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THE INTELLIGENCER ESTABLISHED 18W. Published every morning except Monday by The Anderson Intelligen cer at 140 West Wbltner Street, An derson, S. C. SEMI-WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER Published Tuesdays and Fridays L. M. GLENN_Editor and Manager Entered as second-class matter April 28, 1914, at the post office at Anderson, South Carolina, under thc Act of March 3, 1879. ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCHES Telephone .3211 SUBSCRIPTION BATES DAILY One Year .$5.00 Biz Months .2. KO Three Months .1.26 One Month.42 One Week .10 SEMI-WEEKLY One Yeer .11.50 Biz Months . .75 The Intelligencer ls delivered by csrrlers In the city. Look at the [hinted label on your j paper. The date thereon shows when the subscription expires. Notice dste on label carefully, and If not correct please notify us at once. Subscribers desiring the address of their paper changed, will please state tn their communication both the old and new addresses. To Insure prompt delivery, com - plainte of non-delivery In the city of Anderson should be msde to the Circulation Department before 9 a. m. and a copy will be aent at once. AH checks and drafts should be j .T--x drawn to The Anderson Intelligencer. ADVERTISING Rates will be furnished on applica tion. No ti advertising discontinued ex cept on written order. The Intelligencer will publish brief and rational letters on subjects of gene-el Interest when they aro ac commented by the names and ad dressee ot the authors and are not ot a defamatory nature. Anonymous communications will not be noticed. Rejected manuscripts will not bs re turned. In- order to avoid deleye on account ot personal absence, letters to The Intelligencer Intended for publication should not be addressed to any indi vidual connected with the paper, but simply to The Intelligencer. TUE8DAY, JUNE 8, ?lt Clean Living Worth $26.000 to WII rd.-Headline. First time we ever heard the worth of morality figured ia doliera. A New York judge sentenced a wayward woman to eternal sobriety. That would he a sobering sentence for some folks we know. Motor Party Nabbed for Taking a Drink.-Headline. Moral : When ^rinking Interferes with motoring, leave the car In the garage. DtsftaOjea state the Russians are astfcring terribly from German gases. Rutslan whlBkcrB turned up over the ts^i and/caught under the hat band ? 4., * II ?ia 4.1/ make a mighty good respi te ^ Devrlopinx atlas: Prints I V, |? m ? L1 t?t eu?' ?ru",n *?D*teb? says all the AOLNi the Medici family haye volun ?NBBUGC^, K war duty. We dont know sm",. ""^^out the Medici family, but M 1 ?nds like they ought to be ?=jrdt announces sn ext year. Americana es notated to see this dis every a-The State. It abe before then, guess tly urge Either - , " ng convey "n W0t4ta. ^ t in a wis?, kMVf thB g>rdwl erity you ould feel Just aa inorrow. -, ever, no matter iter on depi school master We Pay sensational ketti aye 'a ta a Wis* tiger. 4 Cid trailed over a third woman We heard tt """" '' ' .. "J l^saed tresa official sources "**|"?<a some days ago that the 7 tn the City by the Seo. SjjWjBMtates Ufe Saving Be E vf Sj Cl- to IB officers and men ot ^VHbgiHf ,t*mm*r Philadelphia, ^f?Ju?i?ut&t* Kw9a .?'aM onfor ^***P"*^ow ??a, Oa the other aide -, ? , _ atlantic men are being pre kjiOla i50|th medals for deeiroylag Ute , jthetr fellows. Great world! i to ask the newspaper mea uftjfg and Anderson not to WflTileld collars to the Chick PW ^^tfcering. Such apparel baa ien, too. the Illumina ON MOUE THAN ONE LEO. The New York ?Sun makes ? gal lant and hopeful effort to ?how that the whole Issue between the United State and Germany about the subma rine warf ace may bc reducid to the establishment of a single fact, name ly, whether or not the Lusitania was armed or unarmed on ber last and fatal voyage. If the ship carried mounted guns, as the German gov ernment alleges, then, says The Sun, the United States may have to recede from its most advanced position; if she did not, the German government. lt thinks, would bc ready to declare its regret for the sinking of thc ship and that the way would be opened for reparation by Germany for the losses Inflicted. It in very questionable whether even the mounting of guns for defensive purprzme would har? made the Lusitania a belligerent ship in the accepted meaning and Intent cf such a definition, while she was engaged rgeularly in passenger traf fic, but grant that side of the alterna tive to save unnecessary argument, and look now at the other. Suppose lt proved to the satisfaction and ac knowledgement of the German gov ernment that the Lusitania was not equipped with guns, does the German case, as made by Herr von Jagow, col lapse? The silaged armed condition of the Cunarder was but one of a sheaf of reasons advanced by the Ger man foreign office as technical justi fication of the sinking. It was alleged besides that the ship waa carried on the register or the British admiralty as a reserve cruiser, and that she was, therefore, always a belligerent. It was held, also, that she wss carrying contraband of war and merited de struction that this might not be used to kill German soldiers. And there btands the "war zone" proclamation, in which lt wgs announced that cvery-^iiostlle vessel flying the flag of a nation hostile to Germany would he attacked and sunk by German sub marines, If they could t>e reached. Thero is nothing to be gamed by spu (ialfklng on any one reason in the hope or expectation that disposal of that will qompose the situstion that has been crested. Germany sank th : Lusitania Just as she has sunk some ulxty other British merchant vessels in reptissl against Great Britain for the undertaking of that enemy to cut off food supplies from the German people, and lt is a waste of time ami tm aggravation to narrow the issue from thain general condition. If the question ls to be discussed at all lind there are some very excellent ressens that could be advanced to show why lt ought to be-it ohould be discussed on the very broad?st grounds. Germany could multtoly the legs upon which she would stand In Just i lieut ion of her campaign, as fest as they might be cut from under her, provided lt was conceded that ibo used of submarines against mer chant vessels waa permissible In any circumstances compatible with the in terests and the rights of neutrals It nay not be generally appreciated how weeping was the range of President Wilson'* protest against tho new rnethod of warfare. This paragraph rrom hts "Lusitania note" wilt show that: "Manifestly, submarines can not bo used against merchantmen, as the last Few weeks have shown, without an in evitable violation of many sacred principles ot Justice and humanity." It is possible to regard that as too : ompreh?nbive a condemnation of Ute it'w method of warfare, but lt ls no*. lOsslble to narrow the Issue it pre ?ents down to tho question ot whether sr not one destroyed ship-though that happened to be the Lusitania was aimed with guns. On the piolnt >f armament, moreover, there Is this hat would cntatftty be said: Every rossel that can plow the waves ls irmed for offensive agalast the sub narine, potentially. The bow nf a iwift ship is the most effective wes son against the under eeo boat. Ram ming is about the oe*r ??ode of at tack upon Ute fetbmerstbles that promises any resulta. Had the Lusi tania been armed with sans and sould sh? have brought them te train MI Ute submarine that appeared igalnst her, she would still hare done mach tetter la her own defense to have ran headlong, with- all speed, apon the merin? assassin, aiming to rip? ii open with her prow.--Charles ton Poet Rat Hobo Vomi It Oat Little David had always been re garded by bis father and mother ea being particularly smart and clever tor a child ?of tender years. One day while he was playing la front ot hts oom? a rough-looking tramp .appeared ind asked David very sharply where sis father kep( his money. He re plied that U waa all tn his waistcoat ia th? kitchen. A few minutes later the tramp came through th* doorway in a harry, very mea battered end looking sad, mot ' *: FORC If you see a tall fellow ahe; A leader of men, marchin And you know of a tale who Might cause his proud heat It's a pretty good plan to fo lt you know of a skeleton hi In a closet-guarded and In the dark, whose showing, Might cause grief and angi It's a pretty good plan to forj If you know of a thing that w Of a man or a woman, a ; That would wipe out a smile A fellow, or cause any gla< It's a pretty good plan to for IF WE FIGH1 (Chicago Tribune). Count von BerriBtorfT8 efforts to preserve peace for thia country In UH relations with Germany deserve recog nition. The German ambassador, al though embarrassed by the interrup tion in his means of communicating with his government, is extraordinar ily active in his endeavor to present to Berlin an accurate representation sot only of American demands but of the national sentiment behind the de mands. The most apparent error in Ger many's policy throughout the war is that it has considered only the pon lerables. In a world of sentiment it bas endeavored to create a' world of Tact, evidently not understanding that when the emotions are sitting as ludges facts make poor witnesses. Part of the German fury may be ex plained by saying that the Germans see facts too large and are enraged that the rest of the world does not Bee them at all or sees them too small. The elaborate endeavors to prove that the Lusitania carried guns, and the Insistence upon the fact that lt carried ammunition get nowhere against the American sentiment that the killing of noncombatants, women ind children ls murder without ex :use. 80 long as the Germans' decline to iee the noncombatants on the decks ind the Americans decline to see the immunltlon in the hold the opening [or deadly consequences ls wide. 3onnt von Bernstorff ls ! ying with ill his power to bring his government o understand that the American po sition is one which Ute American sen timent made lt obligatory for tho rovernment to take. We must try to iee the Connan side. The loss of life on the Lusitania is Irreparable, if not Inexpiable. For natcrlal damage done American prop irty Germany offers to make rec om jenHe. For the safety of American .ltlzons on tho sea hereafter lt would >e possible, with concessions on the >art of both the German and Amerl :an governments to provide. We do not believe there is s bit of lentlment In America for a war with lerntany merely to punish that na lon for the sinking of the Lusitania, rlowever outraged this country was >y the destruction ot the vessel, there ian been no dominating cry from Qe|tjBfocji^UhM?itl^ they would go + * ? ODDS AND ENDS. ? ? ? ?*??#*?**?+?*?**??*?** Physlcsl activity in England la at ta greatest when Ute average tem pe r iture ls about 60 degrees, mental ac tvity when the average temperature s a little below 40. "Hurrah!" waa originally a fighting xelaniatlon. and is derived from the Karonie "HureJ"-."The Paradise" he bellet being that valiant fighters rent straight to heaven lt killed. The phrase "to lionise a man"-to tare at him as a wonderful person irose whee a show ot liena was the treat attraction at the Tower of Loo Ion and avery one went aud stared." Your salary ls your "salt money." loldlers once received salt as part ot heir pay. When the salt waa com outed for cash the latter waa called 'sal erl um," salt money, or "salary ???<?.. ? Dutchmen are the heaviest smokers a the .world, ana ney are followed >y the Inhabitants ot the United Shaving was introduced among the tomans about B. C. 300. The first ihave was deemed the entrance te nan hood and celebrated with great ettivtuec. Marmal moa. good fighters and ot boferlc temper, have red and spotted lager nails. ? PALMETTO SQUIBS. ? Finding son something to do dor ag the semmer months is the next dgr fr rael sat.-Bpraianburg Herald The Jun? gradu?tes wUl now have "step down" ead give place to thc te Bride?.-Unto* Tarnee. ?ET IT ad of thc crowd, ' ig fearless and proud, sc mere telling aloud i to in anguish be bowed, rget it. idden away kept from the day whose sudden display, nish and lifelong dismay, ^et it. mild lessen the joy (\r\ or a boy, or the least way annoy iness to clo)', get it. -Selected. r GERMANY Into the trencbeB In Flanders to avenge their countrymen. And we do not think there ought to be such a cry. Wars undertaken hy a democ racy munt liaMe or ought to have other cause than ons of emotions outraged by a catastrophe, however tragic. ~ War, in the faulty human scheme of things, can be justified only as the Instrument by which a nation works towards its destiny or averts itt Tate. Thin excuBe ls conceded only by nationalists, who, praise be, so long as the human scheme of things remains so Immeasurably away from perfection, remain in the majority. War then. If Americans are to think if it as impending, ought to be con sidered In the light of our national nterest and national egotism. We re lect tho idea of a peaceful and com nerclal war as humiliating and abas ing. If we fight it must be with ho nan sacrifice and In human suffering. 3ave us from the obloquy of a trades nan's war when other nations, con iclops of their peril or of their rigbts, ire offering their best and strongest Is sacrifice to be demanded of us o uphold a matter of International aw when to the knowledge of any nan the law ls upon'the point of be ng changed to follow the course of nventlon in the instruments of mak ng war? It we fight let there first be the Inn conviction that the wonderful lerman organization of society, with ts military socialism and its indoml able purpose, threatens our loose lemocracy and ts emphasis of the ndlvidual, his will, worth and happi less. Let us be convinced that the ?verthrow of the nations opposed to ?ermany would mean the release upon is of th? terrific powers ot this cen ral European military empire, young ind strong and determined. If we go to war let lt be because ve see an embodied and threatening nenace to our form of life, and not lecause in the development of the lubmarine and the wireless and in he new' Importance of the ammuni ion factory International law finds tself out of touch with brents and inpotent to do Justice. Certainly we can und a working ad ustment of disputed questions to ?ridge u: over the time of stress. If re go to the final arbitrament let lt >e with the consciousness that we ire working out our hatlonsl destiny md working for our right to live as ve wish to live. ????????????????A*?* * 4 ? wrr AND HUMOR. ? r ? >?*??*****??***??*??? ? Ne Use fer These. While a travelling man was wait ng for an opportunity to show his amples to a merchant tn a HtC ) back roods town In Missouri a customer ame In and bought a couple of nlght hlrts. Afterward a long, lank 1 uni te rm an. with his trousers stuffed tn LIS boots, said to the merchant: "What was them 'ere that feller ?ought r* "Night-shirts. Can I sell you one or woT" "N'aup; I reckon not," said the Mia ourlan; "I don't set around much ..nights." -e ? Arbitration. A peaceable man tn a steel town ot ' en n sylvan la came upon two youths If Ming "Let me beg ot you." he ear testly besought, "to settle your dls nite by arbitration. Bach ot yon hooke half a dosen friends to arbl rate." Having seen the 13 arbitrators se eded to the satisfaction of bcih sides, he man of peace went on his way re olclng. Half an hour later he re urned that way. and was horrified to ind the whole sliest fighting, while n the distance police whistles could ie heard blowing and police rushing o the spot from ail quarters. "Merciful heavens! What's the mat er nowt" the peacemaker asked of aa sleeker. "Saure." said the maa. "the arbitra era are at work!" Cause far Weeder. ""*?? At a recent dinner te Irvin 8. Cobb, s New York. De Wolf Hopper satd: ie fi tho speakers here tale ev? > have said anything about the le ihet grace tba boxea. Their lag pr?sence remind ? me of a of. beautiful and soaUmeutal I heard e friend af mine ae on* day alter he had ?aaaai Somewhat Berren. "I'm thinking of entering the field ot literature." "afr friend, hesitate." "Why do you discourage me?" "The field of literature, in nine cases out of ten, wouldn't eren pro duce turnips." te lt Would Appear. Patience-It is said that an excel lent beverage, similar to tea, can he brewed from the common maidenhair fern. Patrice-It wovid come pretty near being green tea. wouldn't lt? -; Where the Danger Waa. "I'd croea the world for you, dear," said the young man on the parlor sofa. "Oh. that's all right," said the sweet young thing alongside of him; "but don't cross father." How He Escaped. The Mate-Sirens on the port bow, sb?! Ulysses-Pass 'em up! Beat lt! I sight a movlng-ptuture man hiding among the rocks. Right on Hsr Job. Huggins-They tell me Mrs. Hen? peck la a nest and tidy housekeeper. Guggtne-Why. yes] hsr husband can't even drop a remark at home bat what abe picks lt up immediately. ? Something In a Name. . fly ker-I wonder why the game bf .?ker ls so call efl? F. kor-I guess lt's because a fellow la apt to burn nts fingers when he gets tba wrong end of it WANTED TO KNOW. w-^sxaanawi^r tm W fi J ' Jm Bhd-Papa says if I will remain sin gle. I can bare everything my heart desires. He-Bot whet if your heart desires a hoabandT Ce. you have that, too? ?ireh 1? Lite. -and we don't think we could suggest a more suitable subject for the season. * Nor could anyone suggest more appro priate cloths with which to defy the mercury than these easy, breezy, weightless, warthless, heat-dispelling Palm Beach, Mohair, Crash and Silk like Suits. And the next great feature is the fit; it's there. Taken all in all they are the most fitting clothesl for you men who wish to be stylishly and comfortably and comfortably dressed. Prices from $7 to $10. r ':T"7" *>an faw.rtt ja Sam Umt Business Asset Is Com mand of Languages By GISELLE D?NGER, Ciicgo A valuable business anet1 is command of one or more foreign languages. Busi ness requires the personal supervision, the personal in terview with the foreign rep resentative who realizes the value of personal contact. To have command of French, Spanish or Ger man assists a young man or woman to progress with the firm. Dentistry, law, medicine and other like professions are elow and arduous because the student is rarely equipped to read or understand the phrasings of higher and foreign authorities, whose wolds are needful for study. Henea, much) valuable time is lost and the student makes slow progress. Foreigners arrive in this country, associate with Americans, attend, night schools and devote their minds to a study of oar language. Japa nese young men in particular seek situations as butlers, waiters and g?n?ral utility in order to be in contact with the language. I have met graduates! of colleges of Japan, men of high birth, priests and soldiers, merchants andi college students, engineers and theological students who have acquired the difficult American tongue. For intelligent young men and women there are opportunities as inter preters, stenographers, proof readers, copy holders, governesses, teachers, chaperons, professional, men and in many other vocations. Notably, the Spanish possessions and Mexican commercial, profes sional and mining interests are demanding assistance from students of Spanish. The first practical interest dates from the Cuban and Spanish war, when Americana flocked to Cuba and the Philippines. Clerical and professional men and women eagerly sought language schools and by con centration and application they soon acquired a certain knowledge, which waa developed later when they settled in their new homes. To train the mind in a study of languages is fine disciplina. The concentration a squired through this means is valuable in many ways, for* it is the mind that develops the successful man.' In one's spare moments a language may be hirned by means of a study at home through,excellent books for this purpose, the phonograph, or at night school. Contact tad study with natives is preferable, but many men learn as they can. ?*?-J It was Lord Bacon who said "reading maketh the full man," but ho failed to tell his public that loo much reading of a certain sort might make the reader "too full." I do not decry the reading of fiction. An old instructor of mine used "{to soy that during the winter months everyone should read solid books for the most part and do light reading in the warm weather. His theory was thal too muck solid reading during tho entire year tended to make ont mentally stodgy. The point I wish to snake, however, ia that mental intoxication, con sequent upon too great indulgence in tho printed page, is as bad ao phys ical intoxication. If we read too much fiction our taste is apt to become (vitiated. The summer is the time for fiction, but H ht also the time for the i country, for athletic exercise, for botanizing, for getting acquainted with that wonderful nature which ia ?ll about us. . ..KMH! < *, ? ?, i .j.,, . ? ,.., . ," . , ., ^ Tennyson's Remarkable Prophecy (From "Locksley ?all.") For i dipt into thc future, far as human eye could seej Saw tHe Vision of the world, and all the wonder that would be Saw the heavens fill with commerce, argosies of magic sills; Pilots of the purple twilight, dropping down with costly balis; Heard the heavens fill with shoutinj, and there rained a ghastly dew From the nations' airy navies grappling in the central blue; Far along the world-wide whisnrr of the south-wind rusvuur warm, With the standards of the people plunging through the thun derstorm. Till the war-drum throbb'd no longer, and the battle-flags were furl'd . *".'.'*.'