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I - COLO!:: i> REGIS?'RANTS CALLEb xt) TiiE COLORS. The local rs-vwrd has called the fol- ' lowing colored registrants to report for military duty cn Wednesday. , August 21st, at 5 o'clock p. m. The j following left for CaniD Jackson on i Thursday, leaving Newberry on C. j N. & L. at 9:53, a. m: - William Holmes v Tames Johnson James Nance Oscar Stephens Dock Burgess Belt Burton James Keitt Willie Maybin Lat Gary Coly Kincaid Carl Suber < Robert Van tLou J Laddie Wheeler ? Claud Swittenberg ' * Henry Hutcherson Henry Suber Eddie Galiman Wfllie Eigner ' Tommie Henderson Henry Suber Finkney Sanders William Swittenberg , Elmurrv Jackson ' Henry Lindsey Luther Spearman Geroge Chaplin Jimmie Shelton Eddie Frank Dean r James Arthur Glenn Pies Reed i Nathan Gaffney " * 5' . Sammie Sheely Anderson ''"J9. '*'.** > Dorroh Williams r T * Johnie Goree Mayer Benson Ben Duckett ; Ed D. Tames " ~ 3 ^g'lwii i Willie Koon ' . I William 'Nance w r7 Dr. /ackson's glasses are headache . O OO 1f i rerr.ovsrs. f I ! FOOD 1 t\#5I [ L If. P ?.11- T??_jI pp uueuiiiy tesieu TAND Glasses Properly Fitted | Satisfaction Guaranteed \ i Frames Repaired j rt? i (j.L.Looper SUCCESSOR TO P. C. Jeans & Co. Next door to New Bank Building - ,] k / H n Chattano Uf rr ugunaThe Bes HHBuarload Jus Ii|gi?gl|im yours now' another I TLA Diiv/>AI1 rj i sic i. HI t-cii British RurSl Life CliarnOo. . 4 With wov.oji taking the place of men workers, cor'litioi.s in many parrs o*. the country are undergoing a rentarkable change. Th-s: ;s most noticeable l r*oT*r?s wlioiv* lonrl nrmr*lra?^ ar^ melons th^ir homes. The Woman's Institute is largely responsible for the movement, which is gradually revolutionizing village life, making it more attractive and stimulating a sense of citizenship. In conjunction with the food production ae-t partment. a parliamentary meeting is called which elects a democratic committee representing farmers' wives, cottagers and landed women, who thereafter manage affairs, arranging for monthly social gatherings where useful lectures are given, exhibitions of housecraft or gardening skill held, and old. treasured recipes and house hold hints excnangea. Several hundred villagers already have their committees and the food department Is inundated with' demands for organizers and lecturers. Surgical Dressing Work. Some skeptical people, who usually aren't doing anything themselves, think that the production of surgical dressings by patriotic women is being overdone. If they could see conditions in r? n /-v a rrllln A*?A ijumc Ui iuc i' icuut viuagco, luicic not a single able-bodied man remains, they would not feel so. In these colossal battles, where hundreds of thousands of men are engaged, all previous wars and needs are outclassed. A great many men are wounded in these"' battles. With prompt care and abundant material handy, the vast majority of the wounded are saved. Vast storehouses should be filled in Prance at all times for this need. A Bed Cross doctor who recently returned from France reports a ease of a soldier so badly wounded that it took a whole case of dressings to save him. Under the strain of such demands, a great mountain of supplies will quickly melt away.?Virginia Enterprise. Miller T?ves Have Given to Motordom the , First Uniform Tires, 1 TIRES are mostly hand work. They differ as the men who make them. By creating a body of master tire builders, Miller has rid the*rt*res"buman Vl'W The average perrl^? sonal efficiency of MJlif _ '1 ? incsc masxcr ouuucrs yiv| is 96 per cent. t ll tires they build tS' ^ are ^ Per cent exb^W'I iiwM cellent. Less than | jEaffijja one in ahundred calls 1 %-y^hmm ^ora^*ustment' ^ Get a set today, i ^?5v Experience for your- 1 , self what Miller Uni- ^ ^??gg|s?r form Mileage is i * X5?^ i For Sale by P. E. Way, Druggist; Phone 158, Newrhery, S C. oga I; < I < t Made j: _ . . I: t Received | before they are sold. i ' load for long time. * r p I s /I Ir P e 0 . VV&atfpUla w % f ? | * Si: r?y~rj| Hlrjj KH?f,r HiH S 0 4 sl^U ? O t i iiiii nnnnM! WHIIHliU' WW I I UI9 I i ! I Food Administration Names Pric? Which May Be Charged in South ! Carolina?$3.50 for a Bale of 500 J I Pounds, $1.50 for Bagging and Tie*. ' Columbia me rood Aami-nsira#tlon bag fixed the price which may be changed for ginning in South Carolina. This fixed price becomes effective immediately, and is as follows: For ginning a i?ale of 500 pounds of ; lint cotton or less, $3.50 per bale. For each additional 100 pounds of lint cot- i ton, at the rate of 70 cents per 100 pounds. When bagging and ties are ] furnished by gm<ner, $1.50 additional. The farmer shall have the privilege of furnishing his own bagging and ues. j , LESS Ml NEEDED 10 : EWEETEfJ TEA Ifii COFFEE! I " , 1 Save the waste. ! 100 million cups of coffee are nsed 1 daily in tha United Statei. I j 700 million cap* of Ua are tMi y daily in tht United StatM. j 179 Billion eups of tie* and eoffoo. ' j If oven an avoracs of half a tM> | poon of sugar per cap It loft uadis- , sol red at the bottom of tht cups of tea and coffeo, the waste would 1>? 1,- 1 700,000 pounds of sugar daily. ^ Stir your sugar until it dissolves. * Less sugar is needed when It dissolves. j It is estimated that one-third to onehalf of all sugars used in homes is j used in tea and coffee. Think it over. How is it in your home? Isn't there a chance for savtoS? t 1 1 MAXIMUM 1 Preservation of Fruit With < m i m i urn m 1 IVI I II I Ifl W 111 < Sugary < 1 1 The sugar shortage is one of the in- ^ conveniences of the war. It is not a tragedy. A little consideration and ( resourcefulness will quickly help to ^ lessen the inconvenience. ^ Housewives who have been accus- < tomed to preserving fruits with quan- i tities of sugar should not view th* < present sugar shortage as a death < knell to their plans for conserving the fruit surplus. It is important that 1 these fruits be saved for winter use. : ^ ?/>/>?> ^ nuuac?ivcj) wuu no. o uccu ovtuotomed to preserving fruits with quan-; tities of sugar should not view the! present sugar shortage as a death . knell to their plans for conserving the fruit surplus. It is important that these fruits be saved for winter use. ! I 1 Sugar is desirable In preserving; i fruit, but it is not necessary to ith success. There are three things which j the housewife should do to help in the < ?ugar conservation program: .j 1. Preserve a part of the fruit by 1 methods requiring no sugar. 1 n t~i ?f fi,A * it _i + v ^ u. rj essivc a yew l uj. lug nuit a. greatly reduced supply of sugar. 3. Preserve a part of the fruit by replacing some of the sugar ordinarily used wirh other sweeteners. When canning without sugar fruits may be put up by the usual methods, asing for the liquid, water alone initaad of sirup. Unsweetened fruit Juice may b? is?d in nlaee of sirun. ------ ----- ; Unsweetened fruit juice may be , concentrated to a thin sirup and ised in place of sugar. Fruit may be canned with one-half >r one-fourth the usual amount of sufar. The sweetness of the sirup in arhich fruits are canned may be re luced. In making jams, marmalades and Hitters, reduce the volume of fruit < >ulp one-third to one-half by bciling, :hen measure and add only one-half lugar by weight instead of the cu3-} omary three-fourths. I * Other sweeteners may be used in- { [ Honey?If honey is obtainable it nay be used weight for weight to r?> >lace part or all of the sugar in any riven recipe except in jelly making. | rhree-fourths of a . cup of honey \ weighs about aa much as a cup of ugar. Molaaaes?Molaases may ba uaed aa kaubvtitute for sugar with such strong [avored fruita aa plums and cranber its. The flavor molasses remains j tromlnent. Sorghum?All grain sirups are lik* t aolasses, giving a decided flavor to t he product. 1 Glucose or Corn Sirup?These sirups iav be used to replace three-fourths * ... V f the sugar by weight in any ~ ven j * ecipe except jelly making. T- r<. :> j t ourths of a cup of these sirups j weighs about as much as a cup of j * ugar. Sugar is 1 1-2 to 2 times as 1 wf>5t as these sirUp3. t isjii 5 Will rnnsrr kiliLL liili ruliiiC ! FOB IMPSr ~ I South Carolina Farmers Who Have Forage to Offer Will Find Ready ' Market in This State?All Offers Will Be Given Consideration. Columbia.?August Kohn, chairman of Conservation and Productcion of the Food Administration for South Carolina, has received a letter from the Chief of the Forage Branch of the War Department, Quartermaster's Division, stating that offers of forage from farmers and dealers having it for sale In the neighborhood of the j army camps and cantonments will be gladly received and will be given consideration. "In fact, says the letter, we are * here to buy forage for the fovernment ! wherever we can do so to the best ad- j vantage, all things considered." It is advised when contractors or > farmers are submitting their propos- j als on forage they should si ate tho ? L-in/l onri ornriA nf fnrasrPi thev have to i 1 [\1UU U11U n A w*. v* v w - 0 _ ? sell, the quantity and its location, the ( time they can make shipment, and the jprice. If prices are satisfactory, pur- ; ' chases will be made, it is assured. iv All proposals should be addressed to Chief of the Forage Branch, Office of ' the Quartermaster General, United , States Army, Lytton Building, Chica- j So, III [ Mr. Kohn has been working for ' lome-time past to assure this assur-! lqc9 from the Government, as It has ( &een Celt that farmers in this and other j States, who hare forage to sell should ) be given consideration, especially j irhen it is considered that the camps j md cantonments offer the natural j market, and the saving in freight to I Lhe Government wouia D? a lacior nut :o be disregarded. I"H"E "50-50" RULE STILL IN EFFECT, i . i J Household Released From "No Wheat" j Pledges, But Must Still Use Equal ..Amount of Wheat Substitutes 'E Columbia.?Housewives who prao | :ically put hteir homes on a wheatless 11 t>asis last spring have been released ; ft Prom their pledges by the Food Ad- 2 ministration to go absolutely without | svheat until the harvest As no change, has been made in the "fifty- I fifty" rule, however, housewives will continue to purchase an equal weight M >f wheat substitutes with their wheat ; lour. Bakers are still obliged to make I Victory Bread, which must contain at | ast 25 per cent wheat substitutes. The coming in of the new wheat I ;rop has made It possible for the na- I :ion to go back partially to Its old | labit of eating, but the uncertainties J jf war and the necessity for building up a food reserve are incentives to I caution, even in the face of a good -rop. j Public eating places are likewise re- , oooa/i fr/vm thpfr "nr> wheat" Dledses. ! M 41 V4U v** w*. ? ? _ \i ALLIED FOOD CONTROLLERS \4 URGE ELIMINATION OF WASTE. ? Columbia.?Herbert Hoover, federal food administrator, has cabled the folwoing joint resolution of the Food Controllers of the United States, jYance, Italy and Great Britain hack :? America: "Resolved, that while the increased; production of the United States renters it possible to relax some of t>3 whlr.h hava been florae Frith peculiar hardship upon all our peoples, yet It is absolutely necessary :hat rigid economy and elimination of waste, in the consumption and handing of all foodstuffs as well as in-, creased production, should be mainained throughout the European allied countries and in North America. It s only by such economy and eliminaion of waste that the transportation >f the necessary men and supplies i 'rom North America to the European ! front can be accomplished and that j itocks of foodstuffs can be built up In j 'vorth America as an insurance j Lg&inst me ever pre a win, utuigor vt Mirrest failure and the possible neceslity for large and emergency drafts o Europe. We canot administer the 'ood problem on the basis of one rear's war. We must prepare for its ong continuance if we are?to insure ibsolute victory." j m COOPERATION NECESSARY TO j ?" PREVENT SUGAR FAMINE. |j Columbia.?There is shortage of; | tugar. There will be no sugar famine. \ This is the assnrance given by the food Administration. While manufacturers using sugar: md the trade are under rigid restric- j ions, conservation of sugar in the; tousehold is no honor; but the Food j lammisiruciun is it* 10 give puanive LAturance that there will be no sugar inline only upon the presumption hat the American people are going ? eonaclentlously and patriotically ive op to the regulations?an allowance for the household of two pounds >er month per person. "We cannot in honor compel Europe o <k> with less whtta we take mors or ourselves," says tiie Food Admin stratlon. Canning is good economy, and sugar or canning may be had on certificates, mt so far as possible fruits and vege- j ablos should be put up without =u^ar.: The succes o* the sugar program oi j h6 FcjcI Administration dependi argoiy upon the honor antf coogera^ ion or tne American people. i" t 9 ' Vy; V V??i:r ! yrs I \-r? th^v boosting yen i-:> or yo-: down? Potter consult Dr. Jackson about them. S-23 it 11 rWf JW* y j ~s~Z\ help | wfcwt i>^V-7oit^oldLier^ | j -j.1 ' r*? U. S. Food Administration. i . Tater ain'?i skeerin' up a ..>' vrn he say we alls mils' eat | ; w!:.:at en less meat en save all j f-it en sugar we kin. We has jist i >t ter feed dat big army er fightin' c.ier boys, en we kin do hit by eatin' i ight smart mo' taters en ganien sass n eatin' mo' fish en game *stid er pork and beef. Ef we alls don't nn ter feed dem sojers right now ! ;ve'll be feedin' somebody 'fo' in it won't be us. ; Just R ' ' A r 1OO Wrough This Range makes Will sell them chea Better get your get They will probably The Puree! We Want your? Peaches, Okra and We will buy them or ca: quantity. Let us help yoi is our main object. We a business. We guarantee our goods. C >me to see 1 Stand. N pwhprrv C Phone 266 " W CANNING DAYS: Tuesday: A rnmnlp ?~~~3L Mantels, Tile, Come and Newberr V s s Is a s!;^n of intollii:ol i.-'?c Lr. jackson. . . > > i . ? > 11 I U. S. Food Administration. Baking powder biscuits, co'n bread, muffins, brown bread, griddle cakes en waffles is wot dey call "quick breads." You all makes 'em wid on3 cup er wheat flour ter two cups er eiiKctitn+o flrinp +r? oota oil rlo wheat dat kin be saved fer de sojers. Some folks kin git er'long widout any wheat at all and are glad to do it ter help win ctc war. Dat ain't bad med'cine to take," fo' who's gwine tu'n up his nose at srood co'n bread er biscuits erflapjacks? ~i eceived + " " 1 * t Iron Ranges ; ' cooking a pleasure. ? ac arsv I f ? v?J )d wife one now. be hard to get soon. If I il W V SAk^J | 4 > f f ) Tomatoes Beans. n them for you in any j save your stuff. That .re well equipped for the our work. We stand by lis at Dollar Down's Old tannery Co. L Herbert, Manager k s, Thursdays and Fridays f i te Sine of 1 P ana urates see them. y, S. C. I