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onerirr i aKing Uun From Standard Oil Guard. "1 . y .:.v ? The Millehinuni. ? Nobody has the k tautest idoa when. If everitlio war, of competition,- IK to cease. * It may be that ?omc?me men will llvp poly lo tlfbashts. not nedda ia a' beatific contemplation"' ol' their own ideal?. Sometime tho vallek'a may be exalted - and, the ,*, mountans brought low,-and we shall live on high plateau of co-operative equality, when, to supply'his wants." h. mari will have only to touch a bntton and the machinery of government will do the I rest.-"Truth-Business and Pollti-J cal," Henry D.' iBstabrookv In Na 11ional Magazine for August. BIBLES BIBLES BIBLES .We have a splendid line of Cambridge and Bagster k Bibles and Testaments. FANTS BOOK STORE ? - . .. ? _ 'i^lW?^^^?i I^^^^M^^MS^- F?r 'mcn mo# come -JI^? ' and men may ?o. But I ?o on forever. . ff Tho S?an?arcI Bc?cr?^ >w Imitations of COCA-COLA come and 9 . 'jjoT-rione?astmore than a few basons. WSalusha? beert going on for 29 years- , ? . yet COCA-COLA, unchanged in name \ or self, keeps ito old friends and makes ^^^1^ ^^^^^^^^^^^ v COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY ANDERSON^ S, C. 122 W. Earl SL :-: . Pfc?h?137, EXPERT ADVISER ON DRESS Woman Ha? Achieved Succeta in Oc cupation That la Something of a Novelty. I heard lately of a pla? adopted by one young woman that has worked out well with her, and might be of use to someone else, says a writer tn the Pittsburgh Dispatch. She lives at home, but must help the family excheq uer, sod this is how she does it: Her ono talent lay in ber good taste in dress. She had an instinctive feel ing for what waa becoming, not only for herself but her friends, and was often coiled in to consult over a pro spectivo new gown. So that is what she determined to do professionally. 8be lot her friends know that for a certain siira she would glvo advice on costumes, helping to arrange a whole vnrdrobo, and from friends she soon branched out to regular clients. She goes to the house of her em ployer and looks over everything the lady has. Sho gives definite Instruc tions as to what each dress or ault or waist requires to bring it up to par. She advises as to the most becoming styles abd colors, and lists what new garments are necessary. Of course she regulates tho expenditure according to the purses of her various clients. She baa made s auccess. Many wom en do not know what to wear, what snits them best, what to put together. Sho tells them. She also saves them a good deal by her cleverness In adapt ing what looks h : . 1 -. n. She can alao tell where you shoe-? go for mate rials; she has addresses of tailors, dressmakers and aewlng women, and known they con do what they promise She is thoroughly up in her chosen Job, in fact She also makes a point of attending carefully to the details of a costume, making sure that each item will harmonize.* The work is ex tremely 'Interesting, and lt payB both her and her clients. EXPLAINING THE WILD MAN Curious Individual Learns All About Him, Including Reason for His Wildness. "The won-der-ful cu-ri-os-l-tee which yon see.before you, lay-dees and gen tle-men," announced the sideshow lec turer, in tones admirably adapted for talking down from a great altitude to the subnormal understandings of the masses, at the same -time waving an indicatory hand toward the hype rp ea Blmlstio looking personage In the steel barred cage, "ls the Wild msn of the Everglades, mptused at the cost ot seven lives and eleven thousand dol lars in geld! Thu-ree times a day this savage monster leaps upon gur rest hunks or r-r-r-raw and r-r-r-reeklng flesh and devours them with terribie' ferocity and bloodcurdling yells!" "What caused the cuss to go wild and live on raw meat?" asked a sharp* nosed ru ralla t, Interestedly. "He lived on hts brother-in-law for five yara and lt made him wild when his long suffering relative would no longer support hun. He eats his meals raw because he ls too lexy to cook them himself."-Kansas City Star. Changing Dist of the Chines?. Americans who have been influ enced by the Orient to the extent of taking their tea clear, without milk or sugar, will be astonished to learn that the Occident is now bent on teaching the Chinese to use milk with their decoction ot tea leaves-and con densed milk at that An enterprising condensed milk company ls pushing the campaign snd expects to be successful. This con cern has already introduced con densed milk Ice cream to the Chinese, and they like it so wall that many of the' restaurants keep it always on hand. Practically no fresh milk is to be had In China, although the naUves seem familiar enough with the virtues of both tho fresh and the condensed article. Perhaps after all of the Orientals have taken their tea clear because thora waa no milk to put in lt and not because they thought the addition of milk ruined the beverage. 4 Nsw Uses fer Old Rope.' Old rope, like old tin cana and other th haga generally considered as waste,.has its special market and vies, snd ir. every seaport the collecting and classifying of old rope is an im portant business. Rope that is cov ered with heavy graphite or tar is even more valuable today for making oakum tkflightly tarred material while htm'p rope with the original h*?vy coating of tar v?rn off by weathering ls often used for bag pa* per. A shiail percentage of untarred hemp rope, ?sed in its prime for holst* lng and other' purposes, is being con verted Into cigaret paper in Europe. Scraps and waste from old tarred rope, and also old oakum removed from seams of ships, are now ?sod for ?liking boards. . -., Bamboo Blooms Slowly. Certain species of bamboon flower only once ir. ?bout fifty-five years, and strangely enough, all the trees to \ locality flower about tho seme Urne. Those In Burma began flowering last year, and now they sro ?ll in blossom. Tba last time this species flowered was in 1859-60. They will now di? and those that spring from tbs seeds born ot this flowering wiU tike their places and will not flower until about 117?. They may flower aporadically st o?h~ bet the seed does not mature, ter the bamboo cannot ferti Bab tue! WANTED 2 8 7 New Subscribers TO GET A SET OF SIX Oneida - Community Souvenir Spoons cw m Guaranteed Forever. PAY SIXTY-FIVE CENTS And Get Spoons To the first 287 responsible and reputable citizens of Anderson who sulv scribe for the Daily Intelligencer for THREE MONTHS, pay 65 cents, and agree to pay ten cents each week for twelve weeks we will deliver this hand some set of Six Souvenir Spoons FREE. This offer is LIMITED to TWO HUNDRED EIGHTY SEVEN New Sub scribers. First come-first served. \Vhen quota is finished no more Spoons on this proposition. O?t-of-Town Subscribers Owing to our inability to collect from weekly subscribers by mail we would have to have the money in advance from all out of town patrons. Haily Intelligencer Anderson, S. Cc