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The Hov I am offering t place is located four New Zion. There a 25 acres of original million feet-and v wood timber. Thei leaf pine, good bari bacco barns, four t ded into four tracts No. 3; 104 acres an This is one of t County, having mal 1 bales of cotton terms are easy. ROBEJ Office DeLorme Bldg. FARM LANDS P. S.-If inter D. E. Turbeville at FAIL IS BEST TIME TO CAN SURPLUS CHICKINS Canned Chicken a Friend in Need to Busy Housewife When Unexpect ed Guests Arrive-Cheaper and Easier to Can the Birds Than Feed Them-Canning Process De scribed. A vertiable friend in need to the busy housewife is canned chicekn. A few jars of it on the storeroom shelf which may be quickly converted into a delicious dish when unexpected com pany comes or when other emergen cies arise, give the housekeeper a sense of preparedness. From an eco nomic point of view, canning the sur plus of the flock is an excellent prac tice, as it is cheaper to can the birds than it is to feed them until they are wanted for the table. Nor is it neces sary to have young chickens for cann RII * Fri Prominent spe many benefits OVER at Pinckney's SSummerton h IEand Calhoun 4 i and Sumter a Manning will 3 wake up to ot. Speakers. are ter, and other IFridi M A tard Gree 3R SALE he Howard Green home plac miles from Turbeville and t re 328 acres of land; 135 acr i growth long leaf pine timbe considerable amount of sho e is a good 7-room residence is and stables etc., two pack anant houses and gin house. as follows: No. 1, 58 acres d No. 4, 87 acres. he best cotton and tobacco fa le about $400.00 per acre of t per acre this year. Prices a: RT W. PLOI REAL ESTATE Sumter, S. C. TIMBER LANDS C ested copnmunicate with me Turbeville, S. C. ig, for the older birds have superior flavor and quite as good texture as the younger ones. Two-year liens made a much more desirable canned product than a six-month-old chicken. The best products were obtained from plump, wellfed hens in tests recently made by the Experimental Kitchen of the United States Department of Ag riculture. How The Canning is Done. To prepare the bird for canning, it should be carefully picked and all pin feathers removed; it should be then singed and washed in water in which a small amount of baking soda has been dissolved. Remove the entrails cut the meat into pieces as for frying, and carefully wash each piece in cold water. The giblets and excess intes tinal fat should not be put into the jars. The chicken may be partially cooked before being placed in the jar, being either browned in fat or stew ed, but the best results have been ob tained when the uncooked chicken was BIG IIm MB]1 day, Nov takers will present t from a bridge SANTEE landing. as contributed libera ounties are enthusi; re working for it. be greatly benefitted ir needs. promised from Colui s will probably come, try, Nov 2 O'clock, at COURT HC N N IN G. n Farm. of 'e r M 3 for sale. This wo miles from I es cleared, about a r-about %/ to 3/4 " rt leaf and hard- iii built of best long b( houses, four to- -I This place is divi No. 2, 79 acres; 1s rms in Clarendon TV obacco and about re reasonable and = a aa VDEN Phone C No. 106 ITY PROPERTY in Sumter or Mr. t -- - - ------------ I packed into the jars. The jars may be filled with hot water or both ,or the t meat may be canned without the ad dition of liquid. The best product has resulted when no liquid or only a small quantity (about 2 tablespoons to a pint'jar) was added. The meat in jars to which no liquid was added has kept as well as that in jars filled with liquid, and has possessed a sup erior flavor. The following method is, therefore, recommended by the Ex perimental Kitchen. Pack the pieces into pint jars. As much as a pound of chicken can ofter be packed into a pint jar. Two chick ens weighing, before dressed, a lit tle over 4 pounds each, when cut up for canning will fill five pint jars. For example, jar I may contain a thigh, leg, fillet of breast, and saddle; jar 2, a neck, wing, leg, fillet of breast, and two wish bones; jar 3, a saddle, neck, thigh, and fillet of breast; jar 4, a wing leg, thigh, and breast bone; jar 5, a fillet of breast, thigh, 2 wings 19 P he need and the s RIVER fly, Orangeburg istic, Charleston I and we must rnbia and Sum 19tht S. C. CH[ERFUL WORDS l has To have the pains and aches of a d back removed-to be entirely free pou mI annoying, dangerous urinary dis- fIor lers, is enough to make any kidney to I ITerer grateful. The following advice Yor one who has suffered will prove use( IlIful to hundreds of Manning read-'was s. ! . Mrs. C. M. Taylor, S. Boundary St. 1tra i inning, says: "About a year ago, C was troubled with kidney complaint larg had terrible backaches and head-tair lies bothered me. Nervous spells . >set me and my nerves were just a ist eck. I felt tired and languid and I last frered with dizzy spells. Finally, I sac ard about Doan's Kidney Pills and, by might some at Arant's Drug Store. rail can 2ertainly say Doan's did me a onderful lot of good and quickly re- P ved me." Chi Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't roa mply ask for a kidney remedy-get ' oan's Kidney Pills-the same that . rs. Taylor had. Foster-Milburn Co., fgrs., Buffalo, N. Y. cee id a leg. When the meat lias been icked into the jar, add a half. teas Lon of salt to each, iartially seal, of nd process. No If a water-bath outfit is used for the rocessing, set the jars on a rack in m le bottom of a wash boiler with suffi- of) ent water to come 2 inches above y leir tops. Process pint jars continu- be usly for six hours after the water be- ,' ills to boil. Seal the jars quickly up n removing fro mthe boiler, or if lass-topped jars fastened by a spring re used, force the spring into posi oil while the jars are still immersed. fter sealing invert the jars to test or leaks while cooling. edtuces Time of Process. If a steam-pressure cooker is used he length of time can be greatly re uced. Fifteen pounds' pressure for lie hour has been found a safe and atisfactory period. Chicken canned in either the water ath ior pressure cooker is a desirable oluct, comparing very favorably vith fresh chicken when used for hieken salad, creamed chicken, chick m stew, chicken pie, or for scalloped >r baked dishes. The chicken in a pint jar is sufli ient to serve six p1ersons when the Ileat is prepared in any of the ways Ilentioned. - ---- I'() OUTI,NE COTTON DUSTING PROGRAM The United States Dlepartment of Agriculture will particilate inl a con ference called by the Plant Protection Institute, to be held at the'Chemists' Club in New York, December 6 and 7, to outine a proglaimi for cotton lusting in 11)21. Treatment of cotton with poison dust, principally calcium arsenate, has been of such recent de velopileit as a m11an1is of combating the boll weevil. that often impractic Ale iethods have beel emj)loyed for its application, many of which were due to improper advice given by rep resentatives of manufacturers who were not thoroughly informed on the problem.' The present meeting is to, p rovide a clearer understanding of the werk and to outline an educational campaign for 1921, which should re sult in the f armers hlaving tile best adl vice and1( suiperv isioni possible in the ir ploisoninig efforts. VOTE AG AlN STl STVRIK(E Newv York, Nov. 14.-Five local, uniionis of the International Brother hood of Teamisters aind Truckmien to day voted not to strike to enforce demand they had1( iiade for wage in crease of $1 a day. Thell nien v'oted to accept the agree ment offered by the wage scale coim mittee of the Merchant Trucknien's assoc iationi whiich prov(des that over tim(le be paid for M tile min ute in stead of by the lionur and that the meii receive full pay for one hol iday only in a week. Thie aLgreemenit is elfective November 1. 'I'l IEVES G ET1 lPOUCHI ES Omaha, Nov. 14.- --The piostal deC parlltmen(t toiiighit is .tighteniiing the not about the thieves whol laust night robdaHurl ingtn reg iste red mallil car with in the city limlits of C ouncil DEATH Aches, pains, nervousness, dim~ culty in urinating, often mean -serious disorders. The world's stan daird! remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and ur ic acid troubles - GOLD MEDAL Sbrinig <''lik rolid' a;d eften ward off romiecar of~ ii :.l:t f--r i-uorn thani 200 vestigators say no estimate of the I can be given as in no attempt i been made to check contents of i :hes. The stolen pouches were 11 San Francisco and were said iave contained currency for New k banks. An automobile was I to carry away the loot which thrown out of the car while the n stopped at a crossing. hicago, Nov. 14.-Reports that -e shipments of money were ob ied by robbers who entered a reg red mail car in Council Bluffs night and escaped with several ks of mail wero denied tonight Charles Woods, chief clerk of way mail district No. I and E. Bracken, neral manager of the cago Burlington and Quincy rail d. There were no treasure shipments the car and the loss can'not ex d $20,000," said Mr. Bracken. DANIELS TO INSPECT 4orfolk, Va., Nov. 14.-Secretary the Navy Daniels will arrive in rfolk tomorro wmorning, and will pect the Hampton Roads naval 'rating base awl the Norfolk navy rd. Tomorrow afternoon he will the guest of honor at an oyster ist to be given at Cape Henry. To orrow night ' he will deliver the ening address of a membership npaign to be conducte( '6y the Nor I -- On F~ftk Ave Hill Plumbing Water Works, PLUMBIN( PIPELESS FURNA Next Express 4 MANI FO)R THII BANI HOW IS FIRST NA7 W. C.ID J.A.W: .L T. STI olk Y. M. C. A. Secretary Daniels vill leave tomorrow night for Wash ngton. ;TATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Clarendon COURT OP COMMON PLEAS SUMMONS FOR RELIEF. (Complaint Served) lhe First National Bank of Manning, Plaintiff, against [arry Steinharqit, Ida Steinhardt, B. Walker Holladay and L. H-. Harvin, Defendants. To The Defendants above named: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED md required to answer the complaint in this action, of which a copy is here. with served npon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said com plaint on the subscriber at his office in Manning, South Carolina, within twenty days after the service thereof, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the comp laint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint. )ated November 2, A. D., 1920. W. C. Davis, Plaintiff's Attorney. TO THE DEFENDANT IDA STEIN IIARI)T: YOU WILL TAKE NOTICE: That the Summons and Complaint in the above entitled action wias filed in the oflice of the Clerk of Court for Clar endon County on the third day of November, 1920, and is now on file in said ollice. W. C. Davis, Plaintiff's Attorney. Nov. 3rd, 1920. 44-3t-c Eleven" rue New York -and Heating Co. Lighting Plants, ~, HEATING, CES, REPAIRS. )ffice. Phone 155 dING, S. C. tittttittttitttitittttttitt I fltttitit It tIt ~SY SAiLING 3 MAN WITH A E ACCOUNT IT WITH YOU ? FIONAL BANK. I NBEI~RG, Vice-Pre'sident. UKIN~S Cashier.