University of South Carolina Libraries
I "TRHHIS METHOD XHNNINSTOMATOES -Clerwon College.?An economical , metho<kY>f canning tomatoes is recomp{ mended by the canning specialists of the 'Extension Division, Louisiana State University, as follows: i. Pacjffinn, whole fruits in a jar (A and fwMn the spaces with a concentratcd 4cmato sauce. Each quart jar will their provide whdie tomatoes for salads or baking and a tomato purer | a for soups or sauces. The recipe is 9 given here. Select firm, uniformly red rip'' ' tomatoes of medium size. Put into v 'trays- add lower into boiling water ! for "one * minute. Remove, plunge v into cold water, drain, and cut out |L the core with a Wlcnder-pointed # knife \Vftbout cutting into the seed yUceijs. Peel promptly and pack intc H;|(r8. 'iTo'ia&ch pint add one level ['f'ivtoaspoonful of a mixture of one,.?'u i y ??? CHI 7L Vl,iru wmi *ug?i. * ? ? T*1 the jarsvwith a thick tomato sauce > made by choking the small or bro'ken tomatoes until tender." Remove y 'the seeds.ai.d skins by straining the , '-pulp?arid concentrate it by boilinp v 'to about the consistency a?f ketchup V thqr rubber cap, place the & kpacked jars on a false bottom in a vessel of water which reaches almost , "to their tops and keep at boilinp ;! "temperature for 25 minutes. Remove. . the jars from the water xi?ath am . :/ ttpj^btcn the coders immediately. JM. JOHNSON, i CIVIL ENGINEER MARION, S. C. Jly i Engineer? .lg and Sursveyini office will happen during ir.y ah eunoe,. and prepared to tatao cart of .any workman usual. Addres: ; hUI contmunic&uons as ? fore. : WILLIAM EUGENE KINS,?* ( Physician end Surgeon 10Hive insFlitt urug wo. AWOfi,. - - - S.C _________________ Dfl.J.D.'THOMAS 'Physician ard Surgeon I IjORIS. JJ. 0. " iemewis I ?ENTAL StffcGEON (Am Otw Norton Oiug Ctiipanj h CONWAY, 8. a LUM JUNG LAUNDRY. | CONWAY,C, S^aniiK^july.lC 1913f All persons mast take tickets |fo work left he-re. Postxtively n Lwork delivered until tiok<st is ,pr* sented. Lau>itlr.y uot -c^ '^d fov* ' f-30 days will be sold for charge* LUM JCH4G I ,D. A. SPIVBf Aim ; W. B. Kin?, Sect,y. ' (BONDS AND INSURANCE ?Office in? IpEOPLBfc NATIONAL, 1BANI | Building I n.nnn (nil B. UADDCI (Ml IriMnnxa-Vaviv <x iimiuis^WJWW At too:? ey s - at - La w Practice both in the Stete and ^Qd<vsal Courts. MULLINg, ? ? B. 0 H. H. WOOOWASD. ' 4tlwM7 ini Cwpllor at U?CONWAT. ? " I B. a SCARBOROUGH yi Attorney at Lav, k jfONWAY. & C. Rvt. b. lewis, Atty. and Oonncellor at Lav CONWAY, , - - - 8. C OS BBSBiSBfiBBS K HORRY COUNTY J M TRUST COMPANY' K) L. D. Magrath I Hi Manager. I fteal Estate I ^ 1 Roal Potato I nans I II IVMI laVIMtV kaVMI IW ? Bonds I Insurance I i i?? ^ ''i!| jjj J ' IB.nJ. RayiioWtf ''III | I To)u?w ti'u. "lijj I ' 'WOULD KEEP HERO : DEAD IN TRANCE That the bodies .of Amoi'ic^u Ihoroes I who lost their lives .during the war will be permanently lloft abroad, ;s } ir.timatcd in a recent jurtlidle lissued f: by the war department. If it is definitely determined -J j < withdraw efforts to return the bodies , of. American soldiers to ithe 'United jRjbates then the government wilil ' luj^btless secure van! cemotoi ies in ; A ranee which will 'be permanently ; i,nnod as a tewtiiraonsal to tine j t?;>t:\;iotisni of her dead sons. ltttv.AV&K at first aniwiuaaed by *the ' department that the bodies oil' * Anpr^'icqn soldiers would .be disinterf j' red 'from the Ku rope an battlefields i a ught bac k to the U'riitfcd Stat- j . ?Rt;tt",the inquest of relatives, but! , tnan^ things have since developed j v'hich vvrll make the rem<oval of the Ix dies ail ftiuch greater tas& tha* was ! at first expected. JVlany families that haell ;rdlp|iiygs killed in the war have not l'Qpw sled the return of their bocHrcs, vV^txithjs clear that they desire I the.ni to ivritt&[in permanently interned j I in hV;ancc;. With rotrr-epce to the removal <oi'? the hollies <?.he war department authorizes plication of the following: ? Not W>ng :tf/tcr the United States PlitlM'Oll fill) Ikfn Iirf) l' fliA <"Oi' vwm vnv I^V' 1/41*: VYCVI MV |;ai inc nt announced that it would ho its * policy to bring back to the United Slates the bodies of American soldier* whicb weft* buried abroad, provided the nearer -relatives requested their return. | - Since the armistice many ccwamuniI cations have boen ivceivcd by the war ~i department from t'he families *>,1 deceased soldiers, requesting- that tthe bodies of the latter We left peruuMPcqp;y interred in France; many oth^r ftfctt&lies have requested that the bod-' iett<of their dead be refairned to the Un'rVtfl States The graves registration service of the Tufted States army ?}?. now and bar been for some time .engaged in . disintervfang, identifying and collecting into /cemeteries, preparatory to return to the United States, the i | PERU f THE BEST MED ' FOR COUGHS ANE > I Miss Ivy Gray, Fairview, Kentucky, writes: "T have taken Pcruna, and I would say that It is the best B medicine for coughs and colds I R ever saw. I find flint It nlwny* cure* a cold In a short while. It | also strengthens and builds up | the system," Sold Everywhere g in L TTTB HOJMtT HgKALP. OOin Wddi i IBP ill' "5 i I I 111 I,' P V?U can'1 i ij j Iji'1 I'llll1'' 1 remarks [ ! !j I -smokespot \ ililljiir you so fair and square. pipe and cigarette makii ing as it is delightful every hour It's never too late Xo hop into tl pasture! For, P. A. is trigger tobacco fun than you ever ha That's because it has the qua Quick as you know Prince A1 that P. A. did not bite your ton And, it never will! For, our < ruts out bite and parch. Try it ft Toppy red hags, tidy red 'tins, handsoi humidors ?and?that clever, practical pc sponge moistener lop that keeps the tob PL J. Reynolds Tobacco Compai booties which., through the .necessities, I <>r war, were temporarily iiriterred, | w.horc they fdH. This work which has been of considerable magnitude, involving the removal of bodies from many isolated and scattered places on the battlefields, has now .reached an advanced stage. < i>_r 1.1. i'i? *? - - 4 ut:j ui:u me next ?tep, xne actual rc- \ < turn of the bodies to the United J 1 States, can be undertaken the consent of the French government .must be , obtained. There -are approximately j 4,500,000'bodies interred in France as ( a result of the war. 'The attitude of j the French government is .against ? the removal of any of these. A pro-; posed law under consideration by the French parliament which, if passed, , would prohibit such removal for a ^ period of three years from January ^ 1, 1919. Pending the enactment of the proposed law the matter is being . .regulated by ministerial action of the ^ French government, along the same j lines as the proposed law itself. For the bodies that are to remain permanently in France the United States government will undoubtedly provide cemeteries of "American ^ fieflds of honor." They will be main- ( tamed and cared for always by the American government. The French * government has considerately offered to cede several tracts of land for this purpose. One of them, at Romagnc? ^ sous?-Montfaucon, is in the heart of j the Meus-e-Argonne battlefield. Anoth or is near the city of Paris, upon the r slopes of Mont Valerien, overlooking ^ the pretty town of Suresnes, the val- ^ ley of the Seine, and the Bois de Boulogne. No more beautiful site a cculd be imagined. The municipality a <11* Pfll'IS llll? ill Vf>!wl\; /innulin/ilnfl ?? v -L ? ^-r. 1*1 ' V-l*A 4 T V-I I ? i V I V* V. l/V V. I ? c splendid highway called Boulevard Washington connecting the latter cemetery with the French capital. o A Bolsheviki wireless message from * Moscow admitted the occupation ef Odessa, the chief Russian port on the &lack Sea. c ? . a? i . J>ra>tic changes in the civil service system to benefit federal civilian employees are under consideration by the federal salary classification committec. , ii, J ' nam ICINC BpiWl > COLDS l|r V j i t,ver mm m Saw i Miss Gray's letter breathes hope to the ailing. It Is an In- j spiratlon to the sick and Infirm. , Iilqnld or Tablet Form r?r, 9. c., Mxrr. it, 1m. !Nl i; itat 1 'In WiMfrosraw*'5 II' i iwigii it" 11% ps N| mi i t help cutting loose joy'us ever}' time you flush your vith Prince Albert?it hits It's a scuttle full of jimmy a's sunshirjp and as satisfyof the twenty-four I ne Prince Albert pleasure-ready to give you more d in your smokecareer. t lity. Ibert you'll write it down gue or parch your throat, exclusive patented process )r what ails your tongue 1 me pound and half pound tin iundcrystal glass humidor with >aooo'Vn such perfect condition. ny, Witi3ton-Salem, N. G, ENGINEERING FEAT AMAZES RUSSIANS Soroka, Russian Island, via Lon Rlishinnr fnl'iimi-il 'In!'" ? > ? ivy* *? Mi vt ua 11 y 111 L\J erritory of the Bolshevik and often mdcr fire, the Ajnerican railway troops on the .Murman front .in two 11 on til s transformed seventy-fivi niles of dynamited and burned nidges and railway, wrecked and lostroyed by retreating Bolshevik nto a workable railway, which they nanned, operated and maintained. To these troops the British comnand gives much of the credit of the seventy-five mile advance toward Pe trozavodsk. In the contingent were ;hirty-six officers and 75 men, comirising the l(>7th and l(>8th compancs of railway troops as a special batalion under Major E. E. McMore*tnd, Kansas City, and every kind of ail l oader from superintendent to .ecfion liand. Miracles Suspected. The Yanks worked so fast in fact hat the Bolsheviki, according to pris mors taken, believed they had miriculous machinery for tracklaying md adjustable bridges which they hopped in as they went along. It vas all done by a gang under Capt. *. J. Jones of Patterson, N. J., who hi Uaskian and Latin-American jobs, as nicknamed "Hurry-up Jones." Tie men worked seventeen hours laily with the enemy right ahead and he British artillery right behind .waiting construction. There were Jso battles and skirmishes in many mall sidings, where, on many ocasions? the constructors and also the rain crews were under fire. On May 19, while building a bridge mder shrapnel fire, the Yanks were mrrounded by Bolshevik skipping hrough the woods and dynamiting he bridges three versts in the rear. )n the way back to repair the bridg* !>: the Yanks were again attacked at lose range, but managed to escape. Junk is Transformed. Then the Yanks, under Capt. H. G. )dell, fonner assistant and superinendent at Santa Fe, built and operited an eight-mile street railway in Vlurman. Under Lieutenant Charles 3 Tuttle, they operated and manned m armored train. Railroad men who formerly drew ugh pay in Boston, Pittsburg or Inliana, shared in making these railway enterprises a Yankee success. ? o In a special report to President Wilson the federal trade Commission recommended that the operation of refrigerator cars be made a government monopoly. rm i - - i no nouse bill con t on ing the permanent rank of general upon CJ( neral Pershing in roeog dtion i f hs service abroad was pa sod by tN < nutc. SUFFRAGISTS IN WAR WORK ( By MRS. JAMES LEES LAIDLAW, Vice Chairmen New York State We- u man Suffrage Party. The New York Slate Woman Suffrage party, since It finished its great task of carrying New York state for * w woman suffrage, f November 0, 1917, lia8 devoted Itself exclusively to war "J" MEZSBiS work and various forms of civic and NVe have recently sent the first woman's hospital unit ? * t National Woman " ' '" ,riu ' " * J Suffrage AssoclaMrs. J. L. Laidtaw. tlon- wlth whlch we are affiliated. We have Just held a great naval and n< military meet at Madison Square Qai> ^ den. where a large sum was raised for this remarkable unit, which has sailed t\1 to do such valuable work In France. Every person in it, even to the plumb- a< i ers and mechanics, are women, and S 1 they volunteered for dangerous service. T Other branches of our war service a have been an intensive food conserva- (. | tion campaign and the Wnr-Savlnga : Stamps campaign. In all this active ' 1 patriotic work we feel Inspired with ihe thought of our own chairman, !l Mrs. Norman delt. Whltehouse, abroad on an important government mission n ' and many others of the rank and file v of our women who are engaged In devoted service "over there.'* Citizenship Schools. Another Interesting branch of our ( i work is the great university extension of citizenship. Schools are being held throughout the state under our Educn- v tlonal Committee. c< Another line of work Is that of our Intelligence Committee, which lists of- ^ i ftcials of all political parties and all men in every township and county in the state who have run or are to run for office. It Is believed this committee will become extremely intelligent " as time goes on, mid lis Intelligence c wUl react on the civic welfare of the s state most tellingly. ] Our Americanization Committee hua j1 Issued some very effective and educn- j tlonal literature and is organizing in every center and community where I there are foreign groups. Maintaining Morale. 1 i We realize that a great part of a natton's war time efficleicy is in keeping ' . i life normal and efficient at home. In s I the last analysis that nation whtrh t j keeps most nearly steady and normal \. In Its industrial and domestic life will < ' maintain that morale which will win ' I the war for it. The work of the Kara I Problems 1 Commit let! perhaps is of particular in- 1 terest in this publication which is being sent out by the National Security s League. Very few people in the coun- s try have stopped to realize how in our j body politic the rural committees are discriminated against in the matter of ^ socializing forces. Our great cities ' have their amusements, their munici- I I pal halls and baths, their community 1 ( kitchens, their public libraries and lec- c i.ure courses and innuinerahie settle- | c intents and clulis whore jreopie are r I drawn together and stimulated menI tally and spiritually. We feel that sume of these advantages should he brought to the country districts. Any rural woman who wants to be n put in roach with our legislative bul- p i letin, .with our correspondence courses \ in civic education or any information p in reference to the work of the Wo- p man Suffrage party should write to that organization at Fifth avenue, n New York city. ;l ? o a Tlio organized strength of South I' h Carolina's National Guard compares ^ ''avorably with that of many of tlv> p <J4.?4^.. 1...4 4 1... ?..i:..4 ..1 .4 4.1. w - i n I klliUV.1, >1(1 HIV II M rvilj?l J1 <) of tlio ^uai'd fo)* aM the Slates is but i? per cent of it.; esjvanii.o 1 sir. ngth. i| "BAYER CROSS" ON ASPIRIN 5 t! (, 'Always Ask for Genuine ? "Bayer.Tablets of Aspirin" ? PAVM ti Vv J n Only Aspirin Tablets with the n safety "Bayer Cross" on them are v ..r A 1l/U^ V/A A HUiVvVO V/A 'owned and made hv Aineriefins nnd I proved safe by millions of people. Unknown quantities of fraudulent Aspirin Tablets were sold recently a by a Brooklyn dealer which proved ^ to be composed mostly of Talcum n Powder. "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" should v always be asked for. Then look for ?s the safety "Bayer Cross" on the j package and on each tablet. Accept nothing else! Proper directions and dcsage in each Bayer package. \ ! Aspirin is the trade' mark of Bay- , jer Manufacture of Monoaceticacid- ' ester of Salicylic; id. adv OTATO LOSS IS COMPARATIVELY SMALL /hen They Are Properly Stored in Right Kind of Good Houses HEY SHOULD BE DRY AND FREE FROM DIRT d xcess of Moisture or Soil Increases Heat in the New Potatoes Potatoes properly stored should >t sustain a loss throughout the win>r season of more than 5 per cent, ml under exceptionally good condions not more than 3 or 4 per cent, ?cording to specialists of the United tates Department of Agriculture, ho maximum return from the crop Tier it is produced depends on the \re with which the potatoes are ha rsted, stored, graded, sacke<l, and k ability oi' the grower to sell at the tost advantageous time. Approximately one-third of the tain potato crop is marketed at barest time, and the remainder is stord as a reserve supply for winter and pring. It is physically impossible, s well as economically undosirab e, 0 attempt to market the entire crop 1 the autumn, and the only way in hich potatoes can be handled site' r \sfully. so as to insure a uniform apply, is to provi le sufficient storgc on the i'aim or at (ho shipping tut ion for from (>5 to 75 per cent of he crop. 1 Various types of storage places are ow in use, ranging from pits or heaply-constmctod dugouts, to large, ubstantially-builtJ storage houses-. Mans for the construction of storage k'iisos are given in the department's ?a niters' Bulletin 847. Moderate Temperature Necessaiy. For successful storage, the tubers nust be protected front extremes of old and heat; a temperature of from lb degrees to 40 degrees h\ is con-idered satisfactory. Sufficient venilation must be provido<l to remove \ ul air and moisture. The storage tousc must, he so constructed as to nake it possible to exclude the light, is the table quality of potatoes quicky deteriorates in the light. The tubers should be dry and reasonably free from dirt when put into to rage; an excess of moisture or soil ncreases the amount of heat in newly tored potatoes. The soil tends co ill up the spaces between the tubers, bus cutting off air circulation and iel ping to retain heat that would otherwise escape. All diseased, badly ut, or bruised tubers shoud be reiinvoil Civ\m 'H". ?? O?tv. ? li-' - ...? ...... m viii niv i a/|i i/uwiv jjtaunj; t into storage. Heavier Shrinkage in Large Pile*. It is a common practice lor comnercial growers and shippers to stole totaloes in bins to a depth ol' 10 H> 5 feet. This is almost certain to enail a much heavier shrinkage loss han when stored t-o a depth <?f not lore than (I feet. The heavier shrink ge is the result of the greater mount of heat generated by a large ile of potatoes, which results, in a igher amount of moisture loss as ell as a heavier loss from decay, as cat and moisture both help to dovelp organisms causing tuber rots, 'icquently the losses sustained when i>o potatoes are stored under these enditiors reach 25 per cent, and 'here rigid care has not been exerised to remove all diseased tubers efore storing the crop the loss is \en greater. It is advisable, thereore, to pile the potatoes not greater lian 5 or f> feet deep, and the floor intensions of the* bin should not be renter than 12 by 12 Vcot, unless rovided with a series of ventilating hafts or division walls for the esape of moisture and heat. o ? Postponement of the settlement of 1C shonmon'vl wnw /Inmanilo ""SI X ~ - ?' ?f I t 1(4-1 l\iO mil II ormal economic conditions are retored was announced by President Vilson as the policy which the administration will pursue in dealing /ilth such questions, particularly hose af fecting mil road workers. o Negro veterans of the world war u'e eligible to membership in the American legion but the composition f local posts and State organizations i ill be left to the members thomelves, v vtt unit mm (16(5 quickly relieves Constipation, iiliousness, Loss of Appetite and leadaches, duo to Torpid liver.?adv. y liOi.