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i .. CLUB MEMBERS ! FACE TO FACE i ? ' With'*AII Kinds of Work at This Season of The Year CANNING IS~THE MOST PRESSING Succession of Garden Crops Should be Ke.pt np for Canning Purposes Just at this juncture the thrifty Home Demonstration Club Member finds herself confronted from ever} j angle of vision with some phase of I work. The season for canning, pick ing and preserving is right here and she realizes that there is no longer nnv doubt as to the beenfits con f erred upon the general health of the family by canning fruits and vegetables so absolutely essential to the diet of the household, these beinu the sources from which they derive vitamines. mineral matter and everything vitally needuful in keeping their physiques in properly functioning order. Knowing that a correctly balanced diet is necessary for the welfai"e of her family, she determines to procure this varied diet through fresh vegetables and fruits all the year. The home maker realizes three important things when the period for conservation comes in. First: That home demonstration canning methodhave made the way sure and easy for her. Second: Knowing the importance of fruit and vegetables in the diet during the entire year, she can entertain no excuse whatever in a failure to provide them. Third: She has the assurance that a supply of canned products makes her work easier, the canned fruit solved many dessert problems and aid greatly in reducing the grocery bills. Cucumbers, cabbage and other vegetables may be brined now to be used later for pickles. Following is a "Sure keep brine Recipe." viz: 1 pt. salt. 1 pt. vinegar 1 pt. sugar 1 gallon sterilized wfttpr. Mix well, pour over vegetables as soon as cold. Weight vegetables under the surface of liquid, when fermentation ceases, skim off white scum, pour melted para (Tine over the surface of liquid to seal until ready for use. When ready for pickle soak vegetables in clear water over night, drain thoroughly dry next morning, pack in jars and cover with spiced vinegar adding two cups of sugar to each quart of vine-. 1 Farmers OUR HOU AND IS WHEF BUILDING HANDLEOUR OUR SALI IENCED TOB/ AND AMPLE I ACCOMM< ni \v> qi a m WV_>1\ ULiWUA\l\ Bring us ^ will WESEETt I. GENERAL ^ - - V- -: . J. *z j Wifc.t .if t 4 ?ar if sweet pickles are preferred or i mo cup of sugar otherwise. Inter- , *persing grape leaves with the vegctables in the brine makes the cucumbers green a?l brittle. Succession W fturden crops must be kept up, lett'ufe "be sowed every two weeks, use the Iceberg variety l'or June and July planting to oh- , tain the most chrisp heads. As shady place as possible should be selected for the growth of this product these hot days. We may now make two plantings of corn thus giving an abundance for table use and to be involved with okra and tomatoes in soup mixture this fall. Kale may now be sowed for winter greens. Cabbage seed should be sowed now for winter use, dustj the bed with a mixture of one parti sulphur and six parts lime to pre-: vent the invasion of the cabbage maggot so prevelant in fall cabbage crops, '.when the plants are set out it is wise to dust this mixture into the cavity made for setting the plant. Celery may be sown now to give fine plants for August transplanting. Cauliflower and salsify may ! now be planted. The cauliflower j sowed now gives splendid heads in | the fall. Plant hush beans, 1000 to j the bush, every two weeks a few rows, to have them all in the fall. [ The White Navy Bean should be planted now and gathered dry for winter use. A two weeks succession of these may be planted front March until July, gathering them! dry and making a wonderful market inn proauct tor me uemonstration members in winter. The little white egg turnip m;*y be planted now and comes in very early during1 the fall like the radish, they develop very quickly. About the middle of July put the Irish potatoes from which the sap has evaporated, in soak the night before planting to insure a good stand for fall growth. There is no reason why club members should not market Irish potatoes during the entire wint- 1 j er. The Lookout Mountain makes the best production, but the cured culls from the Bliss Triumph yield a very good fall crop. LEGION MEN TO VISIT FRANCE Party of 250 to Represent Every Section and All Arms in War The 250 members of the American Legion who will visit France in August and September at the invitation of President Millerand, will represent every section of the United States and all arms of Hip fiVlit THE Tobacco W; SE IS THE HOME OF TI IE THEY GET FAIR TR . REMODELED AND E : SHARE OF THE CROP LS WILL BE CONDUCT! \CCO MAN, WITH A BUYERS. 3 DAT ION AND SERV tfour Tobaccc rv^ q Tar a in TV/T i ? X LLdXlC 1LU JL.TXXO iAT YOU GETBi T. SCOGG MANAGER & AU % * THE HOKBY HERALD, CON'V ng forces in the war. Kvery state! will have its quota and if possible jvery combat division will have' representation, says an announce-1 went by the l^egion. . | A fixed quota, based on Legion i membership, has been allotted to each State. Not all who have asked ! to be included can go, but it is th * purpose of Franklin IVOlier, the former national commander of the Legion, who is in charge of the pilgrimage to make the party "a cross section of our former fighting' forces." Selection of the membeis is in the hands of the state organizations of the Legion. Details of the tour in France which have just been made public show that the Americans will visit again the principal American battlefields, attend various dedicatory i ceremonies and will be entertained j at numerous receptions. The party will sail aboard the steamer George , Washington on Autrust 3 land will return about; frhn middle of September. The principal events of the visit will be the dedication at Flirey of a monument to the American army, which is the gift of the French municipality' and the people of Lorraine; and the laying of the cornerstone of the new bridge "Pont Roosevelt" ovei ; the Marne at Chateau Thierry. v President Millerand, Premier I Briand and the marshals of France * are expected to bo present at the < ceremonies at Flirey. Flirey is fa- j miliar ground to the A. E. F. It is situated in the old Toui sector i which the American troops took ? over in 1917. The village itself is * only 2,000 yards from the old front jj line of the sector which was held a'. ) one time or another by 17 American divisions. , , Another reception of note to the ; Americans will l>o by the little town , of St. Die in the old Luneville sector, also long held by Americans. * St. Die's claim to special attention in light of the Legion visit rests on the fact that in St Die stands the house in which the continent of America received its name. It is the one-time abode of WaldseeMuller, the Alsatian monk, when he wrote the letter suggesting that the new world take the name of the Italian navigator, Amerigo Vespucci. Marshall Foch will be "at home") to the visiting Legionaires. He will | receive them in the house in which he was born in the town of Taubes in the Pyrenees mountains. There will be receptions to the j pilgrims at Paris, Bordeaux Tou- ; louse, Lyon, Metz and Strasbourg-. At Verdun the party will sleep in the famous citadel. j At Aheims the veterans will attend the presentation of the 3,000-1 |000-franc gift of the Carnegie foun-J Idation to the city library there. At j ' Rlois, St. Jeanne D'Arc will be hon-' 4 arehouse i I t \ \ ( I HIE FARMERS, \ EATMENT. ' 1 t .QUIPPED TO j FOR 1921. ; < ID BY EXPER- ; FULL FORCE ! < < ICE WILL BE and you take ZST PRICES ilN ICTIONEER I 1 " %t % > 7AY, S. C., JULY 21, 1921. i The Hi The Pioneer I Lead? i WE ARE t CORNER, AN S rKlLNDS ANL \ ? no pain: our house i our custom ij t f you wil courteous We thank our . for s. \ red. The Legionnaries will witless the dedication of a statute t> he French heroine which is th<% rift of the Joan of Arc committee >f New York. Under the terms by which the | jegion accepted the hospitality <-fj he French government, the ex>enses of the expedition will be j >orne "by the delegates themselves i >r by the Legion organization. Mr. D'Olier says that the pro- j )osal for the visit has been received ,vith such enthusiasm by the Amercan veterans as to constitute a striking and spontaneous tribute to France as a former ally. "The Americans veterans feel that :he forthcoming expedition marks ;he entrance of the Legion on the <tage of international affairs and ;hat it will tend to knit more closey a mutual understanding among /eterans, not only of France and Lhe United States, but of all Allie I countries," he said. It shows that n the hearts of Americans who wore the uniform there surely hvells an abiding affection for France and the poilu. It is noteworth?' that ' many applications ;ome from men who did not see foreign service during the war.' ? o Habitual Constipation Cured In H to 21 Days "LAX-FOS WITH PEPSIN" is a speciallyprepared Syrup Tonic-Laxative for Habitual Constipation. It relieves promptly but Bhould be taken regularly for 14 to 21 days to induce regulai action. It Stimulates and Regulates. Very Pleasant ?.o Take. 60c -er bottle. COTTONAND SUGAR PROTECTED Administration Mobilizing Banking Credits to Carry Ht/AP CitPnlnn V/ VUI OUI piuo. Washington.?Efforts are being made by the administration to nohilize banking credits for carrying over surpluses of the country's cotton and sugar, Secretary Hoover disclosed before a Senate committee. The object is "to prevent a forced liquidation of these commodities he said, and the plan under consideration is identical with that carried out in the cattle industry. The Commerce Secretary, who called to give his views on the Norris bill to create $100,000,000 government farm export corporation, told the com mitt.ee he did not favor the measure. 'T don't want to appear to deprecate any propo.sal intended to assist the agricultural industry," Mr. Hoover said, "because the situation today which has reduced the Du'v-Howrng 1 ' % % )rry Ware louse of Horry Co jr in the sale of Tobi \T THE SAME OLD ST D WILL BE "AT HOI\ ) PATRONS. 5 HAVE BEEN SPARE FOR THE ACCOMMC [ERS. L RECEIVE THE USUA TREATMENT ON OCR friends for their sple the OPENING SA A. GRAVI F power of the American banker 07 per cent has put him to the most serious' duress agriculture has ever had to face. The situation is the most acute and dangerous in the country at the) present moment. Yet I cannot feel that I tho extension of further credit facilities for the supply of food products; to Europe would give any adequate, remedy." Billion Dollars in Food. While sixty million Europeans still | are "under food restraint, rationing or similar systems," Mr. Hoover said, Poland, Austria and "in a minor degree, Czecho-Slovakia,* were the only 'countries where a diminshed food supply might result from failure of credits. European harvests, generally! good, he said, might be sufficient to meet their needs, hut that in any case thirty million bushels of wheat was I all that would be involved. He added that Europe "found the money somej how to take a billion dollars in food : from the United States in the last jeleven and a half months." "As to cotton, however, the problem of disposing of our surplus is much more serious," Mr. Hoover continued, i"because experience has demonstrated that the governments and the peoples will secure their food but that i they will cut in textiles. Live at Home. ! There is a marked tendency in Europe to live on their own food re! sources, and make their harvests 1st'etch as far as possible through the | yeai, which indicates that the American farmer must carry hereafter his crops for a longer period through the year because the European demand will only come at later months. "We are trying to set up such machinery as will prevent forced liquidation in cotton and sugar and negotiating through the banks of the country. If this cannot be done through the mobilization of private banking capital in such a way as to avoid putting the Jjurdcn on the government, why thou we may have to call on the government. "Happily there is a short crop of cotton this year, and there have also been artificial conditions which have depressed the market such as the long strike in England and the reparations discussion with Germany, which worked to cut our cotton exports, yet the shelves of the world are growing bare of textiles, and we can hope to carry over the surplus until it can be sold at satisfactory levels. A similar situation exists as to grain, but it is not so marked." o 6G(? quickly relieves Constipation, Billiousness, Loss o' Appetite and Headache, due to Torpid Liver.?adv. o Mis.^ Roberta Cannon who recently underwent an operation for Appendicitis at the Burroughs Hospital is recovering \ - : < 31' ?. r house *> unty, and the acco. ;i AND ON THE /IE" TO OUR ,D TO EQUIP _ I 3DATION OF S .L KIND AND I FLOOR. ;ndid patronage LE ? ELY, 'ROPRIETOR. i I Church Directory \ Conway Baptist Church, Myron W. Gordon, Pastor. Services every Sunday. Sunday School Exercises 10 .a. m.. Morning worship and preaching 11:15 a. in. I Evening worship and preaching 8: IT) p. m. Prayer meeting services every Wednesday evening at 8:lf>. Strangers and visitors cordially welcomed to all these services. Kingston Presbyterian Church, J. Lemmon, Pastor. Services every Sunday morning. Sunday School at 10 a. m. Morning worship and preaching at 11:15 a. m. Prayer meeting services Tuesday 7:30 p. m. We welcome one and all to our services. Conway .Methodist Church, J. C. At kinson, Pastor. Services every Sunday. Departmental Church School 10 a. m. Bible Class for men only 10 a. m. Morning worship and preaching 11:15 a. m. Evening worship 7 p. m. I Prayer meeting services Wednesday evening 7 o'clock. Welcome extended to everybody to attend all services. GfiG euros Malaria, Chills and Fever, I Bilious Fever, ('olds and LaGrippe, or money refunded.?adv. NOTICE TO CREDITORS All persons having claims against the late Janes F. Gause are hereby given notice to present same, duly verified according to law, to the uiir dersigned Executors, and all persons indebted unto the said estate, are hereby requested to make immediate payment of same to us. 1 1 If . T\ 11 11 ti, j. mci/oweii, riXecuior.' Ellen Gause, Executrix. Allsbrook, S. C., July 5th, 1921. 4t. o To Stop a Cough Quick take ' HAYES* HEALING HONEY, a \ cough medicine which stops the cough by healing the inflamed and irritated tissue*. A box of GROVES O-PEN-TRATE SALVE for Chest Colds, Head Colds and Croup is enclosed with every bottle of HAYES* HEALING HONEY. The salve , should be rubbed on the chest and throat of children suffering from a Cold or Croup. The healing effect of Hayee* Healing Honey in* nlde the throat oombined with the lieaHng effect of Grove's O-Pen-Trote Salve through the port* of the skin soon stops a oough. Both remedies arc packed in one carton and the cost of the oombined treatment Is 35c.^ wjupt ash your druggist for HAYES* HEALING HONEY