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VENISON STEAKS AND HASH Recipes That Will Be Appreciated by Those Fond of Highly Seasoned Meats. To hash cold venison, cut the meat in nice, small slices and put the trim mings and bones into a saucepan with barley water enough to cover them Let them stew for an hour, then strain the liquid into a stew pan, add to it some bits of butter, rolled in flour, and whatever gravy was left of the venison the day before. Stir in some currant jelly and let it boil up, then put in the meat and keep it over the fire just long enough to warm through, but do not ailow it to boil, as it has been once cooked already. Venison Steaks.-Cut them from the neck or haunch. Season them with pepper and salt. When the grid iron has been well heated over a bed of bright coals, grease the bars and* lay the steaks upon it. Broil them well, turn them once and take care to save as much of the gravy as pos sible. Serve them with some currant jelly laid tn each steak. Have your plates warm GOOD WAY TO SERVE STEAK Planked, With Duchess Potatoes, ls a Manner Popular With the Best Cooks. Wipe, remove superfluous fat and parboil 7% minutes a porterhouse or crosscut of the rump steak, cut 1% inches thick. Butter a plank and ar range a border of duchess potatoes close to edge, using a pastry bag and rose tube. Remove steak to plank, put in a hot oven and bake until steak is cooked and potatoes are browned. Spread steak with butter, sprinkle with salt, pepper and finely chopped parsley. Garnish top of steak with sauteed mushroom caps and put around steak at equal distances halves of small tomatoes sauteed in butter, and on top of each tomato a circular slice of cucumber. You can use potato balls, small onions, peas and carrots diced as a garnish. Duchess Potatoes.-To two cups hot riced potatoes add two tablespoonfuls of butter, one-half teaspoonful salt and yolks of three eggs slightly beaten. Shape, using pastry bag and tube. Brush over with beaten egg diluted with one teaspoonful water. Bread. Much good bread is wasted on ac count of drying and hardening on the outside. This needless waste could be easily prevented by wrapping the unusued portion of the loaf in a clean piece of muslin or towel wrung out of cold water before putting it away after each meal; or it might be re v-rapped in the waxed paper that comes with some kinds of bread. The so-callecj stale bread, so much of which is wasted, is really better !for one's digestion and health than 'the freshly baked, dyspepsia-breeding 'article, for it is more friable and ab sorbent and it really absorbs the sa fliva and gastric juice which penetrate ?it and act upon every particle of it. The fresh bread is so moist that like ;a wet sponge it can take up no more 'moisture, and it is acted upon by the digestive juices on the surface only. Whofe-Wheat Bread. Dissolve a yeast cake in two table spoonfuls of tepid water. Add a pint .of milk to a pint of boiling water .and let stand until lukewarm. Then .add the dissolved yeast, a teaspoonful of salt and enough whole-wheat flour .to make a thick batter. Beat this bat -ter for about fifteen minutes. It will become quite soft and liquid. Add -enough flour to make a good dough. 'Turn-it on to a board and knead a few 'minutes. Return to the pan and let rise until it is light. About three hours is the usual time. Pressed Beans and Sausage. Let one pint pea beans soak over 'night, wash, drain and cook until very tender, but not broken, in boiling wa ter. Put the beans in baking dish 'with sausage here and there, using about one-half pound sausage. Dis solve one teaspoonful salt in one pint boiling water and pour over the beans, adding more, if needed. Bake five or . six hours and serve hot with catchup i or any other table sauce. The Piece Bag. . Here is a sensible way of tagging .the contents of a piece bag: On tho 'outside of the bag fasten the largest procurable safety pin. When dress making is over attach samples to this kpin of every remnant that goes into ?the bag. A great amount of time and '.patience is saved by this simple de .vice, for one can see at a glance just what the bag contains. :-' Ham and Cheese Dish. ? One-half cupful cheese, one-half cup .ful boiled ham (run ham and cheese through chopper), three eggs, six soda crackers, rolled fine, one tablespoonful table sauce, salt and red pepper, one teaspoonful baking powder, one cup ful milk. Stir beaten egg into ham land crackers, add milk, add other in igredients, baking powder last. Bake ;30 minutes. It is fine. Chicken Patties. Patty cases may be bought in city ; bakeries, and will save time and trou ble in preparing this dish. For their *? filling cut up cold chicken into tubes, with sliced canned mushrooms and a teaspoonful of chopped onions. Make a white sauce, and add the mixture of chicken and mushrooms, with season ing of salt, cayenne pepper and a few grains of mace. Serve In heated patty cases. Winthrop College Scholarship and Entrance Examination. The examination for the award of vac mt scholarships in Winthrop College and for the admission of new students will be held at the County Court House on Friday, July 2, at 9 a.m. Applicants tnust not be less than Mxteen years of age. When scholarships are vacant after July 2, they will be awarded to those making the highest average at this examination, provided they meet the conditions governing the award. Applicants for scholarships should write to President Johnson before the examination for scholar ship examination blanks. Scholarships are worth $100 and free tuition. The next session will open September 15, 1915. For fur ther information and catalogue, ad dress Pres. D. B. JOHNSON, Rock Hill, S. C. For Neuralgia, nothing is better than Dr. Miles* Anti-Pain Pills Used hy thousands for a generation Those who have suffered from neuralgic pains need not be told how necessary it is to secure re lief. The easiest way out of neuralgia is to use Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills. They have re lieved sufferers for so many years that they have become a household necessity. "I have taken Dr. Miles' Anti-Fain Pills for five years and they are the only thing that does me any good. They have relieved neuralgia in my head in fifteen minutes. I have also taken them for rheumatism, head ache, pains in tho breast, toothache, earache and pains in the bowels and limbs. I have found nothing to equal them and they are all that ls claimed for them." J. W. SEDGE, Blue Springs, Mo. At ?ll druggists-25 doses 25 centi. Never sold In bulk. 1 MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind. ri Nervous? I ito. Walter Vincent @j of Pleasant Hill, N. C., g?| writes: "For three sum mers, I suffered from nervousness, dreadful pains In my back and sides, and weak sinking spells. Three bottles of Card ul, the woman's tonic, relieved me entire ly. I feel like another person, now." TAKE Cardui The Woman's Tonic for over 50 years, Cardui has been helping to relieve women's un necessary pains and building weak women up to health and strength. It win do the same for you, if given a iair trial. So, don't wait, but begin taking Cardui today, for tts use cannot harm ?rou, and should surely do you A. H. Corley, Surgeon Dentist Appointments at Trenton On Wednesdays. DR- J.S. BYRD, Dental Surgeon OFFICE OVER POSTOFFICE. Residence Thone 17-R. Office 3. To Prevent Blood Poisoning apply at once the wonderful old reliable DR PORTER'S ANTISEPTIC HEALING OIL. a sur pical dressing that relieves pain and h gals al he same tine. Not a liniment. 25c. fcl ^<oc THE BEST FOE BILIOUSNESS AND KIDNEYS. MEALS ARE NEVER LATE WHEN you're behind with your work, with only a few minutes in which to get supper - then the handy NEW PERFECTION Oil Cookstove helps you to- hurry. It lights at the touch of a match, and cooks rapidly like a gas stove. It regulates high or low, merely by raising or lowering the wick. It is easy to operate, easy to clean, easy to re-wick. Sold in 1, 2, 3 and 4 burner sizes by hardware, furniture and depart ment stores everywhere. NEW PERFECTION OVENS bake better because a current of fresh hot air passes continually over and under the food - diying out the steam, and preventing soggi ness. This is an exclusive NEW PERFECTION advantage. Use Aladdin Security Oil or Diamond White Oil to obtain the best results in oil Stoves, Heaters and Lamps. STANDARD OIL COMPANY Washington, D. C Norfolk. Va. Richmond, Va. (New Jersey) (BALTIMORE) Charlotte, N. C. Charleston, W. Va. Charleston, S. C. (FB. B. RUSSELL, JR. R. E. ALLEN^ Ship Your Cotton to RUSSELL & ALLEN Incorporated COTTON FACTORS AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS Liberal Advances Made on Cotton in Store ^Augusta . . . Georgia^ "Art jroo goba to the meeting?" "Yet. I'll be ready when you come." Women living on farms and in rural districts haven't time to seek and enjoy social pleasures; Distances are too great-the work is too urgent. Women grow lonesome and listless when robbed of these pleasures. The Rural Telephone solves the problem. It enables women to talk with neigh bors and friends and keep alive to the news of the dav. Our free booklet tells how you can have a telephone in your home at small cost. Women living in the country should write for it Address ? Farmers Line Department SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE & TELEGRAPH COMPANY South Pryor SU Atlanta? Ga. Ford Automobiles We have accepted the agency for the Ford Automobiles for Edgefield County, and will have constantly on hand a stock of Touring Cars and Run-Abouts. Shall be pleased to show them to those who contemplate buying a car. The Ford cars defy Edgefield's winter roads. They are an All-the-Year-Round Car We will also carry a full assortment of all parts of the Ford cars, and can fill or ders at our Garage without your having to wait to get extra parts by express. ^ Make your auto wants known to us, and we will satisfy them on short notice and at reasonable prices. Edgefield Auto and Repair Shop Edgefield, South Carolina ARRINGTON BROS. & CO. Wholesale Grocers and Dealers in Corn, Oats, Hay and all Kinds of Feeds Corner Cumming and Fenwick Streets On Georgia R. R. Tracks Augusta, Ga. YOUR PATRONAGE SOLICITED DSF' See our representative, C. E. May. Southern Railway Premier Carrier of .the South Schedule effective April 18> 19 L5. Trains arrive from No. Time 208 Augusta, Trenton 8:20 a m 230 Columbia, Trenton 10:5fra m 232 Charleston, Aiken 5:05 p m 206 Columbia, Tienten 8:35 pm Trains depart to No. Time 209 Trenton, Columbia 7:20 a m 231 Trenton, Augusta 10:10 a m 229' Aiken, Charleston 11:20 p m 290 Trenton, Augusta 7:40 p m Schedules published only as in formation and are not guaranteed. For further information apply to J. A, TOWNSEND? Ticket Agent. Edgefield, St C. Notice of Bridge Letting. Sealed bids will be received at noon, June 23, 1915, at the office of County Board of Commissioners, at Edgefield, S. C., for furnishing all materials and labor and erecting complete ready for travel steel bridge across Turkey Creek at Pleas ant Lane, Edgefield county, S. C. Plans and specifications can be seen at office of Supervisor of Edge field county. Certified cheek for $500.00 to accompany bids. Right is reserved to reject any or all bids. A. A. Edmonds, County Supervisor. Landreth's Garden Seed. Wheu in need of garden seed. Irish Potatoes, Corn, Onion Sets, etc., let us supply your wants. W. E. Lynch & Co fillPi'l ttl'? IS THE ONLY GENUINE ARf?G? SALVE