble and repair expense — can even stop your burner dead. But Sinclair Fuel Oil contains RD-119®, Sinclair’s miracle rust inhibitor. Used regularly, RD-119 stops rust — helps you get trouble-free, economical oil heating comfort all winter long. Yet Sinclair Anti-Rust Fuel Oil costs no more than ordinary fuel oiL ANTt-MS]- SINCLAIR ran OIL WITH RD-II9 , (A2&ce,—/t0 epfacwf 1 S. C. Paysinger Agent Sports Afield By TED KESTING Each year some new candidate for the “most vicious” animal in America is suggested—the semi wild hog of the South, the grizzly bear, the Russian boar. How ever, the average person’s chances of encountering them is remote unless he deliberately sets out to hunt them, in which case he is armed and presumably prepared. On the other hand, anyone mght run into what outdoor writer Bill Wolf considers the “most vicious” animal anywhere — the domestic bull. I think he’s right. Frankly, I’m scared of them, and know of no defense against them except to avoid them, or to turn tail and run. Here is the most vicious and dangerous animal in America, bar none, and anyone who hunts or fishes much is likely to come across one sooner or later. Only one course is open to you. Get out and get out fast. Take no one’s word for it that “the bull is harm less” and that it is OK for you to hunt through a field containing one. The cardinas rule is: Never trust a bull. Wolf tells of one day when hunting he walked an uneasy length of a field while two bulls obviously with murder in their hearts, tested the strength of a fence between him and them. The bulls, without any provocation, left the herd in another field when they saw Wolf, rushed over, pawed, snorted and butted at the wire its entire length. This is an excellent example of how bulls go out of their way to be ornery because, when Wolf first saw them, they were so far away he couldn’t tell whether they were bulls or steers. (Steers .sometimes turn ornery, too, but they don’t have the black fury of a fully sexed bull.) Bulls, by the way, are not irri tated by red any more than some other color because they are as color blind as most mammals. The movement of the toreador’s cape, and not the color, infuriates the fighting bull. So my advice to sportsmen is to learn, if possible, whether there are any bulls turned loose to pasture where you are going to fish or hunt. If that is impossible, treat any bull you meet with re spect and get out. Conversions Unless “platoon” football is re vived, major teams will gradually ease away from the policy of scheduling “breathers” with small er colleges. They stand to lose too much—gate receipts and na tional prestige when upset by teams not so well known ... As predicted, 1953 was a year of up sets. However, most of the nation’s powers took the conversion to the “one-platoon” game in stride and will do even better in 1954 ... As football makes its annual farewell with bowl activities, basketball takes the spotlight, for what vet eran observers believe will be a year of more and more new rec ords. They say offense is so far ahead of defense that most schools will need three-digit scoreboards . . . Early play in the Southeastern Conference bear out the fact. Cliff Hagan, In Kentucky’s return to the cage wars, set a conference rec ord with 51 points. Two days later Louisiana State’s Bob Petit broke Hagan’s record by dumping in 22 field goals and 16 free tos&es for 60 points as LSU toppled little Louisiana College 128-74 ... At Indiana, Branch McCraken said IU has plans for a fieldhouse seat ing 20.000 and could fill it easily if TV were taken away. \V LEADS PENSION FIGHT . . . Chicago Cub Ralph Kiner (shown with young son), together with Yankee Allie Reynolds, repre sents baseball players In negotia tions with team owners over players’ pension. Involving nse of World Series and All-Star games TV-radio receipts. | AT BY HELEN HALE TT TAKES only a little ingenuity * to make ordinary foods some thing very special. Start on these tips for some ideas: Stewed tomatoes can be prac tically epicurean when you add some crushed cereal flakes to them while heating along with one of the following seasonings: 3 table spoons minced onion, 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce or 1 table spoon chili sauce. After you pan-broil hamburgers, add to the drippings 2 teaspoons Worcestershire sauce and V* tea- RECIPE OF THE WEEK Spanish Beef Salad (Serves 6) 6 slices cold roast beef Tomato French Dressing 1 head of lettuce, shredded 6 thick slices tomato 6 onion slices ' 6 green pepper rings Cut roast beef into long nar row strips. Marinate in dressing for an hour. Toss in salad bowl with lettuce and additional dressing. Border bowl with al ternating slices of tomato,-onion and green pepper. spoon dry mustard. Spoon this sauce over the hamburgers. Try spiced fruit for dessert: cook one pound dried apricots as direct ed; 10 minutes before done, add % cup brown sugar, 5 whole cloves and 2" stick cinnamon. Cover; chill overnight. Serve with cream. This is the _ season for mulled drinks. Combine equal parts of apple cider and apricot whole fruit nectar; heat with a few allspice and cloves and serve at once. Use this as a topping for coffee cake before baking: combine Va cup honey, with an equal amount of sugar, butter and flour. Add % cup cut-up walnuts or roasted almonds. Try different seasonings for veg etables if you want them in the spotlight. French dressing does wonders for spinach and green beans, while powdered cloves are excellent with hot beets, and ginger goes with squash. FWoteL INTELELGRAM Check correct word. 1. The caber is (eaten) (thrown). 2. Mother’s Day is the (second) (third) Sunday in May. 3. The divided riding skirt originated in (Amer ica) (England). 4. The law of Moses is in the (Talmud) (Torah). 5. Zog I was king of (Albania) (Tibet). 6. The first public school in America was in (Boston) (New York). 7. A lepidoptera is a (butterfly) (poisonous spider). 8. The Green Mountain State is (Kentucky) (Ver mont). 9. George Washington lived in (New York City) (Philadelphia) while he was President of the United States. 10. There are (10) (12) members in the President’s Cabinet. Check your answers, scoring yourself 10 points for each correct choice. A score of 0-20 is poor; 30-60, average; 70- 80, superior; 90-100, very superior. Decoded Inteliigram 01—01 apoA 6 tuouuaA—8 l twnsoa —9 *eiuBqiv—« tiejoj,—* *eopaaiY—z *puooas—Z ’UMattu.—I Holiday BY DOROTHY MADDOX L OOKING for something ' different to serve at your parties during the holi day season? If you are, then Pennsylvania Dutch “Funny Cake” is one delicious an swer. It’s a cake baked in a pie shell with a filling between pastry and cake. It can be served with chocolate sauce, but anyway you serve it this “funny cake” is good fun for all the guests. ‘Tunny Cake” With Chocolate Sauce Line 9-inch glass pie plate with pastry, rolled %-inch thick. Make sauce, as di rected below, and set aside to cool while mixing cake batter. Cake Batter: One and one quarter cups sifted cake flour, 1 teaspoon double acting baking powder, teaspoon salt, % cup sugar, ^4 cup quick-mix shorten ing, V? cup milk, 1 teaspoon vanilla, 1 egg, unbeaten. Combine sifted flour, bak ing powder, salt and sugar in sifter. Place shortening in mixing bowl. Sift in dry $ t 'y' sj siisMiN 1 m rl mm mi • < « m. ■■m HP iHH i Wm S3® “Funny Cake” served with ice cream is an ideal holiday-season treat. form a layer between cake Cook and stir until choco- and pie shell when cake is late is melted and mixture baked.) Bake in moderate is blended. ingredients. Add milk and vanilla and mix until all flour is dampened. Then beat 2 minutes. Add egg and beat 1 min ute longer. Pour batter into pastry-lined pie pan. Drib ble lukewarm sauce over cake batter. (Sauce will oven (350 degrees F.) 50 to 55 minutes, or until done. Chocolate Sauce: Place 1 square unsweetened choco late and Yz cup water in Add 2/3 cup sugar, stir ring constantly, and bring again to a boil. Remove al once from heat, add V4 cup shortening and 1 teaspoon saucepan over low heat, vanilla; stir until blended. Garden Club Of South Carolina Sets 2-Day Symposium In Capital City The Garden Club of South Caro lina in cooperation with the Uni versity of South Carolina will sponsor a two day symposium on horticulture and garden design February 12-13, Mrs. W. Jack Bryant of Orangeburg, president announced today. Illustrated lectures, panel dis cussions and a tour of Columbia homes will be featured on the pro gram. Mrs. James A. Cathcart of Co lumbia is chairman of the sym posium committee with Mrs. Irvine F. Belser of Columbia as co-chair man and Mrs. Donald Russell of Columbia as chairman of the local arrangements committee. The program includes a panel discussion on roses conducted by Clifford R. Raysor, Jr., of Colum bia, past president of the South Carolina Rose Society, assisted by Niels Hansen of Washington, D. C., president of the American Rose Society, and F. P. Gurney, Harris burg, Pa., executive secretary of the Society. A panel discussion on landscape design, is scheduled with Mrs. James M. Green, Jr., of Orange burg, presiding, assisted by F. W. Thode, professor of horticulture at Clemson College, and Robert Marvin of Walterboro, landscape architect. Dr. W. E. Hoy, Dr. W. T. Batson, Dr. William Kelley and Dr. J. T. Penny, all of the Univer sity biology department, will par ticipate in a panel on South Caro lina wild flowers. Other features of the program will be a discussion of camellias by Calder W. Seibels of Columbia, president of the American Camel- Miss Hi Miss Of Pomaria ROCK HILL — Elizabeth Ann Ruff has been chosen the 1954 * \ Miss Hi Miss of Pomaria High lia Society; talks on “Some of South Carolina’^ Outstanding Con tributions to HorticultureV by Mrs. Finley Henderson of Aiken; “Singing Gardens” by Mrs. Julian Buxton of Sumter, national bird chairman; “How to Have a Green Thumb” by Donald Hastings of Atlanta, Ga.; “Arrangements of Altar Flowers” by Mrs. Donald Hastings; “Roadside Beautifica tion” by C. R. McMillan, chief highway commissioner, with Mrs. Richard L. Baker of Newberry, state chairman for roadside beauti fication, presiding; and “Hawaiian Gardens and Exotic Flowers” by Mrs. E. B. Cantey of Columbia, president of the Palmetto Garden Club. . School. Her selection was mad© on the basis of scholarship, character, leadership and personal attractiveness. Her picture will appear in the 17th annual Miss Hi Miss edition of The Johnsonian, student week ly at Winthrop College. She be invited to participate in Miss Hi Miss Weekend at the South Carolina College for Wo men April 2-3. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee Ruff, "Miss Ruff Js presid6nt of the senior class and of the Beta Club. Also president of the Future Teachers Club and the 4-H Club, she is editor of th© Hi-Life and of the school annual. Miss Ruff is accompanist for th© Glee Club. Last year she was a Junior Homemakers of Amerioa. Convention delegate. From Akron, Ohio, comes a : port • that a girl swallowed watch. What a waste of time! -i '"-t We are Pleased to Announce Our ' "* t < 37th Semi-Annual Dividend Amounting To 735.68 r , + Payable To Y * 3,086 I n vestors ON DECEMBER 31, 19S3 Each Account is Insured up to $10,000.00 New Accounts Received by January 10th will Receive Dividends from January 1st. NEWBERRY FEDERAL SAVINGS <&• LOAN ASSOCIATION John F. Clarkson, President J. K. Willingham, Sec. & Treas. ./