The intelligencer. (Anderson, S.C.) 1915-1917, October 14, 1915, Page PAGE SIX, Image 7

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(PROFESSIONAL CARDS Dr. HENRY R. WELLS DE?f?lST OIHc? F. A M. Building Office 627-Phones-Residence 66 Dr. C. Mack Sanders DENTIST Onice 304-5-6 Bleckley Building. Office Phone 429 Resldenco Phone 149. U , 1 - ? 1 Dr. Lillian L. Carter Osteopath 212 Bleckley Bldg. Phone 168. Residence 318. Dr. L. Carl Sanders (Associated With Dr. J. 0. Sanders) Office Bleckley Bldg. Phone 329. Residence Phone 149. Dr. C. Singleton Breedin OSes fa St Mary's Hospital North Anderson, Hourn 8 to 10, 12 to O and 0 to 9. CUshobsif Trowbridge St Shiggs DENTISTS New Theatre Baaldsag W. ?vmswrat C. GADSDEN SAYRE Architect 405-408 BSacSdey Bnfltfing rt s s. c. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children In UM For Ovar 30 Years Ogro^s of We have add ed a Grocery department to cv? 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 in Grocery line here and j., <. , ... . our Mr. A. E. Mull will be glad to serve you at any hour of the day and at prices to let you live too. Come in and se.e us-We-will $ave vpu money and give you the Freshest Goods In town. Anderson Hardware dvOe Argentine I Golden Oj J. KJ vai Due?os Aire?, Sept. 20.-(Assi.elat ed Press Correspondence. )-Thc re moval of the Interdict upon th? im portation of Anierlcan cattle into Ar gentina opens to American breeden* a most promising market that has been monopolized by Uri ilsa breeders here tofore. Already some of tho Argen tine estancieros, aa the owners of grillt ranches are called, havo taken Interest in the possibilities of the new conditions, und as a pioneer lu the trade, Senor Cclcndlo Pereda, one of thu most prominent of thc Argentine ranchmen, has gone to the United States to select hulls and other blooded stock for his vast estates. In view of the phenomenal advance In thc prices for live stock in the Ar gentine and thc probability that they may reach still greater heights, par ticularly If the European war contin ues, lt is assumed tuai the estancieros who seek cattle in (ho United States will bo prepared to pay well for choice stock. The cattle show at Palermo, which is au annual fixture and which is con sidered un economic j barometer of prosperity in tho republic has Just closed with results that are far moro encouraging thau could have been Ex pected, lt madu pia i o the fact that In whatever other ways tho country might be suffering depression, its basis industry-cattle grading-pros pers as never before. The Argentine has suffered trnde disturbance as a result of thc war? ind during the past two years the country has been passing through what ia called hore a "crisis of progress" tho resiult ot lavish expenditure ol borrowed capital In national and pro vincial public works. Hut In the face ot these adverse conditions, there la the outstanding significant fact that s single champion Durham bull, for in stance, has Just sold ut auction foi 160,000 paper (the Argentine pape: dollar' being equivalent to about 42 cents gold.) The average prices at the Palermc show established recored. The fav orites breed In tbs Argentine ls no? the Durham shorthorn, of which 20( bulls, making up the first lot put u( at the auction, brought a total of Si. 140,000 paper, or an average of $?,701 a head (about $2,61? American gold.] And this do? not-lnehide a-ix per cent commission which, in this cuontry, ii paid by Hov purchaser. The Herefor has, it appears, declin ed in favqr, the champion bull of thal breed being..sold for $12,000 paper only a firth,of the price paid for th? champion Durham. The polled Angus, which was deem ed tbs coming breed a few years aga was in such little favor at ralermi that lt was difficult to find a bldaer Tho champion of this class went fo only $4,500 paper. Tho Angus steel however, Is In great demand arnon j the establishment tlhat pack frosei beef. Only recently prices In the or dlnary cattle markets went as hlgl as $400 poper for this type of steer probably a world record. One outcome of the flourishing stst of the grazing Industry may be im proveniente in the Argentine ranches With tho exception of a few localities grazing is carried on under primitiv conditions, with little application c science and expert knowledge. Argentina ls an ideal grazing coun try, but the natural pasture, excer in privileged zones, is very scrubby Owting to these visible advantage: lands were sold by the league In th old times, the prices hoi nfl based uj on the quantity of stock that coul be carried. Thcro are .vast, exton eions, hundreds -o fthousands < lesgues, that are still obtainable ? prarie value. The poor etetler ca do nothing- wkh these lands. H would starve on a league ot lt if li had not a gun to shoot birds. Bi the rieh syndicate or privato In ves tc could, and many do, buy with a vie to improvement. WSien this ls doc Judiciously ?lie results are surpris lng. In this country stock ls never hom od-Borne animals preparing for tl show, aro raised in special paddocl but the animal raised for tho buetel er rarely sees the lnsido of a bulldin or tastes anything but pasture gr&si This out-of-door life saves cxpem and. doubtless, avoids somo of tl cattle diseases. Tho settler who pu chased land forty yeera ago at prar value and put lt under alfalfa, the wealth estanciero of today. Son of the big estancias havo been bani ed down fdom father to son, but A gentlno Jaw' governing succession altogether contrary to tho maint nance of hereditary interest, for win Mis owner dies there ls generally division .of all his estate among h heirs. The groat enemy of grazing ai agriculture. Is drought and at prese it ls keenly felt tn C?rdoba, tho prl ctpal alfalfa province whore tt < complicated by the docusts. a' plata which has cost the republic millie to keep down. It ls claimed Chat ti depredations ot the varaclous tnse are not so great as formerly, ' b just now It ls admitted that the dil ages being caused are vety groat. T insects come m rom Bollca, Bras and Paraguay. They return tb th? quarters tn those countries after A gen tine has spent much money kl tng 'a more ot less negligible perce tage of them and they return clouds the followIrig season. In i gard io drought the problem ls loss complex. The republic ls largo, and the natural rainfall is unequally distributed that the troul ls eudemlu In about nins lin tbs of t total area. The rarlbhs schemes Irrigation have cost enormous sums ot money and created only as oa heve-aad-there. The skilful settler or wealth ? tandero contents himself with si lng wells and erecting windmills tn supply lils IIOIIKO and stock, but it ls obviously impossible to overcome, by artificial means, lite heavy handicap imposed by nature Mr. Ross an American expert who ha? been tour ing the provinces, eug?osta a solution. Ile finds that there aro ??00 varieties of the cactus naturul to the country. Ile thinks that this piont, deprived of thorns hy breeding them out, would solve the difllculty. The cactus will thrive In tho poorest soil, and ?JO per cent of Its leaf weight in water. The fibre of the plant ls ai.io declared use ful for the textile industry. The al falfa plant, however, must still con tinue to lioltl Hie field in a 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 cor"try with tlio expla nation ' at lt ls part of French indo china, .hus enlightening many a read ier who \.i rusty upon Asiatic geog raphy. is significant of tho resources I of the allies, as compared with those lof Germany, in human units and in ?materials. Annam is a, strip of tho Indo-Chi jnese peninsula skirting the China Sea So little is known by Westerners that not one newspaper reader among a dozen, in America or Europe, could say orr hand what is its principal city, what its form or government, its nat urul resources or the language and racial extractions ot its inhabitant:;, or whether Annamese women wear skirts or trousers. eYt Annam has 15,000,000 Inhabitants. It 1B a part or "Father India," which includes pop ulous Burma with Its large agricul tural, mineral und 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 temple bells." How many countries obscure to the Westerner whose geogrophical studlea were begun and ended in school might be listed as dependencies or protector ates of Great Britain and Franco ?capable ot sending to the European j battlefields such hordes as may bc I 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 the 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 ? + ? After the rather poor showing mode by the Tigers against Davidson aggregation, tho big victory over the Volunteers was a great surprise to I the most ardent Clemson followers. It ts now the belief that Clemson will put out the best team that has represented the Tiger camps in ?years. Tito players seem to have tho pcp and snap that can be desired, but better they show remarkablo team play for the season's age. The Clemson team pict with a I royal reception from tho Clemson alumni In Knoxville and with a mons ? ter celebration when they 'returned to the college. They have now a taste 1 or the sweets of victory, lt 1" expected (that they will work yet the harder. None of tho men were hurt ser iously In the game at Knoxville. Har mon and Gee got slight twists of the knee, but they will be all right In a few days. Ail Gie men will be In tine fettle for the strugglo wltii Au burn in Anderson Saturday, tho 16th. even Loplo Major ls about to got his charlle-hoss In condition to ride into Ute fray. He is especially anxious to play in his home town where" his brother, former Auburn star and cx Clemson coach lives. Harris bias the most talked of foot ?in college now, since he booted tho pigskin for those three points that I spelled victory for Clemson last. Sat urday, such to the dlgust of tho Vol unteers. He ls showing great im provement, and promises to bo ono of tbe leading punters of the South for this season. Capt. Mfeglll ead "Mule*' Littlejohn are doing wonderful work at tackle, and Randie's defensive work at center ls of high order. Almost Gio entire oorpe will go to Anderson Saturday- for the game with Auburn. A spacial train will be mn over the Sine Ridge. Preparations are under -way looking to a big par ade in Anderson. If Clemson does win from that ancient foe, there wilt be big doings in Andereon Saturday afternoon and night. Anderson Tonight, Ladle* Free. Watch for the Football "Specials* Ila Friday's ??aper. Thar will be wet! worth while. There WOI probably be a page of Ute m. Lady Senator at Work. Mn*. Heirn Hing Robinson, Colorado's Lady Senator. Senator Robinson has temporarily left her home in Colorado to fight for woman suffrage in those eastern states wtjdch failed to see as early aa did Colorado, what she considers on I of the vpry Important questions of th I age. Some of these eastern states are now in the thick of the fight for an against woman suffrage, and thi photograph, taken Just tho other da. shows her making an outdoor specc to New Yorkers, asking them to Toto for the state constitutional amend ment which will permit women to vote. Anderson Tonight, Laches Free. ? Bow it Happened. Senator Ciaron co D. Clark, of Wy oming, smiled' the other day when, reference Was" made, to the bright saynlgs of, tho, kiddie folk. lie said he was reminded of a small party named Jimmy! relates The Phlladel [ phia Telegraph:' One afternoon little Jimmy had been 'playing'nititer strenuously in I the street, und when ho returned to his happy heme he had on overheated I look. "Jimmy," exclaimed his mother cn seeing thu youngster, "como here a I moment." "Yes, ma'am," obeyed Jimmy j quickly hustling to his mother's side. "What in the world have you been doing f" demanded tho fond parent. ["Your head is all perspiration." "That's all right, mamma," was tho I indifferent response of Jimmy. "My roof leaks." Watch fer the Football "Specials" in Friday's paper. They will be well ] worth while. There will probably be [a page of (hem. ? HM ll' ' - Anderson Tonight, Ladies Free. QUIT MEAT IF YOUR " KIDNEYS ACT BADLY ?Take tablespoonful of Salta if Back hurts or Bladder bothers. We are a nation of ment eaters and our Moot' is lilied with ??ric acid, says a well-known authority, who warns us to bc constantly on guard against kidney trouble. The kidneys do their utmost to freo Ute blood ct this irritating aclu, but become wea* from the overwork; they get sluggish; tho elimlnaUve tis sues clog and thus fha waste is re gained lu tho blood to poison tho cn jtlre system. When your kidPdyS ache and feel Uko lumps or leud. and yon have stinging pains itt'the bach, or Ute < urine ls cloudy full of sediment, or j Ute bladder ls irritable, obliging you to seek relief during the night; when you have severe headaches, nervous and dlfcsy spells, sleeplessness, acid stomach or rheumatism lc bad weath er, get from your pharmacist about j tour ounces of Jad .Salts; ?ake a tablespoonful tu a glass. e| water be fore breakfast each morning and In ? few daya your kidneys Will act fine. This famous salts is made fri m the acid of grapes and leaioo juice, com bined with l?tala and has been used for generation's to flush and stimulate clogged kidneys, t?L...th??tralise the acid?, so lt no longer ls a waree ot Ir rlUtlon. thus ending urinary and| bladder disorders. Jad Salts hi inexpensive sud cannot Injure; makes a delightful efferves cent Uthla-water drinks and nobody can make a mlttake by taking a little occasionally to' heep the Wdneys clean ?and active. fWia Usa a vzZs v??y vasa tss br^szj $3,00 & S3.50 SHOES JL V?U CAN SAVE Iii ON EY BY r-1 ?M^QmJL WEARING W. L. DOUGLAS SHOES FOR MEN I VALUE GUARANTEED L. ^ ? Tf||^~||r^lj For 33 yeavsW.L.DoiigioG same has stood for shoes / ?\ U?54?Uy?33 of the ?f&h?st standard o? quality for the price. His L W> L> DOUCLAS name anti the price siumpets on the bottom guarantees ^ v??- WA S'P'JT TO full value. They ar s the bese known shoes in the world. ^\ W*S MSEVES W. L. Douglas chaw ??a made of the moat carefully ? jg? ?E^ECAM r? selected ieathc.r?,afitr the latest modela, in a well equipped ?gmm^ f OFACTUR?NC irJ factory at Brockton, Ma- under the direction and per, y/rf^m*-:/} iSZtb J?? DLARS sonni inspection of a most perfect organization and the J^^ML CEST MAKER OF highest paid sk j'led shoemakers; aUworkingwithaahoaeat>^y^ /I^?^*3? *3-5? AND ***. determination lo make che best ahoea in the world. ^^^?^-S?Jf^f?fefvSHOE wo Ta. W. L. Douglas $3.00 and $3.50 shoes *r*i(i$??^^ ^hocc, just aa jyood for style, fit and wear aa other J^Mjl/U^ ^?^W^??S^^??^-^^-m makes costing $4.00 io $5.00, the ^y^B?w ~ %^S?HB^H^^ ?Ss?00 paiceptiblc different: is the price. ^^^^^py^^oo%<r^g| H^^^^^T^L *2"M W. L. Douglas r? Tie and J^jojj^ If your local dealci c.mnot ?jpply you, wilie TBM^O^^MSK^? w^Mflj j^E ^^^^v^sOT IL^iwSffl RMb ?E5a^B?Hl (oi Illustrated Covalo? ?hmvin? Low lo oeder ^^BHBMwsar J' !/W?I^BB ?-- ^ ^^NNSISBM E^TOn iSmaKmL^B f l(*J S?nrC Stfrt. Riockt?n. Mass. ^^*HHM^W\^^F lu^STmrTKS X^^^^^^B?BIP^ ? B. FUiSHMAN & BROS. - - - ANDERSON, S. C. A Goasvractira Suggestion. "I am too liusy," said tho popular author, to Judge" to spend uny time polishing up my literary style. A man ?who'has to write 100,000 words u week hap no time for sue") triviali ties." "Then," said thc critic, "you should employ a literature valet to do it for you>; to koei) your punctuation mark? ia order; to brus!; your phrases; to press your paruKfafJuV'which an* in clined to bag at thu kneos and to snip off the fraying cilgt-s of your gram mar." 1 JJ TIRES Represent the utmost service, safety, mileage a-iid < pleasure obtainable from an Auto-Va cation trip. TODD AUTO SHOP Opposite The Palmetto N. Main. THE YEAR'S GRAND?ST AND BEST HOLIDAY ANDERSON CIRCUS FRIDAY OCT. 2. 2 "THU - ^ MARVELOUS &V\WAAI BIG, GCIRG^ ?wv MM? ata*? mm iWjgNwi.i? ?4 aas?, ?s ge costosa ?a aunara a* ?anu?as setsumuw ONE 50 CENT TICKET AIMMTS TO AU. THE WOWBRUWP canoas* uNota ia vgAaa, naur noes S -480 WOPL?-PAMCD ARTISTS GATHERED FROM EVERY MATSON AMRt^awA NE3VE3R SAW A Ol ROUS LIKE THIS 1289 P?RSG?S-700 MtSB-B 06U5U1OIS?H RAURGAD CASS 200 MSW FEATURES & EUROPEAN SENSATIONS THE CIRCUS SURPRISE & CENTURY WOSSEkflit WAK ELEPHANTS-MAI BRINA'S FIY1N6 HISSGS ??Ll?W53SS CHMKtMe aOlia SIATfWJ Um BlCYCLE-?i?a BEAK coMPurrn CHINBSB CIRCUS DIRECT PROM PEKIN BARIUM ANO BAILEY'S BEAUTIFUL STATUE AND POSING HORSES ?V?LX4E. ADDIE'S IO TANQO DAIVCINO MONS AdsntMkm tickets and reserved grand stand chaira will be on sale circus day at EVANS' PHAR MACY NO. 1. Price* **aeetjy the same charged ?t the show greonns.