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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1959 THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA PAGE THREE HALF-PAST TEEN A HAM SANPW/CH! » HALF-PAST TEEN | THE BAFFLES By.Mahoney j Hot Dog! Be you six or sixty the news that franks are on the Cookout bill of fare is almost sure to bring a grin of anticipation. But just wait until you taste them with this good, new and so—easy-to-make relish! Hot Dog Relish 2 cups chopped ripe tomato 2 cups chopped green tomato 2 cups chopped cucumber 1 cup chopped onion 1 sweet red pepper 1 teaspoon celery seed V2 cup sugar 1 tablespoon salt 2 teaspoons dry mustard 1V& cups vinegar Wash and drain vegetables. Scald, core, and peel ripe tomatoes. Core but do not peel green tomatoes. Cut blossom and stem ends from peppers; discard seed. Peel onion. Chop vegetables squeeze to remove juice—saves cooking time. Mix all ingredients and cook until the liquid part is about as thick as Chili Sauce. Taste and add more seasoning if desired. Watch it! If too highly seasoned the relish will mask rather thitri enhance the flavor of frankfurters and wieners. Pour boiling hot relish into hot fruit jar. Put dome lid on jar; screw h«nH tight. I THE BAFFLES By Mahoney I iCE CREAM FILLED ECLAIRS LEND NAUTICAL TOUCH TO KIDDIE PARTY Lives there a child who doesn’t love boats? Whether it’s a boat to float in the bathtub or food shaped like a boat, the idea of watercraft goes over big with the kiddies. These chocolate eclair boats are wonderful refreshments for a children’s party. The whole affair can be built around a nau tical theme. It is a motif suit able any time of year. Boat-shaped eclairs are easily formed with the aid of a table spoon or spatula. Instead of shaping the pastry into, circles as for cream puffs, shape the portions into long, slender rec tangles. There are two keys to success in making eclairs. One is in the cooking—be sure to have the water mixture boiling when the flour is added. Stir well until flour-water mixture forms a balL The other is in the beating. Add the eggs one at a time and beat weU after each ^addition. Be certain each egg is beaten in completely before adding an other. Proper beating * incor porates sufficient air in the ^ batter. The recipe yields 12 eclairs. Each eclair may be cut in half lengthwise to make two boats. Any extra eclairs can be frozen and kept for a future dessert. Chocolate ice cream is the perfect filling for the -light, den- cate eclairs. Youngsters love ice cream and chocolate ranks as a favorite flavor. Besides, how could a kiddie party be a success without ice cream? CHOCOLATE ECLAIR BOATS 12 eclairs 1 cup water Vi cup butter *4 teaspoon salt 1 cup sifted flour 4 eggs Chocolate ice cream Peppermint stick candy Peppermints Combine water, butter and salt in a saucepan. Bring to a boil. Add flour all at once and stir until blended and the batter stays in the shape of a ball and clings to the pan in one piece. Remove from heat. Add eggs, one at a time, mixing well after each addition. Shape into long rectangles on a well greased cooky sheet, using a tablespoon or spatula to shape the batter. Bake in a pre-heated 450° oven for 10 minutes, then reduce heat to 375° and bake 20-30 minutes longer or until the . eclairs are puffed up and browned. Remove from oven, slit to allow steam to eseape and cool on a cake rack. When ready to serve, cut eclairs in half lengthwise and 'fill each hair with chocolate ice cream. Stick peppermint candy sticks into the ice cream for the smokestacks and place a peppermint on each side. Flags with the guests names may be stuck into the ice cream also. TAX NOTICES The tax books will be open for the collection of 1959 taxes on and after October 1, 1959. The following is general levy for all except special purposes: Ordinary County 11 Mills Bonds, Notes and Interest 5 Mills Hospital 1 Mill The following are the authorized special levies for the various tax districts of the County together with the general levy: County School Total District No. Tax Levy Spec. Levy Levy Mills Mills Mills 1. Newberry 17 30 47 2. Silverstreet 17 80 47 3. Bush River 17 30 47 4. Whitmire 17 30 47 5. Pomaria 17 30 47 6. Little Mountain 17 30 47 7. Prosperity 17 30 47 There will be a discount of one (1%) per cent allowed on taxes paid on or before October 31, 1959. On and after January 1, 1960 the penalties preseribed by law will be imposed on unpaid taxes. You are requested fro call for your taxes by tax districts in which the property is located. J. RAY DAWKINS, 22-4tc Treasurer of Newberry County B EFORE going to market. mark old eggs in the refrig erator with a pencil. Then you can use these first even though you put in a fresh supply from the store. Want to save money on food? Make your menus before shop ping, planning to use all left overs, then make the shopping list and stick to it no matter what the temptations. When a garment is too old to be worn or altered, you may still THIS WEEK’S RECIPES Deep Dish Apple Pie (Serves 6) 6 tart apples, thinly sliced % cup maple sugar Vz teaspoon cinnamon V4 teaspoon nutmeg 1 tablespoon instant tapioca 3 tablespoons water Vz pint heavy cream Mix all ingredients except cream. Place in a casserole and cover .with a single top crust of pastry. Bake in a hot (425°F.) oven until apples are tender and crust brown, 30 to 35 minutes. Just before serv ing, lift one side of crust to pour in the cream. find zippers and buttons on it that can be removed to be used on other clothing. Doing a lot of canning? It takes time to make labels for all the jars, but you can use a single large label on the shelf to identi fy large batches of certdin canned goods. Get in the habit of using tongs to remove vegetables from pan to serving platter. You can ar range them attractively witt tongs and they do not need to be drained in a colander. If you have lots of pancakes or toasted sandwiches to make on the griddle keep it clean between pourings of the pancake mix by scraping clean with the spatula. Boys In Service 1ST CAV. DIV., KOREA (AHT NC)—Army 2nd Lt. Billy R. Gibson, 23, whose wife, Sylvia, lives at 305 N. Main Et., Saluda, recently received the Expert In- 'I 'HE hunting season approach- -*■ es and its .arrivtd in different sections of the country; will find hundreds of enthusiastic nimrods eager to take to the field after rabbit, quail, squirrel, and a va- tiety of small and big game ani mals. The beginning of any sporting season always gives the outdoor writer (and everybody else who likes to give advice) the oppor tunity to outline a few “clo’s and iion’ts.” The place t- start, of course, is by reminding one and all that a gun is a deadly weapon and should never be pointed at anything or anybody that shou'da’t be shot. V/e won’t go any farther, how ever, because we happen to be lieve that advice given so freely is little heeded. We could set down more than a dozen safety rules, but just knowing the rules isn’t what makes a man or a boy a safe, careful gun handler and u«er. It’s just like automo bile diving. Some people could pass any driver’s test in the country, park on a dime, recite t v .e «afety laws backwards—and sail drive like a maniac on the h'rf-rvways. y^roe day, perhaps, the time will come when all the states re quire training in gun safety and gun handling before hunting li ceAtee ire issued. But this is s lorr time off. In the meantime watA ’•ruere you shoot—and be rcr.dy duck if you have to. And. e-De last thing: hunting land* »>^<*ome harder and hardei 3no every year and one big reason ts that too many hunters have no respect for other’s prop erty—gates, fences, farm build livestock. Hunting is a sport and if you want to enjoy ^his sport, try to act like a true •portsman. YotTll have just as riu td fun. fantryman Badge while assigned to the 1st Division’s 8th Cavalry in Korea. The lieutenant, a platoon lead er in the cavalry’s Company B, entered the Army in November 1958 and arrived overseas last March. He is a 1954 graduate of Bush River High School, Newberry, and a 1958 graduate of Clemson Col lege. Lieutenant Gibson, son of Mr. and Mrs. James I. Gibson, Rt. 3, Newberry, was employed by State Highway of Georgia, before entering the Army. NORFOLK, Va., (FHTNC)— Charles P. Dowd, fireman appren tice, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lennie B. Dowd of Pomaria, is serving aboard the attack aircraft carrier USS Forrestal operating out of Norfolk Va. The first of the Navy’s super carriers, the Forrestal returned to Norfolk in late July after a six- week refresher cruise to tha Ca ribbean Sea. MAINZ, Germany, (AHTNC)— Army Specialist Four Donnie M. Ochiltree, son of Mr. and Mrs. Odis Ochiltree, 705 Pope St., re cently received a high school equivalency certificate in Mainz, Germany, where he is a member of the 8th Infantry Division. He completed his secondary education through the U. S. Arm ed Forces Institute which offers servicemen ^n extensive variety of courses at high school and college levels. Ochiltree, a machine gunner in Company 8 of the division’s 605th Infantry, entered the Army in August 1954 and arrived overseas on this tour of duty last Janu ary. The 22-year-old soldier attend ed Newberry High School. Brice Waters Finds Hobbies Of Interest By MRS. A. H. COUNTS “When I was a child we lived next door to the church and when Sunday came we did not know anything other than to attend Sunday school and church serv ices,” said Robert Brice Waters, in speaking of his early training and Sunday school and church at tendance. Mr. Waters is a Baptist and has always been active in church work and has served as a deacon, Sun day school teacher and in other capacities. He has lived in Newberry since he retired in 1967 from Winthrop College where he served as Ad ministrative Director for a num ber of years. He was born in Rock Hill De cember 6, 1891, the son of the late Col. and Mrs. John James Waters. His mother was the former Miss Ida Marshall Brice of Fairfield County. He graduated from the Rock Hill High School and Clemson Col lege, class of 1916. As former president of the Clemson College Alumni Association he has kept in close contact with the college and always looks forward to his trips back there. Shortly after graduation he went overseas in World War I, and served as an officer in the regular army. All of his work has been in an executive capacity. He was exe cutive secretary of the Sumter Board of Trade for many years; Assistant State Director of the South Carolina Emergency Relief Administration; Assistant State Director of the South Carolina Resettlement Administration; Ad ministrator of the South Carolifla Unemployment Compensation Commission; Public Relations Ad visor to the Social Security Board, Washington, D. C., and Executive Secretary of the Interstate Con ference of Unemployment Com pensation Agencies, Washington, D. C. The last position which he held, that of Administration Director of Winthrop College, took him back to his native city. Mr. Waters married Miss Goode Griffin Burton of Newberry in 1927. They live at 1315 Glenn St. in the house where Mrs. Waters was born. This handsome Colonial Home is over 100 years old and is surrounded by a lovely garden where the Waters spend most of the. time planning and planting flowers. Mr. Waters interest in addition to the church are education and civic activities. Shortly after he came to Newberry he helped to organize and set up the Newberry County Development Board, a County-wide organization to pro mote and develop industrial inter est. in the county. His hobbies are flowers and his well-equipped work shop. Al though he is interested in many kinds of flowers, day lilies, are among his favorites. In his workshop he has made some attractive hand carved what nots out of walnut wood for their home and also for gifts. He also enjoys making bird houses and re finishing old furniture. His most recent project was painting the cabinets and tables in their kitch en. He enjoys sports, but his great est pleasure is from reading* He is & charter member and past president of the Sumter Kiwama Club. ; Tresil i RewT>eaiT^r me-Track^eeb! n*' A car is a living thing. And all living things must change. This is why the creative car builders of Pontiac took the proved principle of Wide-Track Wheel Design and surrounded it with fresh, exhilarating, totally new beauty for I960. The prow is styled for excitement. The horizontal bars bear the artistry of the classical. The perfect profile comes from just-right proportion, unity, rhythm. The clean, graceful back contributes character where other cars seem only to reflect confusion. Its effect upon your attitude toward driving and owning cars can be quite radical. For you cannot possess this automobile and be anything less than‘lighthearted. You cannot control it and be anything less than sportive about driving. You cannot be seen in it and* he anything less than buoyantly proud. With the widest track of ary car, Pontiac's width is on the road-where it gives you better stability. Wide-Treck widens the stanci., not the car. THE ONLY CAR WITH WIDE-TRACK WHEELS SEE YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED PONTIAC DEALER KIRK PONTIAC-CADILLAC COMPANY 211 NANCE STREET NEWBERRY. S. C. ■THERE’S NOTHING LIKE A NEW CAR—AND NO NEW CAR LIKE A PONTIAC-