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DAIRY COWS ARE NATURALLY CLEAN Man's Duty is to Keep Them in That Wholesome Condition DAILY CLEANING MEANS CLEAN SANITARY MILK Little Touches to Cow's Toilet **TT?v> Pnlfnr Prnftllr> r? V 1H (llVt! k> 11C A UCVlbl * i VUHUV4 Of Milk and Butter Sightliness and attractiveness are feminine assets which extend even to the dairy cow. Naturally she is a clean and tidy beast. Unfortunately nuin has been obliged to confine the dairy cow closely in stables during periods of the year, with the consequence that unless he daily biUshes and grooms the dairy Matrons, their sleek, seemly coats soon lose their gloss and luster and become densely mattted with dirt and litter. For the same reasons that it pays to groom horses?greater efficiency from neat, ?? spick-span coats?it also proves in valuable to "dolj up" the dairy cow daily by vigorous application of brush and curry comb. Cow comfort?that ir.explainable condition of well-being which means animal satisfaction and the economical production of the maximum flow of milk?is fostered by careful and persistent grooming during the season when the cows need such extra attention as ordinarily during the pasture period the animals of their own accord keep themselves clean. The enthusiastic use of the brush I and currycomb, supplemented by a moist cloth, as siege guns against dust and dirt are good mediums for increased production, according 10 the opinions of progressive dairymen reported to the United States Department of Agriculture. They main tain that clean coats and luxurious feelings of contentment induce incleased production of milk. If you doubt the profits from grooming dairy cows, put it up to Bossie and her stable mates via the referendumvote method. Dirty iMilk from Dirty Cows. From a sanitary standpoint, the densely matted, filthy and caked coat of the dirty cow is one of the main sources of contamination in milk. Filth dries on the body of the animal and, unless it is removed previous to milking, a portion of it is likely to fall into the milk pail and carry undesirable bacteria with it. Hence, grooming cows is a fundamental safeguard against inferior, germ-laden milk. Where cows are groomed daily during their period of close confinement an attendant requires only about two or three minutes a cow to prepare and gloss up the animals as though for a banquet. On the other hand, it is difficult and timeconsuming to clean off cows which have been kept without grooming in a dirty stable. The commendable practice is tc groom and clean the cows daily at such a time between the milking periods that there will he abundant op portunity for the dust put into circulation to settle so that it will not coi taminate the milk as it is drawn frorr the cows. It is necessary for bes' results to wipe off the udder an( flanks of each cow with a moist clean cloth just before milking, ii order to remove all the surface dus or dirt which has escaped the pre vious clean-up processes. It is recom mended that dairymen exercise spe cial care to provide plenty of mate rial so that at all times they may us clean cloths in preparing the cow foi milking, as too commonly th wiping cloth, unless carefully hand leu, becomes a source of contamins tion. It is also advisable to clip ol the long hairs from the udder an flanks of each cow, as ordinarily the provide ideal places for the accumt lation of dirt and filth. Tests Show Harm of Dirt. Extensive experiments conductc bv the United States Department < Ag riculture at the Government fan lb ltsvllle. Md.. show that milk drav into ii sterile pail from dirty coy contained an average of 32,677 l>a Knrtminmtmiitnmtimmtmnuntm We are proud of the confiden doctors, druggists and the pub have in (56(? Chill and Fever Tonic, adv?4'24jl9-20t o ? n.9 Gutolne That Does Not Affect tho He Bcscise of tonic and laxative ei/*ct. I.AX Vi \'H BROMO QUININKis better than ordinn Quinine and does not cause nervousness 11 ringing; in hend. Hi-member the full np.mcni loo* ior the t>4 nature ot E. W, GliOVR. 3i What Is Rheumal W1 Sufferers Should Realize That It U a Blood Infection. Doubtless like other sufferers, you have often asked yourself this question, which continues to remain unaswcrcd. Science has proven that Rheumatism is caused by a germ in your blood, and the only way to reach it is by a remedy which eliminates and removes these little pain demons. tcria per cubic centimeter, while milk drawn from clean cows whose udders and teats were washed immediately previous to milking had a content of on'y 4,947 germs per cubic centimeter. These tests were made immediately after milking. Naturally, on standing, the milk with the greatest number of bacteria would deterioiate most rapidly, due to the manip illation of the germs. Accordingly, its value as a human food product would be greatly reduced, while its introduction on the city market would be carefully scrutinized and, in some cases, punished by the health authorities, Pride shoud cause every dairyman to maintain his cows in an attractive, cleanly, and sanitary condition every day in the year. In a way the appearance of the cow is an accurate measure of the owner. In the same degree that neglected fences, overrun fence rows, tumble-down build ings, and unhoused machinery typify the shiftless, ne'er-do-well farmer, dairy cows which are dirty indicate the milk farmer who does not safeguard consumers against contaminated milk. o Intelligent community cooperation will be asked by Attorney General Palmer in the government's drive to reduce the high cost of living. Rub-My-Tism is a great pain killer. It relieves pain and soreness caused by Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sprains etc.?adv. 4-24-19 20t. F armei Home I located in Princ< LORi: Opened for busin We solicit y 5 per cent, interest DAN W. HARD' CHAS. D. PRII DIRE Dan W. Hardwick, Chas. D. Prince, O. E. Hickman, J. A. Bryant, 713J19?tf Rey : ' '' Your I I c S ' I e l4 if Furniture i<i love in makin y III II IU pyand livabl fand it's not ing through i old, creaky c squeaky bur dated lookin) c- 00\ ^ Make yot ot enjoyable co v^ftvy pays* Whe ii< \U // niture buy Wt That's why here. - ?utherl oj k. Household and Kitchen Furnis THE HORRY HERALD, 001H ism? by Suffer from It? S. S. S. has been successfully used for Rheumatism for more than fifty years and many voluntary testimonials are on file from those whom it has benefitted. Try it to-day. and you will find yourself at last on the right track to get rid of your Rheumatism. For treatment of your individual case, address Chief Medical Adviser, Swift Specific Co., Dept. 43, Atlanta, Ga. BLIGHT OF ENGLISH RULEIN IRELAND Dublin.?Whatever may be said of England's misrule in Ireland it cannot be claimed that it is inconsistent. From the first day that the Norman set foot on ireland to the present, England's policy has been to rob and exterminate the Irish people Martial law which prevails in Ireland today is only a continuation of Cromwell's policy of Ireland, of history repeating itself. The late General Sir William Butler, writing of the ruin wrought by British "civilization" in Ireland, says: "Wherever the traveller pursues his route in Ireland?along the coast line which borders the Irish Sea and the Atlantic ocean, over the inland plains of the central region, or yet through the mountains and valleys which lie between that central plain and the sea?there is one ever-present object in the landscape, whose presence after a time ceases to attract attention through the simple fact of its perpetual recurrence. "It is the ruin. "Ruins of great monastic edifices and abbeys?some set on lonely islands in silvery lakes some standing I amid meadows where winding riverreaches reflect their roofless outlines. Ruins of Plantaent castles crowning some rock, which itself seems of material scarce less durable than the remnant of battlement above it. -s Bank Institution e Hotel Building S, S. C. ess June 2, 1919 our patronage paid on time deposits. WICK, President l\ICE, Cashier ICTORS L. S. Smith, A. F. Cannon, A. J. Mishoe, P. C. Prince, Worley. i* ] \ C_^) F?l / ?lllf iy m Homels |||| Castle 1 comes next to I ig the home hap- J e. Life is shorty jiluUull^ worth while go- IWT/p it surrounded oy hairs; scratched, M|1|W 'eaus or dilapiy beds. nr home a castle surroundings. It :n you buy fur- \jvjyw good furniture. \y w you should come JbSjL AHDF0RII.C0== i'urgs ? Bicycles and Supplies, ?AY, S. 0., SEPT. 18, 1919. Ruins of hermit's cell, of wayshle chapel, of weedgrown cloister, of city rampart, or seabitten fortalice, of broken bridge and battered gable ?everywhere they rise in view, the silent witness to some great historic cataclysm, some vast fact of human destruction which has wanted no historian to describe it, so largely is it written in characters, which even time is powerless to efface, over the bioad page of the entire island. "People have grown so accustomed , to those relics that few stop to think or to ask what they were, or why i they are ruined. It seems so natural they should be there. Are they not Irish? Do not the jackdaws nest* in j them ? Does not the ivy rest on j them ? Do not the cattle shelter and shade in them from winter cold and summer heats??that is all." Sir William Butler describes at lenirth thr inhuman outrages commit ted by the Cromwellian soldiers in Ireland and he concludes. "So much for Cromwell's personal share in the Cromwellian War in Ireland. Time has constrained me only to deal with the salient features of the campaign. I have not told you ot tho unnumbered acts of burnings and hangings, of the slaughter of ecclesiastics, and the merciless treatment of prisoners done in the castles or houses which lay in the path of the invaders. These find frequent mention in the dispatches to the parliament and in the correspondence of the time; but they are alluded to as things of such general and unquestioned occurances as not to need explanation or excuse. "The war in Ireland went on for ^ three years after Cromwell's departure. It reduced the country to a desert. Then came what was called the settlement. The land was divided among the army; the old proprietors were driven out of their homes and forced across the Shannon, the terrible alternative of hell or Connaught being, in the language of the time, given to them. Thousands of women and children were sold into the worst form of tronie slaverv ever known. 'An universal confiscation,' says I Isaac Disraeli, 'ir. a bloodless mass- ? acre.' Hut there was plenty of blood . upon it too. "All this went on from 1653 to the death of Oliver Cromwell in 1658. You may search the entire modern history of man on earth, and find nothing more terrible, nothing mere savage, nothing more relentlessly cruel than the record of these nine years?from 1649 to 1658?in Ireland." The execution of Ribcrt Emmet, the hanging of the Manchester Martyrs, the murder of Padraic Poarse and the leaders of the Easter Week rising, the doing to death in prison of Thomas Ashe and Pierce M'Can and the deportation of hundreds of men to English jails without trial, bring the chapter of English misdeeds in Ireland down to the present year of our Lord, 1919. Street car service was resumed in Greenville on full schedule iast week. o LEMONS MAKE SKIM WHITE, SOFT, CLEAR Make this beauty lotion lor a few cents and see for yourself. What girl or woman hasn't hoard of lemon juice to remove complexion blemishes; to whiten the skin and to bring out the roses, the freshness and the hidden beauty? But lemon juice alone is acid, therefore irritating, and should be mixed with orchard white this way. Strain through a fine cloth the juice of two fresh lemons into a bottle containing about three ounces of orchard white, then shake well and >ou have a whole quarter pint of skin and complexion lotion at about the cost one usually pays for a small jar of ordinary cold cream. Be sure to strain the lemon juice so no pulp .gens into the bottle, then this lotion will lemain pure and fresh for months. When applied daily to the face, neck, arms and hands it should help to bleach, clear, smoothen and beautify the skin. Any druggist will supply three ounces of orchard white at very little | cost and the grocer has the lemons.? j ?adv?(5) I After you eat?always take FATONIC f FOR YOUR Aniwafnua r I Instantly relieves Heartburn, Bloated Go toy Feeling. Stops food souring, repeating, and all stomach miseries. Aids ciiffestion and appetite. Keeps stomach sweet and strong. Increases Vitality and Pep. EATONIOis the beet remedy. Tens of thou! sands wonderfully benefited. Only custan cent ortwou day to uaoit. Positively guaranteed to pleaso or v/c will refund money. Get a big box today. You will see. ' CONWAY DRUG COMPANY . 8.24 CONWAY, S. C. 521. CHEV MODEL 490 Ri Prices F. 0. B. 490 Touring car 490 Roadster F. B. Touring car F. B. Roadster FULL LINE OF PARTS CARRIEI Distributor; WILLARD BATTERIES, Call, telephone CONWAY MOTOli ( CONWAY The oldest Americi THE MUTUAL LIFE INSURAN W. B. Coxe, Sp F. F. Covington, Bullock Br R. M. Bullocl m PAY A FAI Nobody wants anything le when he buys from a merchant; buy what he needs at fair prices At the Same The year of 1919 finds its a, full line of staple goods that arc fair to our customers a Give Us If you have not been tradu us a trial this year. DUSENBUR Toddville, -5 BRAIN TWISTERS. E h What key is hardest to turn ? A donkey. s When is money damp? When it is t due in the morning and mist at night. What bridge creates the most anxj iety ? A suspension bridge. 'Why can a watchmaker never make a fortune ? Because his goods ] always go on tick. I "What is the most dangerous bat 1 that flies in the air? A brickbat. , How long did Cain hate his broth- i or? As long as he was able. PvVhy is the sun like a good loaf? | Because it's light when it rises. Why is a camel a most irascible animal? Because, he always has his bock up. What is the difference between a light in a cave and a dance in an inn ? One is a taper in a cavern and the other is a caper in a tavern. When does a man impose on himself? When he taxes his memory Why cannot a thief easily steal a watch ? Because he must take it off its guard. "U/Kot 1 /I \rnii iIn if vol! snlit " "t?V nilVMI\l J -V, .. %r r your sides with laughter? Run till you get a stitch in them. Why arc gloves unsalable articles? 1 :t cars , \ * ^ftV OADSTER I Conway: > $ 835.00 j 815.00 < . . 1,335.00 t * 1,310.00 V\ w D IN STOCK . 5 for VULCAN SPRINGS or write ^ ;ar company ' S. C. ^ ? iiiiiiMiiiiini liial an Company CE CO., OF NEW YORK ecial Agent District Agt. 08. z, Mgr., Agents. in nninr I iii ritibt ss than a fairly good article and a customer wants to Old Stand at the same eld stand with which we offer at prices is well as to us. a Trial lg at Toddville before, give 111 A AA [I & uu. , S C ^ m m j 1 {( cause they are made to be kept orii and. What is that which makes everyoneick but those who swallow it? Flatery. o? ? You Do More Work, # Vou are more ambitious and you get more enjoyment out of everything when yotu blood is in good condition. Impurities in the blood have a very depressing effect dtt the system, causing weakness, lazinej* nervousness and sickness. / ROVE'S TASTELESS Chill TONIC \ restores Energy and Vitality by Purifying and Rnrinhind the Rlrtnd. When vnii feel its strengthening, invigorating effect, see how it brings color to the cheeks and how it improves the appetite, you will then appreciate its true tonic value. GROVE'S TASTELESS Chill TONIC is not tt puiciii iiicutCtiiu, iv ii> oiiuply IRON and QUININE suspended in Syrup, fr" So pleasant even children like it. The ' blood needs Quinine to Purify it and IRON to Enrich it. These reliable tonic properties never fail to drive out impurities in the blood. The Strength-Creating Power of GROVE'S TASTELESS Chill TONIC has made it the favorite tonic in thousands of homes. More than thirty-five years ago. fAlfcs would ride a long distance to get GROVE'S TASTELESS Chill TONIC when a member of their family had Malaria or needed a body-building, strength-giving tonic.' The formula is just the same today, and you can get it from any drug store. 60c per bottle. **