University of South Carolina Libraries
4 ? - .. SCHOO jBIPliPPPiJ I s&y Ke V/dS! *Wi He ?4S long* , 1 Wiifve you., ^ 1 Had him cie*n. < Tom. Iu e, .fcke v)a?er wK? la believe f give a big vloy thin? you t*lt | 6u^e<3 the Im# hVe ?Ih? ? 0 50! | T>>/tCr~^>Copyright HoihiKooKBook i "Just stand aside, and watch yourself go by; . Think of yourself as He instead of I. Pick flaws; find fault, forget the man is you. And strive to make your estimate ring trilA The faultb of others then will dwarf and shrink, Love's chain grow stronger by one mighty link, When you with "He" as substitue for "I" Have stood aside and watched yourself go by." EVERYDAY GOOD THINGS. PRUNES are so wholesome and good for chUdren as well as "grown ups," that we should serve thetu In a variety of ways. When a pie which Is very nice is to be served try this: Bake a shell and put in a layer of cooked stoned prunes, sprinkle with nut meats of any kind; black walnuts or butter nuts are very good; cover with whipped cream and serve. Cream Prune Pie. Put through a sieve a cupful of stewed prunes, add one cupful of milk, one teaspoonful of cornstarch, a third of a cup of sugar, the yolks of two | eggs well beaten; mix well and bake In a pastry lined plate until firm. The whites may be used as a meringue or may be stirred into the filling just as it goes into the crust. Corn Muffins. Take one cupful of corn meal, threefourths of a cupful of flour, throe teaspoonfuls of baking powder > tea spoonful of salt, four tab "u' of molasses or two tables < sugar, one cupful of milk, o n beaten, and one tablespooi r butter. For the housewife who n likes grkldle cakes and w hold does not enjoy the s a greased griddle, try put three tahlespoonfuls of ! . > Into the cakes the last th <>? r greasing the griddle. They * n nicely without sticking to . i Codfish With Cream. j ' Shred the fish and then prepare as usual, then make a white sauce, using thick sour cream; thicken, using butter and flour, cook until thick and stir In the fish. This Is delicious with UBKCU puiuiuca. Mock Patse de Foie Gras. Wash a small calf's liver, place In a stew pan with an onion finely chopped, two bay leaves, a blade of mace, a dash of black pepper, a teaspoonful of salt, six cloves, a lump of loaf sugar, and one pint of stock. Cover and stew gently for three hours. When cooked cut the liver in thin slices and place on a platter.-ponr over the strained liquor from the i saucepan and let stand over night. The next day, pound the liver to a paste, adding slowly one-half cupful of'butter. Press through a colander. Pack In small jars and cover with melted paraffin. Cut In thin slices when serving. i # * * *)vi X/ lA+CO ? V * mm j Copyright. 1921, Western Newspaper Union. () THE CHEERFUL CHERUB < Vken people z.c.X unkind to me UitK cruel word5 end kevtfkty look5 Tkey little know Im _ teking notes ro In r? >+. t.kprYN til fi N in story LvJ books. ? ???! A Preventive Measure. The Factory Manager?Can I establish a zone of silence urouud iny factory? The Health Officer?'Thnt's an un usual request. Any one sick there! The Factory Manager?Not jet. but I 60on will be. My workmen are mis taking every passing automobile horn for the quitting whistle. I .1.50 gets The Chronicle one year.] L DAYS - ? (" ( 'III >=>(. f- f lv , \ I <T8 uncle orxct -viKo *ln*o?^ QT*C ^ 3ic1c! ' pu& ** _??-^_J"~d m kifcas > " rrj ~"| r* **-*< 3jua "^,4 *J*s? I S yo? | He b?-cVe J1 3ii' ^fl lo^se, Joe *?' 1 " ^ TKis same amcnr dc?s , CauSCS tjydro^Kobia?CHANGED Maude?Sometimes Vera speaks and sometimes she doeRn't. Grace?-Yes. She got that way since *ne took a position in the telephone exchange. NOTICE TO TAX PAVERS. Those of you, who have the well??-.e of ihe SK.n-.olb m he:-.rt, .et i... ask that you use your influence to get the patrons of your respective districts to pay tax as early as possible, in order that I may be able to pay teachers their salaries promptly each month. It think that they will be entitled to this consideration. This I think is your patriotic duty; to see and make it possible for us to pay claims as they are presented to this office. So help, each of you, that we may be able to remunerate these the most worthy of our laborers. I sincerely hope that everyone will lend a helping hand in this r>?tter, as everyone can and should. W. F. YOUNG, County Supt. of Education. It is fim? to put in your grain for a winter pasture f-?r stock and for chickens. A mixture of live, Clover and Vet^; v ill ma^o o Pasture for e??'ht nn-it'is, let The Pure Seed Co., Cheraw, S. C., fix you up at once. The C'.ropicle is Sl.rfl a year. > W. <v. 5K 50: & ?' W: h 1 I The: * :o: :<s if :o: if ;o: if | Facing the ( if 1 Ti if i3 if :<x if | Croslan< if :o: if On Harvesting Sweet Potatoes I Clemson College, Oct. 15?At a conference on sweet potatoes held at Clemson College during the annual meeting of the Extension Service forces, growers of sweet potatoes were advised that potatoes be dug if possible before frost; that they be stored in curing houses; that-banked potatoes do not make a commercial product and should be sold while green; and that great care should be taken in properly harvesting, grading, and curing the crop to be held for better spring prices. Attending the conference were T. B.- Young, (President South Carolina Sweet Potato Association; Geo. P. Hoffman, extension horticulturist; F. L. Harkey, agent in marketing; D. W. Watkins, assistant director Extension Service; and Roland Turner, agricultural agent Southern Railway. Below are the recommendations made. 1. That it is the sense of the conference that potatoes should be dug. before frost by all means and we recommend that digging begin about Monday, Oct. 17, and finish certainly within two weeks following that date. 2. That we encourage all parties ^ ! f I ! : j i * * % ! Guaran T \XT J. ?v. Ph McMar Second Chera^ ^oast Line Fre *^* 11 L1 i r\ nn jJULm^ au jesday, 0< At 10:3< d-Tyson Re Beanentsv who have potatoes to harvest and store same in curing houses wherever, satisfactory houses are available, as we believ prices for well kept potatoes next spring will be more profitable than to sell now. For those who can not carry potatoes in storage, we believe it would be best to market their potatoes while green rather than to bank them with the idea that they would have a commercial product to ship later on. It is the sense of this conference that banked potatoes do not make a commercial product and cannot be (marketed sucessfully at long distances, but can at best be a local proposition. 3. That great care should be taken in properly harvesting, grading, storing and preserving the present crop > of sweet potatoes, to be carried until the spring season, at which time itJe believed that reasonably profitable prices can be expected. o mm lltU* * M QIaInm man/ mnro mi ripmy. 3 the water and pas mains which Onderlle the streets of New York city were placed end t? end they would form a continuous pipe line sufficiently long to reach from the Atlantic t# the Pacific coast HOW ABOUT YOU? HaTe yon ever figured out your tangible, negotiable-assets and liabilities? If yon have not, you will find it will surprise you. We Americans base a man's financial worth in terms of principal? English and Frenchmen use the proper way, L e., in terms of-income. In using this method we are not so liable to confuse ourselves. -Twenty thousand dollars seems a large sum but when you reduce it to terms of Income it looks pretty small when you realize it will hardly yield $1500.00 a year. When you were getting $25.00 a week you were not living what might be c'lled a luxurious existence?you were just getting by, that's all. Put your wife and family in your place on $25.00 a week and they will have even a harder time than you when yon were single, because there are more mouths to feed and more bodies to clothe* .~ Life Insurance is the answer?at least 60 per cent of all the money you yon save can be put into life insurance so as to yield neaidy 8 per eent If you live and several hnndred per cent if you should die prematurely. Think it over?then let us advise you what to do. We represent ATLANTIC LIFE INS. CO. of Bichmond. Call or Write ity Loan & Tri MALLOY, Mgr. & Gen'l.. tone 192 M. & F. Bldg Cheraw, S. C. n da LP ills Lot: Street V, O. Kj. ight Depot wili ction on ^tohpr 1^1 ^ V VX icr WJk jmrn w ' 3 A. M. alty & Auct ille, S. C. \ ; i i i SELF-RELIANCE GOES BANKRUPT Thin Blood Saps Energy. Glide's Fepto.Mangan Rebuilds the Blood. Wrestling with a weakened condition of the blood 1b a desperate struggle. Thin, watery blood deprives the body of energy and cause* a played out feeling not unlike utter exhaustion. A man with weak blood has not the full use of his powers. He lacks decision, and vacillates until he loses self-confidence. . Some men, and women too, go faltering along for months scarcely realizing that they need Gude'a Pepto Mangan, the blood-builder. But when they have taken it for a while, what a * difference there is in the feelings ! The old-time vigor and the red-blooded hue of good health return. The new rich blood gets to work, building, fortifying, lifting the spirit up to its normal standard. Physicians have prescribed Gude's Pepto-Mangan for years as a blood-builder. Druggists sell it in liquid and tablet form. Look for the name "Gude's Pepto-Mangan" on the package. Advertisement. V 3 jst Co. Agt., ] M i i le i TS| sOn I I $ I be sold at | 92 7T. s>: th | I v. 4: ion Co. I 8 8 DANGERS OF A COLD Cheraw People Will Do Well to Heed Them. Many bad cases of kidney trouble result from a cold or chill. Congested kidneys fall behind in filtering the poison-laden blood and backache, headache,, dizziness and disordered kidney action follow. Don't neglect a cold. Use Doan's Kidney Pills at the first sign of kidney trouble. Follow this Cheraw resident's example: Mrs. H. B. Russ, LeGrande St., says "I caught cold and it gave me a severe backache and settled in my kidneys. I had pains through my kidneys s.ll the time and was alwajjis in misery. Dizzy spells often came True enough," repair bills that the bank account "stop them before "With Cypress you be sure you get the rvni w, i r i "THE WOOE Look for the Cypres below on every boar on identified respoi "double your lumb< ?and often more t! BUY THE GRADE TI For many uses the medi exactly the thing. Your dealer will sell yo Ask him what your job Write us for list of FREE I Southern Cypress Mfi 242 Poydra8 Building, NewOrlei 'Graham Building, Jacksor YOUR LOCAL DEALER WILLJSUPPL1 HASN'T ENOUGH CYPRESS LET US Kl G2> ! j?,?* Cheraw E Plumbi . %' " Electrical Contraci Plumbing ai . >m Phone 263 , Wood a f? It will pay yttu I can save you m See me before y< Wholeasle prices on both Coal and 1 I DO DRAYING Al ALL .T A. D. CI Try A Sac. LUCILE or B High Gra< A GUARANTEE WI' Horton & H Save Time a By Goii J. S. BUR( Variety Si Cheraw, We Make a Specialty Little Things \ - / 43n over me, and many a time I thought I would fall. I had a tired feeling and was languid. My kidneys aqted irregularly, too, and annoyed me considerably. I heard of Doan's Kidney Pills and took two bo^es and felt greatly relieved from the start. After I had finished the second box, I was entirely cured of all the kidney trouble. I can recommend Doan's to anyone who is bothered with kidney com. plaint." 60c, at all dealers. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. no. 7 o WANTED?Field Peas. Will pay market price. 10-20-21-4t. Cash & Carry Co. I * i r it stne frequent eat the holes in But, why not they happen?" build but once" but genuine Vj&ST H5T IESS i eternal" s trade-mark shown dor bundle. Insist * visibility. It means *r money's-worth" han that if you 3 AT FIT3THEJOB. um or lower grades are u the grade .you need, calls fof. . . . TANS for farm buildings. >q ' Accn bufit on " Tiii a. /-VSSU. Water" Cypraas . -you can identify ins, La.,or U by tbi* mark, iville, Fla. ' you. IF HE WW AT ONCE. n n . ' v- T ' ?.? ledlric & ng Co. ling and Supplies 1 r nd Heating - cheraw. s. c. % ' . i i ?^ nd Coal j ' . # i to buy now. loney. )u buy. on carload lots, iVood. . 's ' " Sj. I, . , . \TD HAULING AT IMES lapman , ? . J? ,"V# i : ? ; k of Our * , LUE BIRD i \v. a Je Flour TH EVERY SACK, ' S * , [endrix Co. ? ' ' * i immmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmarnm md Trouble ig To :h co's. tore First ' s. c. t of Carrying the You Need