THURSDAY SEPT. 16, 1926 f | Dw;<,s leas I And Bridge X Parties 6?^ Hot Cakes a la Sonia Bj Jostpbiat Jewnp Of aS the glamour that once belonged to Greenwich Village, only a fragment remain*. For me, that is cfapodied in Soaia's. When I first heard of 8onia's?and I did almost u soon at I reached New York?I pictured a place that specialized in atmosphere." You know what is meant by Greenwich Village atmosphere, dont you? Itt the stuff of 'which thrills are made; thirsting for it, high school principals journey all the way from Kosciusko, Mississippi, ostensibly for a mmmer's work at Columbia UniTfreity, but actually to steal down to the Village. Shoe clerks from Saggmg Springs, Iowa, exchange a year's savings for a few nights of batiked entertainment. 'And what do they find, these misguided Ponce de Leons? A honey omb of basement restaurants, fancifully named: The Blue Horse, Dead Man1* Chest, Moo Cow, Pirate's Den. Candles, in saucers, stuck in the walls at -precarious angles, ready to dhp tallow, on one's best clothes. Girls with henha-stained limbs, dancing iA soiled lengths bf cheesecloth and tinsel. Grimy-looking benches and tables bare of cloth. To be sure, there is Sonia'a. How the place found this name is mare **?? 1 ??? ?*v Srmial Don't you *Kmk of ?b oLve-akinned charmer, ? . , 1 .. -i _ t Steam Heat X EDGKWI . I TOURIST ANE I Phone 167 ((= s TIV 1A i The Ford: gets ever ed effort. D We will s pump wa tee farm You may of uses. EV Plows, H untk vviui rinuc 11 Delivered || $581.50 II Phone 1Q j ?$? ?g? ? . <$? $? ?$??? ?$ ?$??$??$. ?$. $??? *? ?$ ?$? $"?* 4* < < <- < < :ASU?AeL? /1SUSSDV rl/\y i\i_ rv i t 1 hand on hip, regarding the world of men intriguingly, between alitted lids? The restaurant I am describing would have been more appropriately called Faith, Hope, or Charity, j for it resembles nothing so much as a New Eugland kitchen. From rag I nigs to the softly-colored pewter ware j which adorns the old-fashioned cup. boards, and t}ie brass kettle singing in the open fireplace of a winter morning, it is consistently Colonial. I I have heard men indignantly deny J that Sonia's is a tea room. "No bird seed there, but real food!" And I'vg i seen many an Anglo-Saxon lose his habitual impassivity to gesticulate over Sonia's beefsteak. But Sonia's reputation rests principally on her hot cakes. Their goodness is unvarying; day after day, they emerge I from the frying pan, uniformly light and tender, of a color that lies between gold and bronae. Their popularity has been unchallenged by a single dissenting vote; they are favored alike by the Broadway broker and home economist from Teachers Colego. Their fame has spread over the country. I have known but one recipe by which Sonia's hot cakee might be duplicated. 2 cups Self-Rising Flour 1 egg 1 1-4 cups milk S tablespoons melted fat Sift and measure the flour; add the beaten egg and milk, add the fat and bake immediately on a hot griddle If the griddle iron is properly cared fcir it will be unnecefflary to grease it. Griddle cakes are ready to turn hnhhles ntoo coming to the top. %is recipe makes a thick griddle cake. (Recipes furnished by Home Economics Department, Soft Wheat Millers' Association, Nashville. Tenn.O OOI) INN > COMMERCIAL * Tryon, N. C. * > *> : * > * *> > *: >>+ pecial yrc 'ower For son Tractor makes farmii y job done at the time it s on't Miss Seeing how how easy it is to plo ter haul heavy loads, in s with the Fordson tractor try it yourself?see how FERYONE INVITEI arrows, Rims, and a rs I. H. ST7 16 ? l ' TRYON All Society Nei iDcal '=8? -P Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Holme have returned from a visit I (the coast. Mrs. Flynte, of Chicago, II is in Tryon to spend the ft months with her daughte Miss Mae Irene Flynte. Indications for the early r turn of many of the reguli I visitors to Tryon by the mar [changes of addresses to the p Ler that has been sent to tl various subscribers all ov< ihe country ?o ? Mr. C. W. Ballenger has r turned to Tryon after a plea ant hunting trip to the sta of Kenteucky. The entire community is gh to know that Mr. ed "Fairfa: ; Harrison, the venerable "F | ! linger" at Missildines has e iliieiy recovered from his recei jillnness and is back at his du Lcs again. Red comes in mighl i handy when any general info i mation is desired, bus sched | lcs, whats going on at tl ! Theater, etc., of .course we ha1 j to caH on him. We want 1 know wliats on at the theati we have to call on "Red" y( lould'nt teil by the newspaPi because they don't advertise. I Q A news headline in tl i "Charlotte Observer" "Ande son, Of The Continental Hot Corporation Remains Silent won tor if they have referen< lo Tryon or Charlotte? ~~?~ i Mrs. George D Blakely, wt has boon visiting relatives i Lexington, Va., returned 1 Tryon, on Tuesday. Mr. T. R Owen, of Charlott .W C., who is associated wil Showii of Isc * The Far # ng more profitable. It hould be done. No deli This Gre$t Macl w, seed, cultivate, thre ;hort perform every p practical the Fordson is D TO INSPECT T ny other necessary kCKHOU! 'r m the polk county news *++**+*++++++++++++*+++***++* SOCIET Phone 99 ars Mu?t Be In Thi? Office By Wednesday I M>++*+++++++++4+++**+++++**++ e|Jews s, the Western Union Telegraph to Co., was in Tryon this week looking after some business here. 1., ill Dr. Grady went to Asheville, r, N. C., Tuesday on a business trip. e-1 J. C. Brannon, of Atlanta. mac a Kuoinps visitor here p^j* I \JO?y ?? no U KJ uu?a< iy | last week, a- ?o? ie Dr. and Mrs Frank Lander sr of Williamston, S. C. and Mr. and Mrs. Sam Lander, of Anderson, S. C. were the dinner e- guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. T. 3- Price, on Melrose Avete ?o? Mr. Alexander Wyness, of , Spartanburg, S. C., is now lo^ cated in Tryon, with the new ' Packard Studebaker automolz bile agency, nMr. B. A. Warlock of Chart lotte, N. C., was a business visitor in Tryon, last week. ?O? 11ie Dr Justis of the local Bapve tist church, is reported to have to accepted a call to occupy the e> pulPit at Greer. S. C. >u ?o? er Mr. H. O. Gregg, of Baltimore, Md.. was business visitor in Tryon this week. ie ~?~ r_ A large crowd attended the el meeting of the Polk County ? Club, at the Mimosa Hotel on Tuesday night. Miss Caroline Jervey. left. Monday for Greensboro, N. C. !? to resume her studies at the }n College for women. to I _<>_ Miss Bettie Doubledav. left Monday to enter Wilson Cole, lesre in the sta,te of Pennsyl;h vania. lg >IY m Saves time? ays, no wasttine sh, saw wood ower job on i for a variety HEM r Equipment without finders vciivei cu $541.50 >E Try on, N. C. v Y NEWS Voon of Bach Week I ."TTTTTT, . Mr. Lawrence Doubleday, I left for Cornell University. Jim Kimloch, Dan Rion, Harry Morgan, and Amos Wilson, left Monday for State College at Raleigh, N. C. Miss Helen Morgan, left the first of the week for the State College for women at Greensboro, N. C. Mr. and Mrs. James Olson, from Cadillac, Mich., are visiting Mrs. Shoff. ! Mr. Purdy Richardson and I Mr. Pa Brauvelt, motored to 1 Spartanburg. Tuesday night. Mrs. Hintz, of Wilmington, N. C. have returned home after a pleasant visit at the Circle Inn. Mr. Louis Lehman, left Wednesday night for New York City. Mr. and Mrs. William Herron, of Lakeland, Fla., spent the week-end at the Circle Inn. Mr. Walt Thompson, of Saluda was in Town Tuesday on a business trip. The Thermal Belt Development Company, sold six lots this week to parious parties of j Greensboro, N. C. Mr. Martin, who is associated with the service department of the local Chevrolet agency, has just returned from a few days trip to Charlotte. N. C., where he has been taking a special course at the Chevrolet branch. Mr. Thompson, of Sahida 1 1 Recipes from a Country Inn ! , e i By JoMphint Jotop Bin ycrn ever fliwored croas ountry m the summer time, when the heat is like a fine, irritating pow?r in the mouth, and the trees along til* roadside have a grayish cast? If you have, you can sympathise with the Thorntons, as they rattled across a ten-mile stretch of freshlycrushed rock in their little Ford. The eoonomy of motor travel had attracted the Thorntons; but their principal reason for driving through was that?ecoording to legend?they could pause to admire any bit of scenery j that caught the eye?n privilege debarred by train travel. 'After an interval of particularly active bour ing, Horace Thornton gava his views on misleading highway maps. "Calling this hard surfaee road I Huh I" i His wife attempted to cheer him. ' "Itfc almost dinner time, now, Horace. You'll soon feel better." Tm not looking forward to coun- ' Sy cooking; and 1 don't want you to, ' ther, because I'll hate to see you disappointed. That talk about the abundant fried chicken, and delicious ; biscuit you find in the country is Dura I blah!" "But the biscuit are bound to be good, because most of the folks out I hAVM HBO onlf_mam? A?? " WBV Dl.U-I IOiU5 UUUI. ' j "Maybe so, maybe bo," the hungry I young doctor muttered. "Did you | read Irvin 8. Cobb's latest Christmas i story? He tells about a pair of city boobs who planned to rusticate economically during the holiday season. They found that a poor grade of food, shelter, and service cost them more in a village than a good quality woukl have in New York City. Not only that, but they hud to bribe them- I j selves free of a Prohibition indict- 1 ment by the chap to whom, in an ex- 1 cess of holiday enthusiasm, they'd ? presented their last bottle of 8cotch. < Dam a Ford, anyway. If we had a J real car, we could have readied j Waynesboro by now, instead of hav- ? ing to stop at this little dump." Horace Thornton jerked the auto- * mobile to a standstill, in front of a 1 yellow-painted farm bouse, which carried this sign: Higgins1 Inn. As they went tip the steps, appetising odors drifted to them. o "What does that small like?" Fay < \ > was a business visitor in Try- held at It.,, p. on Tuesday. p. m. dU>^ * 0? Mr. Bemis, of Tryon Devel- Mrs. ,\,,.;,,..v ,. opment Co., who has been out troit wi.,, , ,r,';n 'fl of town bn a business trip, |ta#e ;, !-''-'j11? has "returned. ?ver .? '< ' --n.ll *< nas re ?o? promiiic in |J(.lp^ >< I among \tr 'j 'i m The "Winter Colony is tens ha v.-. \!> r'' i I forming mluch earlier this year Mrs ^ jgfe I several of the regulars, are al- froull ,.;,i ^ 1 I ready here. I tertainr >. , havt* jed for ih intluding"j. I Mrs Bernard Sharp, Garrow > Kiv.-n . Mrs. J and Mary Sharpe, who have |np to h- I,,?iair< Wn spending sometime inljak Mount , an(j a M J New Ire in Tlryton for Hogl,;? k ?*?*,*- J the fall and winter season. j ^. w 1 Mr. h!ni Mr,,. I Mrs. Clyde Gleen and Mrs haV(. Ulrya Taylor of Grovemont hom(. \varr:or' ^ j-. motored to Tryon'Tuesday'to have : I spend the day with Mrs San- jsouth ( -to,.ma for v C Chase and Mrs. Natalie, - : \b Gilmore who are guesta at Oak, Hall. . i Dr. ami Mrs. Hale o! j m ?o? jtanhuiy \isitd jn Tr-. I j ov.n?wi onrl i Tuesdav. Al:' ..n.rr Mrs. rsernaiu unaipc u.m u.7,^ Miss Mary Sharpe have return- S0'(I the h. ;)H.V ed and are being welcomed bought, tr.-tain th.>M home again by their many terest in |,,.autv'';;|a, friends. mountain ?? .iitry. |pr The Garden Club will hold Mr. an<: Mrs. ..,1 its first meeting of the fall on York aiv , i, V';W Wednesday Sept. 22. Mrs. which Mr.-. aV Merrick will be Hostess. ing. Tin a' been r?*lu? Mrs. T. T. Ballenger was a kept open : ,r visitor to Tryon last week. A high das- h. anih:g number of Mrs. Ballenger's friends were invited to a tea - L. given by Mrs. J. B. Hester. Mr. _o? rensacnia. I la.. aMrs. W. T. Lindsey has re- ^or a s'!"r: turned from a delightful visit ' ljD with her daughter in New York K and will move soon into the Miss ha Grady Cottage. ing in ('l.irag... The first meeting of the H Guild of Christ Church will be Mr. Of" Han;;;:: .1 turned t? spending pan < :' in his h"!!.' Mountain. ASUR.A0LC daughter .Mrs. W. J.F.il^L ODKIQY ? ?'ni!;??Sl IXW IV, I Blowing Rock. ?0 ^BQ Miss A. Ford. r.i; ?^1 Thornton squeesed her husband^ from her vacation atX'lB A reluctant grin parted the yoonf j^er a,1.llt man's lips. in Greenville, and The plump, broadly-smiling pro ret Hall in In man, S. ? I prietreas welcomed them to her din mg-room, and the travelers seated \ r themselves eagerly before a long t*- LHAI hR iilLL, ble, laden with food of delicious aj> 16?Students at the pearance. Crisp brook trout; tartare ftorth Carolina T-m sauce?a piquant blend of mayon- , ?till naise, and Shopped capers, pidkles, year have acco.v.??? olives, and pimientoes; tender little Religion i rotesso garden peas, in drawn butter; a plat- Thornbury Workman"1* ter of golden-brown fritters, bw- Drofessor of Bible'? * sert was peach cobbler, accompanied f, ... . 1'nivaSiB by flawlesscoffee. therii Mcthonst IBM* "I never hit further from the mark Dallas. Tc\.. has in my life," Horace Thornton admit- p(\ oo tli,, first profeS* ted at the close of the meaL . i,. ,,t the "You were hungry," said his wife, acting (lt.il uja fl as if that statement explained the Religion at I .tapei - whole situation. School ha> heon ' JM Horaoe did not argue. "Do you office of the ** M reckon you could wheedle a couple c, , . Wnl.ich; of recipes out of Mrs. HigginsT" State at u.u h The proprietress of the inn was gra- a Board of cious in soaring her culinary secreta. Corporation: ami Before her guests went to their room Trustee* of the for the night, Mrs. Hireins gave them - ....rrinilP^M the recipe both for squash fritter* and worked OUT u- . peach cobbler. Professor Horkman' el Hill now r**atl> 1 uM 8quatk FritUn ses on {}w morning 1 Dip thin alioee of unoooked iqnuh Septomhiu 1' in batter made as fallows: Before mniltih 1 ** sitv Rev. Workman 2 tablespoons sugar Pul-iy !,t 'yfl uld to the flour slowly to avoid religion i?vr: lumpe. All fritters should be cooked to which h< b deep fat. The fat should be hot ^he cor]"'rat1"11 snough to brown a cube of bread in aotiarnte from the one minute. ? v r* .1,,. first re but after the i" [>? Peach Cobbler the eQSlling f,0 gjrt<| tj Standard Self-Ridng Flour Paetrf ity will he ^k'''. ^I tfl 1-2 cup fat ' iui \ iit'srt*2 cups Self-Rising Flour ward ll"' V,'u! Coldwater to make a stiff dcragb rH\l'F! Cut or rub the fat into the flow ,,* ,i, ,r. iirad'1', sntil the mixture is thoroughly 16?rO<> \ rori. f-; 2 tablespoons Self-Riahic Flour rpu,, I"illVi'i'.--* (blenawith sugar) . l!\L this year f 'jfl 2 tablespoons butter staff ' I-Y'j.or .. Put the water in the bottom of a Coach H0'1 . fu?!" [reased baking dish, add the peaches, Coach C- ( 1 . nfy. lugar, flour and batter. Roll the r i \\\ ,1. 1 ('' V Mstry 1-8-inch thick and use to cover Coaib rlVU-h J- *he top of the pan, letting ft fit well coach ; 1 : tor I lown over the fruit. Prick with a and Coach ' I ork to allow the escape of steam. who win lake in a hot oven (400 degrees F.) "?. r^h-nun ^H rom SO to 40 minutes. To serve, cut tie to c ,,f lad , nil he crust in wedge-shaped pieces, put Only <> j,ack he (dees thus cut on a dessert plats, tcr men . ' nd cover with fruit and Juice. coaches (Recipes furnished by Home Eoo- ?nfu H\VhKc f'"re,f r $ omlce Department, Sdt Wheat Mill- with >> aK s ttni^r ?* Amocbtkn. Nariiville, Tsnm) Forest on ^