The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, March 02, 1916, Page THREE, Image 3
\
A Distinct i
* What is the chief i
ority of Royal Baking
There are several g
is which distinguisl
baling powders.
This reason, which
know, is that Royal
from cream of tartar
grapes. This means a
It means natural food
mineral substitutes uj
powders.
There is no alum nc
Baking Powder.
| ROYAL BAKING
New '
WAYS OF USING
/ CAROLINA RICE
t -
"nutritious And Easily Digested
| " Cereal Serves Many
Good Purposes
. '
FOR MAKING DISHES
IN OUR DAILY DIET
I1 "Southern Style" Which Means
%
With All of The Grains
j Distinct.
Then; are few food materials which
scive more purposes than rice. It is
used as a breakfast cereal, as a thick
ening for soups, as a vegetable, as an
in^odiont of "made dishes," in which
I it may appear in combination with
meat, fish, eggs, cheese, or vegetables
and sweetened and flavored in various
ways as a desert. The Office ofi
Home Economics of the department
has been studying the food value of
rice prepared in various ways, and !
housekeepers can perhaps us ? i\ with)
bct?}-r understanding of its advantages
if they consider some of the results
of these studies.
In and of itself, rice is a mild, and;
pleasant-flavored cereal, which, when;
properly cooked, furnishes the !>ody{
with an abundance of easily digested'
starch, and this explains why oriental;
can use it as the "staff of life" ir-'
stc^td of bread, and why it may be J
substituted for wheat or corn or oat-[
meal as a breakfast cereal. Many I
persons tljnk it also may be substi-|
luted for uoi.'ilnrs i?;i i>nTil.f!<it?#??n'i '
I 7 " 1'?-1 *v<*
1 vrgct dole. This is a natural supposi- !
I lion silica; a portion of cooked rice 1
I furnishes the body with , about the
I f.'ftnc quantity of energy-producing
j, standi as a portion of potatoes. I'o*s,
b.owever, like most vegetables,
I (iiWer from cereal foods in the char
aclcv and combination <?f the mineral
H matters and acids they contain, which
pfry an important part in nourishing
the body and keeping it. in good work-'
vfcg order. This means that they are;
\A>t exactly substitutes for one another,
:<wl that the common custom of
i providing fruits and vegetables as we j
generally do as a part of meals made
up to a considerable extent of foods,
prepared from cereal grains is a commendable
one. It follows that when!
rice is used like the potato as the
(principal starchy food of the meal,!
one should bo careful to use fruits
itn^T vegetables generously?a custom ;
which is in accord with the traditions j
of good housekeepers.
I Ideas differ as to what is the best
way of cooking rice, but probably the
mcst generally accepted, standard is
to have all the grains distinct. Rice
cooked in this yay is often described
as "southern style," although it is by
no means confined to the Southern
Stages. It may be prepared as follows:
To a quart of rapidly boiling
water, containing two level teaspoonfuls
of salt, a cupful of thoroughly
washed rice is added so slowly that
the boiling is not stopped. No stir-!
ring is permitted, the rice being kept!
from sticking to the kettle by the!
I rapid iboiling. About 20 minutes'
[cookwg is needed. When the rice is
soft, the water is poured off from it
and it is covered with a cloth and
placed in a warm part of the stove so
that its grains will swell. Some
ve Reason
peason for the superiPowder
?
ood reasons, but there
hes Royal from other
every woman should
iking Powder is made
, which comes from
healthful fruit origin,
as distinguished from
sed in other baking
>r phosphate in Royal
r POWDER CO. I!
York
TEXAS CONSIDERS
CUTTING COTTON |
The Texas Department of Agriculture
in warning the Texas farmer
against increasing this cotton acreage
says:?"Should the 20 per cent reduced
acreage of 1915 he restored and
that acreage produce a normal crop,
and the war continue, as it mast prob
nhly will, witli more than half the
foreign markets closed and all impaii
ed, cotton will touch low-water mark.
The farmer's chance of getting but 5
cant sa pound for an increased acre-,
age of cotton next fall is splendid?...
~ . !
jus cnance oi getting ) > cents a poun< !
on a further reduction of 20 per cent
is equally good."
o
CO reus AM) COLDS ARC DA N- j
OK ROCS.
Few of us realize the danger of
Coughs and Colds. We consider them 1
common and harmless ailments. However
statistics tell us every third person
dies of a lung ailment. Dangerous
Rronchial and Lung diseases follow a
neglected cold. As your body strug-1
gles against cold germs, no better aid j
can be had than Dr. King's New Dis-;
covery. Its merit has been tested byj
old and young. In use over 43 years,
(let a bottle today. Avoid the risk oi'i
serious Lung ailments. Druggists.? !
adv.
cooks, oefore covering the ricD with aj
cloth, turn it into a strainer and pour!
over it about a quart of hot water to
remove the starchy material on th
outside of the grain.
The water poured off from the!
cooked rice contains a certain amount'
of food niM'.oi'inl r?vi .r ? . . "
and this nny ho boiled down and usMd
in making; soup. It will thicken the',
soup as would cornstarch o>- f'0?ry
Another way to prevent waste is to'
cook rice in a double boiler it? only so
much water as it will absorb wh'le
softening. When so cooked about
t hree cupfuls of water and one level i
I tea* noon fid of salt ar allowed for a
cupful of rice. If the rice is not stirred
while it is cooking, it will be not!
unattractive in appearance, although i
the grains will not be absolutely dryi
and separate. A more savory dish
may be made by substituting meat
broth and strairod tomato juice fori
the water.
The food value of boiled rice may,
bo increased by using milk instead of
water in preparing it. This has no
special advantage in families where'
milk must be economically used, but
where there is a large amount of
skim milk which might otherwise bei
thrown away it is worth considering.!
If rice is cooked in an uncovered j
double boiler it can he made to absorb
at least six times the volume of ,
milk. By this means the protein of'
the dish is greatly increased. In the;
following recipe the amount of pro-,
tc in supplied by the skim milk isj
equal to more than that in a pound of j
round beef without bone.
Rice C-ooked in Skim Milk.
1 cupful of rice, (> cupfuls of skim'
milk, .'5 tcaspoonfuls of salt.
Wash the rice thoroughly. Cook in
an uncovered double boiler till all the
milk is absorbed, which will take at
least an hour. This nutritious dish
can be mad? savory as well by adding
to the ingredient* one-fourth level
teaspoenful of curry powder ami a
few grains of cayenne. Eaten with
butter or gravy, it is eery .palatable
when served with meat or in a similar
way. If one prefers, the r?ce can ne
made savory by seasoning with a few
drops of onion juice, eelery salt, and
paprika, or a little cayenne pepper, if
it is liked, or with grated cheese.
THE HORSY HERA LI
HOW HOG CHOLERA
IS EASILY SPREAD!
(Columbia Record.)
Mr. J. C. Ramplcy, chief state in-1
spector of fertilizers under the direc-1
tion of Clemson College, saw the
statements in the Record of Tuesday
with reference to hog cholera in
Richland county, and states that this
is a very serious matter but can be
handled successfuly if the farmers
of the county will cooperate with Mr.
E. E. Hall, the county farm demonstrator.
Mr. Rampley has handed
the Record the following valuable information
for farmers:
How did the cholera get on your
farm ? Careful statistics were com
piled last yea?* to trace the source of
disease on 880 farms in three counties.
It was found that 33 per cent j
>f this infection was spread by visit
ig neighbors and by exchanging
v/ork.
If your neighbor walks through his!
infected hog pen and then comes ovorj
and walks through your hog pen, the j
chances are pretty strong that he will;
1 spread infection to your stock.
The Disease is Easily Spread.
Sick hogs on adjoining farms
spread 4.5 pc-r cent of the infection;;
dogs carried 6.5 per cent; previous!
infection on the premises was re- I
sponsible for 0.5 epr cent; stray hog. '
carried 4 per cent; now stock brought 1
in 10 per cent; contaminated streams:
spread 8 per cent, uvnl birds ir.tro-'
llllCfvl 9.7 fl Pf!' i-nnt nf f linen . i
eases.
The Clay county, la., fanners have J
been advised, in consideration of the
above statistics, to keep out d othv.-rj
hinners' hoy lots and keep medicine |
venders. stock buyers and other pco- j
pie out of their hoy lot:;, and i:i < xchanging
machinery to hoc]) away
from ground acccssii le to hogs.
Simple and Kffoctivc lb*.'cautions.
Don't borrow nor lend breeding
hoes. Don't btiv feed from infected:
.arms. Don't let vour hoes go to a I
running stream. Don't haul hogs foi 1
your neighbor unless you know he
has no cholera, and consider all public
stock pens as infected.
Tie your dog up at night and in the
day time too. unless you know vrh< re
ho is, and carry a shotgun for stray
(logs, cowds, magpies and pigeons.
Don't keep pigeons on your premises.
Pi: "II I f ?t*/? * 1 o r? c* />(' ..11 1>'.'?? *' 1
...... v..., vui ? <ioov.ii u i an i ii lil.lv |
?!i" and immediately inoculate an.i 1
animal that appears no tright..
o
NOTICE OF KALI-;.
Uiulcn- and In* virtue of the decree
and judgment of the court made by \
his Honor Frank I?. Gary, Presiding (
lunge, in the ease of Underwritersj
of Greensboro, a Corporation, Plaintiffs
vs. Sam T. Creech, and J. A.
Lewis, Trustee in Bankruptcy of
Sam. T. Creech, Bankrupt, Defend-!
ants, and dated the 1st day of Novemi
her A. I). 181o, 1, the undersigned i
J. A. I.ow'i Sheriff of Horry Coin;-'
ly, will soil at public auction to the I
lushest bicider before the Court!
House door at Conwav, in Horry
I
County, and State of South Caro-;
lina, during legal hours of sale, on,
salcsday in March next, it hehig the <
CIMi day of said month, all and sin-j
guiar those certain lands sitaute ini
fforry County, and described as fol-j
lows, to wit:
Tract No. 1. All that certain
tract of land containing seventy-six
(7(5) acres, known as a part of the
Long Point tract of land, situate in
the Simpson Creek Township one!
and one half (1 1-2) miles from the.
town of Loris, in Horry County,!
South Carolina, and represented on
a plat by N. E. Hardwick, surveyor,J
dated in 1011, as follows: Beginning
at a milo post on tho Long Point
load, thepec running S. 89 E. 21 1-2 j
chains to a corner in Bay, thence j
due North 18 1-2 chains to a corneri
in Bay about run of Big Branch,!
thence with the run of Big Branch |
North-westwardly course to a stake 1
?.xn by Big Branch, thence S. 21 W.'
5 1-2 chains to a stake on Long
Point Road, at J. Q. Graham's line,
thence with said road to the begin
ning point, a distance of 37.80
chains: lying on the East side of
I/Ong Point Road and bounded by
lands of J. Q. Graham and others,
b> said road and by the run of Rig
Branch; known locally as a part of
the Todd land which was conveyed
to me, the said Sam T. Creech by D.
J. Butler and George C. Butler, by
their joint deed dated the 18th day
of March A. D. 1911, aud which is
duly recorded i? the office of the
Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas
in and for Horrv Countv K/m??u n?
v k vuui vn i "
olina, in Rook of Deeds "LLL'\ at
page 303.
Also that certain lot of land in
the town of Loris, in the County of
Horry and State of South Carolina,
situate on the East side of, and
;
3, CONWAY, S. C.
HEALTH SERVICE
CURBS TRACHOMA
The establishing* cf small trachoma
hospitals in localities where this contagious
disease of the eyes is prevalent
presents the best solution of the
trachoma problem, according to the
statement contained in the annual report
of the Surgeon General of the
Service. The Service now has five
trachoma hospitals in the three states
or Kentucky, Virginia and West Virginia,
and so great has been the number
of applicants for treatment "that
a waiting list has been established. In
the past fiscal year 12.000 cases of
trachoma have been treated, the larger
proportion of which <werc cured,
while those in which a cure was not
effected have been greatly improved
and rendered harmless to their associates.
The great majority of these |
trachoma patients were people who,
lived in remote sections far removed |
from medical assistance, and who, but
for the hospital care and treatment
provided would have remained victims
of the disease practically the reinder
of their lives.
"When it is considered," the report
of the Service states, "that thousands
of p'.so s su'Vering with trachoma
a da gt rous contagious disease
would othcrwi.ee remain untreated
if is realized how far-reachir.g results
have beer, obtained through those tra
ehoma hospitals and th.c ether publL
kwlVi work dure in thrs cor ratio.a
Tt voulil he impossible to estimate
with any degree of accuracy the nu n
her of people who have been raved
M'orn contracting tin" comnur.ncu'. -1
disease by thus removing these tli i
ands of foci infection."
Wood's Productive
Seed Corns.
Cur Virginia-grown Seed
Corns have an established
reputation lor superiority in
productiveness and germinating
qualities.
Wood's Descriptive Catalog
tells about the best of prize-winning
and profit-making varieties in
both White and Yellow Corns.
Cotton Seed.
We offer the best and most improved
varieties, ftrown in sections
. V.,oh:tcly free from boll weevil,
t \:r Catalog ftives prices and infori
-.'ion, and tells about the best of
Southern Seeds,
1 CO-DAY VELVET BEANS. Scja
Leans, SUDAN GRASS, Dallis Grass
end all Sorf.hu:n? and Millets.
( analog mailed free on request.
T.W.WOCDO SONS,
SEEDSMEN, - Richmond, Va?
Only Professional.
It is good to see the denunciation
of lawlessness in Mi*. Please's deciar
ition of principles for his next campaign.
We should have been disappointed
if that had not appeared; it is
as essential a political property as
l'o steam piano is to a circus parade,
and frequently as inspiring. Profession
and practice, anyway, need bear
no serious relation to each other, nor
usually do they, though people, lacking
due sense of humor, or not having
been initiated into the new psychic
arts, sometimes# require they should
be. There was Fielding's jailer, who
liked to read the parliamentary reports,
with their fine phrases about
lit crty, for, said he, "I am all foi
liberty." Asked how so ardent a lover
of liberty could employ himself in
the restraint of others, he explained
that was entirely "in the way of business."
Sometimes lapses from thing.,
ordained or license to lapse comes
"in the way of business" to the politi
cal practitioner and may not impugn
his sentiments or the expression of
them. The world owes everybody a
living and the State owes everyone
who can get it an office.?Charleston
Evening Post.
fronting on, the right of way of the
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad, and
bounded on the North by Lot No. C,
owned by J. V. Collins, on the East
by D. J. Butler, on the South by lot
No. 4, owned by B. S. Butler, and on
the West by the said railroad right
of way, being known as I/Ot No. 5, *
measuring twenty-five (25) feet 1
front on said right of way by fifty \
(50) feet in depth, and being the
certain lot conveyed to me by P. C. \
PrinPO hv KIR Jporl rlolA'l I
_ - ? - ..mm.. UtVVVU ilVTVIIIVCI
27th, A. D., 1912.
TERMS of Salt Cash. Purchaser
to pay for papers.
Conway, S. C., February 7th, 1916.
J. A. LEWIS,
Sheriff of Horry County.
H. H. WOODWARD,
Plaintiff's Attorney.
SANITARY METHODS
USED IN CANNING!
Absolute Cleanliness Required1
by Club Demonstrators
Teaches Lessons
Nothing demonstrates the value of
homo sanitation in a more practical
way than the homo canning of fruits
and vegetables, according to the demonstration
agents of the Depart j
ment of Agriculture and State cch
kges who working with the {riffs' \
winning clubs in tl?e South. The first
step in ever; cunning demonstration
is to make certain that the kitehc*
and all utensils are absolutely clean
and that the product to be canned is
in sound, wholesome condition. The
next step is to sterilize thorough'}*
utensils, fruit, and cans and jars, as
heat and cleanliness are the only pre- j
serving elements allowed. In teaching
the "why" and "wherefore" cf i
heat and cleanliness in canning, the
demonstrators are able to give the
girls, in a simple way, practical
knowledge of tlie effects of bacteria
and molds and to make them realize
that dirt is synonymous with these1
destructive "germs." The gill win*'
neglects to take these tilings into no i
count soon gets a serious object lessor
in a spoiled batch ef canned vegetables.
Following such <ici .enst.ations
it is far easier to get families
' ) adopt sanitary measures with milk
v:ater, and otlu r footle than when the
general subject of sanitation is attacked
directly or in an abstract way.
In their campaigns against the
house fly, the county agents in the
South have found that inducing the
children to make a h'vno eorr true Led
flytrap is far more effective than
literature or general discussion of the
danger from these typhoid carriers.
Once the family instalsl such a trap
and sees that it is catching hundv d;
and thousands of these dirty insects
right where their food is prepared
they are ready to consider further
p.'ovt 'dive measures such as the deduction
of the larvae of flies in tin
manure heaps. It is then not difficult
to ifducc them to screen then
doors and windows, and. to rootinuo
the use of flytraps to catch the few
flics that .U'ct in in spite of screens.
Willingness to exercise the greatest
care in the disposition of garbage and
filth, and especially to prevent flics
from passing; from stables ami outhouses
into the house, fallows logically.
o
k/\J should be "nipped in the LjV
iL/j bud", for if allowed to run #Wj
rfrj unchecked, serious results
UjY may follow. Numerous L
g cases of consumption, pneu- IgS
I inonia, and other fatal dis- ISI
1 cases, can be traced back to E|?
| acold. At the first sign of a IBS
B cold, protect yourself by
y] thoroughly cleansing your 9|
JH system with a few doses of II
III Tiirnrnnnic III
Imcurunua ijj
BLACKDRAUGHT
|
the old reliable, vegetable 5
liver powder. J t
Mr. Chas. A. Ragland, O' 3
Madison Heights. Va., says: 8
I "1 have been using Thcd- I I
U ford's Black-Draught for * flj
ill stomach troubles, indiges-fYll
tion. and colds, and find ittolAAl
n/\S be the very best medicine lynfl
Mjever used. It makes an oldy/l 1
\?J man feel like a young one."
LK Insist on Thcdford's, thejDj
joriginal and genuine. j
|
o
Conway looks more and more like a I
nty as improvements are coming in.
Improvements like those recently
nadc to the L. H. Burroughs corner
idd very much to the appearance of
W- L
,|(f IHWII.
!
that proved fatal to the Zeppelin will!
reecive prizes amounting to 15,000;
francs, 10,000 francs being awarded'
by a leading Paris newspaper and;
5,000 by Marquis Ornano. Checks for|
these sums have already been sent to!
the minister of war for distribution. !
I
THREE
ZEPPELIN BURST
BY FRENCH SHELL
The Tiiriiling Story of Quick
Destruotien of Big German
Aircraft
!
AUTOMOBILE GUN
CHASED THE ELYER
.vjcocia! Projectile Ilrcil wiiile
U vi ilc-v Wv A vc:'*. ^
Blov.'i; to Atoms.
>i
J ;
Paris.? An eye-witness < !' the destruction
of Zeppelin 1,-Z 77 by
I'h-cnch gunners on Monday near Rcvigny,
a town which lion nine miles
northwest of Bar-Le-lHic, thus describes
the exploit:
"Two Zeppelins were signalled at
10:25 o'clock at night by an artillery
officer in a listening post in the first
line trenches of the Argon no. The
night was clear and the wind moderate.
The officer could not see the airships,
but he heard the noise of their
engines and telephoned to the battery
Ik se whence the new s was forwarded
to the army coin s headquarters. Ail
the batteries of the di:- li iet were at
or.ee on the alert and within five mil..
, tcs search 'ij'V.s nv. re .; "coping the
i.v_i.vC".S 111 till uiu.l.. .I?I
"Tlid Zeppelins were first sighted
by an ollicor commanding a battery of
7") millimeter pans. The no; rest v.a.
then about tv.o miles off, flying at a i
altitude ol about *>,000 feet an<? .'hire?
. ., .... . r.
rapidly. me second / ppenn was
sonic throe miles behind the f'rst,
] The otlieer was unable to get tlv elevation
no'.essary to hit the ahship ba.t
i re managed t?> giv * the exact position
| ..) the search light operators. From
that . Oi.wt uu'ii it was clcstr \ved
i die firs-, dirigible \.\.s r.tver lost to
view and the searchlights mvci lc:h
it. As it was moving agar."at the
wind its pre groin- was r;! Tively s!?w.
"As soon as the warning macV. <1
Rovigny, five automobiles \ e i 111
searchlights and special anti-aircraft
guns, vnn .ucd by naval gunners,
staitod in pursuit. Those guts threw
a shell which is expressly <h bgncd I)
explode on comae1 with the aluminum
painted covo'dug of the Zeppelins a..b
to ha.st into flames once i\ is i. si h\
j As the car rushes along; vhc road the
officer standi .a' hi the ha: \ of the ca?'
! gives the var.',e ami directs the fire of
i the gun by ;! <? crew which wend; the
gun ! eg; on. 11? i hit e1 thei1- O' cks.
4,The gu s on h rnovirv; nuomohiies
opened fire as soon as they came
within range. A she il bu st jasi !>>hind
the Zeppelin, throwing it into
strong relief and immediately th.o
| gunners seiat d their opportunity.
Another she!1 passed over the target
I hm tlw? ?> :' ili.i
hi- tho mark squarely about 7."? fret
! from iho stem. There was a shout
' ( [' triumph from the Frenchmen as
the shol! appeared to go through th.e
body of the airship and to adhere to
the right side of the frame work
which it set afire. A few seconds
later two other shells went through
the rear of the car, badly damaging
the steer and elevating mechanism.
''For an instant nothing seemed to
happen and then a thin red line crept
along the side of the airship whic i
shone with a bright rudely glow as
the- flames spread and moved upwards.
No explosion was heard as the
Zeppelin began to fall. The great
mass, now blazing more and more
fiercely, descended slowly, while burn
ing fragments of the cover fluttered
away in the wind, and all the on-lookcis
expressed surprise that the airship
took so long to come down.
"The cargo of bombs which there is
reason to believe were to have been
dropped on the inhabitants of Paris,
exploded with a terrific roar as the
/<? ppelin struck the ground. Fragments
of it* ear were hurled over
ihOOO feet away and the remainder of
the huge frame work collapsed in a
bean, the fire continuing to burn for
several hours.
"The second Zeppelin which had
witnessed the disaster to its companion
tllHKul t;iil !>>wl 1*.
^ ..." HUM IIMIIIUI f\ IV
the German lines.
"It is believed the Zeppelins belonged
to the Crown Prince's army.
The commanders had hoped to steal
across the Prench lines unpercrived,
all lights in the gondolas having been
extinguished, but the head wind proved
an obstacle to the speed which is
so essential to the success of an under
talcing of the kind and gave the defei
se time to bring up its guns."
The gun crew which fired the shot