PLAY. BALL WITH BASE BALL, GOODS IKE KINO THAT * MAKE FAMOUS PLAYERS REACH GOODS ARE FULLY WARRANTED. r THEY ARE THE BEST THAT CAN BE BOUGHT. ? ANY ARTICLE IN THE LINE THAT PROVES DEFECTIVE WILL BE REPLACED. SULLIVAN HARDWARE CO. Anderson, Greenville, Belton. RI co;, i Anderson Cash Grocery SPECIALS FOR TODAY Another shipment of those Delicious MAJESTIC Ham jurst re ceived. They go fast; better order one NOW. 1 ? Price only, per pound .. .. ..IOC Home Grown String Beans, 3 pounds O for.?DC Fresh Tomatoes, beets, new potatoes, etc. for your Sunday dinner. SPECIAL-Tunny fish for Chicken Salad; sounds funny but ' testest fine. Try it! ICE TEA-Tell the man-"Orange Pekoe" None better for ? ice tea. Phone Us Your Wants for Sunday! Here's a Tip That Means Money to You ' .*j?&?' We were fortunate enough to be able to purchase some Roof Paints of different f grades, and in all colors at EXCEPTION ALLY LOW prices. For the next thirty days we will give our customers the benefit of our good for tune. We can and will save you anywhere from 20 per cent, to So per cent, in the painting of your metal roofs. NOW IS THE time to do this work, and WE are THE people to do it. i?* C. M. GUEST PAINT CO. "Guest Selb the Best." CALOMEL WHEN BILIOUS? NO! STOP! MAKES YOU SICK AND SALIVATES Wi Dur TOM" lt Karates Ti fjghl Calomel make? voa sick. It's horrible! Take a dote of the dangerous drug tonight and tomorrow yott may loaa "a dav's work. Calomel is mercury or quicksilver which cause? necrosis of tho bones. Calomel, when it cornea into contact with sour bile trashes into lt, breaking it up. This ia when yon feel that awful nausea end cramping. If you ere slog ??ah and "all knocked out," If your vcr ls torpid and, bowels constipated or yon have headache, di sri HTM, coated tongue, ii breath ia bad or'ftomsch sour, ?aT try a apoonf"1 ?* harmless Dodson's rer Tone tonlgU on my guarantee. Here's my guarantee-Ck? to any drug store and get a 50 cent bottle of. Dod son's Liver Torn. Take a spoonful and If it doesn't straighten you right un and make yoe fevl fl.'* and vigorous I want you to go back to tbs store and get your money. Dodson's Liver Tons ia destroying the ssle of calomel because lt ls tesl liver medicine; entirely vege table therefore it can obi salivate or make you sick. I guarantee that one spoonful of Dod son's Liver Tom will.put your aluggish liver to work and clean your bowels of that sour bile and constipated waste which is clogging your system sad mak ing yo? feel miserable, f guarantoo that a bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone will keep your entire family feeling fine for1 months. Oise lt to your chiidrea. It ia harmless; doesat gtlpwknd they like ?U pleasant Utta, NO USE TO WORRY ABOUT FINDING OUTSIDE MAR KET ANYWHERE CAN ABSORB CROP Chamber of Commerce Disagree* With Opinion of Commis sioner Watson. A movement to secure an all water rate from Columbia to Baltimore to handle the surplus wheat crop in South Carolina was discussed Monday in the offices of the state department of agriculture in Columbia. Those attending the conference were of the opinion that as little wheat as possi ble should be shipped from the state. It was alco brought out that, if there ls a surplus, then some means must be speedily found to dispose of lt out side the state on a cash basis. At this meeting Mr. Watson stat ed that thc people must be able to meet reshipping competition and wes tern shipments in Baltimore, the place which has been decided to be the best market for thc grain, especially for export. The optr.nm that Beltimore ls the best market is not conceded by thc Anderson Chamber of Commerce and when asked about the matter yester day it was staled that the best grain marketa are to the south and that markets will therefore be found In Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi. Louis ana and Florida, since If South Caro lina were to Bend her surplus grain tb Baltimore it would be in direct competition with the great railroads from the west, with the rates 1n many instances in favor of the west, so far as short distances are concerned. However If the wheat should be mar keted to the Southeastern states, where distance ls in favor of South Carolina, rates would not be so high. Florida alone, it was stated can use the surplus grain In South Carolina this year and in many years to come. However it is not believed that there will be any surplus grain in South Carolina since the state han al ways been a heavy importer of grain and even witto the estimated (1915 crop of whoat at 2,500,000 bubhe'.s, which is the estimate of the commis sioner of agriculture, it is believed this will readily be absorbed by the flour mills in South Carolina, of which there are now some thirty, seventeen new ones having been re cently constructed. The result is, as a mstter of fact, there will be no surplus grain crop In South Carolina this year nor In many years to come and no one need worry about an out side grain market. This may well be Illustrated by the fact that Anderson county has a larg er acreage planted In grain than any other county In the State, and not withstanding this fact, Anderson county will be able to absorb Its borne crop which is estimated at some thing over 1.000,000 bushels. * * * ? ? * .? *??*-^ -* jg, Jlti, ,*L .t. * ' * ? ? J?A1 j Personal I m m a ? .a- ? SA a 1 _m_-.m _a.? m rn ?. a m mi m I ff ? I ? r 1 -w -rn -? ^r^T^r^w^ ? ^r^Tr^T "T^T^w^T o MISB Clsudia Herron of Starr pass ed furlough the city4, yesterday eh route to Due West where she wilt at tend the commencement exercises. Miss Lucy Lig?n, who ts visiting at Iva. Was In the city yesterday wita Miss LOIB Jsckson. Miss Aileen Herron of Starr was In the city yesterday shopping. Mr..Chas. H. Balley and daugh ter. Miss Esther Bailey, formerly of Anderson, but now of Beuna VlBta, Qa., kre spending a rac-th' in the city. Among tho visitors here yesterday from Lowndes ville were Messrs. J. G. Huckabee, E. J. HucS^bee nod D. I*. Barnes. Misa Thelma Osborne has gone to Greenville to spend several days with Miss slay Covington. Mrs. Jsmes Harper and little son have returned to their home in Bel ton after spending a week here with Mrs. Clarence Osborns. Mrs. E. H. Hdlliday and little son have returned from s week's stay with the former's mother near Due l Weat. Miss Julia Ledbetter will leave this morning with Misses Esther and'Elis abeth Lawrence for their bomb In Duluth, Minn. Miss Florence Mattox of Anderson College will leave this morning for San Francisco to visit the. exposi tion. Mles Smith, teache . st Anderson Ootttfift will lesve this morning tor her home lu Beardstown, lil. Cant. J. R. Anderson hso returned fron, a snort business trip to Meridian, Miss. 8?T. P>. N. Ward, traveling claim agent of thc Blue Ridge railroad, was a visitor to the city yesterday. Mr. V. B. Martin returned to the city -yesterday from V alhalla where he had been for the psst two day* oh business. CORDIAL INVITATION IO SEE BRMKInG MISS GARLINGTON URGES WOMEN TO ATTEND ON FRIDAY MONEY SUBSCRIBED City Council Give? $25.00 to Help Defray Expense? Others Help Also. Friday Is to bo woman's day at the threo dave Kcbool which ls tft Those >?"ho subscribed groceries and other things are: Dr. George Evans, Minor Ten Cent ?tore, W. X, ?f'owers and Peoples' Grocery company. COMMENCEMENT AT FORMAN UNIVERSITY Declamation Contesta Held Rev. B. H. DeMent Preaches Baccalaureate Sermon. Greenville. June 1.-The commence ment exercises at Furman university last night at 8:30 o'clock with tho annual contests for tho Wharton and the MacMillan medals. The Wharton medal is -awarded annually to the best declalmer in tho Freshmen class. The contestants were J. D. Peag, W. B. Simpson, A. C. Holier. T. T. Smith. The MacMillan medal Is open to doclslmers from tue turee uppc. classe, was contented for by W. L. Bates, Senior; W. D. Nixon, Junior; W. E. Bowen and CF. Pittman both of the Sophomore class. The winners will be announced and the medal awarded In each contest on Wednesday night. At 10:30 this morning the carious classes and a number of alumni in connection with the faculty assembled for the academic procession 'o the First Bsptist church to hear the bac:*, cslsureste sermon delivered before the college by Rer. Byron H. DeMent, D. D., of Greenwood. Arro wreck Dam Almost Beady for Usa. Now that the bulk of the concrete work on the Arrowrock dam tn Idaho has been done and the structure j needs only the addition ot a few minor details to make it ready for service, it is possible to get some adequate appreciation of the magni tude of this, one of the largest dams In the world. The dam, which ls shown in some interesting views in thh Jane Popular Mechanics Maga sine, ls built of reinforced concrete and ls nearly 350 ft. high at the high est point. The length ot the crest ls 1.060 ft.; the thickness at base, 24 J iL, and the thickness at the top, 16 ft. .Something Uko 600,000 cu. yd. of concrete went Into tho structure and 250~O00 cu. yd. of excavation was ner esssry to get the foundations down to the solid granite. 0 ft. below tho bed ot the rived. It ls built in the form of a curve with th? convex side up stream so h tat the structure docs not depend on Its own weight alono for stability, but acta ar a horizontal arch in resisting Ute tremendous head of ./ater, transmitting the pressure to abutments that consist of tho granite walls of the canon Itself. The gates sad accessories alone 'weigh 1,000 tons and the spillway, which ts cap able of discharging 40,000 cu. ft ot water a second, riiulred ?he excava tion of 200,000 cu. yd. of material. Asian ( east Blockaded. Athens, June 1.-The British gov ernment has established a blockade over the coast of Asia Minor from the I Dardanelles to tao Straits of Sana nos ls was officially announced today by the British Legation. The block ade will go Into effect on Wednesday. Cool Why be without an Electric Fan any longer? It is a mistake to swelter when the twitch of a switch will fetch cool, refreshing breezes in an in stant. An Electric Fan is an inexpensive joy these hot days. You can use it in any room in the house. Why let children fret and older folk suffer when for less than a cent an hour an Electric Fan will make any day tolerable and insure restful, unbroken sleep through thc long, hot nights. You nally should ORDER your Electric Fan TODAY. Southern Public Utilities Co. PHONE 223 First American ^hip to Pass Panama Canal Torpsdoed off Irish Coast. Copyright Brown BroB. Captain J. S. Green Tho Nebraskan, the first ship to go brough th? Panama canal was thc Ictlm of a torpedo or rn4: . off the .nant of Ireland, Tuesday. May 18. The photograph herc shown of tho CHBPI was taken as sho went through he canal l i gala array. She was truck while about forty miles south vest of Fastnet, Ireland, and, down Lt the bow, she started back tb luecnstown. When tho vessel left San Francisco n August for her trip through the The .Vetraskar.. ?ki Panama canal there was much cere mony. The mayor christened her for tho trip. She is an American built, American owned, and American manned vesoo*. Sho was launched at Camden, N. J., In 1902, for the American-Hawaiian Line. Sh> is of 4.409 tons gross. 160 feet long, and 46 feet beam. Tho Nebraskan left New York for Liverpool on May 7 with a general cargo, under charter to tho Atlantic Transport Uno. for one voyage. She discharged her cargo and on May 24 left Liverpool In ballast for the' Dela ware Capes. ' Tho charter to the Atlantic Trans port linc expired when the Neb .-.dhan delivered her cargo in Liverpool. Sven though she might hava taken moni tions of war to England on her c*st ward voyage, sbc was strictly an American ship. .In ballast, bound fdr an American port when she was dam aged. Before the war the Nebraskan plied between New York and Hawaii. ?RAIN RATE WAR NOT A COMPLETE^ VICTORY lowevcr, Mr. Richards Well ?leased With Success of Meeting. Mr. Edward H. richards, manager if the Carolina Grain and elevator ompany. when Interviewed1 yester ay afternoon by an Intelligencer re porter, aald that the real atatus of the Tain rate proposition as decided by he petition of. tho Anderson Charn ier of Commerce, was not an abso ute acQuleaenco in the request con si ned In the petition. It was a com iromise which leaned In favor of the etltloners since a 20 per cent charge s added to the through rate on the toppage tn transit privileges. What the petitioners would liked to ave had would haye been a full com liaoce with the petition, when in fact hey nave - received an BO' per rent ompllance. whereas In most of the raia producing states, if not all of them, a full 100 per cent allowance is occured. Mr. Richards states, how ever, that he is satisfied with thc com promise and especially so since the railroads have necessarily had to act without all the Information in the precises which good equity would have warranted. Noise Eliminated hy New Street Car Wheel. Elimination of thc greater part of the noise that now accompanies the operation ot street cars and elevated and subway trains is a prospect of the inmediate future as the result of a new noiseless wheel which ls de scribed, with illustration, in the June Popular Mechanics Magasino. A street car equipped with wheels of this' kind and recently subjected to test runs at Portland, Me., is reported to have run as noiselessly as an au tomobile. The wheel s made of two sectons. and ls Ia effect a wheel within a wheel. The Inner section is fixed tb the axle whllo the outer sec tion takes the bearing on the track. Between the two sections ls a cush ion of rubber of special composition which absorbs thc vibrations caused by the ?rind of the tire on the rall and by Irregularities in the track, and it ls this t nat gives the wheel Its noise, less qualities. VIOLATING FISHING LAW Mr. E. H. ilnMlimr ITslag Net in Sk in da River. Game Warden Thackston arrived hi the city on Sunday and with Sheriff Asheloy began to make a round of different ?ectlons ht the county to see If the fish laws were belog en forced. One vislotor waa found as the result of the expedition. Ou Monday morning Mr. E. H. Holliday was discovered on the Saluda river whore it ls said he waa fishing with a net. He admitted that the nets were his properly and Stated that he would be In Greenville Monday morning at 10 o'clock to answer to the charge. The net waa taken to Greenville and is In the office bf the sheriff of that county. * CARO OF THANKS We wish to express dur. thanks to the many friends who visited U'M showed us kindness and gave help during the last illness of our father. Capt. J. T. Busby. Wo also want to thank friends for the beautiful floral tributes. THE CHILDREN. Misa 'Lucy Edwards has returned from a two months tour of the west. .,