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THE INTELLIGENCER ESTABLISHED IMiO. *~~? Published ever/ morning except Monday by The Anderson Intelligen cer at 140 Weist Whltnor Street, An dereon, B. C. BEMI-WEKKLY INTELLIGENCE Published Tuesdays and Fridays ? I ? U M. GLENN_Editor and Manag?; . Entered as second-class matter April 28, 1014, at the post offlce at Anderson, South Carolina, under the Act of March 3, 187?. ASSOCIATED PRESS DIBI'ATCHEB telephone .821 SUBSCRIPTION KATES DAILY One Tear .16.00 Biz Months . .2.60 Three Months .1-26 One Month .42 One Week .10 BEMI-WEEKLY One Year .11.60 Biz Months.76 The Intelligencer is delivered by carriers in the city. Look at the printed label on your paper. Tho date thereon shows when the subscription expires. Notice date on label carefully, and if not correct please notify us at once. Subscribers desiring the address of their paper changed, will please state Is their communication both the old and new addresses. To Insure prompt delivery, com plaints of non-delivery In the city ef Anderson should be made to the Circulation Department before 9 a. m. and a copy will be sent at ones. All checks and drafts should be drawn to The Anderson Intelligencer. ADVERTISING Rates will be tarnished on applica tion. Nb tf advertising discontinued ex ept on written order. i The Intelligencer will publish brief and rational letters on subjects of general Interest when they are ac companied by the names and ad dresses of the authors and are not of A defamatory nature. Anonymous communications will not be noticed. Rejected manuscripts will not be re turned. In order to avoid delays on account ef personal absence,, letters to The intelligencer Intended for publication should not be addressed to any Indi vidual connected with the paper, bat Imply to The Intelligencer. THURSDAY, AUGUST 19. 1915. WKATHIB FORECAST I?qcnl thunder showers Thursday and probably Friday. MOBS AND THE FUEL. Tho ,gullt or tho Innoconcc of Leo M. Frank is not tho issuo in tho hu miliating outrnge that has been per petrated on Georgia by a gnng whose lust for blood is matched only by tho degreo of cowardice thoy resorted to in satisfying thla thirst. The over throw of the standards of civilisation, the reversion to barbarism and tho ilondlHh clamor for vongrance that resulted In deliberate murder are phases of tho case to he dep'.ored, but neither are they relevant to the Issue. The most threatening and the most sinister aBpocit of tho horrible nrTair is tho uucouqucrublp lust for blood that hold so many thousands of peo ple on this man's trail for nearly threw years and tho fires of which lUHt wer? nover' allowed to smoulder for being fanned by propoganda of tho most open and the most shame less kind. Every bit as guilty as Ute men who adjusted the hangman's nooso about Frank's nock and drew the rope that sent his body dangling in the air are the people who con tinually agitated the matter so openly, through the public prints, by the dem onstration against the governor who commuted the prisoner's sentence, and In other ways equally as breazon. If aomethlng is not done to curb a press that turns out incendiary lltora- 1 tat?, or bridle a public speaker who p.'uacboa anarchy openly In public ' places, or suppress demonstrations alined at tho very fouvlatlona of the Btructure on which wo havo built our civilization, it will soon become an easy matter to start a campaign 1 against law?as was done In the Frank cas?? that will gain momen- ' turn Jhrongh the activities of theae agencies and sweep up, civilization 1 all, into the abyss that threatens to cngu,f ua. 1 . *LAB0R*8 PEACE COUNCIL." ' ' ^Labor's National Peace Council" continues to bo somewhat o! en enlg- i nn to the genera] public. The dis- : puto still rages to whether '.i deserves Its title?Whether Vt really repr?senta 1 lahor. or is national In scope, or la ; working sincerely for peace. ' ; * At the recent Washington conven- ! lion, it will be remembered, there was a hot light over the adoption of i resolutions calling for a government < embargo ou t Ii * munition? ti?.fllc. At that time it "was charged that pro German propagandas hati got labor organizations to Join th<; "council" by raise pretenses, and several lahor leaders rebelled, with the declaration that thoy wer?- opposed to un embar go ami resented the attempt to hitch American organized labor to the Ger man cause. The- climax of that rebellion lui;; como In the resignation of Milton Snelllng a.< vice president of the "Peuce Council." Snelllng la widelyj widely il own ;w first vice president of, it he International Union of steam and Operating Engineers of America. H?| accuses the council leaders of had faith, Raying that one of them told him: "We want to stop the expor-j talion of munitions to ihe allies. You sue, Germany can manufacture all Ihe munitions she wants." It wan under the auspice:, of this organization thnt William J. Bryan by Invitation of Us president, Frank IJuchanun, addressed a great "peace" audience in New York t'lty, consisting chiefly of Germans. At that meeting Mr. Bryan himself was placed in an e<|uivocal position by the fact that resolutions were adopted denouncing 'the Hale of arms and ammunition, al though Mr. Bryan as cl?ief speaker had not taken that position at all, and he explicitly refused to" "do so later in iSt. Louis. Frank Buchanan Is tho Chicago congressman who has lately denounc ed President Wilson in a public state ment, accusing him of being dominat ed by "big business" in the Interest of tho war traffic?because the presi dent refused to Bee him at a time when ho particularly warned to ace the president. Buchanan used to he un iron worker, and served au pr?si dent of the Structural Iron Workers' Union, which itself at one period made a lavish use of arniB and am munition. Everything considered, it seems to be up to Mr. Buchanan and his asso ciates In "Labor's National Peace Council" to prove their own good faith before they assail the good faith of the representatives of the Unified Stutcs i t verument. IH'LGAHIA'H REVENUE. It Is a beautiful case of poetic Jus tice thut is now on exhibition In the Balkans. Shakespeare himself couldn't have figured it out hotter. Bulgaria, betrayed by her allieB aftor the first Balkan war and robbed of tho fruits of her victories, n,ow holds their fate In her hand. At tho close of the war, when Tur key was prostrate, and the Balkan confederates were kept from finishing her only by the Interposition of tho big powers, Crecce and Scrvia de manded from Bulgaria a largo part of tho Macedonian territory which they had pledged to her In case of victory. Whe l aho refused to yield it, they made war on her, taking what they wanted and killing moro of her boI diers than the Turks had killed. At the K?me time Roumanla, taking ad vantage of Bulgaria's weakness, de manded a slice of territory aa a re ward for not having attacked her when her back was turned, and Bul garia had to surrender it In bitterness Bulgaria bided her time'?and that time has comp with unexampled celerity. Sorvla, against whom Bhe has the bitterest grievance, is expecting a great Gorman-Aus trian "drive" which may crush her unless she obtains powerful aid. Roumanla Is willing to help Servla, by making a drive at Austria-Hun gary on her own account, but Rou manie doesn't dare take the field until Bhe knows what Bulgaria will do. Greece wants to Join the allies and enlarge lier territory at Tnrkey'a ex pense, out hesitates to do so from fear of Bulgaria. And what does Bulgaria dot She calmly says that she'd like to Join the allies and dispatch an army against Constantinople, to take that great prize for Russia?but she couldn't think of starting until Servla and Greece anu Roumanla given her back what they atolo from her two years ago. And If tho allies?who, by tho way, acquiesced in the robbery?want , her assistance, all they nave to do is to make ht>r Balkan neighbors give up the loot. Aa for Germany and Austria, whom she regards aa largely responsible [or the crime committed against her, j she la bargaining with them, too, on j this basis?.If they can give her bot- i ter guarantees than the allies c*n\<: that Roumanla Servla and Greece will >, give her what ehe wants, then shoj, will join the allies. The moat the Teutons can hope for Is continued Bul garian neutrality. I So nhc proud little nation that waa \ humbled in the dust two years ago Is , now mistress of the Balkans and j seems to hold in her hand the destiny , of Europe. j< I With the blot of Fairfield Htill fresh I upon her escutcheon, South Carolina lean well nach out a hand across the I Savannah and gropo syinpathislngly I In the dark for the hand of her wlster I Htute dripping with the blood of tho horror enacted laut Monday plgbt at Marietta. Why speak any longer of the bru tality of Indian in taking the scalp of u victim for a souvenir? What about the depraved mob members who I snatched shreds of Frank'? clothing us bin IficlcHS body dangled from the tree that was his gullowH? The Spartanburg Journal states that tiic report that Charleston Ih to have a new railroad is good news since it increases the "geUlug-out-of-Char lctston" fucilitles. -o Three negroes charged with poison ing mules were lynched yesterday in Alabama. Let's lynch the next fel low we catch stealing a hag of pea nuts. Georgia's State Farm must be a hot house uffair judging from the nerve displayed l>v the guards und higher officials of the prison. -o What has become of the old time reporter vJho UHed to tear off grinds about "the pollltlcul pot beginning to boll." -o "Hot Wenthor Bad for Women's Nerves."?Headline oVCr adv. And in directly bud for men who are married. -o Wonder what percentage of rthose checks the Russiand are said to have given tho Germans are bogus checks. We presume of course, fiat Tom Watson approves of it, o Have you planted your turnipss yot? A LINE o' DOPE iLaU^l?ai I I._.-.=-?< Messrs. W. W., J. F., W. It., and W. W. Bradley, Jr., and Mr. J. D. Kerr of Abbeville spent a few hours in the city yesterday en route to the moun tains of North Carolina where they expect to spend several days. They arc making the drip In an automo bile and claim that the roads are get ting rather bad on account of the very heavy rains. "Next week," stated Mr. Pinkston yesterday, "I will have at the Palmet to a vaudeville company known as the Mersercan Submarine Girls, which played for three solid weeks at the Bon l ta theatre in Atlanta. They are in Spartanburg this week, having Jumped from Jacksonville, Fla. The company is highly recommended and if It is not up to the standard, I will not keep It." Tho heavy ralnB yesterday after noon and last night will interfere with the paving work that 1b now going on. For the past several days tho work has been stopped at times on account of tho wet streets und very l'Xely none will be done today. -o?? Mr. L. D. Phillips of the Western Union Telegraph office roceived early yesterday morning a postcard picture of the body of Leo Frank, hanging to the tree v. here he was felt by the mob who lynched him on Monday night. The picture was the object of many curiouB looks yesterday by interest ed people of this city. ? o - The Brogon Mills resumed opera tions yesterday after a holiday of over two weeks. Tito rest was much on Joyed by the operatives but they glad ly returned to their posts yesterday morning. o Dr. H. A. Pruitt and Coroner Har die are In receipt of a letter from Prof. R. N. Bruckctt, chief chemist at Clemson College, stating that no evidences of poison were found In the utomach of Maria Walker, the negress who died under suspicious circum stances Tuesday morning of last week. The letter In part Is as follows: "This sample was analysed with all t'ue care and pr?cautions to insure Immunity from being tampered with at any stage of the analysis. No poisonous substance, metallic, or ganic, inorganic, volatile or non-vola tile could be found." May m Godfrey received a letter rrom Sidney-Spltser and company yes terday stating that their attorney had riven his approval of the 166,160 pav ng assessment certificates of this city tad thai as soon as they were printed ther would b? sent to Anderson for the mayor's execution. Thoy an- ex pected to be available by the latter part of this month. -o Mr. 8. M. Byars. farm d?monstra tion agent, stated Inst night that he had received a telegram from Mr. W. W. Long stating that he would be present at the farmers meeting which Is ito be held at Mr. Pat Major's to day. A barbecue dinner will bo served and un interesting program will be carried out. Many people from this city will doubtless attend. -o Mr. I ley ward Mahoii, former mayor of the city of Greenville, was in the city yesterday in interest of an excur sion over the P. & N. and th" C. C. & O., which is to be run from Green wood to Johnson City, Tenn., on Au gust LT>. Mr, Mahon is a veteran er curslonlst and will be la charge of the train. A train will leave Ander son at 6:30 and the fare will bo 13.50. Tickets will be good returning as late as the following Saturday. * * LAW OB ANARCHY. WHICH f * * There can be but one answer to this latest assault on the authority and integrity of Georgia. r "MB Tho deconcy and civilization of our state Quit, at last, assert itself, or, else, pull up stakes and quit. it is a straight-out I sue between law and anarchy; let Georgia choose for themselves. This climax was inevitable as long as we permitted incendiary indica tions to set Georgia aflame. Tom Watson has cost oGorgla more than ten thousand good and true men can rebuild in twenty years. but the latter must begin now, with a courage and determination born only in a crtalB, unies they will .to see the situation grow even worse. It Is no longer a question of Leo Frank's guilt or innocence; or of his life or death ?but solely a question of Georgia's honor and good name. The war in Europe is horrible enough; but anarchy at home is worse. Those who are disposed to tempor ize with this situation further will be as guilty of Georgia's dignice and re trogression as the mob iteelf. Only worse than cither of these Is the man who has so persistently sown these seeds of hate and violence and anar chy throughout Georgia. God may be able to forgive him, but Georgia will never be ablo to forget him and his hellish work.?Augusta Chronicle. 001? BITS OF SEWS. Allentown, Pa?Paul and Fred Gold smith of Cormack, L. I., took refuge In a barn during a storm. Tho light ning struck a pillar against which Paul was leaning, ran down it and ripped the man's shirt entirely from his body. Paul's body was scorched, but Fred was knocked unconscious. Lake City, Fla.?Georgia Garner, 9 years-old, coughed u;, a small metal doll which she had Bwr.I'owed three yearB ago. Topcka, Kan.?A. C. Bartell, police court reporter, had a tip that Borne persons had buried beer in t^clr back yard. lie obtained a grave 'digger's s, ado, and stealthily entered the yard. After much labor iu what appeared to br ? newly made grave, be dug up thpie chickens which the people that day had buried. WakaruBa, Ind.?When Coroner Dr. Walkinshaw performed an au topsy on a young woman following her mysterious death, he found .that ber ieft lung was no larger than a lemon; that her right lung was one quarter normal size; that her heart was about one-half normal size and that her liver was many times larger than it should have been, extending to her fourth rib and up into her shoulder. Tho woman was 21 years old, and died of poisoning of the Intestines. Middle! own, N. Y.?To celebrate then* eighty-sixth birthday, Mrs. J. C. Barrett of Edmondston, and Mrs. Nathan V. Brand of Leonardsvillo will be rocked In the presence of their guests in the old cradle In which they were rocked when babies. Tbey claim to be the oldest twins in the state. Temple, Tex.?Cutting roses In her gardon, Mrs. Bd. G. Talley heard her baby cry in the house. She started to run indoors, tripped over a lawn-mower and foil. The scissors in ber hand pierced her heart klll l ing her instantly. Crane. Mb.?W. H. Hilton, 65-years old, has a peculiar affliction which : -events his speaking to persons near Mm. He can talk to animals or per sons at a distance. Philadelphia, Pa.?Bitting on the doorstep of her home. Mrs. 'Meddelena Italslna heard her baby utter a cry above her. She looked up to ace the child In the window on the third door lose its balance and fall. The mother sprang under the wlndw in time to catch the child. Neither was injured, beyond a Blight cut on the baby's Hp. BEER KEGS S AYL THE CROPS. South Dakota Farmers Use Thea to Help the Reapers. (St. Paul Dispatch.) The beer kegs of South Dakota are helping to save the gram crop. With wheat rlpeoJn gat the rapid rate the farmers Tout d that the rains had left the fleL's so soft they could not use their '-aiders. Then some onft remembered a beer keg h? bad seen in froat of the Tillage bar. He took It to the blacksmith shop had holes bored la ?ach end and throagh these holes he thrust a bar of Iron to serve as an agle. Then he placed the caterpillar ?tieei und-, the binder back of the big wheel. The weight was thus shifted from the wheels to the keg and the binder wss able to move acro&s the soft ground. Get this idea elear ! The goods offered you at these clear ance prices are not the "sale" kind; every reduced article in this store was purchased with the idea of giving you extreme value for the original price. In other words, they're true Evans Quality. $3.50 Men's Oxfords-$2.75 $1.50 Manhattan Shirts. .$1.15 $4.00 Men's Oxfords_$3.25 $1.50 Adjusto Shirts.$1.15 $4.50 Men's Oxfords_$3.45 $2.00 Manhattan Shirts. .$1.50 $5.00 Men's Oxfords_$3.75 $3.50 Manhattan Shirts. .$2.65 $6.00 Men's Oxfords_$4.90 $3.50 Eclipse Silk Shirts. .$2.65 $1.50 Manhattan Union Suits. .$1.15 $2.00 Manhattan Union Suits. .$1.50 Parcel Post Prepaid. "The Store with*a Conscience FALL OF KOVNO SEVERE BLOW TO RUSSIANS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1.) prrts that the party now landing at Gdllipoli was heavily engaged and ?ays the British left won 500 yard?. The Australians repulsed the Turkish attacks. Gr?>s Situation. There Is little change in the diplo matic situation in the near east. For mer Premier Venlzelos, who asked for four days to consider whether or not to form a new cabinet, is believed to have reached an agreement with King Constantine. It is not considered probable, however, that it will result in an early alignment of Greece with the allies. The Italian mountain troops, Rome announces, in squads joined by ropes crossed the high mountain passes and climbed and occupied the Turkctt pits and the Hinder Madatsch pits, each about 10,500 feet high! The Italian advances claimed the upper Rlehz Monte Nero section. Yenfzelos To Form t'oKnet. London, Aug. 18.?A Central News, Athens dispatch says Venlzelos to iay notified the king of Greece of his readiness to form u . cabinet. Petrograd, Aug. 18.?German aero planes are persistently bombarding Vilna, about 50 miles east of Kovno. \ possibility of its capture is fore seen in Petrograd. Operations pre liminary to evaluation are in pro gress. Zeppelin Raid. London, Aug. 18.?Zeppelins raided the pastern counties of England last light Ten civilians were killed and 16 were hurt. The property damage Aas slight. One Zeppelin 1b thought o have been damaged. Two Steamers Snnk London. Aug. 18.?The British steamer Bonny and Spanish steamet [sldoro have been sunk Twenty-one jf the former and eight ?f the latter were picked up. The Norwegian steamers Romulus and Mineral and he trawler George were also sunk. Snide to Success. Can You FoUow It I A few guide-posts to success were tet up before the employees of the 'hit-ago Public Library yesterday in he form of quotations contained In i rule book issued by Librarian Henry 3. Legier. Here are some of them: Do what you are paid to do?and hen some; it's the "then some" that ;ets your salary raised. Folks that never do any more than hey get paid for never get paid for my more than they do. Some men are ground down on the rrindatone of life, while other get lolished up. It depends on their kind f stuff. Let's be of good cheer, remembering hat tho misfortunes hartfeeV to bear rere those that never came. You will never push yourself for ward in this world by patting yourself n the back. . iv The mac who thinks he can learn hloks a great truth. It may be more interesting to mud ther people's business, bot it's more rofitable to mind your own. The Land if Ry-And-By. There la a Sand, as I've heard tell, | rhere nothln'a ever done; the people rho therein do dwell, no work have et begun. "Tomorrow" is the watch word there, and "Pretty soon" the cry -the name of this unpleasant land?? tie Land of By-and-By. Procrastination there is king; he nies with a high hand, but makes no &ws or anything to benefit the land, 'he lessons they are never learned? 0 use to question why; the chores re left unfinished In.the Lan'I of By nd-By. And If YOU put things off and ssy oull do them pretty soon, and ahtrk our tasks from day to day, perhaps ante afternoon, they'll take YOU oS j thies bad land?no friend will heed our cry?and there is no Tomorrow 1 the Land of By-and-By. THE LOVERS. (Margaret Widdemer in The Interna tional Magazine.) Pearls for a necklace, pearls from out the seu. This was the guerdon that the first gave me, Pearls that were worth a sultan's ran soming, Slaves and temples and the cities of a king. i Singing at my window, singing whllo I slept. Long was the vigil that the second kept. Of my eyes like morning and my hair like night, And my arma for a girdle of the heart's delight. I Fair was the third one, fairer than the sun. Fairer than an empress could see and i not be won; He clasped my knees and pleaded that love was sweet And his red lips burned upon my naked feet. Naught have you given me, nothing . have you said, You have not beaut yand you have not gold, I Yet my heart shall lovo you till the world 1b old. Who shall tell the way tho heart Is Australia's population is now esti mated at 5,000.000. British East Africa devotes 12,000 acres to cattle growing. Finland, in the first half of 1914, ex ported 33,000 tons of paper pulp. It has been estimated that nearly 300,000,000 feet, or more than 555,000 miles, of film are used up yearly to satisfy the world's damand for meting pictures. According to scientists, a man should live about five times as long as the time required for the full develop ment of his frame and muscular sys tem, but seldom docs. Japan is such a mountainous coun try that it has to resort to intensivo cultivation In order to raise enough rice. In 1912 It used fertilizers to the value of more than $104,000,000. A Wisconsin legislator, has asked pt n ilsslon of the House of Repre sentatives to return home and' earn some money. He declares that his $500 salary had been used up and that he must mak0 something in ordor to live. The State of Ohio has abolished 1, 493 saloons since Its new liquor li cense law became optratlvo a year ago. This is exclusive of thcse forced to close because of the proportion to population restriction of one bar to each 500 residents. A tower higher than the Eiffel Ib in course of Construction at Brussels, and la designed for meteorological purposes. It will oe 1,033 feet In height, while the height of the Eiffel tower is 9R4 feet. Three to six months, working four or five hoars each day, are required In Ecuador to complete the best Pana ma hate, but children will make two of the cheaper grade hats from un dressed straw in a day. Qualifications such as patience, good eyesight and the. skill acquired by years of ex perience are necessary to prodv* *.he very best grade of hats. ' - ' la His Beeiu. Major von Hohcnstockwlta had grown a wild war-beard, says The New York Evening Post. The hair of his head, about tho time of the full development of General "Macken sen^ Gallclan drive, reminded one of the locks of Samson that fell before the false shears of Dellah. As for his eyebrows, they stood out in fierce luxuriant tufts. Along came a trooo er, saluted and humbly addressed the adjutant, a slender and' immacu late young lieutenant, still clean shaven. In spite of weeks of cam paign log. "When can X speak to the major?" said the trooper. . The lieutenant looked fixedly in the Strectlon of the Russian trenches and replied: "The sooner tho better. Else hell be grown over entirely." GERMANY REGULATES TEXTILE INDUSTRY Blockade of Raw Materials Makes Economic Move Necessary. 'Berlin, Aug. 11.?(Associated Press Correspondence.)?Since the impor tation of textile raw materials into Germany has been almost entirely stopped, the army authorities have perfected a plan or economic schedule by the terms of which the textile in; dustry of Germany will be regulated and controlled. It has been worked out with* a careful consideration of the supplies of tevtlles now on hand and with a view to. making them last as long as possible. This Is to be accomplished, In part, by forbidding for the time being the production of luxuries, and suiting production of all oii.tr articles to the supply on hand. Sudh a regulation in connection with cotton goods al-. ready exists and is working well. No general prohibition of textile production has been laid down but the list of articles whicl. may be made has been restricted so 'ar as possible to the absolut el ;- necessary?as for instance personal and bed linen, clothes and linings. It Is also stipu lated what kind of material these things may be. made of, the coarser being substituted for the finer here tofore in use. Also the use of cot ton is to be enlarged somewhat so that the llst Of textiles may bp ac cording circumscribed. . . Regulation of wool production is also in prospect, probably differing somewhat from the rules governing cotton, but in any event prescribing what kinds of woolen may be used for given articles. A restriction of the flax and hempt Industry Is also planned. Army contracts are not to be gov erns dby any of the new rules. Those who have already made contracts with the military or nrval authorities may carry them out Whether or not the production of the articles in question Is forbidden. Hawker?"Buy a flower, sir?" Bil lion?"No thanks." . Hawker?"Buy one foT your wife, sir." Billions? "Haven't one." Hawker?'TV>r your sweetheart then." Billion?"Haven't one, either." Hawker?"Well, but one to celebrate your good luck."?'Hous ton Chronicle. Baslaess. "That drummer is certainly a per sistent salesman, Isn't he?" remarked ' the Old Fogy. "Should say be was," replied the Grouoh. "Why, if ho ever fcets to Heaven when he dies he will try to sell. St. Pete- a card-Index system." This country has two billion acres of land and only 12 per cent under cultivation ? one six teenth of the popula tion of the world and over one-third of the wealth of the world, and $15 is the average price paid by men for a suit. We offer you a suit now better by $5 than the average man wears for $14.95. B, 0. Evans & Co. It's clearance time with us. '?ls?i:*L i.u., Adv.