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CLERG1YMAN GIVES act, lie had witnessed. TEs'1'IMONY ON VICE Dr. Straton is scheduled to appear 4- -tonmorrowv before the regular grand ,rte Rev. .john Roach Straton 8 ilt. jury whe lie Is excted to describe ness In New York Investigation. Indecent dances ho itnessed ii vNew York, April 7.-Tlie limelight Lroadwhy cabarets. Assistant District in New York's vice crusade centered Attorney James 14. Sith announced late today on the Rev. John Roach today he intended to back up the Straton, vastor of Calvary church, clergyman's testimony wIth that of whose Easter sermon with its charges several society women and social of a iwide open tenderloin resulted inllworkcrs who have been conducting a a lifth investigation being launched. private investigation of vice condi The clergyman made his debut as a t=3. titoess by apmearing before ttheh fedgr eral grandl Jury, which is chiefly con- 6j Never Knew Yex Could Keel) eits cered with hnis charges that liquor Is d Out (f it aether Shop. beig (lispeiised freely alonig Broad- What Ralph atkins Nays: "Fig t oure rates around store had enough to lfeed on; wouldn't touchi anything sus othler vemson, who also appeared sbe- piclous. soeard about RAT-SNA, fore the Jury and wvwo are said to be gave it a t hial. Resutls were onder the(, mnen whio accom'lpanniel 11i11 oil Is fit]. Cleanied all rats out III tenl days. recenit tour of 'the Great Wtdte W~ay. Dogs bout store night and (lay never touchi RAT-SNAP." Three sizes, 25c, The minister onl leavinig the jury-room -50c, $1.00. Soldl and guaranteed by 'would say nothing furlthler thian that lie 1,aureits 'Hlardwvare Co., lPutuamn's itn b yen uizzed by Assistant e r ,e- l rug Store and Kenedy Bros. eral gitsrict Attoriey Taylor regarl cn e ed i lt isc args thti Vlquor ooisdwd e Iln ,a 9,a ing iee l on Boa .1. C. Burns & Co. Here is the pegtop-skirt ed dress that is one of the biggest favorites in the season's most vog uish styles. It is but one of the many exceptional - dresses shown exclusive ly by us and offered with the others given here for today's special sellings. NO TAFFETAS Pricd at t A$29.75 to $69. 5 GEORGETTES Priced at $35.00 to $50.00 Wells Clardy Co. i g vLauren, S. C. "A Good Place to Trade" t6 ed= Fo rss chat s. thesigest favitesi - utet.sho styletisuon an ietonhsmn. ecptoa Its byeusfand offeredGwith tsaifisthe dtesre ie ere o sweetsodaydsIspbcneficialntoo Seald Tght ntridt Even, WLaurenS, S.avC. Meand diestions It beeit.rea AREA ONIONS IN MILK Flavor and Odor Not Unhwolo, some But Very Objeo tionable. Remedies Suggested Clemson College, April 12.-With the coming of spring and fresh pas tures a great many farmers, milk producers, and consumers are con fronted with the usual, and to a cer tain extent inevitable, flavor and odor of onions in milk products. The presence of onion flavor in milk does not indicate that the milk containing this flavor has been produced or handled under unnanitary conditions, nor does the presence of the flavor and odor render the milk unwhole some for human consumption. But the onion flavor in milk, even to a slight degree, is such a pronounced and unpleasant one to the great ma jority of consumers that from a com mercial standpoint all milk so affect ed is unfit. Cream from this milk may be used for butter making, though the resulting butter will still retain the objectionab'le flavor to a marked degree. As a result of this trouble in milk, many producers and dealers suffer every spring consider able financial loss, a part of which, at least could be avoided if propor precautions were taken and prepara tion made for the short time during which the trouble arises. As to remedies and treatment of "oniony" milk, the only sure and ef fective means lies in prevention. If onions are present in the pasture they must come out, or the milk cow must be kept out for several hours prior to milking time, else the milk will surely have the chara-teristic objectionable odlor and flavor. Should the onions be few, or should they be confined to a limited area. it viight be possible and advisable to pull up the plants by hand before seed are produged iind thus eventually rid the pasture of them. On the other hand, it the pasture is badly infested the only course to follow is to take the milk cows off the pasture early in the afternoon, at least four or flye hours before milking time. The onion plant is one of the first to begin growing in the spring, and the cow, with her natural craving for green succulent feed at this season of the year, is not at all particular about what she eats while the graz ing is so scant. In this connection a grazing lot of rye or rye and barley, or clover and barley serves a double purpose. If the cow is -allowed ac cess to such grazing lots for an hour or so each day not only will her milk flow be very much increased but her hunger for green feed will be satis fled to such an extent. that she will be more careful about grazing on wild onions .while in the pasture. The onion flavor in milk i only one, though perhaps the most pro nounced and objectionable, of many food flavors which often get into milk from the cow. Such feeds as rape, rutabages, cabbage and wet brewer's grains, when fed either just prior or during milking, often Impart quite pronounced and objectionable flavors to milk. Any of the above feeds, however, may saf(ly be fed just after milking or several houtrs before milking wvithout afifecting the flavor of the milk in any way. 'So 't is where conditions make it neces snry to graze milk COWS on onion ini tested pastures. If the cows are t urned on these pastuores immediately after milking in the morning and then driven up about noon, there shoul 1(be little if any trace of onion flavor in the milk. Es~pecially is this true where the cows are allowed to graze on green grazing lots whieh are free from the wild onions or where a good1 grade of corn silage is fed as a succulent teed. Various methods of removing the onion flavor and odor from milk so contaminated have been tried out with little success. Perhaps the most common as well as the most effec tive treatment is that of aeration. Buat niven with this method, the amount of the objectionale flavor andl odor removed Is so small that it is impossible)1 to rendler contamInated milk tree from taint. . Alo SummaW~'. 1.Alwmilk cows to run on on ion infested pastures only in the fore noon. Drive them upi four' or five hours before milking time. 2. Provido green grazing lots, or have an abundance or corn siage, to increase the flew of milk and to 'ap pease the cow's craving for green teed. 3. Take extra precautions with the handling and cooling of the milk in ordoer that nco bad odors and flavors might develop to augment the objec tionable ones from the onions. AVOID COUNTRY DAMAGE TO COTTON Yn a recent test by the fltreau of Markets it was shown that a bale of cotton exposed to the weather for 6 months lost by weather damage 76 pounds from its orginal weight. At the prevailing price of 40 conts per pound this loss would lbe $30.50 The halo could have been stored in a good warehouse and insured for 0 months for less than $3.00. it has bacn estimated that the loss in the value of the entire eotton crop result' lng from t'amage may amount to $80,, 000,00 0. There is no substitute for milk pro duets-and healthv childron. 8andpaper Label. A device for protecting people from taking doses from poison bottles by mistake is a sandpaper label. The ordinary label is posted in '4 piece 01 sandpaper large enough to go all around the bottle, so that when any one takes up the bottle in the night, no matter how dazed from sleep he may he, the rough, unfamiliar feel of the sandpaper rouses him and he rec ognizes at once that the bottle con. tauins poison of some description: The printed label tells the kind of poison in the bottle. Beware of Lost Minutes'. "In the dynamics of human affairs," said a learned Man, "two qualities are essential to greatness--power and promptitude. The former is often the fruit of the latter. A man or Woman who is impressed with the value of time will make every minute count to such purpose that his or her life will inevitably bear the stamp of power." -OPison Swett Marden in Chicago Daily News. Stomach. Out of Fix? 'Phone your grocer or druggist for a dozen bottles of this delicious digestant,-a glass with meals gives delightful relief, or no charge for the first dozen used. Shivar Ale PURE DIGESTIVE AROMATICS WITH SHIVAR MINERAL WATER AND GINGER Nothing like it for renovating old worn-out stomachs, converting food into rich blood and sound flesh. Bottled and guaranteed by 'he cele. brated Shivar Alineral Spring, Shel. t)", S. C. If -your regular dealer cannot Supply you telephone DIXIlE FLOUR & GRAIN CO. Distributors, for LaurenN. Goodyear Clincher Tires for Smaller Cars, We have a full. supply in stock. We carry Goodyears because they make more satisfied customers. We offer you a real nonebt, de pendable Service in connection with the sale of tires which en aclesyoiu to realize their full mileage value. All other sizes in stock. "rI Ernest W. Machen DEALER LAURENS, S. C. THEY MAKE: YOUR TIRES LAST ,'LONGER GOODYEAR HEAVY TOURIST TUBES LOOSE LEAF LEDGERS..... ....FOR SALE BY.... ADVERTISER PRINTING CO. 1-7 ... .. .... The fine steels in a M A X W E LL stir your enthusias m Ride in a Maxwell and your enthusiasm is stirred for this commendable car. You attempt to search for the cause and you find it in the steels used in the' Maxwell. Those fine steels that give rare strength. Such steels tuke the burden of dragging around useless weight from the engine, providing brilliant performance. Pound for pound the steels in a Maxwell equal those in any car built. The Maxwell construction, employing these fine steels, results in a light-weight car, that gives not only brilliant performance, but the rare combination of durability, economy and comfort. Today nearly 400,000 Maxwells may be seen on the iwiorld's highways. 100,000 more are in process of construction. Still this will supply but 60% of those who have set their minds on a Maxwell for 1920. Carolina Auto Company J. Y. MILAM, Manager