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THE INTELLIGENCER Iftf&BLISHKP 1819. Publlahod ?Torr morning except , Monday by Tho Anderson Intelligen cer BI 140 Weat Whitnor Street, An derson, ?. ?. SEMI-WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER Published Tuesdays end Fridays h. JA. GLENN....Editor and Manager| Mntered as second-class matter April 28, 1914, at tho post office at Anderson, South Carolina, under tho Act ot March 8, 1875. ASSOCIATED PRESS DIoPATCHES - tfalophone.821 BVBSCBEPTIOH BATES DAILY Ono Tear .86.00 Six Months .8.60 ffhreo Months .1.25 One Month.43 One Week ..10 SEMI-WEEKLY One Tsar .,.91.C0 filz Months .76 Tho Intelligencer ls delivered by ric i ?? tn the city. Look at the painted labol on your paper. Tho dato thoroon shows when ene subscription expires. Notice dato on label carefully, and if not correct picase ?K'?'fy us at enc?. Subscribers desiring the address of | their paper changed, will ploaae state tn their communication both the old and now addresses. To Insure prompt delivery, com plaints ot non-delivery in the city ot Anderson should be made to the Circulation Department before 9 a, ra. and a copy will be sent nt once. All checks and drafts should be j drawn to The Anderson Intelligencer ADVERTISING Kate? wilt be famished ea Stylita tion. Plo tt advertising db sept on written order. > ' The Intelligencer will prbllsh brief I and rational letters on aubjecta of general lnteroat when they are ac-1 aempanled by the names and ad dresaos ot th? authors and are not of A defamatory nature. Anonymous ccmmnulcatlona will not be noticed. Rejected manuscripts will not be re Icrnod. tn order to avoid delays on account ci porsonal ebiunce, letters to The InteMigoncer intended for pnbllcattou should not be addressed to any Indi- j Tidna! connected with the paper, but] simply to The Intelligencer. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1915. . . >' < {A henpecked husband ?B a man the ti ! le to whoso nerve ls jin his wifo'a | name. If n pan keeps on hammering nt tho Celestial Kingdom, how long can Chinaware? . --o Tho Balkan situation ts mado moro ? critical by the balkin' of somo of the ] '. ?l?ed "ovverSi The threo R's in many a sport's college education stand for revelry, relaxation and rot., rho diplomatic woy to call a man a| Br.r !n to tell bim that 'he speaks like j a war correspondons .Tho health crank baa prepared a careful . regimen and has begun to sow his Quaker Oats. -o All men aro liars excopt the war bureaucrats .who Bend out the cen , Kored news-^-to let them tell lt. .The baldhead?d man has tow friends among tho tonsorial artists. In their Judgment ho has no hoad for busi ness v : You'd better not trace your family tree to far back, Reginald. You might got hung up .where the aahTo fato. hap pen cd to your ancestor. - . : We always, have something to bo thankful for. The, Ford joke is about to strike tho trail to oblivion via tho route of the mother-in-law jest. With the* circus coming and the sorel eyes^ thinning tho ranks ot the boy? <&#/jrfrlB at school, ' tho kids are in I fer a brief season of genuine kappi-1 Don't kick on th? munie teacher for charging; you fifty, dollars for giving your . daughter music lessons. Forty? Ave of U.may be tor having to listen to jit cr.. . " ._ 1'eoplo aro getting frightfully par ticular. 3aw n man the other day who declined to . give a recommenda tion to a fellow'ho'didn't know any* thug'?bout ;^,:,--'^r^^.; . ... . It is highly Important that the na tional expon so account bo held dowii; Jnst Ia Sr???g^?^JV'^tM-tot navy expansion tho administration la leav> ;4$g'j?iit revenue entier*.' A BETTER I)A\ FOR PRISO.NKIiiJ A great deal IUIH been Haid and much has beon done to HOIVO the problem of tho prisoner who has been convicted of crlmo and JH Hervlng his sentence in a ponai Institution. Somo of tho efforts to better conditions have beon well meaning enough, but they have not always boon rooted in sound judgment or carried o ill with sound common sense. It may bo laid down aH a fundamen tal principle of safe und orderly gov ernment that crime riiust be punished, for only thus can society be preserved in lin prrigr?>H!4 tn nigger ?eve's of living. Kidncss to prisoners and bet tor treatment of them in the way of Improved methods of dietetics, sanita tion and moral Instruction, liave been tried and have proven eminently suc cessful. These efforts in thc main have been a? tho seed thc husband man sowed tm good ground, maturing rapidly into u bountiful und satisfac tory harvest. There is ono method of reaching the prisoner-and the most promising in our judgment-thut has been tho loast tried of ull reform Ideas. What wo mean ls tho effort to befriend tho mau whom the law Lias published with stripes at tho time when ho moat needs ii-when ho finishes his term in prison and 1B rondy to ho turned out Into tho world whoso law? he lina violated. If be ever needs a friend, it is at thin time, and some few of thc states havo employed true and experienced men to look after prisoners going out from prison walis, to get them Jobs, to revive confldenco in their hearts, to establish friendly relations with oilier men, and to start tlnm again in tho world as men to bo Judged alone by tho worthiness of their deeds. Tho machinery of our courts grlndB slowly but surely, sending men by the scores to prisons for their mis deeds. Thia is necessary for socioty's protection, but generally the prison er's moral Welfare 1B lost night of as soon as his conviction is obtained and tho majesty of tho law vindicated. To reclaim him before bis time is up, or when lt ends, ii a problem that ought to command tho best thought and thu warmest support all good citizens, nnd a sincere, honest und unceasing effort should be made to give tho down-and-out what he most needs friends who will stick to him with moro than cold ?p serv ? se. Tho act passed by tho last general assembly^ crcatlnjg^a^ atato^ board of charities and corrections will '* take up this important work, It ia to be hoped, and organize it upon an ef ficient and practical basis. It may be that man's inhumanity to man makes countiesa thornlands mourn, but Just as certain lt IB that man's humanity to man will stir the. wellsprings of shattered character in tho hearts of men who have broken the law and Btart them on. the high road to de cent and upright living. EQUAL PAY FOB EQUAL SERVICE ? - This lu rai old, old subject, and yet ItB agitation today ts as new and fresh aa lt was when, lt WOB first Btarted. It id'one of the leading planks in tho platform of tho now so cial order, ofcfl slowly 'but aurely some improvement In the ?treetion of equality ls being made. ThiB Introduction might very well lead up to an ' assault >' upon * the in equality existing between the salarlea paid male and female teachers, but we aro going to fall asleep nt tho switch thia time and ' let . bur trait of our rambling thoughts run Into a. aiding While wo discuss something entirely different. A very gross inequality .exista In the matter of the -compensation paid to county officials. Some of -the officers, like those of the o up ervin or, the sup-, erin tondent of education and others, aro paid a straight salary, while others aro baaed partly or. wholly on the fee system. . Tho - method of pay ment'works an injustice, aa some ot our hardest working offlclala, whose positions are largely administrative, are getting a torry pittance when compared with the compensation,re ceived by others ont of fees. The fee system ia regarded too lib tie in the tight of a burdon beean ac it la an indirect tax, and yet tho fees come out of the people Just as much aa the taxes they pay directly ont of their pockets for the support of state and county government. What we really need la to ascertain what; tho offices.' actually pay and then; place them all or. Balarles straight. In this '.way enmity of compensation for ser vices rendered could be brought about, and the county would be able to wave money in the' administration of- its affairav'': .'. ? ; - The fee system Is out of date. ; ;It w-ia origin ally based upon conditions that ?^-'*>??t:'ot harmony with; condl tl?na' anch'aa. wa have today. It is undemocratic and unfair j and.it ought to. be atoltaaeu. - MACK TO THU LAM) "Ulick to the land" 1B a cry that linn boen shouted through m?gaphone? und heralded with the heating of tom toniB for a long timo hy thone who are deeply concerned over the grad ual movement of people from tho rural districts to the cities. That the cry ha? not been heeded to any con siderable extent, is causing econo mists ti put on their thinking caps and try to figure out tho reason that their words have falen on unrespon sive ears. Tho reason In apparent to those who stop to think. Peoplo are not going to leave the easier life of thc city to go hack to tho farms until the opportunities on tile farms are as in viting as they are in town, or until tho prospect of making conditions sin bright or brighter aro shown moro conclusively than r-'ioy aro to Jay. Agriculture is undergoing a slow revolution, but only the surface has been touched, as lt were, in Btirrlng up the rich soil of progress. If pres ent activities continue as they ure now being conducted in this and other staten, the turning point will soon bo reached, and then men end women, especially the younger set, will be eager to go to the farms where more freedom, more advantages of a health ier sort, and moro genuine happiness can bc enjoyed. Tills time will come, hut lt has not yet arrivod. High-sounding word? and iridescent pen pictures arr ?00 often employed to paint conditions that do not exist, and this habit of glossing over thc truth has boen hurtful. Farm life must he mado profitable and more at tractive, for upon its full development depends our prosperity aa a people. Will wo let it como in (South Carolina, or will wo permit it to bo held In check by reactionary forces? PREJUDICE Somo obscure ourly English writer speaks .of prejudice as the child of ignorance. His definition is simpler and more to tho point than tho ones in the dictionary, for It hits the nail squarely on the head while the learn ed men who compilo our word vocab ularies usually miss tho mark and bruise their thumbs in trying to con vey to ?B the subtleties of meaning. Prejudice atalks bis brazen form in to the church, into every social gath ering, into politics, and into all hu man efforts especially that are di rected towprd the accomplishment of good. The best of men fall a victim to Hs baneful influence, and, ar, for tho women-oh, well, wo don't wont to stir up anything just at this time. When the war is over, wo will borrow a Bhoet or two of armor plate and whisper a few things from a distance anent this phase of the subject Prejudice has a full opportulty for the display of its talents in political life. If prejudice rules your actione and you belong to a faction, or if you ore a i?yod-ln-the-\vool partisan . ol some skilful and magnetic apostle ol the wind, all that your faction 01 friend does has the stamp of right eousness upon it, signed, scaled and deliverod. But If the wicked party on tho othor side should happen to pass out certified checks when the game ls rained out, or if by some magic ol government he should open tho treas ury and f~iy you ilvo dollars a pound for your dogtall cotton, you would loso your religion in showering upon bim a deluge of abuse smelling ot brinies tone-all because ho ts youl "enemy." You would seo him woj down in some naughty place before you would admit that he didn't have horns and hoofs a shade moro hor rible than the gentleman who reigns over the place you referred to. You would he honest-how rlght esiusly honest you would bo!-ai; e. you couldn't bo made to seo but one way even If truth should rise up anil ehow you a diagram of your error. Prejudice makes a rvun blind to hi? own faults, but magnifies the little shortcomings of others into acts ol supreme tragedy and injustice: It,ii a disease that ls hard to euro, be cause when the'optician comes arounc to pluck it out of the yietlm'a ey^ the victim gets mad and swears that his vision is free from lt and as elem os the noonday sun. Aa the old English writer said prejudice ls tho child of ignorance, lt Is also the father ot much of the in justice and cruelty and suffering . Ic tho world today. < Old Kin ? Cotton has put a few fancy touches to his throne and it took) n g mighty sassy. The mossback stands with his bael to the, front and tries desperately t( jljj^the tide of progress. bur Idea of an irresistible foro; striking an Immovable body Is whoi foolish little cupid lets>er fly at th? heart ol an old maid. A LINE o' D O P E Weather Forecast-Fair Saturday and Sunday. -o Tlie county tux books opened yes terday for the payment of taxes but there was no rush on tho pan o? tito taxpayers to pay up. However, quite a few called in the treasurer's oltlee during thc day and got thc matter t their hands. "1 will haye a four reel . Charlie Chaplin one day next week at the Bijou," tdntcd Munagcr A. M. Pinkston yesterday afternoon. He stated that this was a good feature und ono that had juat been released. -o Mr. li. L. Caughman of Columbia bas been spending this week in the city with relatives. Mr. Caughman's son, Kenneth Caughman, is quarter hack on tho Auburn team. Mr. Caugh man states that he wants to sec the deserving team win this afternoon makes no differenco which ono it ls. He had a son to graduate from Clem son and Kenneth attended there a while. It will be remembered that for about 16 years Mr. Caughman was railroad commissioner of this stnto. New reached tho city yesterday to the effect that Richard McAllister, a white man living below Iva, was shot through tho back of tho neck Thurs day night. Yestorday he waa walking about and seemed little worse for tho bullet having passed through the back of his neck. The cause ot the shooting and the name of the party who did it is unknown. The fixtures for tho Chlquola bar ber shop aro arriving and the place is being put in shape ready for trade. This shop will be located in the base ment under tho lobby of the hotel and is ideally situated. Entranco can bo made by meanB of a stirway leading down Just insldo the d?orB to the lob by of the hotel. Mr. Bean Simpson will havo chargo, 'of the place and 'is supervising the ar rangement of tho fixtures. These con sist of three handsome chaim, large mirrors, two stands having a marble baso; shoo Bhino stand with large marble baso, a desk and. writing table, besides the other usual accessories.. Whon finished this ship wlH- bo ono of tho prettiest in tlie dity- and will be one of tho best equipped. Several merchants of the city yes terday got busy and dressed the show wlndowa of their stores in Clemson colors. Some of these.are the pret tiest ever seen In this city and two especially deservo mention, those ' of Smith, Garrett & Barton and of Fant's Book (Store, lt would" bo well worth ono's timo to see these. Among thc J others who have Clemson colors used effectively in windows.are': T. L. Coly company, Oelsberg Bros.- ?Bhoe com pany, Mrs. J. C. Holloman, Billy Lyon, Moore-Wilson and Company, Colum bia Wooleu Mills Store, Cox Book Store and otherB. It ls thought Au burn wlndowa will bo arranged today. Weather Bureau., Work. . / (The Forth Worth Record.) Poople are prono to. carp at the bureau is not infallible in its prog nostications any more t'ian are come of th federal district' ludgos always, right In their decisions,. FulibllUy IB one of the attributes o? mankind and lt will persist In spite of the severest attempts to overcome^! by scientific research. But tho weather ?[burean scored a triumph in predicting the recent storm that svfodj over New Orleans. This on? Instance of safe guarding is wortfh all the cost of the bureau since it was established. ? The transport Bufrod waa chartered to carry the Twenty-seventh Infantry from Galveston to Manila and was all ready to sall when the news of the great hurrlcano coming from the J- Caribbean yea was announced through t/he weather bureau and tts' connec* ?tons. In tho old timo before?^_tho creation of th's bureau Gae ship would hAve sailed directly, into the teeth of the hurricane, because, t^ero;. wore . no evidences at Galveston, i?f -tho exist ence of a storm of great Vnagnltnoo prevailing. .Had too Buford encoun tered tho storm In the. Yuca tan Chan nel th? probability ts thnV/tho. vessel would have foundered, with rall on board. ? ? -. -:r-y < Warned by the advices of tho weather bu;cac. tho vessel. remained at ber dock until the Storni had vent ed it* fury on the seas, and. then sail ed fdr her destination o?a a presumably safe and . sr ccesaful voy a KO . So score one mora triumph for tho weather bureau. : v m , Vandalia, ni,-Six' boura after: she had been pronounced dead by. .> the family physician, Mrs. Titila. 70 years old, arose,- walked into an adjoining room- and greeted th* fcWof moora? Sioux Falls, S. B.-Bolton Wya'ht, 18, la doad hero becai?fcVs?ib laugh ed. She began to laugh while eat iag peas, and a pea lodged in ?hw bronchial tube, choking her to death. OUTHERN CHINA BALKS AI PLAN FOB MH1Y Canton, China, Sept. 5.-Southern China doep not take kindly to the movement to make Yuan Shi-kai em peror. Southern China, in fact, sel [ dom takea kindly to any movement emanating trom the northern pan of ?he republic. But ?be restoration o? thu empire in a project especially dis tasteful to tim great commercial cen ter of southern China. Most'of thc wealth of China ls centered here and in Hong Kong and Shuiighal. Tho Cantonese have always been ex tremely Independent. They financed and encouraged the two recent revo lutions. Many progressive Cantonese have become extremely wealthy through the development of the mines in the Strait settlements. Others have made great fortunes In Java. And most of tlie wealthy Chinese In fae United Slates are from tho Canton neighborhood. Many of those men. aro reformers who back their views with money. Even before tho society for the preservation of peace set forth its plan for tfa'e restoration of th? em pire, there was extremo dissatisfac tion with General Lung, tho military governor named by President Yuan Shl-kal to direct alfair3 in Canton. War conditions made business bad. Then tho floods caine and intensified the unrest. While inspecting the damage.; dono by thc flood, General Lung was injured Ly a bomb hurled at him by a reformer. A few days later two bombs were found In lils house which had been smuggled In by a cuok bribed by reformers. Gonoral Lung has 2.~>,000 troops In tho vlcinlt yof Canton and the Yuan Shl-kal government lias been able to pay them regularly so fnr. Rut In China alitro is always tiie danger that an enemy will offer more money and win away tho military and naval forces. This happened before lu Can ton, and If Die wealthy reformers were to advance sufficient money to finance the opponent? of tho imperial move ment forolgnoru residing here ore apprehensive of tho results. 1 Southern China has been under the influence of Hong Kong so long, and through ita extensive foreign trade is so closoly In touch with the out sldo world, that lt resents the domi nation of northern China. Tho de sire for a,separate government in Southern China is always uppermost in the minds of the reform element. Reformers seek every exause to ad vance their views and are seizing up on the movement to restore tho em pire as a reason for reviving their efforts to throw off the control of -what they regard as the more back ward section of" the country. Shanghai, Nanking, Hankow and tho other cities along tho Yang-tse kiang are well under control ot the Peking government. Warships pat rol the Yang-tse-kiang river and it is easily accessible by rall from Peking. The pearl River la moro remote. Can ton and other cities along this stream aro not aci flblo by rall from Peking. Forts mo:-? this river are located in a dens'.!/ settled country, where there are many roformors who have in the past seized the forts and defeated naval movement against Canton. Evjery precaution is taken now to protect Canton against revolutionists. Ti;e baggage of passengers arriving either by rail or water from Hong KOng is carefully searched. Chinese men and. women aro examined ' thor oughly to make sure they have no fire arms nor bomba, upon their persons. Apparently there Is no effective leadership for the sentiment against the rest ci a ti on of tile empire. Sun Yat-scn ls thoroughly discredited In Canton and all' southern China. , The reformers . believe he tricked ?hem and pay no attention to the movement against President Yuan Shl-kal which tb 1B attempting to promote from Tokio. No other individual looms big in tho aati-governmont movement up to the present time, but lt has the t .up po rt of many guilde which aro constantly opposing tho Peking government, re gardless of its chief executive. Wily Mother. A mother in 'Newcastle, England, according to Tit-Bite, sent her,.little boy on an orrond, and sold: "Now, Harry, wo to Smith, tho grover in Nob th umber! and street, and cet a pOundt of. tho best treacle," said she handed tba young hopeful a couple of Jugs. When tho boy ?? had gone, the vicar's'wife said: "Youn. didn't, toll hun to get any thing 1 nthe other jug. Ia be going to leave lt at. the Bhop?" '"No, ma'am, ho's gann'u' to .brine 'lt back hero agyne." : But why sand two jugs Jo get a .pound of treaclo?" .'Well, yo seo, It's this way; If ho liei a jng in each hand, ho cannot gan' dlppln' his fingers in thc treacle and eat in* it -up aa ho comes hymo." ^ Case of Necessity, j Recently Smith hired a horse for ? 'canter along tho pike, hut the animal having neither a Sweet;nature nor a great desire to work strenouslyt be gan to buck, and the rider wa?, un gracefully thrown through the air and dropped by the wayside,. .rei?tes--'!t?ti? Philadelphia Telegraph. f49el!c?'\8initli>^.''?^IlngIy:.'Temark:' ed a friend the following' day: J,I. saw) yon. ont fcorsobaeking yesterday."; ; "You-, did?" responded 5>?ltb, bo ginning to ponder a, blt. . "Y/ca," continuedt'toe ' other, --Mi. smile broadening.. "What made yon drop; down sb quickly?" .. 'v^k "Case of neutrality, answered Smith. * "Bid you see anything ?jp whore ? was to hold bu tbf ?ll Suits and overcoats for the hard-to-fit man Stout men, very tall men, very short men, often have trouble in getting cloth s that tit; and of ten when they go to get fitted the style is lacking. We've ar ranged for all that; we flt such men perfectly, and give them a distinctive style that is unusual. If you're one of these victims of poor fitting, poorly styled cloth es, come and see what a haven of peace this is-$10, $15, $18, $20, $25. Voil'll not lind anywhere else so large a va riety of very fine hats as we will show you. Stetson's pride shapes and shades, $5.$0, S4, S5. ' v_ i ' Evans Specials, 552, $3. *. ^ The most extreme values in fall footwear; complete style showing; complete sizes; un excelled fitting service, $3.50, $4, $4.So, $5, s6.5o. ; SOUTH'S INDUSTRIAL opment Work* of Kinds. All Baltimore, Oct. 13.-Reviewing tho business conditions of the Sout'. for tlie week, tho Manufacturers Record reports broadening activities In many directions, with more evidences than for some years of a spirit of deter mination to aggreslvely push devel opment work of all kinds. Long dor mant commercial organization are be ing revived, while other? that have not boen vory active during the last few years axe putting forth new ener gy and life, with a view to awakening their communities to the opportunities of the hour. Tais spirit seen in in dividuals. In corporations and In com mercial organizations is one of the most interesting phases of the entire business situation in tho South. Not since 1907 has this spirit boen os pronounced as it ia at present. It is Indicative bf the whole. trend of Southern thought and gives promise of large achievements. Among the industrial activities re ported for ino ?ees ?re severs! com panies organised in Missouri with a view to developing iron-pro proper ties and JU liding furnaces. The active demand for fluorspar in steel works has, lt is claimed, tak en the full output of all fluorspar min? lng companies in. the- country. A new company, capitalized at $500,000, hos been organized in Kentucky, whoro this industry 1st so.'largely developed, with a vOew io a daily output of 500 tona; While another company has been organized In 'Mississippi likewise to operate in Kentucky In fluorspar min ing. . ' - ' '. ?, ? The Domado Lead & Zinc Co., h?s been organized at Tulsa-, Okla/, with a capital stock ot. $200,000 to develop lt>ad luid zinc properties: . The Broad Uiver Mills, Blacksburg, 8; .Ci haa Increased its capital to double its capacity by adding 5,000 cotton spindles. . ? Tho Viola-Mao Cotton mills wtll be organized nt Gadsden, Ala., t?- b? Ud a .cotton mill. Wilsen m Toomer Fertiliser Co., of Jacksonville aro reported as having purchased a 6,000-acre * silo .at Tam-, pa, Fla;, io develop ft fertiliser plant, Tho Sowahee Cy pi es s Co., Jackson ville, ibaa been Organlred^with $50,050 capital stock for cutting flypress lum ber. . " Climax Spinning C?.,~ Belmont, N. C., vjlth capital stock, of $300,000; has. been organized to, build a cotton mili, tho incorporate-re being cotton min men. t ? : The :Old! Dominion ;lroh .& Ste?l .Jlr^te : of BI chm o n d, : Va ,t will add en electric steel plant to its works in that city ,and ha? ordered Initial In stallation of electrlc'furnaees with ia aa?lsr ^?ap?clty bf 40 tons. ' Tho \ American Merchant Marine f/o.v haa boen Incorporated 'fJff-Mi 000,000 onpital stock by Hew York and ? fettereaphaltots, with a view tbaper s^._j_'_y. massa ating steamships between New York and South Atlantic Gulf ports. There Is a very pronounced move ment in North Carolina for tho es tablishment of creameries and cheese making plants, a numhor of cheese factories having lately successfully been put in operation. Tho Farmers' Creamery, -Co;,; forest City,- N.:.C.,. has just been incorporated with cap-' ital stock of $50,000. The Washington Steellli-Ordinance Co.. of Washington will build an ad ditional forge shop with a view to enlarging its facilities? Tho Mound City Cht Groks 4TJp., of Lnmberport, W... Va., tififo. ??60,000 capital stock, will build plant for man ufacturing cut glass. Throughout the South* there ls in creaslng activity in municipal im provements, including streets and public buildings, and in Uio construc tion of improvted highways. From every part of the South came reports of increasing activity in road-build ing work. ' . ? jj?; * , ? WOFFORD COLLSG? NOTES -. The traditions of Wo?ord are abased on tho monly conduct ot her students. The question ls sometimes asked, "Does the faculty of Wou"er<t onoffce hercules. " TJie - writer answers j yea, unreservedly. . <There Ia a rule whi^h saya thou shall be no secret fraterni ty s on the campus. A year or so np,o a ?iuuioar Ok ?*e*?-" w?,?c liccrc.y \-w longing to a Greek lotter f rater ii ity, and immediately they woro expelled - from, college. The student body stands ready to help enforce the laws. Whetfe the student body falls tho faculty steps In and this strengthens, thus giving strong imputus to the enforce- ' ment of the laws. * .j;.; -The faculty ot-Walford college doea * not spy on thc students, nor are (hero any j secret servfleo men,, but . v#iere disobedience to tho laws' of tho col lege is brought, 'heforo tho authorities, stringent means are alwaya employ ed, where necessary to enforce 'thia lawfi. ' ?i vMP^CfiilOB !? Barents and guardians often- ac companying their bpyB to college .when entering and ask, "Do" you haye, hai- . lng?" Th-T answor ia "no", always. .. Sonic timer, n boy may in'ulg'0 Iii what { ho calla harmless fun, but it isn't left tor him to deckle whelher ho has tie^h ; nosing or sot, but Is left to tho judg merit ot ibo student body o/ faculty to determine whether or npiho-^as !&?> lng:i' If ho ls fovihu* gu?Hy'?f ?iasiflig, home ho goe? ??? u??u???-f. -.- < - ? As'a rule Wtofford has a select "set' bf . men; from this sta^o and other etatPA who stand foY' moral conrage, g-entnity, andi christianity, thus li ia nui-u tor ono who would go wrong-to do.rsb because <->f the influences tfe?t ano brought td hear apea him from V thornie ; sons bf Welford. . At present there 1? a little mailer before tho faculty which may mean '4?e' expulsion of sovorat students, ntit the Stern tribunal of tho student body, sanctions what v4be faculty does and . say, '?eh? rulea must be enforced oyca at the cost of a few stud oats." en hs I Llttlo I iomuel -say, Paw,- whit! the.meaning bf ostentation? .Paw-Ostentation, son, is' the neighbors he-re bf ano lndlwmybll?>'8ta>^??^