The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, December 15, 1966, Image 6
PAGE SIX
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1966
Lovely Bread To Make At Home
Bake Fruit Bread for the Holidays
Easy and economical too with Pet Instant Nonfat Dry Milk!
Our recipe makes enough yeast dough for two loaves.
BASIC SWEET ROLL DOUGH
7 % cups sifted,
all-purpose Flour
2 pkgs. Dry Yeast
% cup very warm Water
1% cups Water
% cup Pet Instant Nonfat
Dry Milk (in dry form)
Vz cup Sugar
% cup Shortening
2 Eggs
2 teasp. Salt
Have flour ready. Dissolve yeast in Va, cup water. Mix in a
4-quart bowl the yeast mixture, 1% cups water, nonfat dry milk,
sugar, shortening, eggs and salt. Stir in Va of the flour. Beat well.
Stir in rest of flour until dough begins to leave sides of bowl. Turn
onto lightly floured board. Knead until smooth and elastic. Put
into a greased bowl. Turn once so greased side is up. Cover with
wax paper, then a towel. Let rise in a warm place until double in
bulk. Punch down.
CINNAMON SWIRL BREAD
2 teasp. Water 1 Tablesp. Cinnamon
% cup Sugar
Roll Va of dough on lightly floured board into a 15 x 9-inch ob
long. Spread with water. Mix sugar and cinnamon. Set aside
1 Tablespoon of the mixture. Sprinkle rest over dough to within
% inch of edges. Roll up tightly, starting at narrow (9-inch) side.
Pinch edges together firmly to seal. Place sealed edge down in
a greased 9 x 5 x 3-inch pan. Cover and let rise until double in
bulk. Brush top with melted Butter or Margarine. Sprinkle with
reserved sugar mixture. Bake near center of 375 oven (high mod
erate) 35 to 40 minutes, or until bread begins to pull away from
aides of pan. To prevent over-browning, lay heavy brown paper
or aluminum foil over top for last 5 to 10 minutes of baking. Take
from pan and cool on a wire rack.
While a fruit cake is something not everyone likes to tackle,
a good fruit bread is a fine substitute. It doesn’t have as many
ingredients and tends to be less expensive than the fruit and nut
packed cake. The recipe here calls for applesauce, dates, raisins
and candied fruits.
Holiday Fruit Bread
2 1 / 4 cups sifted cake flour
3 teaspoons baking powder
\ }/x teaspoon salt
teaspoon cinnamon
teaspoon nutmeg
teaspoon ground cloves
Dash cardamon
36 cup Nucoa margarine
y*
Vi
2
1
1
cup firmly packed brown
sugar
cup light com syrup
eggs ^
cup applesauce T*
cup chopped dates or
prunes
cup raisins
cup chopped candied fruit
Grease 1 (9 x 5 x 3-inch) loaf pan; line bottom with waxed paper.
Sift cake flour, baking powder, salt and spices together; set aside.
Blend Nucoa margarine and sugar in mixing bowl. Stir in com
syrup. Add eggs; beat well. (Mixture may appear curdled.) Stir
in applesauce, dates, raisins, and candied fruit. Add flour mix
ture; mix well. Turn into prepared loaf pan. Bake in 350 degrees
F. (moderate) oven until bread tests done, 1% to 136 hours.
AMERICANA SETTING—Center of interest in this livin'
room is a couch covered with a decorative cotton in •
contemporary color scheme of multi-hued reds ar
bronzy brown. The pattern harmonizes with traditio'
as well as provincial interiors. By Cohama, the fabric
Zepel-fmished for stain protection.
V
Wevuj Ctobtuu foimt
Anderson’s
I yon/i CKjcic
Oddly Enough
tu ICE SKATING RINKS (((0
In 1948 DICK BUTTON of the United States and Barbara Ann
Scott of Canada became the first North American figure skaters
to win the European championship, the world championship and
the coveted Olympic championship. Figure skating; speed skating
and the exciting game of Ice hockey are all popular sports In the
United States, Canada, and other countries that have cold
weather. Today these sports are no longer limited to frozen
rivers, lakes or flooded-over baseball fields. Skaters can enjoy
recreation the year-round- In hundreds of municipal and commer
cially-operated Ice rinks.
•
Artificial ice rinks are be
ing built at a rapid clip to
satisfy both ice skating fans
and competitors. Steel pipes
have'been an essential part
of Ice rink refrigeration sys
tems almost since 1878 when
the first artificially frozen In
door Joe rink was opened In
the US. for New York Cfty
"g«y bia<jea.»
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Yellow
Traveler
(The folowing concludes this
series which has been publish
ed for the past few weeks.)
By TAYLOR CALDWELL
Before the great Senator
McCarthy was murdered, he
said, “There are about fifty
communist suspects in the
State department.” President
Kennedy found that Joe was
quite wrong. Mr. Kennedy dis
covered that there were over
250 pro-Communists there. He
let them go, quietly, just a few
months before his death, and
thereby signed his death war
rant.
On the day the President was
murdered by a communist, I
saw evil and malignant faces
of prominent politicians and
Supreme Court justices and TV
commentators on the screen.
They looked menacingly at the
cameras and said, in terrible
and threatening voices, “It is
said some Birchite or right
wing extremist murdered the
President in Dallas.” Murder
and lust for blood glared from
their wicked faces. They shout
ed for vengeance. They were
already preparing a blood bath
for patriots in America and
the take-over of Washington
by the Communists; it was evi
dent in their glittering eyes.
Had, indeed, the President
been assassinated by some de
ranged patriot, or Oswald not
caught, I should not be stand
ing before you now speaking
nor would the majority of you
be here. We’d have been mur
dered by national government
troops, or tortured, or thrown
into prison at the very least.
But, God permitted the com
munist murderer, t o be
caught.
When the news reached those
justices and politicians, arid
news commentators, their faces
were full of dismay on TV,
and their voices shook. But,
all they could say was, softly
“I’m shocked, shocked, shock
ed. A-a-an awful thing.” They
were very subdued. The day
that they were looking for had
not arrived after all! They
would still have to wait a little
while. Then they exclaimed,
“The right wing climate of
hatred killed the President.”
No, friends, I thought, it was
one if yours, not ours, who
killed him.
Still, I was naive, I said to
my husband, “This will mean
the end of the liberal-socialist
communist conspiracy in Am
erica.” Imagine how silly I
was! I had forgotten the liberal
controlled public means of com
munication, the press, radio,
TV, Politicians, movies. I
completely forgot that Wash
ington was completely in the
palms of the hands of homosex
ual liberals. But, is was soon
evident. Oswald wasn’t a com
munist; he was just a Marxist!
The fact that he had been train
ed for two years in the Russian
School for Assassins in Russia
was played down. The fact
that his wife, by her own ad
mission, knew immediately who
murdered the President, was
played down in the press. The
fact that Oswald was an avowed
communist, by his own state
ments and actions was played
down. The Warren Commission
admits that there are many im
portant facts which they have
not released, and, to quote them
cannot be released for another
generation. Of what are they
afraid? That the American
people, soft and weak and
overfed and fat and depraved,
might destroy the liberal-soc
ialist-communist conspiracy in
America out of a great and
terrible wrath? They can rest
easy. The American people
would’nt lift a hand. They are
too busy with their big pay and
their fun-times and their fool
ish, evil gadgets and their
bellies and their swimming
pools. They don’t care wh o
controls them, so long as they
can have fun and read filth
and dance.
Let us listen to Thomas
Jefferson for a moment about
the American people and he
was a prophet: “Yes, we did
produce a near perfect Repub
lic. But, will they keep it, or
will they, IN THE ENJOY
MENT OF PLENTY, lose the
memory of freedom ? Material
abundance without character
is the surest way to DESTRUC
TION.”
Our children over the past
37 years have become corrupt
ed, soft and weak and taught
to weep “brotherly 1 ove”
whenever the dangerous and
cruel liberal strikes the proper
note. They are designedly ig
norant and mentally illiterate-
They are afraid of manliness
and strength; they have been
(Continued on next page)
Choose a Christmas Costume
For the Children
4
in your family from our finest selection
of dresses for the girls . . . suits for the
boys . . . and accessories for both.
MAKE TOTS TO TEENS your
Headquarters
For
Christmas Gifts
for all the Young
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1214 Main Street
Newberry
We Are Pleased To Announce Our
i
Semi-Annual Dividend
Payable As of December 30,1966
AT OUR
CURRENT
OF
Per Annum
Each account is insured up to $15,000.00
By the Federal Savings & Loan Insurance
Corporation
Member Federal Home Loan Bank
BUILDING AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
1117 Boyce Sfreet Dial 276-5660
Newberry, South Carolina
Officers and Directors
R. B. BAKER, President
PINCKNEY N. ABRAMS, Executive
Vice-President and Secretary
MRS. DORIS S. SETZLER, Treasurer
THOMAS H. POPE
R. AUBREY HARLEY
LOUIS C. FLOYD