Lancaster enterprise. [volume] (Lancaster, S.C.) 1891-1905, July 22, 1903, Image 1
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* jl^..r> KM K.
Vol. XIIT.
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TABLE SYiiLT.
Uncle Sam Proposes to Teach
Our Farmers llow to
Make It.
Washington, 1). C , July 10?
Uncle Sum is embarking in tk-?
business of manufacturing table
syrup. He is not going into
this as a money-making venture,
but for the purpose of setting an
example to the makers ot syrup
in the Southern States and teaching
them how to get the best
result from their cane.
The last agricultural appropriation
hill contained an apprepri
ation of $15,000, to be nsed
exclusively lor tiie purpo e ol
investigating, determinating and
reverting the proper treatment
and process in order to secure a
uniform grade and quality ot
first-class table svrup. Dr. II.
W. Wiley, chief of the hirenn
of chemistry, under whose supervision
the money is to be ex pen
deil, determined that the best
way to carry on the investigation
was to erect a model syrup iact-ory
and engage in liie production
of syrup on a sufficiently Ian."1
scale to demonstrnfc the ndv.*?ni?t.
get* ol the. methods employed.
Waycross, Ga, was seiected as
the lor.-1 o 1 of a mr. It 1 factr r aiul
its erection is now under way.
Dr. Wiiey has arranged lor a
supply of sugar cane trom plan#
tors in the neighborhood and it
is now being grown in accordance
with the instructions issued from
Washington. The manufacture
of table syrup from sugar cane is
not a new industry iu the South.
It is practiced over large areas
of Southern South Carolina and
Georgia,Southern Mississippi and
Alabama, nearly the whole ot
Louisiana and Florida, and in
Southern Texas. In nearly all
of these localities, the methods
that have been employed have
been of a crude nature, invoi ving
no accurate knowledge ot ttie
character ot the cane employed,
the amount of sugar it contained,
fir the cli mie A compos
it ion ol loo piuiiuci secufeu.
1 iio exiout *<? which l.i : iii<i 11 try
has been developed ih snown by
tho last ren in report, which
gave the total quantity of oami
syrup produced in liio United
P biati-s no 12,"2ltd,032 ^allotrs.
'iho quality ot the product
made has usually been of a high
character, and the r lpieeiation
of its value lor the 1/reakiast
' table and for cooking purposes
has gradually grown until i' in
now a recognized food product
throughout the whole oi the
region in which il id produced
and in many other p^rts *4 the
United States to which it has
been sent. So great has become
t lie (iOill.itiU iux l liiM II Itlrier l/llo,
palatable and nulritioas nilicle
of diet that in the past taw years
manufacturing establishm e n t a
have been oieotod on a much
more elaborate poala under
much more careful Mmafement
than heretofore. The old fashioned
mule mill and iron kettle have
Ik given away to the steam mill and
steam evaporator. Improved
methods of the treatment of the
juice have been > >.#?<ir, aad
It
L
5 a o/fnr
sJTk& i c:
LANCAST
iilleiEplH have boon made lo se
cure an article of standard quali
ty and properties. The creates
i difficulty in tlie way of the de
velopntent of a market lor tin
table syrup lias been the lack o
uniformity between the pioducti
of different mills and even be
' i 1 vli i'il i 11 i >1 i H i inn c i 11 .... i
- v.*. .. 1 ??V |/I UUUVIO IU1 IJC'I UU
, hv the some mill at differed
limes. Merchants desire to ban
die a uniform grade of syrup s<
1 that when its value is once cs
tablished I hey can meet I he do
mauds of their customers lor thi<
*>orljenlar kin'h A' 'her d:ft
cully in the way of development'
of a market has been the ten
dency of the syrup to ferment ii
warm weather, thus restricting
the salo very greatly.
The purpose of the factory be.
ing erected at Waycross is 1(
to t V) o f nroil'tAoft
the best methods ol overcoming
these difficulties. It is prop'^ei
to show them how to product
s\rups of uniform quality thai
will resist the tendency to fermentation
in warm we ither. Thf
minulacture of syrup has beei
studied for several years by Dr
" Wiley and by Dr. G. L. Spencer,
chief of the sugar laboratory, win
will have immediate oh rge o!
1 lip ^ oe?qcc: f A4 I1 ho JY1 '
approved scientific .methods wil
he observed throughout Irom the
planting oi toe cane to ttie botfling
of the product, and px:m*i
records will he kept as to tin
amount of cane grown per ?er'
on various kinds of soil and wil l
various kinds of fertil'zers, aw
as to the amount and ehemica
character of s>rup produced pei
ton of cano trom each kind o
soil. These records, togethei
with complete information as t?
the methods pursued at govern
meul factoi v. will be nnhii*'..
? ' - -- r ? T "
by the agricultural ilepartmeui
i<?r tiie benefit of planter
throughout the cane producing
region, with a view to enabling
them to reproduce the results oh
tiuned in the Waycross factory.
liven after a uniform grade o
syrup has been established then
will remain a serious obstacle n
tiie way of the speedy develop
moot of a reliable market for it
that it will require Federal legis
lation to remove. T! is obstacle
is the (act that tho grocery stores
I oi tiie country are SlUCri Ov i will
artificial syrups made of mixture!
n Vrtiioui? liiiid n \w.ic.i giiic*
is on r of the ? nti ' in . ftent;
These are cheap and can often bt
sold by the grocers at a highi
profit loan i ho g. i4kii..e cuin
syrups, esp cially when they n.v
. "''1 ?M-<t ? {>? !< ' J >
These m xed syrups, as a rule
contain no ingr dients that arc
injurious to health, but their s;i!>
j as maple, sugar cane or sorghun
syiup manifestly works an injur,)
'o the legitimate (rile in tin
Tannine articles?News ant
(Courier.
Mr. James Cathcart of Fair
; field county has been forced t<
[discontinue his cH'orts in shcej
(raising for the same reason 11?;>
J has led many others to do like
wise,?ino irequeni visitationof
the "yaller dog," of wlioir
legislator a ro filled with Irea.'
every campaign. ? Groonvilh
Mountaineer.
i
. Nnpervltfr'tt Office Oflff.'i.
My regular office flays wil
be on Wednesday and Saturday
' of each week. The remaining
days will bo required in tin
discharge of othor duties.
> L. J. Perry,
County Supervisor.
:r
" % - rOT ^
ER, S. C., WEDNESDAY, Jl
Itjkinv.in it ?
liw.ll.l J I It/ Jl.llllllAUIia BTO
( Rochester, N. Y., July 17.?, ,
With blue sky for a chapel, an Hflj
, arbor of trees for an aliur and " * **
I the waters of Lake Ontario for a
< background, Fritz Sage Harrow Tin
. and May Goodall married them- in on
I ouives on Inu beach ut W it lie incut
t Citv, Windsor Beach. bnrjrn
The ceremony was witnessed ' ',e t
' by two hundrod friends, but the ?llt
principals themselves were the
only "participants." Standing
j before the crowd Harrow an,
nounced that he took the women I noodi
to wife and placed a ring on hor We \vi
, tiugrr. She then made a similar and r
r statement. Togetlier the two re- sing
pea ted : have
"Trusting under the guidance TT| A '
> of our higher selves to travei Jjxi,
5 lifc-3 fcaths in perfect comrade ~~
ship, before you who know and f
love us, we pledge each other "j1'**
troth, so help us, our higlier j . ,
1 "p|Ve"- . list O!
"Oh, my ^divinity, thou dost 72 pa
i blend with the earth and ,fashion no Cf?,
for thyself temples of mighty sale t
, power. DO pa
"Oh, my diviuity, thou livest Shoes
' in the heart life of all things, and anteo
k ? . , . 1
uuoa CiUuicuic a ^utuoli 1 ij^tn lilat Ctuv- j
1 shiueth forever aud doth illumine New
even the darkest corners of the Vests
! earth. New
"Oh, my divinity, blend thou l;>c. 1
. with me that from the corruptible 1 $ 1 .*J">
i 1 may become incorruptible, that | brelln
I from imperfection 1 may become! A spl
1 perfection, that from darkness 1 j for so
may go forth to light." iQfnri
1 Thai was ail. A witnessed OittiJ
r marriage contract was signed
> later. Mr. and Mrs. Harrow are *'1(
ardent theosophists. lie is a lias
I graduate of Harvard. The bride
( is ten years his senior, and a dis
ciple of Mrs. Katherine Tingley.
They will sail from New York
Saturday for Hamburg to spend
' a year in study in Europe. i \ ^
\ +
! run liUPOItl) lil'.Jil SCIIOOl.!^ i
i will open next Monday roornincr,
1 July 27th. All patrons nn<LsJfc
students who expect to niatric- ^
ulate this session, are requested ^
t> be at tho schoolhouse early. ^
Bring all necessary books, etc. ^
V. A. liintrle.lVin., I
'1. (>. Steele, Ass't. &
j m* J
I Do not imagine that the world! $
i I I
would have any trouble in mov j
r ing on if 3rou should happen to'TL
I drop out ol tile race. uiir ,
man effects tlv condition of ^
. affairs as a whole to any qroat 1 >k c
, degree. There are perhaps a j d
do/.en men ready to sion in and v l
? lake uj> vour work and carry it 4^ 1
i forward?Union Times. v
V o
_ ; ^ ,,
An eighteen-story addition t??i -v '
the St. llegis Hotel, corner 5th j ^ j
avenue and 55th street, Ncwj^ ^
York, will he built, at a cost of ^ "
$000,000. John Jacob As tor ,8jgA a
, trie owner of the lintel, the total ^ t)
cost of which will bo $2,850,000. ^ (
t ? i e
A colored woman in Columbia *
* met tho daughter of Col. I'opo j ^ 1
i and said: "How do you, Miss $
Julia? I near you j ppj niip,!,!., ^
> sick and low, and I awful sorrv V
for you. Hopo he get better yet." ^ 1
She had taken the name of the ^ h
I'opo of Koine for that of the|^ 1
citizen Col. Pope rIio knew.? i ^ n
I Fairfax Enterprise. ^
|j?*
Tkia aiffnnttire it tm ">vory box of the gaauin*
Laxative BromoQuiniue Tablata
Mi* tuat ruroa n euiu iu ui^u -<*X ^
riTD r> f r t"?
i jrSrCi IS. a c* C.' JLY
22, 1903 No. 18
HiTLING
--- ' \3 W V/ 1 / wi
0 hot Julv (l.'ivs fl.ro livpl v I lrnnrlvi fn n,' \- 11.x.
, ~ - 7 . VX, ?*V% ? .?HV V II. I'i I \ V W
?/ %J ? I o
r little bargain establish- is a good time to buy ; .!' ads
The crowds (lock to our of cotton g<>ud- if ^ . .lA1 Oot
ii 11 sale from every section them at obi prices V ? <>v n
;reat values we are putting some big lots cheap and \\ ii let
om day to dav is advertis- them <?o way under old nriees.
s all over the county and Good 5 cent- C'abco Q f7 Ap
ng us many friends. A real at the yard 0 ' "0^ (' '
hot business like ours is Good yard-wide ?U cejr psm r-n
ohl Lancaster b?s been Bleachim* at \ "
ng for several years, lliat (|00d T ie Bleaching at <1 cents,
ill ampl\ meet the demands 60c ready-made Sheets ea? h 15c.
equiroments of the purcha- 25c readv-madePil'.ow
public, the great start we Cases, the pair
made fully demonstrates. |Sest.$i.2r, WhiteQuilt.. !>:,<
PfiATlWQ RIGHT ' ssc ; #6c
iiOf211 li 0aT1(j ]?fTpf Extra large cotton Towviv loc
White Goods,Muslins,&c
s within the last few days, New shipment just in and
1 we have added to our long every item a big bargain,
f July bargains. White Lawns and Dimi- p?
irs ladies' tie Slippers,were ties, the 8 cents kind, at O1 "w
nts, for our bargain n fin 140-incli Lawn, the 20c kind.l2*c
0 111,1 at vv^ 45-inch line Persian q ^
irs men's genuine Vici Kid Lawn at the yard
i, were $2.50, and guar- 2,000 yards wide Or- Cf _
d, our bargain <? "J gandie at the yard ^JC
?tKo o.uj Kj/ A a ss About 1,000 yards ot thoa* line
lot Ladies 10c. Bleached jp ;Uk1 12+ cents figured Lawns
, taped neat, each 5 cents. lo close at half price and ?
lot of those fine "1 under, at the yard.
libbons, the yard A ,
Su,n,Ho?i u,,Qcrr Embroidery Specials . y
each , , - i 1 '
I wo lots at u and 15 ?> ****?
lenclid Umbrella yj gp worth 8 and 25 cents tin yard. \
rvico 11-3 Off the Regular Price
,1 o T>rt7 flrrHc Ohnort1 Men's Suits, Pants, Shirts,
110 Ji j MvwUa UlMr Uudei-wear ami Socks,
a recent advance in cotton For bargains in all lines came
caused all staple cotton \ to the Bargain Store.
E. E. CLOUD
?? } mmmm
_ _ - w ?. w w V V w hj. w
$1?,O?0 *
Worth of Of?? (IllJld? *
'Lj*? I jS vi? wife D (^
?Jr>VV^' (T^'V^fi>5f1?nr W^-r^ K f-n .<*
? A ?A ' " *>; w \
() (JO AT I'l? I (IKS ()*K Sl'Kdl A L lNTfcfrfKST ^
fc W
TO OASH B u RS *
,i .. f to substantiate ur ^
laims : Our entire stock of White l>re?s floods, ineln- ^
in<; also colored Lawns andfyr?andies, from 3 to 25c. ^
yard. 500 yards 1-1 wide Perctils at 7?c per yard.
,000 yards Parker's Pleach at 8;\c per yard. 1 yard A
lido Ti ffeta Silks at 75 cents 1-yard wide T. fTeta, ^
;uarantee!, at $1.00 per yard?worth $1.25. $800 in
iot>en samph's, le^s 38' and "0 cents en the dollar.
Splendid batv*ain* in the ^atuples in Shirts, Towels, .ml
ianclKerehicfs, Hosiery, Suspenders, Bolts, Etc. 3,500 ^
ards Swiss and Hamburg Edgings,inserting* to match, r
t prices that defy coin pet ition. 20 Suits (job) in Crash
aid Linen at $ 1.50 the suit. An all-wool $7.50 serge ^
>uit. tor $4.00 ; 50 $10 Suits, odd lots, at $(>.,">0 and :L "i 50. ^
)(hl lots in men's f
!>2 Clioes?to Close, OS Cents *
>or pair. Ask to sen our "MATCHLESS" Brognn at ^
1.15 the Our entiro stock of men's low-cut Shoes W
.,1 ' .! . ? ...? 1 ?,?: e .} 1 ...... s v
* > \ . Mai iu I 1 I COST. II
rou have not 1 >111 5 cents to spend you can get a lOcvnts ^
inir of Ifoso, a 10 cents pair of Suspenders, a 10 cents ^
iottlo of Refined Sewing Machine Oil, 10 balls Sewing J
'bread, or a hundred other articles too numerous to j
nention. ^
Do Net Fail to Come ^
o see us. We will make it pay you, whether you buy ^
nucli or littlo. Yours to serve, ^
Funderburk Co. #