The intelligencer. (Anderson, S.C.) 1915-1917, October 14, 1915, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6
lilli ii iiimniiiwuiiii iMiiiii.w
PROFESSIONAL I
CARDS
?W?IHBIIWi.llliMIIIIIIIIIIMI.?
Dr. HENRY R. WELLS
DENTIST
Office P. A M. Hulloing
Office 627-rhones-Rc-ldence 06
Dr. C. Mack Sanders
DENTIST
Office 304-6-6 Dleckley Building.
Omeo Phone 429 Residcnco Phone 149.
L14_. ' '
Dr. Lillian L. Carter
Osteopath
\ 212 Heckle? Bldg.
Phone 168. Residence 318.
Dr. L. Carl Sanders
(Associated With Dr. J. O. Sanders)
Office Bleckley Bldg.
. Phone 329.
Residence Phone 149.
Dr. C. Singleton Breedin
Office la St Mary's Hospital
North Ander s OB,
Bonns 8 to 10, 12 to 8 aad 6 te 9.1
CMihorm, Trowbridge Sc Saggs
DENTISTS
Hbw Th astre
W.Wfc&ssffS?.
C. GADSDEN SAYRE I
Architect
sc
C ASTORIA
For Infants and Children
In Us* For Ovar 30 Years
Always heats
1 the
Signature of.
We have add
ed a Grocery
department to
our business
and will carry a full line
of Heavy and Fancy
Groceries-Have just re
ceived a Car Load of the
Finest Flour a Car Load
of the Best Salt and a
full line of. Canned
<Goods, Sugar, Coffees,
etc.
You will find anything
m Grocery line here and
our Mr, A. E. Muli will
be glad to serve you at
any hour of the day and
at prices to let you live
?00.
Come in and see us--We will
save you money and give-'you the
Freshest GooUs In tow?.
erson
Hardware
Argentine I
Golden Oj
To Cat
H?tenos AircH, Sept. 29.-(Associut
ed Press ( lorrpbpondenee. )-The re
movul of the Interdict upon the im
portation of American cattle into Ar
gentina opeiiM to American breeden- a
most promising market that ha? been
monopolized by Urltlifa breeder? here
tofore. Already some of tiie Argen
tine estancieros, as tho owners of
great rauche:) are called, have taken
Interest in tlie possibilities of tile new
conditions, and as a pioneer in the
trade. Senor Celendlo Pereda, one of
the most prominent ol tho Argentino
runchmen, lias gone to the I'nited
States to select bulls and other
blooded stock for his vast estates.
lu view of tho phenomenal advance
in thc prices for live stock in the Ar
gentina and thc probability thal they
may reach still greater heights, par
ticularly if the European war contin
uos, it ls assumed tnat the estancieros
who seek cattle In the fulled States
Will ho prepared to pay well for
choice stock.
Tho cattle show at Palermo, which
ls an annual fixture and which is con
sidered an economic , barometer of
prosperity in tho republic ha? Just
closed with results taut arc far more
encouraging Utan could have betn ex
perted. lt mado plain the fact that
in whatever other ways tho country
might be suffering depression, its
basis industry-cattle grading-pros
pers as never before.
The Argentino has suffered trade
disturbance as a result of the war "rind
during the past two years the country
has been punslnp through what ii
called here a "crisis of progress"
tlie result of lavish expenditure ol
borrowed capital lu national and pro
vinclal public works. Hut In the fae?
ot these adverso conditions, there Ii
the outstanding significant fact that I
single champion lmrhum bull, for In
stance, has just sold at auction foi
160,000, paper (the Argentine papei
dollar hoing equivalent to about 4i
cents gold.)
The average prions at the Pa?enne
show established records. The fav
orites breed lin the Argentine ls nos
the Durham shorthorn, of which 20(
bulls, making up the Cirst lot put ut
at the auction, brought a total of $1,
140,000 paper, or an avorage of 95,701
a head (about ?2,r.ir. American gold.]
And this doe -nct-incl-ude ?'Ix per cen
commission which, in this cuontry, li
pani by too purchaser.
Tho Herefor has, lt appears, dedin
ed in favor, the champion bull of tba
breed being .sold for $12,000 paper
only a fifth,, of the price paid tor tin
champion Durham.
: The polled Angus, which was deem
ed the coming breed a few years agc
was in such little favor at ralerm<
that lt was difficult to find a blduer
The champion of ?this class went fo
only 94,600 paper. The Angus steel
however, is in great demand arnon;
the establishment flint pack frote:
beet. Only recently prices In the or
dina > ~*<ttle markets wont as h!g
as 9t(" paper for this typo of steer
probe.:, j y a world record.
One outcome of the flourishing stat
of the grazing industry may be in
vrovements in the Argentine ranches
With the. exception ot a few localities
grazing is carried on under primitiv
conditions, with little application <
science and exmrt knowledge.
Argentina la an ideal graving cour
try, but the natural pasture, oxcoj
in privileged xones, is very scrubby
Owing to these visible advantage
lands wore sold by the league In th
old times, the prices belnfi based ui
on the quanitty of stock that coul
be carried. Thero are .vast extei
sions, hundreds o fthousands <
leagues, that are still obtainable i
prarie value. The poor Steuer ca
do nothing with these lands. >JH
would starve on a league of lt If t
had not a gun to shoot birds. Bi
the rieh syndicats or private investi
could, and many do, buy with a vi?
to Improvement. Wilma this ls dot
judiciously ?he results are surpri
lng.
In this country stock is never bou
od-Seme animals preparing tor tl
show, aro raised in special paddocl
hut the animal raised tor the buelcl
er rarely sees the Inside of a bulldln
or tastes anything but pasture gras
Thia out-of-door life saves ox-pea
?nd, doubtless, avoids some of tl
cattle diseases. The settler Who pu
chased land forty years ago at prar
! value end put lt under alfalfa,
the-wealth estanciero ot today. Son
of the big. estancias have been han
ed down fdom father to ?on. but A
gcntlno law* governing succession
altogether contrary to the maint
nance of ho' . dltary Internst, tor wit
flio owner -iles there is generally
division of kill his estate among ti
heirs.
The-great enemy of gracing a
agriculture, is drought and'at prese
lt is keenly felt In CoWoba, the prl
clpal alfalfa province ? where kt.
complicated by .tba docusts, a' pla?
which has bngt' tue republic millie
to keep down-. It is claimed Mi.?t t
depredation-?, of the .veracious ian
ar? not 'so great as formerly, t
just now lt ls admitted that the da
age? belair caused are very great. T
Insecto com? ?rom Bolles, Br.v,
and Paraguay. They return to tm
quarters to those countries after J
gontlne has spent much money kl
lng 'a more or less negligible perci
tage of them ?"nd they return
clouds OVA following ?nanon, lu :
gard to drought the problem is
less complex. The republic is
large, and the natural rainfall ts
lingually distributed that the trou'
is endemic in about nine-tenths of I
total area. The viribus schemes
Irrigation have cost enormous sums
of money and created only as oe
haas*-and there.
. Ttl? s Wi ful settler or wealth
tandero contents himself with sh
'resents
jportunity
tie Breeders
lng wells and erecting windmills to
supply his house and stock, but it is
obviously impossible to overcome, by
artificial moans, the heavy handieup
imposed by nature. Mr. Roes un
American expert who lias boen Tour
ing tho provinces, suggests a solution.
Ile finds that there are 200 varieties
of the csotus natural to tho country.
He thinks that this plant, deprived of
thorns hy breeding them out. would
solve tiie difficulty Thc cactus will
thrive in the poorest noll, and '.IO per
cent of its leaf weight is water. The
fibre of the plant is also declared use
ful for the textile industry. Thc al
fulfu plant, however, must still con
tinue to hold tito field in n literal
sense.
Sinews In Reserve.
(From the Louisville Courier-Jour
nal.)
Six hundred workmen from Annum
have arrived at Marseilles to be em
ployed in French munition factories.
That au Associated Press dispatch
follows the name of that remote and
inconspicuous country with the expla
nation that it is part of French Indo
china, thus enlightening many a read
er who ls rusty upon Asiatic geog
raphy. ls significant of the resources
of the allies, as compared with those
of Germany, in human units and in
materials.
Annum is a. strip of tho Indo-Chi
nese peninsula skirting the China Sea
So little ?B known by Westerners that
not ono newspaper reader among a
do/.en, in America or Europe, could
say off hand what is its prlnclual city,
what its form of government, its nat
ural resources or the language and
racial extractions of its Inhabitants,
or whether Anhamese women wear
skirts or trousers. eYt Annam has
15,000,000 inhabitants. It Is a part of
"Father India," which includes pop
ulous Burma with Its largo agricul
tural, mineral and timber resources,
and Cambodia, which Americans re
call as the country whose kink-in Do
Wolf Hopper's comic opera, "Panjan
drum"-gaye someone an elephant
which "ate at night and ate all day."
A majority of readers of Kipling know
Burma vaguely, as being the soil from
which spring Rangoon and Mandalay,
and Moulmeln with its old pagoda and
"tinkly temr'e bells."
How man countries obscure to the
Wester nc 'vhose geographical studies
were begun and ended In school might
bo listed as dependencies or protector
ates of Great Britain and France
capable of sending to the European
battlefields such hordeB as may be
needed. Many of these far-away, out
of-the-way countries are capable of
supplying enormous quantities of
food, fabrics and raw materials for
manufactures. Their products may be
sent to tho British and French ports
over seas thus far controlled by the
allies and despite the pestering of
commerce by tho German submarines,
comparatively safe channels of trade.
Anderson Tonight, Ladies Free.
Watch for the Football "Specials"
in Friday's paper. They will be well
worth while. There will probably be
a page of them.
? ?
? CLEMSON' COLLEGE ?
? ?
I After the rather poor showing mado
by the Tigers against Davidson
aggregation, tho big victory over tho
Volunteers was a great surprise to
.th.3 most ardent Clemson followers.
.It is now the belief that Clemson
will put out the best tesm that has
represented the Tiger camps Ju
years. The players seem to have tho
pep and scap that can bc desired,
but better they show remarkable
team play for the season's age.
The Clemson team met with a
royal reception from tho Clemson
alumni tn Knoxville, ?nd with a mons
ter celebration when they returned to
the col logo. They have now a taste
or tho sweets of victory, lt 1B expected
that they will work yet the harder.,
Nono of tho men were hurt ser
iously in the game at Knoxville. Har
mon and Gee got slight twists of the
knee, but Ahoy will be all right in a
few days: All the men will be in
fine fettle for tho struggle wlt.'i Au
burn lu Anderson Saturday, the 16th.
sven Loplo Major ia about to got his
charUe-hoss In condition to ride lUo
the fray. He is especially anxious
to play in his home town where" his
brother, former Auburn star and ox
Clemson coach liven.
Harris ?bas the most talked of foot
tn college now, since he booted the
pigskin far those three points that
spelled victory for Clemson last Sat
urday, auch to the dlgur.t of the Vol
unteer!.. He ls showing great im
provement, und promises to be ono of
che leading punters of the South for
this season. Capt. Mhgill sud "Mule"
Littlejohn are doing wonderful work
at tackle, and Randie's defensive work
at eJotsr ls of high order.
Almost the entire corps, will go to
Anderson Saturday tor the game with
Auburn. A special train will be run
over the Blue Ridge. Preparations
are under way looking to a big par
ade In Anderson. It Clemson does
win from that ancient toe, chere will
be big doings In Anderson Sa turd? y
afternoon and night.
Anderson Tonight, Ladas? Free.
Watch for the Feetbail ??pac?ais"
In Friday'* paper, nia? will be well
north while. There will probably be
. page of thea?.
Lady Senator at Work, ll
Mrs. Heirn Hing Robinson,
Colorado's Lady Senator.
Senator FJoblnson has temporarily 1
j left, her home in Colorado to fight for
woman suffi ire in those eastern
I states wCtdch failed to see as early ax
did Colorado, what ?ho considers one
of tho vjery important questions of thc
age. Some of these eastern states are
new in the thick of tho fight for and
against woman suffrage, end this
photograph taken just tho other day,
shows her mail lu s an outdoor speech
to New Yorkers, ask int; thom-to vote
for the state > constitutional amend
ment which will permit women to
vote.
Anderson Tonight, Ladies Free.
How lt Happened.
Senator Cleronco D. Clark, of Wy
oming, .muled ihe other day when,
reference whs' made, to the bright
eaynlgs of thc' kiddle folk. lie said
ho was rem i titled of a small party
named Jimmy! relates The Philadel
phia Telegraph:'
One afternoon little Jimmy had
been playing rather strenuously in
tho street, and when ho returned to
his hpppy homo he had an overheated
look.
"Jlrrr__y," o>a:U.h.od his mother on
I seeing thu youngster, "come here a
I moment."
"Yes, ma'am," obeyed Jimmy
quickly hustling to his mother's side.
"What in the world have you been
doing?" demanded tho fond parent.
I "Your head la all perspiration."
"That's all right, mamma," was the
[indifferent responso of .Timmy. "My
roof leaks." ?
Watch for the Football "Spe^ils"
in Friday's imper. They will be well
worth while. There will probably bc
la page of them.
Anderson Tonight, Ladies Free.
i QUIT MEAT IF YOUR
KIDNEYS ACT BADLY j
?Take tablespoonful of Salts if I
Back hurts or Bladder
bothers.
Wo are a nation of meat eater-, and
lour blood is (?lied with uric add, says
I a well-known authority, who warna
ns to be constantly on guard against
|kJdnoy trouble:
Tho kidneys do their utmost lo free
the blood of this Irritating acid,
but become weak from the overwork;
they get sluggish; tho eliminative tit
apes clog and . thus the waste la re
tained in thc blood to poison the en
tire system.
When your kiaaoys ache anC feel
I like lumps of-lead, ^and you have
(stinging pains in tb-, back or the
urine is cloudy full of sediment, or
the bladder ia irritr.ble, obliging you
to seek relief during the night; when
you have severo headaches, nervous
and dizzy s polia, sleeplessness, ac'd
stomach or rheutnstlsm In bad weath
er, srei from your pharmacist nbout
tour ounce? ot Jad Salts; take a
tablespoonful tn a glass Of watet be
fore b-eakfast each morning and in
a few d ty:, your kidneys will act fine.
This famous salts .ls made from the
acid of grapes and lomon julee, com
bined with U??? and has been used
for generations to flush and stimulate '
clogged kidneys, to., neutralise the]
acids, so lt no longer la a source ot ir
ritation, thus ending urinary and
bladder disorders
Jad Salts is inexpensive and can ?-ot
Injure; makes a delightful efferves
cent ltthla-water drink* and nobody
can make a mistake by U?lng a little
occasionally to keep the L-uneys olean
and active.
YOU CAN SAVE MONEY BY I--71 ^JLM^.OJJL
WHARING Wo L. DOUGLAS SHOES FOR MEN! ^P'M
VALUE GUARANTEED L__ -! W^lfc^i!
FOP 33 yeavsV/.L.Do?g*?vjaarae has stood for shoes f gy Uc^J^B^QiJ
of the blahed* standard o? quality for the price. His / w.t OCUCLAS
name ami thc price s?impee on the bottom guarantees fc? ?~ *?? WA6U P'JT TO
fail value. ThcyaP?thebestknownshoesintiiewopld. ?7 ^ Wk gfiftjfffgjgg
W. L. Douglas chaw ?5 made of the mo?t carefully $?L*A ?/ YEAR^OF ACE.
selected |eath??rr,af ter thelatest model?, in a weil equipped ?jaHfc UFACTURINU 8?
factory at Brockton, Ma- under the direction and per? ^ErrS? 13>& TKE DLAR.
sonal ma pee? ion of n mo? perfect organization and the J?j^Jt/L cEST WAKER OF
highest paid akj'Iedshoeritakers; all workingwimanhonest^af^w $3.50 AND sa.
determinatipn to make the beat shoe* in the world, ^d?^? T-iX^
W. L. Douglas $3.00 and $3.50 shoes &n**?
just as rjood for style, fit and wear as other J^M?T. u ^^WlS?S?Lm^.^ jnY*"1T
makes gosling $4.00 io ?5.00, tho ODJy^B?r * ^iliB^ 33.00
ptiiceptiblc dif^ the ^^^^^
B. F L E i SH IVS A ?i|Ck &M B ROS. - ^ANDERSON, S. C.
A Conn; ni ethe SmrgeKtloft.
"I nm too busy." Kali! the popular
author to Judge" to spend any time
polishing up my literary style. A man
Who baa to write 100,000 words a
week has no time for suo.i triviali
ties."
"Then," said the critic, "you should
employ a literature valet to do it for
you-; to keep your punctuation marka
in order; to brush y?ur phrases; to
press your paragraph's 'which are in
clined to bag at tho knees and to snip
oft the fraying tdgcj of your gram
mar."
TIRES
Represent the utmost service,
safety, miieage a-nd pleasure
obtainable from an Auto-Va
cation trij?.
TODD AUTO SHOP
Opposite Tb; Palmetto
N. Main.
LTHE YEARS GRANDEST AND BEST HOLIDAY
ANDERSON CIRCUS
FRIDAY OCX. 3 2
g^y^ >3 ^ ? ^ ^ ^ ^ , a. t f ,
1 *jm\ al L1M y Ma ?Til I m jfll fl
r^j^Vy^^ FROM Ev&^wnra!^^ J
i?^Sfl ??fe^J^AMERICA NEVER SAW\^^Myl
Vi MSU??!*3r ^ KUStlXS-TOg BflftSES-85 IKWBlE'lBtSTH RAILROAD C^^^
t / PB HbkJV 200 NTW FEATURES?, EUROPEAN SENSATIONS ^^f^BV^
THE CIRCUS SURPRISE ? CENTURY warn
UHBBttf W0NBE8FI?L WAR ELEPHANTS-SAMS BRANA'S FLYING BMSSS &afl?BiSH
fnmmnr??i^ami PAuanrars mum ROUERSKA?M AIR s^tcicianu KAJR baan
?H OtuMPt^crm cruiseaa CIRCUS EMRBCT PROM pagiN ' HTP^^BI I
KPH MUI BA3NUM ANO BAILEY'S BCAUTtnjL STATUE AND POSING HORSES ff" tm BBBH
P*? Lg^V MLLE. ApOIB*8 tO TAWCIO DArVCIINO LIONS M^^aET^B
ri,, .HIM.I, sa^A aar i s ? ? , - - - 4
BIS, ?ORO^OIJS FREE STREET PARADE
-a?asm <a? a-jwrfng st a**, ss as sV sa so wsn*as * assssia p?i*mm?-m
ONE 58 CENT TICKET ''miBn-'iamniatmM I
emueasw wteen aa vgaas, *va> rac? 1
mmmawmmtH A???* _Bwtsortp w t w v r.tt. I
Admission tickets ami reset wed grand stand chairs wfll be on aale circa? day at EVANS' PHAR
MACY NO. 1. Prices exactly the same charged! at fan abro ground*.