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E/ERY BAY FBBBS fiREEN VERCHANGEAELE S" Let Cast Determine What , . Source of Starch to Use ? Daily, ij) H'?1& I t. U l .. i , *>i > Ai ** | Itkv, whoa an 1 corn, the common starchy loods' eaton in the mixed <.!cf u i.al in n.c t. lamilics, arc iclicd o ; mainly a - ?(,u cs of eiit"gy to tin. body, and have about the same v:dn#> niiunil (*<??' twtiinil. TliPl'pfoi'o il ^ rice, wheat flour, cracked wheat, ^ corn meal, or hominy cost the same per pound, they are equally cheap ^ fuel foods. Such foods, therefore, can he freely interchanged if foods like meat, milk, eggs, or he a'is an I fruits or vegetables are eaten als o Most wheat breakfast foods and wheat pastes, like macaroni or spaaIn tti, also have about the same energy value as wheat flour, corn, an I rice. They ('if:or very much in apV pearance and also in hulk, according J to the method of manufacture, an<? the cost can n d be judged merely by b the size of th.e package to he obtained for .*? or 10 cents. Now that the law requires the net weight to b marked on the outside of every pack age, it is rasy ;> reckon how much ) the food material actually costs a pound. Thus i< the net weight of a 10-cent package of breakfast food Is 8 ( u, a pound, or HI ounces, would cost '20 cents. As a general rule?and very justly ?the simpler pjpearations, which t has taken less time and labor to put up, cost less than the more elaborate ones. Those sold in hulk usually cost !< ss than those sold in cartoons. Kach housckcpcr must flci'Hlc wnotn i* the variety and convenience of the more expensive kinds compensates for tlie extra cost. In any case before she can choose wisely she must have reckoned how much the package goods cost per pound. ? Leaving aside cost of preparation and comparing lice with readv-madc wheat bread, it appears that rice at 7 cents a pound is about as cheap a source of body fuel as himad at h cents a pound. If bread costs '8 cents a pound, rice costing. up to 10 cents a pound is a cheaper sorurce of one rgy. Bread costing 9 cents a pound would furnish energy as cheap ' " ?>? I ') c <i nnniil ein'ii IN I I' C ai At* VVIIVO wv. .. 1 read usually costs much U-ss per pound than wheat bread, and s?.> furnishes energy at a still lower -cost in the above comparison "than wheat bi end. A pound of potatoes yields hardh < ne-fifth as much body energy as a pound of vice, corn meal, or 'wheat. This is partly because a large proper tion is discarded with the shins. Pail 01 of this loss is inevitable because ihe i-kin itself is not usually considered gcod to eat; but the more carelessly potatoes are pared, the more of the valuable edible substance goes with the skin. A bushel of potatoes ,r weighs GO puonds, a pock 15 pounds. When ptoatoes are selling at $1.36 a /?,. 4ft Vft .> nii/t* (1\n\r th?. pn^ UUrtM I, \/l (4 i\, lUV,^ til*. I Vfore cost 2 cents a pour*]. If their \ fuel value is one-fifth that of rice, to. they furnish fuel at about the same ^ cost as rice at 10 cents a pound ?nd at about twice the cost of corn, corn | meal or hominy at 5 cents a pouwd. f When potatoes cost $2.40 a bushel, or $0.00 .a peck, they are about twice jus expensive as sources of fuel as rice at: 10 cents, and four times as expen-! | 'sivc as corn nteal or hominy at 5 k ^ucnts a pound. These comparisons ^ show that, merely for providing fuel, i | potatoes are often more expensive I than rice, and practically always j I more expensive than corn meal orj i hominy. As was pointed out above i Li potatoes often are relied on not mere ! ly as a source of fuel, but also as a] sour'-e of some of the mineral mat-j tc i s needed by the body. They are | usually among the most economical of the vegetables which serve this second purpose, because they supply a generous amount of energy as well as the building materials. ??? REPRISALS CONTEMPLATED. ) Washington.?The United States n.ay join ttngiand and I4 ranee in re- j /Vlaliation aganist Germans in the three lands. Stirred by German spy activities and by fresh German atrocities i against Belgians, officials hinted' very clearly tonight that reprisals may he undertaken. I What is LAX-FOS LAX-FOS IS AN IMPROVED CASCARA A Digestive Liquid Laxative, Cathartic and Liver Tonic. Contains Cascara Bark, Blue Flag Root, Rhubarb Root, Black Root, May Apple Root, Senna Leaves and Pepsin. Combines strength with pala table aromatic taste. Does not gripe. 50c i PROGRAM OF THE Hi CK CREEK UNION To B*. Held at Cane Branch Church July 27, 28, and 29. FRIDAY. 1 i :()() o'clock?Preaching by Rev, J. W. Todd. I Recess?Union called to order i>\ Moderator. Churches called. Letters IL ad. t^uery No. 1?I'.r.porCancc of Union j ) v Rev. W. I). Stevens. ? SATURDAY. ! Q-.VH IV I'nnnl nvn"/?l ??/-?: j 1/ ?WV 1/^ TWVIVIIUI V AC. VI ?">V Query No. 2.?The Obligation ol Pastor to Church and Cl.urch to Pas1 tor.?Rev. J. W. Todd. Query No. .'J.?The Position of the Soul Between Death ai <1 Resurrec tion.?Rev. Kobt. Carter. 12 o'clock?Preaching. Query No. 4?1st Peter, .'1-19, Wlr Were the Spirits and What was the Prison ??Rev. J. K. Todd. Query No. 5?Rev. 21-1?What C Meant by the New Heaven and New Karth.?Rev. 1). D. Cox. Query No. (>-- Rest Methods of con dueling Revivals.?Rev. A. I>. Harrelson. Services for Sunday to be arranged. T. 11. Patter on, J. H.Causae, w r i '.... i i M . II. V 1 I ' I I < I I 1 , (!. E. Stevens, COM MITT EE. o COPY SIMMONS FOR REMFF. (Complaint Not Served) STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Horry. Court of Common Pleas. (Icoi^e J. Ilolliday, Plaintiff, Against Katie Martin. Fred I). Martin, and Troy Martin, Defendants. TO THE DEFENDANTS A ROVE NAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to anr.wcr the com.. plaint in this action, which has been filet) in the office of the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas, for the said County, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on tinsubscriber at his office at Conway, S. C., within twenty days after the service hereof; exclusive of the day of suck service; and if you fail to smswer the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this ...:n i-- m. u\v. . ? nvm?: win u]i]iiy w> rn<e v.ouri 'lor the relief demanded! in the com.pJuint. Dated June 19th, A. EL 1917. H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. T?o Fred I). Martin and Katie -Miirtin, absent <lefcndl?nts: Take notice that the Cb.mplaint in tno foregoing statc?l action nad the 'Summons of which the foregoing is a copy was field in the office -of the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas oil the 20th day of June A. D., 1917. H. H. WOOmVAItt), Plaintiffs Attorney. , W. 1.. HRVAN, <L. C. C. C. P. ? There must be a readjustment in the industrial affairs -r?f tliic in order to provide iigninst tire high prices. This readjustment will force itself on lis 11s time jjoes :along. m COPY SUMMONS FOR RELIEF, (Complaint Not .Served.) STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Horry. Court of Common Pleas. Conway Publishing Company., a Corporation, Plaintiff, Against Edith A. Pittman, and J. J. Pittman, Defendants. TO THE DEFENDANTS AMOVE NAMED: YOU ARE HEItERY SUMMONED and required to answer the complain! '11 this action, which lu*.s been filed ir the office of the Clerk of the Court o'' Common Pleas, for the said County, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber at his office at Conway, S. C., within twenty days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint. Dated June 13th, A. D. 1917. H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. To Edith A. Pittman and J. J. Pitt man, Absent Defendants: TAKE NOTICE That the Complaint in the foregoing stated action [ and the Summons of which the fore-1 goinc is a <?ony were filed in the office of the Clerk of the Court of Common Plaes in and for Horry Coun tv, at Conway, S. C., on the 14th day of June A. D. 1917. W. L. BRYAN, (L. S.) C. C. C. P. H H WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. THE HORRY HERAL1 ! CHAPLAIN FIGURES I | l\\ r) IiMj^b n a wv; 5".vc IN wUftL GA"fd&: " I French Take 1.700 Prisoner?. Including Many Officers, in Cave. French Front in France?A Fiencnj military chaplain figured promi-j neatly with the French troops on a brilliantly successful attack on the Draughton cave on tlic Chemin-desDamcs, in the neighboi hood of Hurte hisc. While advancing with a stretcher bearer detachment the chaplain was confronted by the fearsome figure of a German officer whose clothing was aflame. The chaplain raised a crucifix arm offered religious relief to the burning man, who pointer! to the rear where another German officer was creeping out of a hole. The chaplain, still holding the crucifix aloft., advanced shouting to the Germans to surrender. The officer plied: "Wc arc ready but will suiien-() Ger.to in officer-'" \ A French officer- .approached and j." entered .the cavern where -11W) Germans, including three officers, 'laid down their arms. The Cavern. Where the incident occurred was the scene of an ambuscade of the French in the beginning of 1915. which resulted in /-??! eianvnhio French losses. When the {French attacked on this occasion, the position ' was peculiar. The southern entrance ; w'!' the enormous eaves m between Grotto and the moaiument commemorative of a Napoleonic victor;, in 1814. was held by the iFrench. Th? nc rthern entrance \v?.s held by th< $ Germans. The Cavern was oOO fee ' long- ami 200 feet broad. Across i' the Germans had built a brick wnl. above, k>n the ridge, the French an'! German trenches were separated b\ only a few yards. The LFrench objective was to drive the Germans from the cavern and gain the .observation points on the surface. The Geiman trenches were won in a flank attack while the southern entrance was filled with gas, which pentrated co the German sector, the novtllfrn vr?w. < v nil ?? DIICIICIW .itlld 5SIIUWered with machine gun bullets. The operation succeeded beyond all expectations and roslted in tin capture of 1,700 prisoners, including a number of officers. The Frencn now hold all the dominating point.on this part of the -Chcmin-dcsDames. The prisoners came in Witches with hands held high in the air anil shouting.: "The war is over." The entire French casualties during the operation were fewer than the number of German prisoners taken while evei ywhere were found ve? dcnccs that the Germans suffered heavy losses in killed. BOMB ESSEN PLANT. Paris, July 7.?Fr*nch airmen carried out an aerial offensive of vas* pioportions today, flying' far afield over the German lines to drop bombs on the Krupp works at Essen i??wl :it Treves. At the same time the Germans took the air to drop bomb? j over Nancy and Epernay. The French air raids, the official statement tonight announced, were undertaken as reprisals against similar German raids. Whenever You Need General Tonic Take Grove's The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic is equally valuable as a I General Tonic because It contains th?? !1 ! wellknown tonic properties of QUININE ; and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and I Builds up the Whole System. 50 cents, j * a, CONWAY, s. c. mmmimmmmm rtie Eno is vcii to tnalat in in all forms by the chn It wards off as well ns stops; tones up the ic veins. The finest kind of a tonic for tin up. Good for Malaria, biliousness. Co chckens combat j ifc'H m OF food' I I I I Pi'iccs for This Delectable Nourishment Comparatively Low. Chickens arc the outstanding* ex i caption to the general rule thai 1 prices are going up all the time. The good old barnyard delicacy?and its milk fed cousin?in getting lower in price and is actually underselling s< me of the meats that in noi mal times cost considerably less p u pound. The reason for the drop in the mar I kct is two fold. First and foremost, ; it is due to the fact thai last fall the storage houses of the country laid in 10,000.000 pounds more than is usually the ease. Storage facilities had been improved and government inves ligation had resulted in the stamp of approval being placed on cold storage chickens, thereby confirming the claim that frozen chickens are highly dseirable and equal in all respects to fresh ones. Under normal conditions, the chick en storages are cleared of their stock before the fall crop of chickens reaches the market, but this year' conditions have not been normal. The nation has been seeking to economize and many people overlooked the real meaning of economy and denied themselves things they were accustomed to have. The demand fo? chickens fell off perceptibly. The result of this large supply and smaller demand became apparent when the government cold storage statistics for May ."and June came cut. May 1 one hundred and eight establishments in the country submitted reports which showed stocks of chickens on lvand wore 145 pe1 rent in excess of the record for May last year. .June 1 the record way about 500 per cent ahead of June, 1910. In other words, there are about 40,000,000 pounds of f'ij*st class chick ens in storage and they must be moved out in the next three months. Lower prices are the result and reports from various parts of the country show that chickens have dropped : in value until they can be bought as I low and even lower than was the case at this time last year. Othet i food products have gone up from 12 to 300 per cent. So if looks like every day will b Sunday for the housewives who make a study of household economy?the science of getting the best and the roost eatables for the least money. Chickens appear to be one of 111 best bets jusf now. A M ERtCAM UST PUT !: Mil I MM? IM CICIIV irilLLIUUU in I ILLu I Meridian, Miss.?Maj. (Jen. I.eonaid Wood canie here today from Hattiosburg, inspected the site Mcridian has offered the government for the location of a National Guard training camp, reviewed a parade, delivered two addresses and left to-j^ night for Atlanta. A luncheon tendered him by the business men of ^ Meridian. In an address to a large gathering at Highland park, Gen. Wood declared that the United Stat- [ * es probably would send 2.f>00,000 men If to Europe before the war can be a broil irht to il r>i\ni>llli!inn i - ? - c He emphasized the necstsilv of has-! i v tcning the location and equipment of Southern training camps so that tinmen may be quickly gotten into condition. [ i: CforOulS ' mpion of all fever fighters,0XI? system and puts rich red blood kWO FEVER I 1 'it'sGuaranteed: your druggist |B will refund your money if SB you'll take back the empty K1 bottles and can truly say jH you've had no benefit from it. Hundreds of testimonials HI > from all over the malarial belt. Sold at all drug stores for 50 cents. Made by 3* hrhc Bchrens Drug Co., Waco,Tex. JSjffl NOT ICR 1 have at Toddvillo > clamps ar.d 2i> pine lops. Owner ear pet same i : i - - - n,\ |)iw\i.;j4 and [ia \ iiij; r' ;t i JOHN i!. Dl/NC \\. ')t Toddvilic, S. C. Magnolia Balm LIQUID FACE POWDER. The beauty secret of women who knowhow \V' to take care of the com**j **?', / plexion. Cannot be / ^ detected. Heals Sun/yTm'\/\ burn, stops Tan. Soothing, "" ?y cooling, refreshing. JJj/ /0 ji' - Pink, n'hitr, 7Taf .htJ. \ j 75 c. tit 'JJrugghts Or Or/ ifi.ii/ Jirect. I Sample (either color) for 2c. Stamp. | Lyor.Mtg.Co., 40 South Fifth St., Brooklyn,N.Y? ?o si mmoxs r-?: belief (Complaint Not Servul.) Court of Common Picas state of south CAROLINA, County of Horry. Palmetto Grocery Company, Plaintiff vs. Dubury Watts and Bert Watts, D< fenda nts. TO THE DEPENDENTS Dubuvj Watts and Bert Watts: YOU A HE HEREBY SUMMON. ED and required to auswcr the complaint. in this action ivhich is filed in the office of the Clerk of Court of Common Pleas or the said County and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber at his office in Marion, .South Carolina, within twenty days aftei the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service and if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in t: is action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint. W. F. STACKHOU.$K, Plaintiff's Attorm y. Dated May 21st, 1917. To the Absent Defendants, Dubuvy Watts ami Hert Watts: TAKE NOTICE That the complaint in the above stated action wa. filed in the office of the Clerk o Court for Horry County on the 21st day of May, 1917, and that you are j ' ill I vtwl ........... 11 .? v|u<i v<i w ciu&\> er iiio same as se. forth in the foregoing summons. W. F. STACK HOUSE, Plaintiff's Attorney. Dated this May 21st, 1917. ORDER FOR A PPOINTMKNT .OK GUARDIAN AD LITEM. Court ot' Co mm or. Pleas. STATE OF SOUTH CAMOLINA, County of Horry. Palmetto Grocery Company, Plain- i tiff i vs. Dubury Watts and Bert Watts, Defendants. On reading and filing the petiiton i i>f the plaintiff in the above stated Mise for the appointment of a Guardian Ad Litem for the infant d< fondant Bert Watts, on motion of W. F. Stnckhousc, Attorney fee the Plain- j tiff, it is ORDERED That A. E. Wait be, 1 ind he is hereby appointed Guardian I A.<! Litem of the infant defendant | i Bert Watts for the purpose of this | iction, unless within ten days after J lie service of a copy of this ordoi ipon him, he, or some one in his In ia'f shall procure t0 he appointed a jiiardian A<1 Litem fot the said inant defendant; that a copy of this rder shall he served upon the said lert Watts, infant defendant by the tublication thereof in the Horry HerId, a newspaper published in tho11( 'ounty and State aforesaid, tnce a ^ ;eek for six weeks, ( W. L. BRYAN, 4 Clerk of Court, Horry County. 4 >atcd May 21st, 1<)17. i4 I THREE ':YE EES ROOM I FOR EXPANDING I -Inch Honey Lost Through H Faiiure to Furnish Storage H Room I A/HEN BUSY WORKERS I NEED iT IN TIME I The Rcmedv tn Pn4 rm n 'V v v v vtr Super fit the Right I Many beekeepers make a serious iMi.v;iho i:i fai'ir.g to jivo bees ci.vi .'j'i si >ra?,e room on time. The ad.lit: m of tlr's room at just t!u riglit time fike storage of the season's cr\ p of Ivr 'V roeui.e^ p*ood hi nn at and an i. i nin-o K owlohye of I locality a lid reason. Very few p< opk> roal'ae thad i-1 ma r l.ica'kies tlie H >p mrplus I gathered and stored. w thin a H p wind cd" a few wot Us. Jt is exceed- H inpiy important dir. iup; these few H weeks that the prop;ress of the work H ia the supers be watched closely and 3| additional 100m he niven as rapidly H i The usual piocedu. c by the inex- H pi riencod beekeeper is t<. put on a I si'per at 2.) to 50 pounds capnetity during eai'y sp ing, and give the sytx ject further thought unt'l T,::te 1 uniiiu. or auiuaai. It tlie super is H found to be lull i t honey at that fl time it is removed and pre i ably an H empty one put in its plane. In many H 1 cases this empty sit per is given long H after there is any possibility of any 'further storage of honey during* two fl season, and i*' honey comb is being ' produced the sections and tounda tiens a.'c mined for further u?e by being on the lvves during a time when no honey is being stored. H | During a poor season a simgie ? i per for eacli colony may JLVO'* [6li an I | abundance of room fc;\ the storage I ^ ol the entire crop \-f honey, hut , dnr I ling a good season, if additional su- I pers are not given as needed, the I I major portion o! the crop is lost to I the bcekeept r sur.piy from lack of I stoiagc space. In hoiu y-conib production the I ! standard mpors contain, when filled, I only alx ut 25 pounds of honey. Dor- I in*' a rapid honey flow, such as oc- I cusc some <sasons, especially in the I Northern States, sufficient progress I is frequently made in each ncw'.y I ' added super to i'sr'fy the audition i of another eveiy 't or 4 days. With I such a honey flow several supers I i may be complete ly filled with honey (before any of it is ripened and sealed I and the hive may have therefore as I many as ."> or (j supers at one time. I i Under such conditions, if the bees I are compelled to ripen and seal the I In ney in the fiist super before a sec- I ond one is given, most of the possible honey crop is lost to the beekeeper, I the bees being compelled either to I swarm or to loaf during the height of I the storing season. Such an abund- I ant honey flow does not by any I means occur every year, but when it I <i( os occur the beekeeper should be I prepared to take full advantage of I the opportunity. Bees need st little attention during1 I th< greater portion of th<> year that I it difficult fc v the inexperienced I beekeeper to realize that for tin* best I results almo3t daily attention is need I ed during tlx1 few days or weeks I known anfong beekeepers as t'.e hon- I ey flow. A more complete discussion 1 of t'lis subject is given in Farmers' I Bulletin No. 50.?., "Comb Honey,"' I which may be obtaine d on request I from the United States Department I >1 Agriculture. I I s * I I Used 40 Years g ? I A AAIH I UAHUUI 1 i The Woman's Tonic J i % |l Sold Everywhere A I r.r # ? #