The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, May 24, 1923, Page Page No. 5, Image 5

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* ? ? ! .. ^ MORE SEASONING THAN SALT AND PEPPEK By Bertha E Shapleigh, of Columbia Uuiversity. ^ The people of ancient days used x moie seasoning in their food preparations than we do, and some of their seasonings are not appealing to our sense of t/iste?assafoetida, for instance. The supposition is that, because thpv htwl nn A-' - >IV iviii^ciatiuiii 11 it?<1 IS ~ \ spoiled readily and some of the very w highly flavored ingredients were added to cover up the taste. But let us- consider some of the Reasonings besides salt and pepper, which the housewife should have on her shelves, and thus add much variety, as to flavor, in her daily menus. A First of all vegetables comes the fjli onion,' and its relations, the shallot, garlic, chives and leeks. There is nothing which so improves some salads, meats and sauces as garlic. But it must be used with discretion, and that means one of the several sections found in ;i garlic One of these sections, which should be peeled, cut into halves and rubbed over the bowl in which a salad is sei ved will give that unusual and delicious flavor so often lacking. i vitality] | MAKE NO MISTAKE p 1 scott's i lEMULSIONj f* BUILDS S& I STRENGTH irriffAtinn n n rl ^rnino u? 0 ??"?RV work. The Calco automatically protects the land from freshet, tide and flood?enables crop pli all seasons?makes crops grow when fore?and never fails to work. V< in any size from 12 inch to 72 incl ? Write Dep't C For Descriptive Dixie Culver ATLAI J .> <0 Moi "i rr fl \ if & rj d VI , i # 1 Celery comes next, perhaps, and the root, stalk, tender leaves and seed are all used for seasoning. The celery root, or "knob celery," is used in soups and salads or when creamed as a vegetable. Parsley Useful. Then comes parsley, which should iicafl /iiiUrt ? 1 * w uc?u vjunc ?.-> mum ?f> u reusoiun^ as for a garnish. When parsley is plentiful in the summer it may be dried and kept for winter use. If dipped in boiling water and then in cold water before drying, the color is retained. The leaf of the laurel or bay tree is an excellent aromatic seasoning, but if used too plentifully overpowers the other flavors. For the ordinary amount of meat or sauces a "bit" of bay leaf is sufficient and by "bit*' is of mace is not much larger than a quarter of an inch long. Whole pepper, or peppercorns, .are much better to use in cooking than ground pepper. From three or four to half a teaspoon is the usual quantity to be used. A slight flavor of nutmeg in cream soups or chicken dishes is best obtained by cooking a 'blade" of whole mace in the stock or scalding it with the milk. A "blade" tion whether, after they have passed, "pin," about one inch long. Whole cloves, never more than one or two, are an improvement to tomato sauce and soup. It should be remembered that these spices ought to be cooked only for a short time in the sauce or with the meat, as too" long; a cooking will develop a strong flavor. o George W. Stevens, of AllsbVook, S. C., spent some time in Conway on business last week. * * * * Drinking cups, paper doilies and roll paper towels at The Herald office. ***** convene on Monday, June 4th. Judge S. W. G. Shipp will be the presiding iudge of the court. CO* Automatic ainage gate Turns swamp lands into farm lands, by keeping land thor- i k ougbly drained and prevent^ ing back water flooding. It needs no attention, CyTjP . for it is absolutely Two*. while S&xSrA. you 8,eep' : anting at 3 none grew be- ~~ ** ?^Vjo|y> ery inexpensive. Made li. Folder and Price List 1 & Metal Co., <TA, GA. / B r re speed fc TAY for the United States * sacrificed and died in ord lail. In fact, the mail has bee ag itself; whatever else haooei m. m. lany people even today scarce 1 mail service that has been 1 asoline. In the cities, motor ailway to postoffices. In the r\ ue to. the gasoline engine* A ^ay places particularly that t New Jersey) has shown its sin* ig "Standard" Motor Gasoline nel available to all motorists al iTANDARD OIL COl 9 s PHB HOSKY HERALD, OONWA SCHOOL FIRE < KILLS MANY ] 1 (Continued From Page One.) < 1 would know anything he had on < O God! i Silently the weeping men and wo- I ivtan v\oooa/^ i:? xt_ 1 i i psoocu UWWII Uic line. MIUIIU save sorrowed whispers, the crouch of ' feet in the sa*d. And then an ag- I onizing cry and a mother'? sobbing:. "This is mine. Poor little child. Poor * little child! Baby! I can't stand it!" A strong man, weeping, and a crying { girl. Broken whispers: "And he was { in it too, and his wife. Ain't it ter- 1 rible? That little girl, too." Awed oaths from men from whose lips they 1 sounded almost sacred. < In the smoking cinders men still i' dug for bodies yet unrecovered. A ] shovel turned up in the heated mass a J blackened watch, a woman's watch, 1 attached to a man's watch chain, run- 1 ring, despite the fiery heat to which i it had been subjected. A rake reveal- i ed a mass of bills, hardly more than i scorched in the fatal furnace. One by i one the finder straightened them out on a charred beam side by side. "They 1 curious urchin, called away by his could be redeemed," he said, and a father, saw them and found in them a source of regret. "If I had* anowed ' I'd have dug first," he said. A little j fair haired baby frolicking in the sand, and five steps away?the dead, i Hour after hour mothers, fathers, i husbands, wives, brothers, sisters i searched the row of dead and to all save a pitiful few it was a search in 1 vain. The fire had left little to set its ; many victims apart one from the ' other; shreds of clothing;, a shoe, a ^ silver belt buckle, an automobile key ?nothing more.?Florence Times. REVIVAL MECHANICS VS. DYNAMICS Bishop Joseph F. Berry There are revivals and revivals. There are revivals, so called, which bring1 the minimum of good to the church. Indeed, it is a serious questhe last state of the church i? not worse than the first. In such meetings the human elem ent predominates. Machinery abounds. Committees trample upon the heels of committees. Publicity is insistent. The Christian forces mcve out of the churches into a shed. In that way God's house as the normal center of evangelism for the community suffers a heavy discount. The regular activities of the church cease. The evangelist and his "party" go to the front. The ministers go to the rear. The evangelist is usually a remarkable man?original, witty, flam boyant. The more , grotesque his words and methods the greater sensation and the bigger the crowds. The multitudes sing ragtime music l'rom the evangelist's latest book. There bnot much time for public prayer. Conviction as defined by the Scriptures and known by the fathers is not often seen. There is no bending under the sorrow of conscious guilt. Not many tears of contrition. No Jacob-like wrestling until after the midnight hour. No sudden and glorious translation out of darkness into light. Shaking the evangelist's hand or signing a card makes you a "convert." Such are counted by huna* >r the spee Mall!" Men have suffered, I ^y-V ASHkA ? * vi iu ca^cuuc ine country s ome a symbol not unlike the is, the mail must go through. ly realize the great advance wrought about in the age of trucks whisk the mail from Liral part, even more credit is ind it is in these out-of-thehe Standard Oil Company cerity of purpose by market 5, making this efficient motor ike* V1PANY (New Jersey) Y, S. 0, MAY 24, 1923 jreds. The papers keep tab, and daily proclaim with headlines big and black the marvelous results. Finally the campaign comes to a close. The spontaneous free-will offering:, systematically worked up for weeks in advance, is tucked away in the evangelist's pocket. It is probably more than any pastor of the town receives for the hard toil of a full year. The evangelist bids the people a tearful farewell. Photograph of the departing ll'O Kfllfl In' nvmcflll -ftw m/intUi! will grace the mantels of the town. Crowds follow the "party" to the :lepot. ,ind sing sadly as the * train moves olF. Then things settle back into normal grooves. The tabernacle is torn down. The churches are reopened. The people are invited back. The pastors try to resume their spiritual and evangelistic leadership. But they have a difficult task. The memory of the applauding multitudes, the laughter, the big choir, the rapturous singing, the sriking characteristics of the itinerant evangelist, the waves of enthusiasm?these make the ordinary pastor more ordinarily ordinary, and the regular services of the church tediously commonplace. Six months pass. The great revival has been fading into the distance. What are the net results? But why press the inquiry ? But there is another kind. It is r\?t a revival of "enthusiasm," but of religion. That revival usually starts in the preacher's heart. The Holy Spirit speaks to his inmost soul, reness the spiritual needs of his church Liiul the community. Upon his knees in an agony of prayer he surrenders himself anew to his Master. His little library become an "upper room" where, like the disciple of old, he tarries for the promised anointing. Pentecost comes. His soul is filled and thrilled. His lips are touched with the burning1 coal. Next Sunday morning he goes into the pulpit with exultant heart. He can hardly wait for the moment to come when he may deliver his new message. How strangely it trembles upon his lips! What an unwonted mellowness has come into his voice! What a flame has been kindled in his eyes! These things the people have noted during the opening devotions, and when lie rises to preach every ear is strained to catch his words. The sermon is clear. It is tender. It is courageous. That preacher's sermons are usually of that sort. Rut this one is differ ent. It ring's out like a trumpet. It flames with passion. It cuts like a sword. It melts with its overwhelming" pathos. The Holy Spirit is evidently in charge. That is why the message fits and hits. That is why the people see themselves in the gospel mirror, and then turn to God in penitence and prayer. At night another heart-searching message. The appeal with which it closes is heard amid silence almost painful. A week of eager pastoral visiting follows. On Saturday night the official board is called to meet the pastor in his study. He tells the brethren of the burden that is upon his: soul. He assures them that he has heard "d going in tops of the mulberry trees,' and that a revival is at their door. Then he places each man's responsibility squarely upon him as an office-bearer of the church, and entreats each to surrender him I I dy I H ' ^ I I self utterly to God. Prayer follows. And when the brethren go out tears glisten in eyes unaccustomed to weep. On Sunday morning the Spirit is again present in power. At night the storm bursts. The place seems to be shaken by an unseen hand. The altar is thronged by Christians struggling into a richer experience. Confessions are made. Reconciliations are etTectp(| Sni vitnnl A ..J ~ ? .VMM. 1IVW1IVO c*t^ V* \'ll* r^UVI best of all, sinners press forward to seek pardon and peace. .The revival has come! No committees are needed now. No advertising. No pre.it choir. No human scheme to awaken "interest." The Holy Ghost makes His own sensation. Salvation draws. People will go where soules are being saved. And they come here in multitudes. S me come to fccolT c. nd remain fo pray. Seeking sinners pray "through." Light breaks into their souls. Experience is a verity. Testimony is certain. Joy is unbound. Every saved soul is instantly concerned about unsaved souls. Hence the converts become walking evangelists. They go from street to street and from house to house to seek their unconverted friends, and tell their experience. The , great work spreads in unexpected 1 11 - A -1 A ways?spreads over me iown, ami oui into the regious beyond. The community is awakened, melted, rocked by the power of God. How the church rejoices! How the bells of heaven ring out! The meeting" comes to a close. Rut the revival does not. The pastor Is the evangelist and he does not take the train. How intelligently, sympathetically, zealously he handles the new recruits! No .adjustment to the church building is necessary. The! people have been converted in the church, and they feel that God's house is. to them, the dearest spot on earth. And this pastor-evangelist does not need to win the confidence and love of the converts. He has been with them in their struggles after the new life, and they now look to him as a friend and counsellor. For weeks the revival swings on. the "extva meet ings" having merged almost imperceptibly into regular ones. As individuals .and in groups the pnstor sets new members at work. How his 10 nU nni'n/l tViniv vt'illiiwr ro. nidi i in v i I* a, i \.\i kw uivii " i i i i ii ? v sponge to his call for F^rvice! Six months pass. What is tho no result? Almost tho hundred-fold ^iar' vest!?Pentecostal Herald. o THE BUSY CHILD By Blue Binofore Maid I have so many things to do, I don't know when I shall be thro.' Today I had to watch the rain Come sliding down the window pane,' And I was humming all the time Around my head a kind of rhyme And blowing softly on the glass To see the dimness come and pass. I made a picture with my breath Rubbed it out to show underneath.. I built a city on the floor And then I went to war! But! I escaped from square to square. I Those that are greenest on the car pet there. And no \vl have :\ boat to mend, And all our supper to protend. T have so many things to do! I don't know when I shall he thro'! ?Southern Christian Advocate, j ? o ? C. M. Reaves, of Fairmont, N. C.. was in Conway on business one day last week. * * * * * Purchase carbon paper, typewriter ribbons, onion skin and second sheets at The Her,aid office/ Stop that Fripma ( You can be free of its itching and danger of spreading! Amazing results have been produced by S. S. S. in cases of eczema, pimples, blackheads and other skin eruptions. S. S. S. will lead you into a world "S.S.S. 'zrd. tf eczema y ^ B. 3. S. will pcor* to you In your own cam tho "how" ?w! why" of it* re markftbU Blood-CUanting Power! you probably have never known before,?a world of joy, where pure blood shows through clear, ruby-tinged faces, where clear eyes shine, where strong light and love is welcome, where embarrassment is no more! If you have been troubled with eczema, and you have used skin applications without number, make a test yourself, on yourself, with a bottle of S. S. S., one of the most powerful blood cleansers known. S. S. S. makes the blood rich and pure, and when your blood is freed of impurities, your stubborn eczema, rash, tetter, skin eruptions, pimples, blackheads, acne and blotches are bound to disappear. There are no unproven theories about S. S. S.; the scientific resuus or eacti of Its purely vegetable medicinal ingredients are definitely known and admitted by authorities. S. S. S. helps build blood-cells?that's why it Is such a powerful body builder, i It will fill out your cheeks, help you , regain lost weight. S. S. S. is sold at all good drug stores. The large size is more economical. ? d ^ makes you feel Vkeyounejf ogam ?""?m Page Ho. 5 KU KLUX KLAN HAS MEETING On Friday evening", May 18th, there was an open lecture at the court house on the object, aim, and purpose of the Ku Kiux Klan, delivered by Willis L. Smith, one of the original sixteen members of the order. The speaking took place at S o'clock that night and was attended by a crowd of people wanting to know about the Ku Klux Klan. There was no admission charged, ro col'ections taken up. Ladies, ministers, and lawyers were especially invited. The meeting was advertised by means of circulars widely distributed and on which it was stated: "An intelligent statement by an intelligent man. All questions frankly and fully answered, without trickery or evasion. Those who criticize should be present; those who desire to know the truth about the Klan should be there; those who fully believe all the bad they hear about the Klan and none of the good?they should certainly be on hand to hear Mr. Smith, who knows his subject as a Music Master knows his notes. Here is entertainment and enligghtment of high order. He fair?attend this meeting." o A CAMPAIGN AGAINST AUTOMOW LK KILLINGS The horror of the annual slaying bv automobiles has grown to such extent that there are definite beginnings of a movement for public safety. The court in Philadelphia recently sentenced a wealthy and prominent banker t<> six to ten years imprisonment for killing three persons while he was driving in a drunken condition. In the* same city a few davs later another man was sentenced to four to eight years. A medical authority in New York declares that a large number of the killinrrs ,?re due to drivers being under the influence of whiskey or drugs, and iT'res rigid examination ac to personal fitness before a driving license is allowed. One of tire most illuminating' publications om tlin ?11 {<?#? v..v I wi i c ci\. driving has recently been issued by the Pennsylvania Rairload. The enlightened selfishness, which is about the best cubstitute and reenforcement of humanitarian sentiment, that led j the lviilroads of the country to their campaign against reckless driving last verr ^ocu'ts in considerably reducing casualties. The present careful report is based on the observation of over a hundred thousand automobiles. 97 per cent of all drivers were found to be careful. Therefore the elimination of only three per cent of all drivers would almost entirely -vit an end to the terrible gr/ide fro-sing: accidents. The railroad claims that to remove 12,000 grade crossings on its system fould cost half' a billion dollars and be an impossibility in a generation. Trucks are the greatest offenders. as they constitute only 11 per cent of the machines, but supply 9Q nAV 1 * ?>' jji.i vcia u i me ill'CHlClUS. L5US driver,. were in only four ac^'donts out of a hundred thousand cars. M.iny instances occurred of autoists being I injured or killed, as survivors admitI .ted, from trying to beat the train across. Seventy drivers actually drove square into the side of the moving trains. moving trains.?Sou. Christian Advocate. TO TOP DRESS COTTON EARLY Clemson College.?Producing- cotton under boll weevil conditions is a race between the farmer and the weevil, with the weevil having the advantage, for he gets iirst choice at the cotton bolls. To offset this it is necessary for the farmer to follow these practices which will hasten the growth of the cotton plants so that it will have set a crop of bolls before the weevils have increased in sufficient numbers to get the entire crop. One of the best ways to do this, the agronomists say, is by early fertilization. in.. -* ? wii.ii reuuny avuuaoie sources of material. The function of ammonia as a plant food is to promote rapid growth early in the life of the plant thereby assisting it in building- a large framework upon which the crop of fruit may be borne. For this reason it should be applied early. Many farmers have followed the plan, and usually with a fair degree of success, of applying all of the ammonia before planting. This may not always be the best practice, however, for heavy rains immediately before and just after planting will cause some of the readily available nitrogen to t>e leached out and lost, especially on light sandy soils. Probably the better plan is to apply a portion of the nitrogen before planting and the remainder immediately after chopping. In this way the plant receives a supply of readily available nitrogen just at the time it is most needed for the develop ment of the plant. Late applications have sometimes paid well, but ordinarily are not to be recommended, as the tendency in that case will be to promote late growth, which will delay the maturity of the bolls already set. This will assist the weevil in his work of destruction. Nitrate of soda is the standard material for side applications, although good results have been obtained in e*perimments conducted at Clemson College and elsewhere thioughout the State, with sulphate of ammonia and other less well-known materials. Cyanamid has given very good results in most tests, but if used care must be taken not to allow it to touch the plant as it will cause the leaves to shed if applied to the piant. J