THE INTELLIGENCER ESTABLISHED im Published every morning except Munday by The Anderson Intelligen cer at 140 West Wbltner Street, An derson, 8. C. SEMI-WEKKLY INTELLIGENCE!! 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, nnder the Act of March 3, 187?. ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCHES Telephone .821 SUBSCRIPTION RATES DAILY One Year.$6.00 Six Months.2.60 Three Months .1.26 One Month.42 One Week.10 SEMI-WEEKLY One Year .11.60 Six Months .76 The Intelligencer is delivered by ?arriera In the city. Look st the painted label on your paper. The date thereon shows when the subscription expires. Notice date on label carefully, and if not correct please notify us st once. Subscribers desiring the address of their paper changed, will please state tn their communication both the old ?nd new addresses. To insure prompt deliver jr, com plaints of non-delivery In the city of Anderson should be made to the Circulation Department before Sara, -and a copy will be sent at ones. All checks and .'drafts should be drawn to The Anderson Intelligencer ADVERTISING Sate? will be furnished on applica tion. No tf advertising discontinued ex cept on written order. The Intelligencer will publish brief snd rational letters on. subjects of general interest when they are ac rompanled by the names and ad dresses of the authors and are not of a defamatory nature. Anonymous communications will not be noticed. Rejectod manuscripts will not bs re turned. In order to avoid delays on account of personal absence, letters to The intelligencer hVended for publication should not be addressed to any indi vidual connected with the paper, bat simply to The Intelligencer. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST ll, 1915. WEATHER FORECAST Local thunder' showers Wednesday and probably Thursday; gentle to moderate south winds. Life hi Greenville is Just a continual iKtlcai war. o ? Wondor how tho June bride li com ig along with the cooking. mio summer resorte will resort to ?vt anything In the kitchen. *~\V'hen marrluge ls a failure the dl rce lawyer Is prepared to dispute The trouble about some of these luted paragraphs la that the points invisible. -o 'What Another Year of War leans." Means moro ot what Sher said war ls. Hld Bottles ot Boer Inside Red Snapper.-Headline. How would you Uko to be a red snapper? And now they are charging old Noah w'ith committing tho first sin. Surely tho womon won't object. uther Burbar.'* has come out strong for eugenics. The Honorable Lu flier hereby cautioned that wo are talking about people, not potatoes, o Folks who aro continually grumb ling that tho roses have thorns ought to he. thankful that the thorns have ;e*4rhore Maids Popnlar.-Headline. And their one-piece bathing suits are a-close second in the race for popu larity, we doubt not. An earthquake has occurred in Europe. With so many other things 'in days, we suppose Mother Earth thought she bad to keep up with tho The GrsonviljH^HMl hsa discovered that. there is j^a*^ ailment called "Trombldioafs." Yoi* are likely to have most any kind of ?soaso in . Greenville. > ' .??'fr--; . . The Newberry Observer observes that one thing at least about the "European war ls certain, and that ls that lt is nearer an abd than lt was one year ago. '? fa t ? . ., JH-'LTIPLYING PKU'EN. Tho New York Sun, after an Inves tigation of tho farm produce situa-' tion around the Metropolis, r? ^-.irts that vegetables are more plentiful and cheap than they have been for many year?, but it isn't doing tho consum er any good. Potatoes, for example, which were j Helling at $4.25 a barrel wholesale ul year ago. art- now $1 a barrel. But J retailed in small quantities, they cos' $8 lo $10 n barrel. The New Jersey I producer ls only getting K4 cent* a ' barrel for them. Onions, which brought S3 a bushel wholesale last year, have been quoted at 25 cents a bushel, but the housewife doesn't pay any less. Tomatoes sell at 20 to 75 cents a nato, and the consumer pays .ton cent)j for four of them. And so' it goes * 1 Neither the producer nor the con sumer Is getting tho benefit of the. abundant Bupply. Vast quantities of j vegetables aro left to rot In the gar-1 .dons, or are fed to farm animals,1 while tens of thoo) ands of families are pinched for lock of them. Of course, tho evil is seen a- lin worst ii: New York, where the mid- ; diemen have a stronger grip on the i market thnn anywhere else. There ? are few facilities there for tho far mer an? gardener to reach the buy-t lng public directly, and Hie public it-,, self encourages high prices by buying in small quantities. The parcel post would improve tho situ?t'.??i but lt make slow headway agoii the Inertia of custom. In smaller communities, more di rectly in touch with farms and truck gardens, housewives are not so help less, prices are more reasonable, and the producer gets a fairer share of the profit. But still there ls room for improvement everywhere. The equit able di. Itrlbution of food products ls tho biggest oconomic problem in America. PHEBE'S ALL THAT (JOLUI "Nobody has yot era sod our palm with British or German gold," laments tho New Yor't Evening Post. "Let Messieurs the ubsldlzers begin." It ls strange, the number of editors In America who have been overlook ed in this lavish distribution of bribe money. For the gold is being .scatter ed right and left, there's no doubt. of lt. Tlie Cologne Gazette has ex- ! plained that the whole American press -ot course, with Gie exception of. tho German-American . papers-has been bought by British bankers leag ued with J. P. Morgan and tho "am munition trust" Miss Pankhurst has countered with the declaration that the Gormans havo subsidized a large j part of our press. Wo have the word I of German-American editora that 90. per cent of plain American editors are subsidized by Great Britain. W. | J. Bryan avers that the widespread ?ditoriale criticism of him and his polities ia paid for by tho powder manufacturers. Senator La Follette ^ay. i that the eastern press has been purchased by vast sum spent in steamship advertising. Altogether, lt must Indisputably bc. a Kr.-at year financially for American j editor?. But why, in tho name of jus tice, have the subsidizers discrimi nated against the papera hereabouts? Wo haven't got ours yet, and we haven't been able to find any of our ' contemporaries who havo got theirs. "HEAD TAX** TO HELP IMMI GRANTS. The suggestion of the federal secre tary of labor for solving the "man less land and landless man" problem sooras to be an excellent one. Ile simply proposes to uso tho tax paid ! hy arriving Immigrants to help dis- ' tributo those Immigrants around tho I country where they are needed and , where they will find congenial oppor- ] tunltles. I The "immigration hoad tax"; amounts ordinarily to about $10,000,- i 000 a year, though of course lt is far ' smaller at preeent while the war, checks the Immigration movement- ? This money, saya Sec rotary Wilson./ was never (intended as a source of in- . come to the government. There could < be no legitimate objection to using it; in protect h c the Immigrant and get ting him properly started in his new life and work. But aa a matter ot fact, he adds, money so utilized could be repaid, and the fund could thus be made "rotary,'' operating aa a permanent and ever in creasing endowment for the proper distribution of immigrants and their initiation Into American industry and and citizenship. A Pennsylvania priest has declined to aeeept a gift of $16,000,000. believ ing that he could not handle lt Judi ciously ' on account of hta advanced age. Pass K dawn this way. Rever end Father, ago is no consideration with us. A LINE o" DOPE Rufus Kant, Jr., started the hall to rolling at tho Anderson theatre yes terday afternoon when he bought the first ticket to the picture show. He was followed by many more and all tlnrlng the uflernoon and evening ? rowds filled the house. Those at tending stated that the picture.'* were good and that the service splendid. -o In speaking of his and Mrs. Peur inan's untoinohile trip through Geor gia and Mali mia yesterday, Mr. Pear man ?tated that one night they drove up to a hotel in AnderKonvilln and were arranging to spend tho night when an auto drove up containing the dead hody of a young girl und the un conscious form of a young man, they having be?n in an automobile acci dent Just beyond the town. Upon seeing these. Mr. and Mr?. I'earman went on to Amerleus for the night "Ahout 12 miles beyond Andorson yllle," stated Mr. Ponrman, "we saw the wrecked automobile and the plac where the accident occurred. The ear was a live passenger Case and was torn completely up. The place was at the bottom of a long and Hteep hill and there was a sand bed. There waa a crowd around tho place and some of them stated that Ute young man was going down the hill at about a 60 mile clip when he struck the sand and tho automobile turned a complete somersault. There were three other members in the party but they es caped serious Injury." "Ves, those roads over there are fine and they aro a great temptation to autolsts, but that ono lesson would be enough to warn all against speed ing, if they could ouly have seen it." "I was up at Henderson vi Ho one day last week." stated Mr. C. S. Sul livan yesterday, ".md at dinner one table was filled with Sullivans, there hoing 17 present. All of Ute people at the hotel took H for a Joke and we lind great fun over the incident. Among thoBe gathered around thu tablo were: Mri and Mrs. C. S. Sul livan, two daughters and son, Mr. Cullen Sullivan. Q. C. Sullivan, Mrs. Leila Sullivan two sons and daughter in-law, two sons of Mr. W. W. Sul livan, Mrs. N. B. Sullivan and son. Mr. Moore, Mrs. Wilson and Miss Wilson of Moore-Wilson company will leave today for New York where they will purchase a fall stock of goods. These represen U-tlves never stop In Philadelphia for purchases but go right on to New York for their supply. -o W. R. Wones. manager of the An derson Gas company, has tendered bis resignation and he and Mrs. Wones expect to move to Chicago Just as soon as someone is sent here to relieve him of bis work. Mr. and Mrs. Wones have mode many friends In the city who will regret to see them leave Anderson. -o The August Issue ot the Southern Public Utlltles company carries a pic ture and bas the following to say in regard to Mr. Carter, one of the mem 'bors of the present city council: "Mr. Robert Lee Carter, alderman irom Ward 6, was born at Rabun Gap, Ga, August 31, 1883, and ls tho oldest boy of tho family of eight boya and two girls. Mr. Carter has been a mill operative for twelvo years, and dur ing this tin. j baa held thc position of overseer of the card room for the East Macon Cotton Mills, at Macon, Ga., and assistant overseer for tho Anderson Colton Mills, of this city. "Leaving the cotton mill, he served for three years on the police force, [from which he waa elected alderman trom Ward 6. His majority in tho lat .t election waa 230 over a total ot 409 votes cast He ia a great worker .for his ward, and prides himself up 'on having secured the first paving and 'sewerage ever laid in Ward 61 He is now a memher of the Abattoir, Water and Light, Street and (Sanitary com mittees." ? o ' The Rev. Fred Tucker, ot Demorest, Ga., is spending a brief vacation in the city. Mr. Tucker waa ordained to the ministry tfsveral months ago, the ordination service being one of Ute last services presided over by the Rev. John F. Vines, former pastor of the First Baptist church, before he left Anderson for bia new field of labor in Roanoke, Va. -o Tho Rev. J.. W. S peake, pastor of St John's Methodist church, baa re turned after an absence ot aeveral weeks from the etty, which ho anent st McCormick conducting a revival. Mr. Speuke will conduct the prayer meeting services at St. Juhin's church Wednesday evening, and will tell of the great revival held at McCormick. -o Messrs. Spann J fling and Frank J. Rhody are taking a course hi cot ton grading at Clemson College They wilt speud one mouth at the In stitution learning ali about pulling and gradiug cotton. Mr. Rhody stated yesterday that there are about ?ti men from various parti of the State who aro taking the course in cotton grading. Tho demonstrations are given in the forenoon, and during the afternoon lessons are given in other branches, such as the study of catie, poultry, ute. O The Anderson Pure Food company, on North .Main street ls going to en tertain tho ladies of Anderson and vicinity Friday afternoon, from 3 to 7 o'clock with light refreshments; and take this opportunity of showing them the home of "Aunt Mary's Cream Bread," and the many other delight ful things to eat that they bake BO well. Tlie management haB gone to cont slderable trouble and expense to pro ville a spotlessly clean bakery In or der to insure tho highest mark of cleanliness and sanitary preparations for clean and wholesome bread, cakes and pastries. They have also provid ed the establishment with the very best of up-to-date machinery and master bakers; and with theso to gether with the very best of high grade ingredients of every kind the manufactured product ls bound to be of the very best. ,Since tho bakery has been perfected to thc high state that lt has attained, the m?nagement feels a certain de gree of pride In their SUCCCBS. hence their desire that the general public and the ladies in particular respond to their very cordial Invitation to at tend their "At home" Friday after noon next, botween the hours of 3 and 7 when light refreshments will be served. COMMUNICATION. Gainesville, Ga., Aug. 7. Editor Intelligencer, Anderson, S. C. My dear Slr: Permit, me to thank thro your Journal all who contributed to my pleasure while I was In your city. My stay with J. S. Sargent and family and, the kindness showed me by them, also by Rev. Jno. W*. Speake and family. EnBign Belcher, Mr. I. W. Holland and.many others I greatly appreciate. At my home hete In this city 1 am ever ready to pray for tile sick, tho donf. tho halt and the blind, and to those who are unable to come I shall bo glad to do anything in my power. For the many healed In your city "I thank God and take courage." Respectfully, R. O. Smith. Death of Mr. John M. Jolly. Mr. J. M. Jolly, one of the best known and one of the., most highly esteemed citizens ot Anderson county died at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Arthur Sullivan, near Double Springs church, July 25tb. He had gone to visit his daughter who was quite Ul at the time. Mr. Jolly was taken quite suddenly and was sick for only a few days. All that physicians and trained nurse could do failed to relieve his suffer ings and as a final resort he under went an operation Saturday morning about eleven o'clock, but from this ho received no relief aud died at eleven o'clock the following night. . Mir. Jolly was born near South Union, Oconee county, S. C., July 28, 1842. Ho Is survived by his wife who was before lier marriage, Miss Eliza Jane Marett, eldest daughter of tho late G. W. and Susan Simmons . Marett, and by five children. Hts children are: Mrs. Claudo Skelton of Augusta, Ga., Mr. G. VY. Jolly of Anderson, and Mrs. John Sullivan, Mrs. David Camphell and Mrs. Authur Sullivan of tho Fork. He also had sixteen grandchildren, besides several brothers and sisters. In 1872 Mr; Jolly r-moved to Gor don county. Ga. where ho remained three years when he came back and has since resided in the Fork. In March 1862 he entered Co. K. 22nd at Wilmington. N. C., was with his S. C. infantry, joining the regiment command through all the succeeding campaigns in Mississippi, South Caro lina, North Carolina, Virginia and wound up at Appomattox. His com pany (K.) was satloned In the works at Petersburg to the right of the fi gun fort which the enemy undermined and blew hp at daylight on July SO, 1864, and or the 27 men- present but tour survived the catastrophe-one of these being Mr. Jolly, who was half burled, and unconscious for half an' hour. Since boyhood he has been success fully engaged In farming. He was buried at Double Springs Baptist church Sunday, July 25th, at G o'clock where he had been a con sistent member for a number of years. The funeral services were conducted by his pastor,. Ber. W. B. Hawkins, amidst a large concourse ot relatives and friends.-Contribu ted. ' - Pour la M?rito. Aunt Ethel-Well, Beatrice, were yon very brave at tho dentist's? Beatrice-Yea, auntie, I waa. Aunt Ethel-Then, there's the half crown I promised you. - And now tell me what he did to yon. Beatrice-He pulled ont two of Willie's teeth!-Punch, Spend For Mexican President. 5 fi. Manuel Vasquez Tagle. Those who pretend to be familiar with tho. purpose of the administra tion at Washington In connection with the situation in Mexico insist it has chosen Manuel Vasquez Tagle, minister ot justice in the cabinet of the dead Madero, to be president. It is declared in the capital that this ts the purpose of tho meeting of the ambassadors from six'South Ameri can nations with Secretary of State Lansing. Thc purpose ls, lt ls now declared the restoration of the Madero govern ment, which was swept Into the dis card by Huerta, by placing fbe con stitutional successor of Madero In the .^residential chair. Tagle ls Bald to be thc only surviving member of the Madero cabinet who did not Aro the country. The plan ls dependent oh the support of Mexican factions. ; Statements bare been made that tho support of all these, with the ex ception of Carranza, can be obtained. UNCLAIMED LETTERS. Following iii the list of letters re-1 malnlng uncalled for in the post office] at Anderson, S. C. for thr week end ing August, ll, 1915. Person? call-? lng for these will please say that they j were advertised. One cent due on all advertised matter. A.--A. C. Allen, A. M. Anderson, F. R. Anderson. B.-Adam Beeks, Miss Mina Burt, Tom Birt. C. -William CyniB, .Dr. J. I. Campbell. D. -R. E. Daniels. E. -C. C. Eppes. F. -Mattie Foster. G. -Mack Glenn. .H.-A. T. Henea. J.-Sloan Jaynos. K.--Miss Lilly King, Mts. Kirby. L.-Miss Rosa L. Linton.. M.-Mrs. Hannah Murphy, Fannie McCall, Pete Morion. F.?.-B. Li. Ray. 8.-Eard Stils. Altert Scott. W.- Daniel Waters, Will Walker, Tone Wo! ld. Charlie Ward. Beale Williams, Misa Ines Watson. Lillie Mrs. Concerned. Old Lady ( to nephew on leave from the front)-"Oood-by, my dear boy, and try and find time to send a post card to let me know you are safely back in the trencbea!"-'Punch. IS?ow to Save That's the idea who are .taking sale, while oth their present net a mighty profita for both the pre $10.00 Men' 12.50 44 15.00 44 18.00 44 20.00 44 22.50 44 $2.50 and $2 M< 3.50 44 $3 4.50 44 $4 5.00 6.50 44 $6 Same reduction on Brv Trousers. Complete clearances: Shirts, Manhattan Unio Pants. SWINE SPREAD FOOT AND Mn DISEASE New Outbreak Emphasizes Need of Careful Inspection by Far mers and Stockraisers. Washington, D. C., AUG. 9.-The susceptibility ol swine to the foot aml-mouth disease and the failure on tlie nart of swine owners to recognize its symptoms are giving the Federal authorities no small aawtiAt of worry in their "clean-up" campaign. Sore mouth, a common indication of the disease, is an ordinary sequence of hog cholera, and contusions on t\.o feet are frequent ia swine which have been driven or shipped. For these reasons little attention is paid by the owners of swine to t'.iese symptoms, and unless the herd is lo cated within suspicious territory foot-and-mouth disease may continue In a chronic form for a considerable length of time before discovery. The danger of course lies in the ability o these animals to disseminate the disease. Since the first case of foot-and mouth disease found In a herd of hogs in Michigan, w*nirU later per mitted the infection of the Chicago Stock Yards, hogs more than any other animal have been responsible for thc spread of the disease. A few months ago, In the outskirts of Phl i.v>c?nhla, a dtstri?t containing close to I '?0,000 swine kept In small lots, sever I al thousand were found to be infec ted. On July 29 foot-and-mouth disease infection was discovered to exist in a herd of 20 cattle within the city limits of H?rndl, Steuben County, New York. Another* hord of 25 cattle, pastured across the road from these, has been exposed and is under sur veilance. As no known cases of the disease had previously been found within a radium of over 75 miles, the souce of the Infection remained a mystery until two days later, when 125 swino, divided among fi VJ herds, were found Infected within a half milo of tho first-discovered pre the disease in a mild form for a con the disease In a mild form for a con siderable length of time. Infection had been carried from these to the cattle through drainage. This again emphasises the need, the authorities state, for continued care ful examination of ell live stock in previously Infected areas, especially large herds of swine. Farmers and stock misers by giving immediate notice of any suspicious cases to the nearest health officer will greatly aid the authorities in their efforts .to eli minate this pest, which if allowed to gain a foothold would result in un told damage to the nation. Owing to the tact that few animals are shipped from the sections in which the latest outbreak occurred, lt ls believed that no serious or wide spread complications will -result from thia new center of infection. A Faux Pass. ."You certainly put your foot in it when you told Mrs. Flirty that the fact you were arguing waa as plain as the nose on her face." "Why did I put my foot In lt?" "Because she ts considered to -have a pretty nose."-Baltimore Ameri can. Careless of Her. "Oh, say, who was here to. see yon last night?" . -Only Myrtle, father." . "Well, tell Myrtle fiat she left ber pipe on the plano."--University of Nebraska Awgwan. Later with quite a few advantage of this ers are buying for eds. You can make ble investment now sent and future. s Suits Now $ 7.45 9.45 10.95 12.95 14.95 16.95 en's Trousers $1.7 irs* Suits as on Men's Men's Oxfords, Manhattan nsuits, Straw Hats and Boys' b? Stan taah a Caroda** Fight for Free Speech. Harrison Morris. ? Harrison Morris, son-in-law ot the founder ot the Wharton School oft Finance in tho Pennsylvania Uni versity, from which Professor Scott Nearing was dismissed by the trustees of the university, strongly opposed the action. He is ono. of the execu ters of tho will of Joseph Wharton and ls therefore believed to know the intentions' of the founder ot the school. "We charge . that the Teal reasons for Professor Nearing';; dismissal," said Mr. Morris, "are a menace to educational progress and we have every expectation that all liberty lov ing educators in he country will rally to our support in this case. Tue great question involved la whether educa tion shall be directed by expert, ef ficient educators or whether the faculty should be under slavish dom ination of private interests." The Crank. "See that man in the corner? That's White; be's not very popular hero." "Why not?" "Oh, he's always trying to start something." "I see. Quarrelsome disposition, i eh?" "No. not at all. He owns a motor cyclo."-Young's Magazine. . Allies Cain ia Dardanelles. Parla, Aug. 10.-Allied forces have resumed attacks on Turkish positions at Dardanieles. says a Havaa dispatch from Athens. Advantage A? with the allies, who havo made sensible pro groRs. Turkish tosses are-heavy. The allied fleet bombarded Turkish positions inflicting severe damage. To Itemeve Mildew. To remove mildew from book-cov ers of Morocco and rr.xn leathers, ob tain a tin of ord int ry -vaseline and rub well intoth e leather with a piece of soft rap Vhen let stand for a whilo. and afterward rub lightly over again with a fresh rag.-Bindery Talk. Adi Iee. Prt#?a onward, boy, ?et in the strife, Be game end never quit; For if you have no aim in life You'll never make a hit -Cincinnati enquirer.