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September 20, 1011 ]
JELLY.
Ripe Grape Jelly.?An aeid grape is
l>est for this jelly. The sweet, ripe
grapes contain too much sugar. Halfripe
fruit, or equal portions o nearly
ripe and green grapes,will also be found
satisfactory. Wild grapes make delicious
jelly. Make same as currant jelly.
l'luin Jelly.?Use an under-ripe acid
plum. Wash the fruit and remove the
stems. Put into the preserving kettle,
with one quart of water for each peck of
frr.it. t'ook gently until the plums are
boiled to pieces. Strain the juice and
proceed the same as for currant jelly.
Apple Jelly*?Wash, stem and wipe
the apples, being careful to clean the
blossom end thoroughly. Cut into quar
iers ciiiu y.r nuo mo preserving kettle.
Barely cover with cold water (about
four quarts of water to eight of apples)
and cook gently until the apples are soft
and clear. Strain the juice and proceed
as for currant jelly. There should he
but three quarts of juice from eight
quarts of apples and four of water.
Apples vary in the percentage of sugar
GEMS OF THOUGHT Compiled
= TITHING GK.W
A comprehensive statement of the scriptural
basis for tithing. A summary of the best that has
been spoken and written by 350 prominent laymen
and ministers A compendium of information
regarding the experience of individuals and
churches in finanrind the L. u
sectarian, sane and lucid. Ministers and official
laymen who are struggling with the problem of
church finance will find much valuable help in
this work. One whole chapter on how to do it.
12mo, cloth, 225 pages. Price, 75c (net).
SENT POSTPAID ON RECEIPT OP PRICE BT
JENNINGS & GRAHAM. Publishers
CincuMJti, Chicago. Kansas City, Saa Francisco
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^ase of Accident.
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u don't underrate the se?it
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For sale by all leading druggists for
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THE PRESBYTERI
and acid tliey contain. A finely-flavored
acid apple should be employed when possible.
Apple jelly may bo made at anytime
of the year, but winter apples are
best and should be used when in their
prime, i. e., from the fall to December or
January. When it is found necessary to
make apple jelly in the spring, add the
juice of one lemon 'o c\ery pi i: o?
apple juice. Make green-grape jelly the
same as apple jelly. Make crab-apple
jelly the same as plain apple jelly.
(juince Jelly.?Rub the quinces V/ith a
coarse crash towel; cut out the blossom
end. Wash the fruit and pare it and cut
in quarters. Cut out the cores, putting
w.cui in u uisn uy laemselves. Have a
large bowl half full of water; drop the
perfect pieces of fruit into this bowl.
Put the parings and imperfect parts, cut
very fine, into the preserving kettle. Add
a quart of water to every two cups of
fruit and parings. Put on the fire and
cook gently for two hours. Strain and
finish the same as apple jelly. The perfect
fruit may be preserved or canned.
To make quince jelly of a second
quality, when the parings and fruit are
put on to cook put the cores into another
kettle and cover them generously
with water and cook two hours. After
all the juice has been drained from the
parings and fruit, put what remains into
the preserving kettle with the cores.
Mix well and turn into the straining
cloth. Press all the juice possible from
this mixture. Put the juice into the
preserving kettle with a pint of sugar to
a pint of juice; boil ten minutes.?U. S.
Department of Agriculture, Farmers'
Bulletin, No. 203.
CIitvrn vwnive i
llisk Stubble Laud Now, and ltepluut.
According to reports from the Depaitment
of Agriculture, the clover and
grass seed sown this spring in wheat,
rye and other grain has been parched
up and killed, either wholly or in part,
on thousands of fields in the central
W estern and Northern States. This is
? s r.ors situation, and calls for prompt
attention. If the clover is not replanted,
it means no clover hay next season,
and the planting of some substitute
ci op for hay next spring at considerably
increased expense will probably be
necessary. Not only that, but the failure
of the clover crop means the loss of
the green manuring crop in the rotation
and a disarrangement of th? whole
farm plan of crop rotation. The situation
should be met at once. Every niece
of neew seeding should be examined,
and if it has been burned up, steps
taken to replant it at once.
The Department says that one of the
best ways known to get a stand of
clover is to disw tbe stubble field as
soon as the grain is off, allowing the
disk to run about three inches deep,
?nd working the stubble into the soil.
The disking and cross disking should
be sufficient to clean it of we ds and
grass, and put the top three inches of
soil in fine tilth. Keep the ground cultivated
until the first soaking rain, then
sow about ten pounds of clover seed,
mixed with six to eight pounds of timothy,
per acre, and harrow the seed in.
A still better way than harrowing is to
sow the grass seed with a grain drill,
letting the seed run down the grain
tubes from the grass seed box and covering
the seed from one to one and onehalf
inches deep.
By sowing clover and grass seed
mo ri |Dr A Pine General
1 vrjno bad effects 1
NO PAY ply It. write to
AN OF THE SOUTH
alone in this manner, ithout a nurse
crop, it makes much more rapid and
vigorous growth than when sown with
giain. By disking the laud also, a
much better seed bed is made than
could be obtained by plowing, siuce
when ground is plowed in dry weather,
it breaks up lumpy and lies up loose,
and is very ditiicult to work down into
a compact seed bed, such as is essential
tor the best results with clover and
grass seed. In addition the grain stubble
worked into the top will by disking
seems to form a top that is especially
beneficial to clover.
This method of seeding clover is becoming
quite general in some of the
middle Eastern States, where farmers
over large sections are giving up the
practice of spring seding with grain because
of frequent failure to catch and
seeding alone after the grain is cut instead.
By this method, clover and grass
seed may be sown in the Central and
Western States as late as September
15, and still make a good stand that
will not winter kill, but in the extreme
Northern States, the seeding should not
be made later than August 15.
To summarize, grass seedings in
li
IIEN the committee at Net
leans, Da., erected to the nie
of Jefferson Davis this ^
ment carved from
Winnsboro Blue Granit
"Th? Silk of Tho Trado"
They not only showed excellent judgement
lecting material, but paid his memory the li
of Tributes.
Winnsboro Blue Granite is tho best granih
discovered; will not crack, chip, smut or wc
and will stand through time interminable, a:
and beautiful as the day you credit. Is ui
in color and texture, aud the inscription stan
in bold contrast to the surface, and is readabl
a distance. Accept no inferior granite. bi
insist on tho best, Winnsboro Blue.
Write i is for the name of our
Winnsboro Granite Corp.
Rion, S. C.
GEORGIA
[fill I Hccauso U.S. (Jovernment test:
rUl marvelous strength, in addition t
I III absolutely pure. Its crushing
fill pounds per square inch, and it ro
"|i | degrees Fall. For exterior b
A || I Georgia Marble is without eq
if ) A ,tlft^ies lierfectl>' an^ 'as^s beyoi
\ H A*k to tee tatnplea of ''Clierokt
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wmjmm who can.
|/|| THE GEORGIA MARBL1
SMPNM&T CU Rg FOR >?
Tonic. Contains no arsenic or other po
ike quinine. If your Druggist or Mercl
ARTHUR PETER & CO., Gen. Agts, I
(911) 2:1
spring grain have been burned out on
thousands of farms. Replant now by
disking the stubble about three inches
deep, and sowing clover and grass seed
alone, without a nurse crop, by August
15.
Does it pay to employ teachers to
teach children the evil effects of alcohol
upon the human system and license
men to sell a thing which inflames t. <
stomach, hardens the brain tissue,
softens and weakens the blood vessels.
mipoverisnes the blood, overworks the
heart, retards the elimination of effete
matter, dims the eye, dulls the hearing,
diseases the threat, lungs, kidneys, liver,
nerves, and muscles; the demand for
which is wholly artificial and when
supplied series no good puipose?
Does it pay to maintain a national
quarantine against criminal and dependent
classes from abroad and license
250,000 saloon keepers to manufacture
such products at home?
Young business men and laymen,
and, in fact, all persons with capacity
for leadership, who are interested in
missions.
mory This
b ever
uthor; fiift Jr r
i fresh HDB rorever
11 form
c from
>
G&0; ff?o?i&:? #3
p^P||
into various materials, the city
first and second stories of its y/l/lL
MARBLE M
s show this m.irblo to possess =*Mj]
0 being superbly beautiful and yliM,
strength is upwards of 10,000 MWM
ssists heat to upwards of 1,000 IhJnvL
uilding and interior finishing
ual in strengtli or beauty?it W'iM
ml 1he reckoning of time. Wyffjjl
!??," "Creole," "Etowah" nn<l fl I III
ul if your denier can't supply yi jJfJ
1 in touch with a nearby dealer |j| jjl u
E COMPANY, Tate, Ga. ||j
Louisville, Ky. NO PAY