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yAOB TWO OLD LOGAN BERRY ~~ MAKES SOFT BRINK! And Soft Drinks May Become More Popular Than Ever Since July 1st EXPERIMENTS SHOW VALUE OF JUICE Berry is Also Used m maKing Jams, Jellies and Soda Fountain Syrups. Soft drinks?"soft" in slang mean- j ing "easy to get"?may attain new 1 importance after July 1. Soft drinks made from fruit juices doubtless will ! attract many now devotees, who will find that beverages made from pure! fruit juices are decidedly healthful,' cooling, and refreshing, and invigor- : ating, says the United States Depart j a - n K \ A mem 01 /vgricunure. Because of its pleasant flavor, the juice of the Logan blackberry, commonly known as the loganberry, is i very popular as a beverage. The berry is aiso used in making jams, jellies, and soda-fountain sirups. Methods, of extracting and treating the* juice are constantly being bettered. This industry, already a large one, is growing rapidly. | Making of Logan Backberry Juice, j] The Department of Agriculture, ' through its Bureau of Chemistry, has done much investigational and experimental work on the juice from the Logan blackberry, or loganberry. Results are reported in Department Bulletin 773, and information rela,i tive to the culture of this fruit is con tained in Fanners' Bulletin 998. The berries are crushed as soon after picking as possible to prevent ^ any molding. From the crushers the pulp is put into press cloths and piled in the presses. Heavy pressure extracts the juice, leaving the pulp ir. a more or less dry cake. The juice is then sterilized and placed in cans for storage. Uniformity Secured by Blending. ! Because of variations in the flavor and character of the juice at different periods of the season, all juices are blended before being bottled to secure a uniform product for the market. Blending is done by "racking off" the cans, filtering the juice, and then sending it to the blending and mixing tanks. From the tanks it goes to the bottling machine. After bottiing the juice is pasteurized by heating it to from lf>G degrees to 180 deegrees F. for periods varying with the size of the bottles. It is then labeled for the market. The Juice as a Beverage. Loganberry juice is naturally so sour that it is necessary both to dilute and to sweeten it to obtain a drinkable article. The berry has a characteristic flavor. It somewhat resemblees that of the raspberry, both red and black, but is more acid t'lan eicner. Adding enough sugar to reduce sufficiently the tartness of the juice ntafees a product too sirupy to drink, unless it is diluted at the same time. The sirup prepared for soda-fouotain use is not diluted until sold ovr r the county. Some of the sweetened but undiluted juices have been labeled by manufacturers as "concentrated." This description is unwarranted, as the juices have not been concentrated or evaporated, but simply sweetened. They should be prop erly labeled as loganberry sirups, rurpose ami Results of Investigation. The object of some of the investigational work of the Depaitment of Agriculture was to establish methods for the detection of dilution common in commercial products of the lili i fe S ... I WILL BE IN MY OFFICE IN CONWAY MONDAY, JULY 7TII. DON'T NEGLECT YOUR EYES. Lycurgus A. Woodruff, G. Opt. Eyesight Specialist. Logan blackberry; and to set analytical standards for such products. The juices from berries grown in Washington and Oregon differ mark jedly in composition from those produced in California. Those of the northern section have a higher acid and a lower ash content than California juices. So far it has been impossible to determine accurately the amount of water added to the juices by the manufacturers. Its presence can be detected, however, ( and the amount roughly approximated. o PRACTICAL POINTERS FOR RAISERS OF GOOD POULTRY Keep standard-bred poultry. It is more profitable. Don't let roosters run with hens after the breeding season is over. ' The hens will lay just as well and the eggs will be infertile and will keep better. j Hatch early. Early hatched chicks live better, grow better, and the pullets make fall and winter layers. If you have had little or no experience in poultry keeping, start in a small way. Then increase as your experience and success warrant. Build substantial, comfortable poultry houses, but make them us inexpensive as possible. Be sure the poultry house is dry and free from drafts, but provide plenty of ventilation, especially in summer. Keep the house and yard clean. Provide roosts and dropping boards. Provide a nest for each 4 or 5 hen*. Gather eggs daily; market at least twice a week. | Grow green crops in the poultry yi.rds if they are not in permanent *od. s Feed table and kitchen waste to the hens. ^ Give a light feed of grain in the " i veiling. C. 1 ?: ? - ? ? *' 1'bcti ti i it111 in straw or otner utter | v ,o make the hens scratch for it. C( Keep poultry free from lice and ;he house free from mites. t* .Market hens which you do not wish .0 carry longer as soon as they stop aying and begin to molt in the late H A Trium] 39 Tough? And yet, the 'R03 sesses amazing buoy That's the secret o tire's success. 1 Hardihood that ; extra miles, combir luxury of easier ridii Let us put 'Royal C car. They are the utr merit?the finest tires United Stat are Good <4We KNOW United S S. P. HAWKS.. .. GEO. J. HOLLIDA GEO. J. HOLLIDA GEO. J. HOLLIDA J VV. MISHOK & | MYRTLE BEACH STONE BROS., CC i J. L. BELL / / THE HOUR? HERALD, 001 1 Tour Deli, Just wor have let their grow just a lit fCan you reall behind the tin sum goes so f that it will sur qgggp For instanc ta new parloi surprise and friends. Our ing room sets pieces are of ^ signs. ^^SUTHERLAN Household and Kitchen Furnis ummer or fall. Cull the flock fco as to eliminate lie early molters and other unpr.if;ahle producers. Be sure that growing- chicks have lenty of feed so that they will make [>ntinuous rapid growth. ~ j? ? ? |1 v-\;w 111^ tllltKft iX UT)' mUSIl ) which they can help themselves. o hegal blanks of all kinds at the [crald office. ph. of less i | ral Cord' pos- J cncy and life. JS if this famous means many led with the x5| ig. ^ lords' on your most in equips in the world. esTires M Tires mlk tates Tires are GOOD Tires, t Y (iAIJVAM Y jor CO FARMS CO MYRT > LIT WWA*. S, 0., JUNE 26, 1919 . "V" - - - r Guests a ghted i . . i 3 to those who parlor furniture tie out of date, y afford to be y les? A small pMVJffl ar in this store Mil jjli prise you. Mjily e, why not buy r table ? It'll please your (n$\ foe] parlor and livand individual uj the latest de- } 'K n rnmi nn ? ==^ j u runrc, uu ?s hings ? Bicycles and Supplies | A number of automobile accidents ; have occurred in Gaffney since Satin* day afternoon, and in some instances the occupants of the cars were ser iously injured. Agricultural development in the Southern States has been planned 1 alcng well thought out lines that are ' calculated to make the South one of ; tb.o leading agricultural sections >f ( the country. ( < Jk hats why we sell thern." . .conway, s. c. ,. ..aynor, s. C. its ferry, s. c. (danville, s. c. louis, s. c. le beach, s. c. tle river, s. c. . .wampee, s. c. COPY SUMMONS FOR IUOLIEF. (Complaint Not Served.) Court of Common Pleas. statp: of south Carolina, County of Horry. The J. C. Bryant Copmany, a Corporation, Plaintiff. vs. Wm. J. Hickman, May M. Shelly, Jottie Blanton, Herbert Hickman, Ad<lie G. Shelly, S. Ross Hickman, Lee Hickman, Bell Blanton, Inez Hickman, VV. J. Hughes, J. Alton Hughes and W. Milton Hughes, Heirs at Law and Distributees of S. P. Hickman, DecM; Jessie Poe Hickman, Alston Hickman, Sam HiPkman, and Mrs. W. D. Hickman, widow of W. D. Hickman, Heirs at Law and Distributees of W n T7I A ... . iiivMiiuu, i/w u; v A . Prince, Jr., N. E. Hardwick, Dan W. Hardwick; Dan W. Hardwick, S. D. Bryant and D. F. McGougan, as Executors of the last Will and Testament of J. C. Bryant, Doc'd; also all other persons unknown, claiming any right, title, estate, interest in, or lien upon, the real estate described in the Complaint herein, Defendants. TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED: | YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the com- ! plaint in this action, which has been filed 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 the subscriber at his office at Conway, S. C., within twenty days after the seivice hereof; exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the complaint within the lime aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the compaint. May 6th, A. D. 1919. H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. Tc D. F. McGougan, F. A. Prince, Jr., Jessie Poe Hickman, Absent Defendants: Take Notice that the Complaint in cno iorcgoing stated action and the Summons, of which the foregoing is a copy, were filed in the office of the Clerk of Court of Common Pleas at Conway, South Carolina, on the 8th :lay of May, 1919. W. L. BRYAN, (L. S.) C. C. C. P. H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. To all of the defendants in the above stated action, especially the absent defendants. Notice of Pendency of Action. Notice is hereby driven that the plan'.iff has commenced an action which is now pending in this Couit for determining adverse claims and correcting errors in the chain of title and for other relief in relation to the following described lots of land in the Town of Loris, title to which is daimed by the plaintiff, .and of which the plaintiff is in possession, wit: All and singular that certain lot or parcel of land measuring one hundred and fifty (150) feet by fifty (50) feet front on Patterson Street, on the Westward side of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company's right of way, in the Town of Loris, in the Coiintv find ?fnv#wn wl r?r? Northward aide of said Patterson Street and beginning at a point which is located one hundred seventy-five (175) feet from the center of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company's right of way and twentyfive (25) feet from the center of Todd's Ferry Road and running thence Northward one hundred fifty (150) feet to J. C. Bryant's land, thence J. C. Bryant's land fifty (50 feet Westward to land said to belong to W. D. and C. A. Hickman at corner, thence Southward one hundred fifty (150) feet to Patterson Street, and thence Patterson Street to the beginning point; being the Eastward one-third (1-3) part of a certain lot of land conveyed from B. J. Sessions to J. R. Allsbrook, November 3rd. 1902, and from J. R. Allsbrook to G. F. Stanley, W. J. Hickman and E. D. Lawson May 4th, 1903; bounded on the Northward by lands now or formerly of J. C. Bryant Company, on the Southward by Patterson Street, and on the Westward by lands said to belong to W. D. and C. A. Hickman. H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. Dated May 6th, 1919. o -? | I f Help Yssir Ipstion I I i Wher. ccid*dlstvf8scd, relieve the H indigcs.ion with 9 I Ri-mbisS ! L1 Dissolve easily on toiifrne?m ll | pleasant to take as candy. Keep' 1 I yoni stomach sweet, try Ift-ntofda 9 I MADE BY scon* * BOOT** 9 I MAKERS OP SCOTT'S EMU<_5HON 9 pi TWO MEN HONORED I nu nI riinfiu noi I rat- 1 DI ULtMdUN UULLtlit I 'Clemson College.?For the past [> five or six years Clemson College I has followed the custom of awarding \ at commencement certificates of^* ? merit to two South Carolinians who ;l have clone noteworthy work in J*ome line of Agricultural endeavor. 'This M v? ar the certificates were awarded (o Kx-Govornor L). C. Hey ward an?g I H Mi. John W. Gcraty. The followin(U#H extracts from the rccommendationX made by the Agricultural faculty I calls attention to the fine work dornji by these promoters of Agricultural^ II development. "This honor is conferred upon ex- I Gc vernor Heyward for the work he I has done in reclaiming the rice lands I and in utilizing them for general 61 agricultural purposes. On a portion ffi of the reclaimed rice fields at# White I Hall, Governor Heyward has sue- I ceedcd in growing successfully as I many as forty-five different agricul- (I tural crops and has gone far enough 'I with this project to show very clear- ,1 ly that many of our most important I truck crops and field crops can be I grown successfully on these old rice I "Mr. John W. Geraty is* the son of I Mi. James R. Geraty, who it seems II first started the seedling plant Irasi ness 111 tilli nl' Ihn %?t ii^ ... ...... . vvvivii v/ j tllvr vi/uuti jr . H Mr. John VV. Geraty has developed H this business and by his progressive fl leadership has been largely respon- <H siblc for creating the tremendous I plant business that we have in the H southeast today. He grows and sells H more cabbage, tomatoes, beets, pep- H pers, etc., than any other firm in the V Unite<l States and distributes these B all over the United States, Canada, fl and Alaska. The development of the plant business has, of course, given H trucking and gardening a tremen- I dous impetus and it to a considerable H extent responsible for the great de | H vclopmcnt along these lines with H in recent years. It seems, therfl S fore, entirely proper that the ma. J I who has been the leader in thfs in- I dustry should be honored in thin, way H by the College." I o H EX-KAISER HOPES TO I GET BACK TO GERMANY 1 Berlin.?Former Emperor William I is planning to return to Germany H bei'ore the Entente can demand his fl surrender from Holland, according H to a Stuttgart despatch to the new Berliner Zeitung. The dispatch states H that the Dutch government thorough- H ly approves his return and that the H former emperor is an unwelcome H guest. The finals of Clemsons 23^^tom- I mencoment were held with one of the H largest commencement audiences seen | < i - - - - mere since "before the war." B Rub-My-Tism is a great pain killer. H It relieves pain and soreness caused H [by Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sprains, I j etc.?adv. 4-24-19 20t. | TAKE" ASPIRIN I ft* WAS TALCUM I I Therefore Insist Upon Gen- I uine "Bayer Tablet J I of Aspirin" Y fl 8 Millions of fraudulent Aspirin Ty> lots were sold by a Brooklyn manu- ^B facturer which later proved to be ^B composed mainly of Talcum Powder. ^B | "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" the true, |H genuine, American made and Arneri- jH can owned Tablets are marked with |the safety "Bayer Cross." I I Ask for and then insist uporo "Bay ^B er Tablets of Aspirin" and til ways lfl buy them in the original Bayer pack re" which contains proper directions ^B and dosage. ^B Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaoeticacidcster I of Salicylicacid.?adv ^fl