The intelligencer. (Anderson, S.C.) 1915-1917, August 11, 1915, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6
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WANTED- Milli's six to ten years of
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Fretwell Co. 7-18-tf.
WANTED-You to know that I am
still on the Joh with tile best wood
and coal on the market, if you
don't believe lt try me. W. O.
.Ulster, phone 649. Successor to
Piedmont Coal and Wood Co.
4-15-tf.
FOR SALE j
l'Oit SALE--Pure native grown I-ook
out Mountain seed potatoes $2.00
per bushel. Plant is soon as it
rains. Furmau Sm.vii, Seedsman,
Phone 464.
FOR SALE-file Jersey cow. Fresh,
makes porno, of butter a day. Price
$00.00. Apply Mrs. J. C. Harris,
204 Calhoun .St. 8-8-3t
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B0?M FOR RENT-Large pleasant
upper front, sultablo for two or
three gentlemen. 304 N. Main, City.
K-8-ltp.
GRAPES-Cooking grapes 25c a peck,
$1.00 per bu. delivered any where
in city.' Selected grapes 25c a bas
ket. Peach baskets 9c ouch, $1.75
per hundred. Tin fruit cans $2.50
per hundred. Baskets and cans
cash with order. Jno. S. Cromer,
92? W. Market St., Anderson, a C.
g-e-etp.
WHEN YOU can not see tight step In
our Optical Department and get Just
the Glasses you need. Complete
grinding plant. Eyes scientifically
teated. Dr. M. R. Campbell. Louisa
8. HUgenboeker. assistant, 112 W.
Whltner SC., Ground Floor. . .
Phone 844
The compounding pf a prescrip
tion we regard.as a matter of most
serious importance.
W? use nothing but the highest
Quality of Drugs which have an
swered certain standard tests. ,
As in drugs-everything else in
the way. of medicines-proprie
tary remedies and toilet necessities
are of the same high standard of
Quality.
Highest Qaulity-Lowest Price
-together with prompt, efficient,
polite service is our motto.
V. tie^frre habit of coming to the
Quality Drug Store for your every
reed. ?''?; ?
W. E. ATKINSON
Proprietor
*-.:.IL':" ,
FOLEY KIDNEY PI1XV
IUT?ATKACHE atoa,;*? aaa olsons.*'
A Day in P
l*on<loii, Aug, !? (Associated Prcs/i
Correspondence.)-A ?lay in the Ad
miralty Prize Court those ?lays ls Ilk??
IH'IUK tn an American court, thc prize
docket being crowded with oases in
volving tho seizure of American ships,
willi American attorneys and witness
es crowding lbs corridors and the
court room, tho Atioruey General sir
Edward < arn'infi citing long lists of
Amercan casi'? and text hooks In sup
port of II?H contentions. Kven the
Lord Chief Justice o? the Prize Court,
th?' Itight lion Sir Samuel Kvans, ls
asking questions shout American
customs, and snaring the distinct
American Atmosphere that pervades
tin' ?onrt room now a-days.
Here in detail ls being rehearsed
the hundreds of seizures of ships ami
cargoes which, besides their legal as
pect, have in the aggregate* develop
ed the most serious political crisis
existing between Creal Urbain and
the United state's. There haw been
upwards of GOO seizures and de-tou
thms of Atnerleun ships, ami the* num
ber of cargoes Inveilveel ts far larger,
feir eae-h ship carries separate- cargoes
te> ellffe-re-nt consignaos. Many of the
cases have been settled, but the large
number still at issue hnvu genie
through tin? tedious proce?ss of prize
- urt pleadings, and this month be
f--.au to take their turu in being thrash
er! ejut to a dual decision before- thc
court itse-lf.
Tin* prize court ls one? of the laby
rinth of buildings making that lils-j
torie landmark known as the law '
courts, a massive pll of weather-beat
en grey stone, housing all the high
Courts of England, with the I .ord
Chief Justice anel the? long train of
tosser dignitaries ami the- various tri
bunals. The scene within the court
as the Ame-rie-nn cases are heard is
eme of Impresii?e dignity. The eliam
ber Itself ls avast, hor-llkc structure,
with stone floor and walls, great ca
thedral windows Mitering the light
dimly, and stained-glass ceiling sev
enty feet above*.. The only touch of
brightness is .tin* large? gilded anchor
and chains hanging back if the chief
justice, an emblem of llritish naval
power. , Slr Samuel Kvhns, the pre
siding Judge. IA'on a raised dais ten
feet above the level of tho rows of
solicitors and odvocates, including the
attorney general and the solicitor
general, king'? counselors and Junior
counselors-all of "them, bench and
bar, In wigs and gowns, giving an ap-,
pcaritnce of deep solemnity. At tho
left of the juilgo sit two officers of
the -Royal merchant marino, in full
uniform, known as nautical experts.
He consults Hiern-frequently on nny
technical question of uavlgatiem or
naval construction arlstng lu the
eas****;.
Luck of the lawyers are the Ameri
can attorneys, In plain clothes ranks,
leaning forward to coach their ' Urlt
1sli hrethre?, but irrrablo to ?fly a word
as British practice requires nil the
argument to bo presented by olllcers
of tbo court and British subjects.
This has caused some little embar
rassment at times when the reserved
British barrister did not urge a point
with that vehemence tnht seemed to
ho warranted by the American legal
view-point.
Slr Edward Carson, the attorney
general, ls the central figure In these
prise court cases. He ls the amoua
flory Irishman from Ulster who leapt
into world-fame when he organized
and armed the Ulster Volunteers and
dared the government to enforce borne
rule on Ulster, lie won on that to
the extent that home rule ls still
waiting, and ho is a member of the
government, one of the newly-formed
coalition ministry. Put there has
been nothing flory In his conduct ot
the prise cases, die speaks without
any oratorical effort. In a monotonous
hum-drum manner, all argument and
no declamation. He ,appears to havo
little thumor. for he looks blankly at
Bir Samuel on tho bench when the
lord justice laughs and has a Joke.
In the case, of the ships K.'m and
Frldland. carrying American cargoes!
of rubber, Slr Edward cited many)
American precedents. One of them
was from 3 Wallace, r.:;r>, the ease of
the Bermuda. Ho road a. long para
graph tn uo-h.ild his contention, and
then patted with some apparent tri
umph that thin American case was on
all-fours on his side.
"But the next paraghaph which you
have not read," said Slr Samuel from
the hench, "turns the case against
you."
The difference between the British
and American practice was shown
when efforts were made to got a copy
of the printed brief and affidavit,
which Sir Edward Carson had been
reading tn open court. In American
courts these printed briefs are opon
to anyone, hut when application
was made to the clerks of tho prise
court -they wiro scandalized nt the
request. Briefs, they explained, were
rigidly secret, never going beyond
the solicitors, who guarded them ss
a prof easton al ethics.
The. Registry of tho prise court is
another vast structure adjoining It,
with endlesa bureaus, through wbtch
the American attorneys v wander in
quest of various .brar ches of their
cases, always lec.elv'.n? ?hi- greet-st
courtesy . but. al way s with the mass
Of tradition and conservatism against
quick aetlon. And yet the officials
resent any suggestion that there had
been any de lay in these nrlze cases,
although tho American litigants are
smarting under what they claim ts de
lay. One. o (thc chief officials. Mr.
Lovell, register of admiralty, said:
"Thero in Absolutely no delay BO
far as iha< prite court . I? concerned.
Slr Samuel Evans is sitting early and
late. He is going to give up the
usual summer recess of tho court
which begins in August In order to
dispose of these cases with the great
est promptness."
One of the British officials who has
had most to do with these pris* caaos
said It waa manifestly impossible for
tbo political branch of thw govern
ment, the crown, to hrry the legal i
Wize Court
branch, when* the exlstnng law hi 1
to bf administered according to thc
existing customs, ll would not bo
expected, for example, fie sahl, thal
the executive branch at Washington
would try lo hurry the United States
Supreme Court on political grounds
or in any wny outside the usual tip- lt
plication for advancement, which,
after all, was at the discretion of the
court.
Answering this au American olli
clal Who bas hud Hindi lo do with (he
prize cases, Haid there was an im
portant dist incl ion between the Ame
rican and British courts, as thc for
mer in reality lind to administer the
existing law according to existing
rules, whereas In the prize court tho
pol lt leal branch, th > crown, had such
power that it could even chango ex
isting law to meet new cases. Titi?
is done tiy the process of au "order in
council." He cited Ute fol low in;', in
stunces in one of these prize cases:
At u decisive stage of the Wilhelm
??use the solicitors for tho crown
made the point that a neutral ship
could be reqlsftlcsed by one of Hie
belligerents. This was laughed ai by
Hie attorneys for the American own
ers, who had Article ''tl of the prize
law before them, and were ready to
go into court the next morning and
laugh the crown solicitors out of
court with their own law.
'JTbo solicitors for the crown ap
peared to have overlooked,*' they said
in the prize court next day. "that Ar
ticle 30 of tin? prize law ls specific
against their contention."
"That was quite true up to '.' o'clock
last night," came the quirk reply from
t;ie crown .ollcitors. "Mut the claim
ants appear to be unaware that a*
'.i o'clock last night an order in coun
cil was signed entirely changing that
law."
On Inquiry, this proved to be the
case, a special order in council bad
been made-not the wholesale order
in counsel dealing with contraband,
growiqg out of the war zone-which
hud never appeared in the oHlclal ga
zette and which is difficult even now
to learn much about. Hut it lilted'
this particular case exactly.
Wants 200 Airships
\
^^^^^^^
',
\
Kt
captain Mark L. Bristol, chief of
the United States Navy's aeronautical
bureau, Is the man who some time
ago presented to the House Naval
Affairs Committee the nesd' for ' In
creasing the navy's aerial fleet to 200
aircraft. Now his recommendation
has been adopted by the Navy Qen
orai Board and Secretary Daniels and
lt will be presented to the next
congress with an excellent chanco o?
going through. Tho United States
Navy now has a fleet of only fourteen
aeronautical branch ot tho navy up
be reckoned as first class military
aircraft. While the European nations
have hundreds. An appropriation of
$2,200,000 is necessary to bring tb-*
aeranautdcal branch of the navy up
to Its proper standard. Is the state-.
mont of Captain Bristol, nd this is'
the amount to be asked for when con
gress convenes.
Comb Sage Tea in
Hair to Darken it
It's Grcndmother's Recipe to
Keep Her Locks Dark
Glossy, Thick.
The old-time mixture of Stiff Tea
and Sulphur for darkening gray,
streaked and faded hah; ia grand
soother' tretitm? nt, and folks are
again using K to keep their hair a
?ood, oven color, which is quito sen
sible, ar we are living in an age when
?? youthful appearance la of the great
est advantage.
Nowadays, though, we don't have
the troublesome task of gathering tito
sage and tho mussy mixing at home.
All drug 'tores sell the ready-to-use
product called "Wyeth's S.^go and Sul
phur Compound" for about V) cen*s a
bottle. It ia very popular becutse
nobody can discover lt baa been ap
plied. Simply mahnen your comb or"
a soft brush with it and draw . this
through your hair, taking oho email
strand at a time; by morning Ute
grey hair - disappears, but what de
lights ?be ladies with Wyeth's Sage
and Suphnr is that, besides boauti
fttJly darkening the hair after a few
applications, ft also produces that
soft lustre and appearance of abun
dance which U so attractive; besides,
prevents dandruff itching scalp and
falling hair.
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Anderson; S. C.