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XLASSIFIED WANT ADVERTISING HATES Twenty?five wordH or leas, One Time 25 cents, Three Times CO cents, Biz Times $1.00. All advertisement over twenty five words prorata for each nd dltional word. Rates on 1.000 words to be used in a mouth made on application. No advertisement taken for less than 25 centh, cash in au vauco. If your name appears In the telephone directory you can t?l? phone your wunt u i to 321 and a bill will ho mailed after its in sertion for prompt payment. WANTS WANTED?You to know that 1 am still on the Job with the beat wood and coal on the market. If you don't bellovo it try me. W. O. . Himer, Phone 649. Successor to Piedmont Coal and Wood Co. 4-15-tf. WANTED- Every lionne keeper In An derson to try a loaf of "Aunt Mary's Cream Bread." It's made at home and your grocer keeps it. Ander son Pure Food Co. 8-l"?-l)tf FOR SALE EOR SALE?Puro native grown Look out Mountain seed potatoes %'.00 per bushel. Plant ns anon as It rains. Furn au Smith, Seedsman, Phone 4C4. MISCELLANEOUS -o?? SUBSCRIPTIONS TO DAILY INTEL LIGENCER AT REDUCED PRICE? During tho Daily Intelligencer con - test which closed March, 1014, In or der to secure votes to win the cap ital prize, I purchased a number ai subscriptions to tho Daily Intelli gencer at the rate of $5.00 a year. In order to got some of the money back which I put Into the contest, I will sell a limited number of sub scriptions to tho Daily Intelligencer at the rato of $3.00 a year to anyone wishing to subscribe or renew their subscription to this paper, or at a rate of $1.25 a year to tho f* ml weekly Intelligencer. If intcrcmied, address P. O. Box 347, Anderson, & c. e-i7tf WHEN YOU can not see right step In our Optical Department and get just the Glasses you need. Complete grinding plant. Eyes scientifically tested. Dr. M. R. Campbell, Louisa ?.. Hilgtmbocker, assistant, 112 W. Whltner St., Ground Floor. MONEY TO LOAN. We aro prepared to mnko loans on approved farm property in Anderson county in amounts of not teBS than $2,4)00, nit 7 per cent. Charges mod erate. Apply to Quuttlebaum & Coch ran, Attorneys. s-i :>-:;;. I PROFESSIONAL CARDS C. GADSDEN SAYRE Architect 405-40?; Bleck!?* Building Anderson, S. C -!_?..1_. Chisholm, Trowbridge & Suggs DENTISTS New Theatre Bufldmf W. Whitner St RUB'US FANT, Jr. ATTORNEY AT LAW Cex-Townsend Bldff. Auderscn, :-: Sooth Carolin? Rannlng No Risks'. vjMr. Hennery Peck was Askod by a neighbor if ho believes In woman suf frage, lays The Louisville Times. , "Who me?" gasped Mr. Peck. ^Gracious, no!" Bent on making a convort of Mr. -Beck, tho neighbor proceeded to ar gue the question. V"Now, Just give mo opo reason why women should not be^glven tho bal lot, if you can." H "Well, my good sir." answered Mr. ?Pack, "I don't care lo diacuss the Is oao with you. but I will say this: I find It bad enough to explain polities to my wife, and I do not enro to place lier In a position where I would be compelled to have thorn explained to tjse?from the woman's viewpoint." "Well, what difference would that make?" the neighbor Insisted "you wonld?" .. "Safety first," snapned Mr. Peck "that's all." Poor Mar. "Do animals possess the sentiment of affection?" asked the teacher, ac cording to The Literary Digest. <w9Bm, ma'am, almost always." . "Correct," said the teac'>er. Turn ing to young Harold; "And now tell me what .iilmal has the greatest nat ural fondness for man?" ? Wlth but a slight pause the little fellc-v answered: 'Woman." . "TIZ" HELPS SORE. TIRED FEET Good-bye sore fmt, I.ummm.: fcet.swol Ion feet, sweaty feet, smelling feet, tired feet. illloUv ?, lltlfltOlM (Hill raw spot*. Xu Good-bye L't?rf;H ft. more >.Ihw tight ness, mi wore limiting >v i t Ii |?iii) <>r ilrnuiii" 111 ? your f ii<?* i-. agony. "'I I/" i Ina "ion I. :i < t right oir. "TIZ" draw* Ulli all I lie hoisollOUfl t'XIt'tu.' lions willed i-.itT up I ho fret. Use "TIZ" urn] for get your font misery. Ahl how coin lurtablo your feet feel. <!< t u 'i't peiil box <>f "ITZ" now at any drtiKgfat 01 department stare. Don't sulfer. liavi >?.mhI feet, glad feet, feel that nevei swell, never hurt, never get tired, year's foot comfort guaranteed 01 money refunded. A NICE BIG ROAST of Beef, Pork or Mutton 1h really one of the best meats. For it is just as good cold as hot. So you can have several meals with only one cooking. Tell us to send one for Sunday din nor. Make it a big one, for our meats are so choice that only a big one wlli have enough left to cut up old. PHONE 694. The Lily White Market J. N. LINDSAY. Proprietor. Wear? JTro LitfSLay IJ't&CQnljJgeedxGorsGte Fitted perfectly by oar coraetlere $3.60 to 112.60 Mrs. B. Graves Boyd I I STOP Spending all you earn. Start a Bank Account deposit one dollar a week and 1 get the saving hiliit. A dollar saved is a| dollar made. if f -11 '. SL> The Savings Depart ment of The Bank of Anderson The strongest bank in the county. Charleston & Wester? Carolina Railway To and From the NORTH, SOUTH, EAST. WEST Leaves: No. 22 ... ...,., ,.6:08 A. M. No. 6 ,. . . .3:37 P. M. Arrives: No. 21 . ..11:15 A. M. No. S . . .: 3:07 P. M. Information, Schedules, rates, etc., promptly given., 1 * E. WIIXIAMS, G. P. A., Augusta, Ga. GOOD MEETING HELD A? BEL?ON YESTERDAY SEVERAL VERY INSTRUCTIVE TALKS BY OFFICIALS OF CLEMSON WELL ATTENDED People Showed Much Interest and Affair Great Success From Every Standpoint. A meeting (if the farmers, business men, and their families was held til Helton yesterday and nbout 100 Inter ested people were present. Tho da;, was given over to speech making and home demonstration work. Tin' Urs? speukev was I'rof. I{. L. Shields chief of animal industry at Clcmson College, his speech being about raising live? stork, marketing, etc. His address was very Interest ing as well as instructive. The next man to speak was I'rof. I>. w. Watkins of Clcmson College, who discussed dairying and creamery routes. This is a subject that the people In general are taking much Interest in at the present time and hia remarks wer??, well received. Prof. T. P. NJveu. horticulturist nt Clcmson, snok" next on orchards and gardens. Many ladles were pr^s nnl and took much interest in hia speech. Prof. T. H. Scnn of Clemson Cor loge made an address ubuu: winter cover crops. He told the farmers that soon the present crop would be harvested and out o the way. bur asked them not to forget that their land ought to have sonn; kind of cover crop this winter, and urged all of them to give this matter serious thought. Miss Maggie Garllngton had charge of the home demonstration work and gave a demonstration of the tireless cooker. Miss (?arlington 1? recog nised to be ono of the best home de monstration agents in the state and she lins udded much to tho instructive features of I lie meetings held in this county this summer. SAYS TEMPERAMENT IS HEREDITARY Or. C. B. Davenport of Carnegie Institute Declares Tempera ment is Unalterable. Boston, Aug. 18?Tho August num ber of tho Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences contains an ar ticle on the Inheritance of Temper ament, by Dr; C. D. Davenport, of tiio Station for {Experimental Evolu tion, Cnrnegio Institution, Washing ton, in which are disclosed the re sults of statistical study into the cases of 89 carefully described family his tories. Temperament is hereditary and as littlo altera!)! as stature, says Dr. Davenport, and in seeking to explain the great diversity in temperaments he makes the hypothesis that there are involved in tho inheritance of tem perament two factors; one which In duces more or less periodic excitabili ty whose absence results in calmness, nnothcr which makes for normal cheerfulness^ and whose absence per mits more or less period'.,' depress ion, these factors being lanerited In dependently and occurring in any combination. Persons may be di vided into calm, nervous, or choleric according to their degree of excita bility, and into cheerful, phlegmatic, and melancholic according to their degree of cheerfulness or fts opposite and there wore then,, nirie\ classes of temperament formed by combining these two classes, namely, choleric cheerful, choleric-phlegmatic, chol eric-melancholic, nervous-cheerful, nervous-phlegmatic, and so on. The statistical study of the 89 care fully described family histories seems to bear out Dr. Davenport's hypo thesis, because the different classes of temperament actually occur wit! about the relative frequences which would be expected from the hypothe sis and the usual laws of Inheritance. Woman After the War. (Prora Ulchmonri Times-Dispatch.) Aiddo from *lio inestlon of suffrage, v. hic, bas notpfng to do with the Lboaghts thul fjllcw, there Is one in disputable Tp..-t; Woman will have more llnflue.ice in Europe when the war Is over than ever before. At the rate at which men are be ing slaughtered thero won't bo any surplus if the war lasts another year. This will bring about u different soft of woman's movement in Europe than thay have bad. ' And it will bo a stronger movement. Tho women of the warring nations, by force of cb* cumatsnces, have already shown themselves to be capable ,n business and have done much which will for ever entitle them to the consideration of men who think and direct. Dut the sort of woman influent that .will grow in Europe, especially U England and Trance, will not be of the feminist type. On the contrary, the women who are doing so much tn this war will be competent and will ing to do morft when tho war Is over. ' When this movement shall amalga mate 1th the woman movement of our country, tho world won't be any the worse, and It won't require field I glasses to get a glimpse of what some [fOlks call thp millennium. SUCCESSFUL MEETING WAS HELD YESTERDAY AF TERNOON MUCH ENTHUSIASM Was Shown twi Ail But One Out of 200 Voted in Favor of New County. Two hundred representative cltl ;:< : :< of Anderson ami Greonvillc coun ties mot In the town hall al William son yesterday afternoon ;it 4 o'clock for the purpose of discussing the i|iication of establishing a new coun ty out of parts of the abovo two named counties. Wllliamston to be the county Beat. Out of tho 200 present !! :? voted as being In favor of the proposed new county. Owing to the fact that th/J meeting had not been advertised very mueli, tin- attendance wns not as large as It might have been but 1 lose present showed much enthusiasm for the new county, representatives were pres ent from as far over as the Weedy Hiver section in Green vi 11 i county; Many were also present from lirushy Creek section in this county. Directly after tit0 meeting was call ed to ordor the chairman called for a vote on the question, which result ed as stated above. Several talks were inr.de and much enthusiasm nrused, especially by those from Greenville county. This meeting was held for the sole purpose of feeling the Bontlment of the people but plans were made by which many preliminary matte;-? will be looked info and another meeting was called for August !8, which will bo seid In the park. All who are in terested in the proposed county, whether for or against it, are urged to bo present on that date. EDUCATIONAL RALLY FLAT BOCK SCHOOL Will Be Held on August a??Sev eral Prominent Speakers Will Make Addresses. The peoplo of the Plat Rock section1 are planning a great educational rally' to be 'held on August 20. The meet-; Ing will bo in tho form of n picnic and will bo held on the grounds of the. Plat Kock school ion: e and all are urged to attend and bring well filled baskets. Among the speakers of the day will be W. W. Look, who has change of the .slate demonstration work at Clont-; son College. Dr. Edwin M. Poteat, president of Furman University; J. C. Ilailoy, pastor of Carmel church. Prof. E. B; Gunter, state Inspector of rural schools, and Mr. E. P. .Mc Cravcy of Easloy. A special invitation is issued to the old pupils of John L. Kennedy. Drink More Water If Kidneys Bother Eat Less Meat and Take Salts for Backache or Bladder Trouble. Uric acid in meat excites the kid neys, they -become overworked;' get sluggish, ache, und fee like lumps of lead. The urine becomes cloudy; the bladder is irritated, and you may be obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night. When the kidneys clog you must help them flush off the body's urinous waste or you'll be a reel sick person shortly. At tirBt you feel a dull misery la the kidney region y.ou suffer from back ache, sick headache, dizziness, stom ach gets sour, tongue coated and you feel rheumatic twinges when the weather is bad. Eat less meat, drink lots Of water; also get from any pharmacist four ounces of Jad .Salts; take a table spoon fui In a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This fa mous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice combined with Ithla, and has been used for genera tions to clean clogged kidneys and stimulai > them to normal activity, also to neutralize tho 'da ir? urine, so It no longer is a source o* Irrita tion, thus ending bladder weakness. Jnd Halts is inexpensive, cannot in jure; makes a delightful oqervcacent lithia-woUer drink which everyone should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and active. Druggists here say they sell lots of Jad Sp.** to folks who believe in overcoming kidney trouble while it is only trouble. The llerk Guaranteed It. "A customer camo into my store tho other day and said to one of my clerks, 'have you anything that will euro diarrhoea?' and my clerk vent and got him a bottle of Chamber.siln'a Colla. Cholera and Diarrhoea Rem edy, and said to him. 'it Ahls does not core yon, I win not charfle you a cent for it ' So ho took It home and came back In a day or two and stld ho was cured," writes J. H. Berry & Co., alt Creek, Va For sate by all dealers. STANDING OE THE CLUBS. New Orleans Memphis .. Birmingham Nashville .. Atlanta .. . Chattanooga Mobil.- . . . Little Wo. a . SOUTHERN. Won. . . 69 ... 66 . . 02 ... ?2 60 r>:i 40 Lost. P.C. 4 S 590 52 559 53 539 55 530 48: 442 442 397 59 63 03 70 AMERICAN. Won. Boston. 09 Detroit. 71 Chicago. 05 Washington. 54 New York. 51 Clovcland. 42 St. Louis. 40 Philadelphia. 34 NATIONAL. Won. Philadelphia. 5G Chicago. 66 Brooklyn. 58 Pittsburgh. 66 Boston. 53 Cincinnati. 50 New York. 50 St. Louis. 51 Lof... 36 39 42 53 51 66 08 72 Lost. 47 52 51 IF. 1)1 : li A L. Won. I Chicago. 02 Pittsburgh. 00 Newark. 00 Kansas City. 01 Brooklyn. 51 I.St, Louis. 5S Buffalo. 52 Haltitnore. 39 55 63 LOBt. 48 47 48 60 02 51 04 71 P. ('. ?57 040 607 605 501) 389 370 321 P.C. 514 514 532 500 500 485 485 401 P. C. 5G1 501 550 550 451 532 448 355 ?ESTEHDAY'S RESULTS. + +*+* * *4 +4**4,+ NATIONAL. At Philadelphia l; Pittsburg S. At New York 0; Chicago 9. At Boston 3; St. Louis 1. AMERICAN. At Detroit 4; Philadelphia 1. At Cleveland 3; Washington o. At Chit-ago 5; Boston 3. At St. Louis-New York, rain. FEDERAL. At Baltimore 0: Chicago 0. At Plttsburg 2; Ilrooklyn 5. At Buffalo 3; Kansas City 3, At Buffalo 3; Kansas City 2. At Newark-St. Louis, game schedul ed today was played Sunday. SOUTHERN. _ At Now Orleans 3; Memphis 0. At Birmingham 0; Chattanooga 0; eleven innings, darkness. At Atlanta-Little Rock, rain. At Mobile-Nashville, not scheduled. +**+ **++*+++++*+++ + * * * + IVA NEWS NOTES + + A series of meetings are being con ducted In the First Baptist church here, the pastor. Rev. H. W. Stone is ably nt> '.ai.ed by P.c-v. C. L. Klngley of Honen Path. Mrs. James Simpson and children of Mc.Cormick are spending the week It?re at the home of Mr. R. S. Shor ard. Miss Thelma Pool(} has returned to her home in Greenville after spending some time here with tolatives. Mrs. Minnie Brown and children ! left Monday for their home in Due West after a stay of two woeks here I at the home of Mr. S. T. McCullough. Mr. N. Uoliakoff left a few days ago for the northern markets where he goos to purchase his stock of fall goods. Miss Mary Hall is spending this week with relatives in Greenville. MIsb Eva Prie?, district nurse of Gnstonia, S. C. Is spendng her vaca tion here with her sister, Miss Lulia Price. Miss Annie Wilson left Tuesday for a visit to Lowndesvllle. Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Jackson and' son, Beats, left Monday for Hender sonville and othor points in N. C. Mrs. J; H. Wlllingham has return ed to her home in Spar tan burg, aft^r weeks visit to her sister, Mrs. S. E. Anderson. Mr. and Mrs. John McCalla, of Lowndesvllle were visiting in town I Sunday. Messrs. W. T. Bhrrlss and W. M. Hilley have each purchased a Ford. Miss Mamie Seawright is tho guest fuis week of her sister, Mrs. J. P.. McDonald of Anderson. Miss Geta Hall has returned homo from a stay* of several weeks with friends In Camnobello arid Greenville. Messrs. J. G. Tucker ?nd^J. D. T?te of Henderson. Texas, left Tues day for their homo after spending Borne time here with relatives. Mts. W. F. Oil 111 and and daugh ters, Missi s Sarah and Ida Dcilc were '-^itors In Loundesvllies Tuesday. .iev. J. Kenneth Linn and wife of Rockwell, N-. C. aro visitors their } week at the home of the letter's broth er, Mr. J. C. Ligon. Misses Winnie Reid and Margaret Wilson have returned from a week's Jvlait to friends in Otie West. Messrs. .1. T. Puntch and L. Aber* nathy of Maiden, N. C. are visiting at the homo of Mr. J. P. Gilliland. Mr. and Mrs. Winston Adams ' of j Hart well. Oa., have been visiting their [daughter, Mrs W. A. Wiles. Mr. W. P. Cook his returned from [ a business trip to the northern mark ets. Recommend* Chamberufa's Celle, Cholera und Diarrhoea Remedy. "I never hesitate to recommend Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy," writes 8ol Wil liams, merchant. Jesse, Tean. "I sell more of it than of any other prepara tion of like character. I have used it myself and found R gave me more relief than anything else I have ever tried for the same parr-jee." For sale by all dealers. ALCOHOL- 3 PRR. CENT AYe<<dablc IVcpa?ahrfflibrAS sirailatitift?icToodan?Lc^uti tin?lucSt?nwcHsandliJi iicssandlfcst?outiiuBjj^i Opiuiia.roipuiiic lwrimiaai | Not Nab*?oti?. 1 AlxStma* ?on.Sou^StDmadU?^a^'J, lOSSOFjABFB jacSi??Ic tt$nataeo?N CASTORIA For Infanta and Children, Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always Bears the Signature, of Exact Copy of Wrapper. In Use For Over Thirty Years GASTORIA THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW VOM? CITY. 4m MBH /chatter; chatter, as I flow, To join the hrimmin? river; For men map come and men maV go, But I go on forever. , S3 to The Stan?ar? BeVora?o Imitations of COCA-COLA come and go?none last more than a few seasons. This has been going on for 29 years? yet COCA-COLA, unchanged in name or self, keeps its old friends and makes new ones. Demand the genuine by the full name that has inspired so many imitations. "Wnenever you ace an Arrow, think of Coca-Cola The Coca-Cola Co. ATLANTA. GA. COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY ANDERSON, S. C. t^V.EarlSt. Phonel37. mm NOT AN ISOLATED CASE. i Many Similar Canes In Anderson and Vicinity. This Anderson man's story given hero is not an isolated case by any means; week after week, year after year, our neighbors t,re telling simi lar good news. W. II. Smith, farmer, 54* E. Orr St. Anderson, says: "1 was almost fran tbj with pains ncross the amaJ' of my back. When I was ploldng .cot ton,' a sharp pain would often, catch mo in the small of my. back and I would have to brace myself in order to straighten hp again. The "kidney secretions passed too freely and they woro scanty and burned In. passage. The secretions wero highly colored, too and looked like brtck-dodL I had Buffered for a couple of months when ? read' of Dean's Kidney Pills and got some at Evans' Pharmacy. The first few doses relieved mo and one box fixed mo up in flno shape." Price 6th;, at aU dealers. iv?n't simply ask for a k'ldney "remedy- *et Doan's Kidney Pills?the aamo that Mr. Smkh had. Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y. ttecTult?Pleaso, sergeant, tt said'! Roipeant?What about it? on tho poster at ?he recruiting oH?ce I Uecrult?Well, they've Just aieas that I should 'av a free trip to Ber-| vrcd me for a pith 'elnrot.?Pasaiug Uni A (eUsow. GLASSES PLUS The day when you bought: your glasses "any old place**' Is gone. Present day intelligence Won't permit you to trifle or gamble on good vision. If you need glasses you need the knowledge and ser vice which should go with the best. v Here, you get just what you want?-guesses plus. Walter H. Reese & Co. Pyes Examined Pree.