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THE INTELLIGENCER ESTABLISHED 1864). Published every morning except Monday by The Anderson Intelligen cer at 140 West Whittier Street, An derson, 8. C. SEMI-WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER Published Tuesdays and Fridays Entered as second-class matter April 28. 1914. st the post offic; at Anderson, South Carolina, under the Act of March 3. 1879. ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCHES Telephone .321 SUBSCRIPTION BATES DAILY Ons Year .$6.00 Six Months .2.50 Three Months . 1.25 One Month .42 One Week .10 SEMI-WEEKLY Ons Yeer .SI.GO Six Months .76 The Intelligencer is delivered by carriers In tlie city. Look st the puMnted label on your paper. The date thereon shows when th? subscription empires. Notice date on label carefully, and if not correct please notify ns at once. Subscribers desiring the address of their paper changed, will please state In their communication both the old and new addresses. To Insure prompt delivery, com plaints of non-delivery In the city of Anderson shoiild be made to the Circulation Department before 9 a. m. and a copy will be sent at once. All cbecks and drafts should bu drawn to The Anderson '.ntelligenccr. ADVERTISING Rates will be furnished on applica tion. No ti advertising discontinued ex copt on written order. The Intelligencer will publish brief and rational letters on subjects of general Interest when they arc ac companied by the names and ad dresses of the authors and are not of a defamatory nature. Anonymous communications will not be noticed. Rejected manuscripts will not be re turned. In order to avoid delays on account ot personal absence, letters to Tho Intelligencer Intended for publication should not bo addressed to any indi vidual connected with the paper, but simply to The Intelligencer. THURSDAY, JUNE X 1915. There's nothing wooden sbout Woodrow. ? ?' 25,000.000-year-old Serpent Reaches Nsw York.-Headline. The devil! ? . o We trust Gottlieb von Jagow Hebe Gott more than be does a jag. Begin Work When War ls Over. Headline. You're in for a long vaca tion, brother. That Spartanburg thief who stolo a tnh of lard believed in getting the fat of the land. Poison Victim Says He Didn't Seek Death.-Headline. Usually death does tbs seeking In such esses. Wc suppose lt ls celled the theatre of war because of the battles staged and there are so many wings. Olrl Gets Shot as She- Talks of War. -Headline. Would have been better lt she had gotten only halt shot Von Tirplts ls chsracterlsed ss a "typical old sea dog." Calm yourself, ya shades ot, Stade Bonnett, Cspt. Kidd and other pirates of old. A Kew York State aviator fell to his death In a cemetery. Let us hope bia spirit flew in the direction op posite from that in which he fell. Result of Zeppelin raid over Lon don: one Infant, one boy and one woman hilled. Wonder lt the Kaiser Will give tho Lord his share of credit for that brilliant feat? Greenwood County Is to organize a split-lug. drag association. We un derstand Brother Bill Gardner. Jr., of the Journal is waiting to find out who is going to 'split the logs before Joining. ? ?? -o Colonel Aftermath reports: "Along tho southern paragraphical front, there ts virtually no change." Neither ls there any on either the right or left flank.-Spartanburg Herald. Nautically speaking, neither ls thor? any a-stern, port or starboard. Germany hus Issued a "White Book-- in which lt sets forth alleged atrocities committed by Russian sol diers invading Prussia. Wonder hew much tba crimea said to have bees committed lack offsetting. Osman outragea perpetrated ta Belgium. .- .. _\ "V. \E WHIMPER GAMENESS. One of tue finest exhibitions of nerve we have Been, in Hie clrcuni staiwes now prevailing in the busi ness world, and espeeially for a news paper, UH HO business in the eountry baa felt more k^<-tily the pinch of lian! times, i- that shown by The Florence Times, u hustling dully newspaper published In the thriving metropolis of the greut Pee Dee sec tl M. Florence, in getting out a "Greater florence Rdltiou." TII?H sp><ia| edition comes -12 page? btrong, which is u mammoth paper for a town the size of Florence and a plant (lie capacity of ihut of The Times. A perusal of the sfveral bright sections of the puper reveals a w< ?Ith ol information with refer ence to the resources of the splendid Beet loll of country, rich In agricul tural resources, blessed with gv . climate HIM! fortunate in location ? i respei ts railroad transportation. Somebody on The Times hus been ut work, und, whoever he is. he knows his business. While the mechanical appearance of the edition is excel lent, the subject matter ls the n-ul feature of the paper. Various sub jects have been treated by persons well versed in the braiu-he* cover ed by their writing upon all topic covered in the edition. An editoriul in thia issue of The Tlnii s, which ls In Hu- nature of a foreword for Hie booster edition, is a clarion eall lo business to "burk up" willoh ls unexcelled by anything we have read In many moons. The Hplrlt exhibited ls so flue that we re produce herewith the editorial In i|ueHtion : "The extraordinary times through which we are passing huve fallen with heavier burden upon the South. perhupB, than upon any other section of the United States. By no means the least extraordinary or remarkable circumstance In connection with (lint fact ls that the South baa shown a power of reslstence to panic, a sta bility during depression and leainenev und recuperative power, which is truly astonishing. "Nothing can argue more atrongly the fundumeutal soundness ot South ern business, cud the resourcefulness of Soul hem business men than do these manifestations. "We have found that our business and our institutions were built upon a rock and not upon the sand. They were not to be beaten away by the tempest o( fear that swept the land like a gale before the face of the storm of approaching war. "With every business prospect bright and abundant crops smiling from every Held, with confidence strong and nothing to threaten the way, wa looked out upon a year of unprecedented prosperity and prog ress. With the first crash of war business was paralysed and the very abundance of our great cotton crop but served to -further depress Un value. The crisis was the severest that the New South had ever met. How she has met it is now a matter of history. She met lt heroically and triumphantly, and today she faces the future with a finer tread and surer purpose and more certain destiny than ever before in her history. " 'The times that try men's souls' bring terror only to the weak; to the strong they bring opportunity. "We believe that South Carolina recognizes this splendid fact and tb t she baa met and ls meeting that op portunity more than half way. We believe, and have believed, that the people of Florence, the business men, professional men, the working men. the farmers and God bless 'em, the women, are imbued with this spirit of self-reliance and community of in terest that makes that opportunity at tainable. They are resolved upon seising and making the best of lt. "This spirit prevadea every activity and the heart of every dweller in Florence we verilv believe and lt is this that makes Florence In truth a leader In every forward movement in this great section of South Caro lina pf which she ls the geograph ical centre as she ts the point of the crossing of the ways. "Convinced that this was so. we came to the conclusion that this was the time to "buck up" and let the country xnow that Florence, for one. was planning for bigger things-In thc midst of - war was planning for peace, us lt were, and we Invited our friends and patrons, the business men of Florence and of our elster towns of Florence County, to Join us In this movement for exploiting to tue world the advantages of Florence and Flor ence County and the opportunities which they offered to those who would come among us. The "Greater Florence Edition" of The Dally Times contains the re sponse to that cal). That it Was gen erous, we acknowledge moat graceful ly, that lt was splendid we protest to all those who scan these pages, that. it proven our caie and our contention we assert without fear of contradic tion. It exempt I fie? the spirit of pro gressiveness and confident strength which animates the spirit of tbe com munity. As an expression of this spirit, we offer yon. dear reader, our salutations through thia "Greater Florence" edition of The Dally Times. -'Here's how!*" _ Pertinent Query. (IAncaster Newa.) The Anderson Intelligencer ls worthy of Its name, but lt never con tained a more pertinent query than this: Wonder hew the little doggie which hasnt s muxsle Jammed over hts head would feel when "being chased through the streets ? by an officer with a pistol If be knew how little ls being done to destroy the fly, which ls a million times more dan gerous to the health ot tb* com manila.. " RECESS ( Rudy ai God of our fathers, Lord of our tar-ll Ueneatti whose awfi Dominion over p Lord God ot Hosts, l est we forget-les 1 a i -called, our na vi On dune and bea Lo, all our pomp ol ls one with Nine\ Judge of the Nation Lest we forget-les GERMANY AGAII (Augusta <'li ron ldc. ) lt looks more und more us tr the I war will riaally resolve ltseir Into ii situutiou where Germany will be ulniost literally, In the words ot the kulser, fighting 'against a world of enemies." Italy is now a hard uml fust mem ber or t.'r late triple alliance - which has become the quadruple alllunee. will? iain or the tour powers bound to muke no peace or peace terms without the consent ot the res;. The entrance ot Italy ls regarded as cer tain to drag in her close friend and blood relative Hon ma nia. sooner or later. And ir war does l lanie up again in the Balkans, all the little countries lately ullled against Turkey may once more tight side by side. There is no more expectation that Bulgaria will cast her lot with the Teutons, in spite of her bitter grievances against Servia and Greece. She may decide almost any time to plunge in and seize the territory wrested from her in the second Balkan war, after she had won I* in the first. Greece's neu trality is wavering, since the king, with his pro-German sympathies, has been taken seriously ill. There are signs that the former premier Veniz eloB. the strong man of Greece, w,io ls eager for a war of aggrandizement against the Turk, may be restored to power. The Teutonic ailles S re already at war actively with seven nations-F/us PRESS CC Taft's Peace Machine. (Charlotte Observer.) KM-President Tait seems to be mak in?; real headway lu his plans by which wars may be made Impossible in the future. At the head of 100 ot the most prominent men in the Knited States, he will preside over a meeting In Independence Hall. Philadelphia. June 1?. and at thia meeting lt is ex pected that the League of Nations will be organized. Mr. Taft has been working up the plan for severul months and has at last met with the encouragement of leading men in and out of politics. President Wilson is an endorser, personally, but not of ficially. At the Philadelphia meeting an organized movement will be I launehed to Induce the Knited States | to join a league of all the great na- i tiona, binding the signatories to agree ! to certin definite lines of interna tional action, the moat important of which hs that the powers joining the league use their joint military forces to prevent any on? of their number going to war precipitately. Toe other principal proposals, are first an inter national judicial tribunal and au In ternational Council of Conciliation, for questions that are not considered triable In a Judicial trbunal. It Is i. * Improbable that Mr. Taft may yet find himself in control of a machine through which he may be prsstlcal dictator of the world's peace. Ton Tlrplts, Typical Nea Bog. eWorld's Work.) Admiral von Tirpltt's character ls chiefly that on an old salt. Wtth his forked beard, his large, round face, his huge bulk, he physically looks the part ot Neptune. With a genuine sailor, he can easily unbend; he can roar out a Bailor's duty with the best of them;- his business and his relaxa tions are n?utica; even hies favorite drink, according to tradition, ls North sea sea roam! If he has one en thusiasm, it Is the British navy; he admires its history. Its traditions, Its great achievements. If fate In recent years has transformed him Into an Anglohcbe. tbst certainly lt not his chosen rois; for Nelson, Drske, Haw kins and the other great British ses rovers becsme the guiding Influences In his life. Moreover, he likes not only English naval Ideas, Cut England Itself; his children have gaiu?d their educaUon, In port, in England This Inclination, according to hts advisers, hs has transfered to the United States. Oar Universities. (New republic.) Tbs University ot Pennsylvania bm? IONAL rd Kipling.) known ?if old, ung battle-line, ul Hand we liold aim and pine be with us vet, t we forget! es melt away, Hand sinks the tire; F yesterday fell and Tyre! s, spare us yet. t we forget! N ST THE WORLD stu. Frunce, Great Britain, Italy Bel gium, Serrula ?uni Montenegro and constructively with Jaran and Portu gal. Tlie entrance ot 'tollman's, Bul garia and Greece weald make u league of twelve enemies. Such u ring of foes, it might seem, would soon render Austria-Hungary Incapable or effec tive resistance, and finish the work of taking Constantinople and prostrating Turkey, leaving Germany alone the titanic task ot defending her frontiers against overwhelming odds. The appalling nature ot such a struggle is all the more impressive when the tull scope nf this possible "duodecimal alliance " is considered. Reckoning the twelve hostile coun tries and their colonies, Germany would be arrayed against much more than half thc world's fires, and near ly half the world's population. If we reckon together, Germany, Aus tria and Turkey, there ls a total' of 136,000,000 people against 800.000,000 out of the earth's estimated popula tion of 1,730.000.000. If we figure on Germany alone, at last standing at bay against such a pack of foes, it will be G7.0OO.00O people against SOO. OOO.000. 11 If Germany can win against such a combination as that, she may truly be said to have conquered the world, making trivial in comparison all the conquests of the Greeks under Alexan der, the RomanB under Caesar and the French under Napoleon. )MME>?T made rapid progress in the last gen eration. It has built vur buildings. It has improved its equipment. It has engaged a splendid corps of profes sors to instruct au ever increasing number of students. It has improved its curriculum, liberalized its teach ing, and in a moral as well as In a j material sense placed itself among the leading universities of America. All this, however, ls ot little value so long as the control or the university ls re presentative not of tlie whole people of Pennsylvania but solely of "the ruling class," of a sinai! group willing to give and able to get, with Indus trial power, political privileges, and see lui prestige. There is no repre sentative of labor on the board. There are. few if any representatives of rad ical thought of small business of the farmer. Tb? university is run by the people who raise the money; and these men, consciously or unconscious ly, invest their capital In the busi ness of making public opinion. It remains to be seen whether in the long run public opinion will permit itself to be made. Hungary. (Chicago Tribune.) The suggestion that Hungary ia dis couraged and seeks a separate peace witn recognition of its nationality, al though made by men Inclined to sober thought and In the way ot possessing information, seems to be made of the flimsiest material. The fate of the small nation in Eurone bas not been envdable slnco August. 1914, and there ia no promise that lt will b-i more en viable when the powers hava arrived at a point where tim determination of their quarrels ls In sight, lt ia extreme ontlmlsm to believe that there will be any protection superior to might, and peoples rather than es tablish a precarious nationality may more wisely sefk the cover of the most powerful coalition they can en ter. Leaks os Farm. (News and Courier.) The Dallas Morning News makea no mistake when it says ?that ono of tho big leaks In the shape of money paid out as expense on the farm is doe to needless damage to machinery and Im plements. ' There are thousands of farmers who have to plead guilty to th? charge of neglect of farm machin ery. Tits Idea ?sams to bo wide spread that most farms of farm ma chinery can stand any sort of treat ment and can bs exposed to any sort of weather. It la an Maa that costs those who entertain lt a good many dollars that could readily ba saved. . LOOK AT THE BACK! That's what tells the story of good tailoring. It's much easier to "put up a good front" than a smooth back. In the back, front, fabric and work of our Spring suits, style and fit are all united. And you'll get style and fit in the very lightest fabrics here. Our Mohairs, Palm Beaches, Crashes and Silklikes tell the same story of quality tailoring as do our Serges and Worsteds. High mercury suits $5 to $10. Light serges and worsteds $10 to $25 mTUJSlmu?Mm ????????++??++??????? ? ? ? ? WIT AND HUMOR. * ? ? ?+???+????++??++???*?? When Mother (?ot Kt nug. This story is vouched for hy M?BS Margaret Foley, th- Boston t-iiiirage worker. It concerns a binull maid wno hud n way of saying startling thing'. Not long ago the family expected a visit from a relative- distant .'ousin from the roomy wes*. "Now," said the mother, "don't you dare say a word ir" you see Cousin Jim eating wirti his knife." All through the duiner tho little maid gave the visitor her closet at tention. She notlcaJ thu*, his man ners were faultless; ttiut he aie as politely and correctly as it kings and queens had been his ta hiemales. And then she turned to her mother. "Well, ma," Bhe gravely i>aM, " I guess aomeboly stung you, all right; he didn't use his kt!'fe once." Same True Story. Here is a story told for professional platform people by a l.oston Yale man: Oue day a viaiting clergyman* who was to preach before the students at Yale University, askei hov/ long he was expected to tala. "Of course, we put no time limit up on you." rep'led President lliutley. with his usual pump handle geatuie, "but we have a feeling here nt Yale that no souls-are saved-aft,i?r the first 20 minutes." Only a "Trifle Lasy. A lawsuit was recently in full swing, and during its progress a wit ness was cross-examined as to the habits and character ol the defen dant. "Has Mr. March a reputation for being abnormally laity? ' a:iked coun sel briskly. "Well, slr, it's this wav "Will you kindly answer .he ques tion asked?" struck iu t.?i lareelble luwyer. "Well, slr, I was going to say It's this way. I don't want to do the gentleman In question any injustice, and I won't go so far. as to say. fair, that he's lazy, exactly; but if it re quired any voluntary work on hts part to digest his food-why, he'd die from lack of nourishment, slr." A Prize Bub j. Little Minnie was having a birthday party and some of the little guests were discussing the merits ot the ba bies in their bornes. "My little sister is only 5 months old," remarked Annie, "and shu has two teeth." "My little sister," said Nellie, "ls only 6 months old snd she has three." Mannie was silent for a moment, then she burst forth: "My little sister hasn't got .any teeth, yet when she does have some they're going to be gold ones!" ??-O' Unlucky Hoary. A New Englander waa complaining to a friend the hard luck encountered by his son Henry. : "Now, take the last case," he said, "Just aa soon as he went to Boston to work Henry fell In love with a girl. 8he lived In one ot th" suburbs, and as soon ss Henry male ip his mind he liked her he up and bought a BO-trlp tlckot to her place and-" "And-" "Got turned down at the second call! The ticket wan left on his ham's! lt that alnt hard luck, what tar B tags st ed. One dsy, while her grand fa'her was paying a visit to Florence's home, the little girl said to him: "Gran'pa, your talk about 'persever ance winning' ls all 000*6880." "Well, well, child!" cried fae grand father, "why do you say that?" "Why." said t*e little girl, "I've worked all the afternoon blowing soap bubbles and trying to pla them oa mother's hat " Bibles decorated with a portrait of Marshal von Hindenburg ara being sold lo Germany. ._ VIEWS OF SEVERAL PROMINENT AMERICANS ON GERMAN NOTE NEW HAVEN, CONN.-The reply of the German Govern ment is irresponsive and inconclusive. WM. H. TAFT, Former President. NAHANT, MASS.-The German note doesn't seem to me satisfactory, or to meet in any way the President's note of May 15. lt is the duty of the President, however, to make reply, and to take such action as he shall deem proper. HENRY CABOT LODGE, Member Senate Foreign Relations Committee. YAZOO CITY, MISS.-If the German note is correctly re ported it is a mere evasion of the question at issue. JOHN SHARP WILLIAMS, Member Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. WAPETON, N. DAK.-As the German Government has not seen fit to either express its views on the note sent by the President or to indicate what its future course will be, we are as far from a settlement of the difficulty as ever. However, I believe the two governments will reach an agreement on this question. P. J. M'CUMBER, / ' Member Senate Foreign Relations Committee. r ? _ * SAN FRANCISCO-The German reply to the American note puts the matter squarely up to the United States. I think it is now time for this government to maintain a firm position. JOSEPH R. KNOWLAND, Representative in Congress. ? ? STRAY SHOTS IN MOVIE LAND. ? ? When rogues fall out lawyers begin to cut melons. Auld acquaintance with a large wad is seldom forgot. We always like to quote threaten ing Scripture when it applies to tho other cbsp. When a small msn gets on a blgb perch he looks smaller than ever. It is always necessary to gamble in order to get something far noth ing. When a man is charitable through life the world ia charitable at his deaUj. When <e litigation it la best not to be too economic?? tn the matter of lawyers. Nobody loves a fat man with a lean pocketbook. It ia a wiso politician who caa make his constituents forget the carnpsign promises. The trouble wUh most of the advice ls that lt baa generally been offered at the wrong time. ! A man . can Insist that weaPfi ls a barden and yet break bis back) hold ing on to his share. j One charitable act will occasskanally canse a man to pat himself oto tho back for many mon tba. Many a smart uki who baa ruled his mother has roon-* it a different pro ? 'lion to govern a wife. in these days ot enterprise lt ls bat ter to gat room on tba grounsi floor than, at tai to?. ? I The Smalley'a have not yet com pleted their three reel picture "Scan dal" which Mrs. Smalley wrote es pecially for their company. The plot of tho story is woven about the events that msy happen as the direct result of people telling for fact what they only surmise because of cir cumstantial evidence. The story will leave a lasting impression on me minds of all who see it. Viola Lubln has Joined "The Black Box" company and ls playing a small part In the concluding installments of the Universal aerial. Miss Lubln, who ls the pretty daughter of AI Lubln, a theatrical manager, ls only 17 years of age. She waa visiting the the studios of the Universal com pany when Director Otis Turner saw ber and engaged her to appoar ia "The Black Box." ? ? * ODDS AND ENDS. ? ?_ ? In the middle of the last century lt was Ute correct thing to add to tho marriage notice tb? amount of tba fortune the bride brought to her hus band. Cooking reduces the digestibility ot meat, raw meat tsklng two hours and cooked meat requiring ou an av?res? four to dig*vt. Every year tba King of'Slam sends a contingent of Siamesa scholars to England to be educated at his ex pense. Abdul Hamid ls an accomplished painter and furniture maker. It takes ten hours for a ship to gat through tao Panama canal: