THE INTELLIGENCER Bfe?ABIJL8HBD 18?, Pabllsbed every morning ?accept Monday by The Anderson Intelligen cer st 140 West Wbitner Street, An derson, 8. C. BEMI-WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER . Poblibhod Tuesdays end Friday a lu M. GLENN... .Editor ?nd Manager ?Sntcred as scccid-class matter Ayrll 28, 191?, ?t ibe pont office at Anderson, South Carolina, under the Act ci March 3, 1870. ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCHES telephone.?....821 HUHSCBU'TIOH BATES DAILY One Year ...S5.00 six Montas '...2.60 ?hree Months.1.26, One Month.48 oas Week .M\ 3 EMI-WEEKLY CBS Year.>..fl.60 BU Montbs.76 Tho Intelligencer ls delivered by aarrler* In the city. Look at the painted label on your ff-aper. Tbp date thereon shows when .*?. subscription expiren. Notioe date on Itbol carefully, and 12 not correct Idease notify us at once. . Subscribers desiring thc address ol their paper changed, w?i piesse state tn their communication Doth the old and new addresses. Yo insure prompt delivery, com plainte of non-delivery * the city of Anderson should be made to the Circulation Department before Ian. and a copy will 6 c sent at once. -..:? All checks an J drafts should be Arawa to The Anderson Intelligencer. ADYItmSQCG Kates will be furnished ca aysllta tfton. No. tl advertising discontinued ss stat on written order. Vhe Intelligencer will publish brief and rational letters on subjects ot general Interest when they are ac companied by .the names and ad dresses ot the authors and aro not of a- defamatory 'nature Anonymous tommunlcatlona will not be noticed. Rejected manuscripts will not be re turned. ? ta order to avoid delays on aceonnt el personal absence, totters to The Intelligencer Intendsd for publication should not bo addressed to any indi vidual connected with the papar, but simply to The Intelligencer. A little frost now and then io wel comed by, th j fattOBt men. , King Co or go carno near giving up bl:; kingdom on account of a horse. : Tho pumpkin pie will .slldo. In on us oro wa.bro.aware of?lt,' . -ii0-- . Lifo In Kuro^o nowadays is just ono cabinet'Obsignation after another. ? ?~-*-0-r L ideal weather ior swallows will co Ou bo upon us. -, Liquor O. K. in Right Place. ? Headline Yes,, but who wanta to go thbro for it. -o-- '? Tho man who kills his family and then commits suicido is no better oft . than ho was before. ... ^c\riBlef of Tirzah Is getting into the : public prints, again. .Election year jrausfc be.drawing'near. ? .??>?'?'." "-o--' . Some widows aro born to publicity, some aohU?>? publicity and others ber come engaged to. presidents. Which ls moro cprrcct, "Tho War in Europo" or "Tho War Over 'Europe/* . 1 ' :*'*.*.' see by tho war dlsp^tchos that the Crown Prlnco of .Germany has! bonn killed again. " j --*o ?..' ' ). '? 'i-i&rly mulling of Yuie-tldo . pack ftgVs ?H.hoing ur^od. Strikes us that early, purchasing ot said packages is necessary first.. . * --T--0 ? bird, in tlie hand is worth two in tho bush, and \iwo in .tho bush aro wurth about a groat deal loss than . one oh tho hat? ^ King George don't know anything ibout hard fallai wonder If ho ever 'attempted to rid? a bull calf when ho waa o-boy. . . ; ? . .o"-.y-. A cabinet member?lrt?- Grofico\is atand? .., ?ng pia si?ppory j|rbund;4h?s? tlm?sv Nfi.xt January Ist will be "anything imt."Happy?'N^.Year*' -for^o ha Miniki ?Ana? ?f cours?'^^ll?wbeTry ' ia a gr??tes: 4 town titan Greenwood. :? i^wba'r^.;.??i*' - seyeri rural routes, While Greenwood has only fivc^Newberry Observer. Which ia ..tT^Q.-w?re'ww^.et getttng way f?Vm ' 'dewberry than front Greenwodd.': ':Ah'-< THE lIEAhT OF A TOWN Publication in ii recent Issue of The .Intelligencer of a news story giving thc facts with reforenco to a case of humen distress in ono of tho local mill villagcH, was followed Immedi ately by public contributions to their relief surpassing anything we believe that lins ever come to our attention. Donations uf provisions, clothing and money came not alono from tho well to-do and thoH? prominent in church work, but from people who very prob ably havo not been Inside a house of worship in a shamefully long while, and from people who ordinarily would not he chosen as ready-made proto types of-tho good Samaritan/ These donations havo exceeded all present needs of the family In distress, and numbers of persons who profforod further assistance were advised to wiiuhold their contributions for toar there would be waste, and to walt un til they wore notified of any further .want? of tho f?mliy. It takes on Incident like this of "tho family In distress to BIIOW tho P<" >lo of AuJeriJon up in their true ,1'ght. They arc thc beBt people on earth, we honestly behove. Others, pot nut ive to tho town but thoroughly competent to judge; havo- declared .that, tho people of Anderson are tho most generous, tho kindest and tho most hOspltablo they have over known. It ls hard to concelvo of how pcoplo could bo more BO. ' Our people may not appear this'" way to ail folks at all times,' but Tthnt iS 'becaOBO; tho occa sion for thom to bo sho\$n up in thoir true cokers.ls not! presented. An IncidWm? Wrought to light in tho . house of juj : for tune lp the mill village - ia'nc?d?'a^ej> dispel Vhat cold nooB, what air of/: aloofness or Bplrll of 'sclflHlineBB .ono pd&ht at times Im agine lie nee:! about them, j . 'Whatsis tho ''secret ot the| goodness bf . heart of tho, Amorlcan? people? Why ls it that a human being In dis tress In no sooner discovered than' he is succored by scores ot the best and the meanest and the poorest and tho richest, people of i(pa community? It ls became we im ve' ii ot as yet for gotten hov.- to h'H ^ighbors, And we havo H'Qt yet forgotten this because wo aie SB yet a good distance from being a real ''city,"'a place whero oyery Y?llovr ^c'rAdibles around for. himself to tho ! devil, a place whero one doon not know- tho', family next 'door and docs'not care. All the disadvantages and tho un desirable things of lifo are not to be found in the little town. The truth ol' v.iileh ls .beautifully illustrated, to our mind, by an incident In ?he Ufo of Henry W. ,Qrody, Coorgla*B peerless orator aud/writ?r, who jwent to New York tbc accopi' a ' very flattering posi tion. He managed, to' get alone in an apartment house^untll a little girl living in the fiat abovo sickened and ! died. 'Ks. pi^i ***W -^-ri io out tho haine of t^e'ilttle girl whose 'body had*;,iSSissH5^en %\ fay surround ed hy, pnlx-?the...family as mourner 3, 'but when fno .onte'?bould tell -him who .she was his great heart sickened and tired of such'c rotation's between hu man beings and. Ho went back to his did country ffi?k4 M\ Georgia, whore he could knpw- and call vhe. people about him by 4hoIr given names and rc jolee with iii em i n their happiness and mourn with' thom'in their "sor ,;thlng for young .Americans '.tp.^ta^ig si praotical inter est i in so fascinating, a . science, but the very intensity "'ol.- theirinterest 'might be a disadvantugo tn Rv ar time. Tho nation .will hardly' need 200,000 wireless. operators in any emergency likely td arbie' in' 'if!* ".nexis hundred years. It will h'??rdijr'nced ten per cent %of that number, posV.ply not more than ono por.cent, th;addition to tho Vegulrr Operators of the army and navy asid the professionals ?Who may pressed into Dcrvlee from, the com mercial wireless companies /..'.;. Multiplying tho number ot wireless experimenters ' lesna^to*' .confUifion^ There is already considerable confu sion in the transmission of wireless ^messages in this country. t In spite of tho official licensing re 'strict'.ons ana}the Aufilng of:: witless instruments, the amateurs manage to catch important private. and ?/ o ffl ci al messages out of the ethers an? , in trude with their own messages to the anooyar^va ot . IcgUtm'ste ct^merotsV IHBHffiHHRfiBfl of war it would be neccBBary to bring tho amateurs under very Btrict con trol. CRUELTY TO ACTORS A movie actor has been arrested by the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals far riding a horse over a cliff In the Adirondacks. It happened that tho horse wasn't hurt at all, while the rider got a broken leg. Tho incident serves OB n suggestion that what ls needed ia a Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Actors. For the movies have wrought groat changes In tho histrionic art. With tho discounting of the actor's elocu tionary ability has come even greater emphasis on his physical ability. There is no limit to tho startling realism of tho modern movie film. All tho devices of the old-time melo drama havo been outdone, and in striving for new sensations the pic turo posers are puBhcd heyoad thc verge of the seemingly poBoible. They leap over precipices, jump from burn ing buildings, fall from balloons and aeroplanes, ford raging torrents, roll down precipitous mountain sldeB, let automobiles and trains and trolley cars run over them, struggle or run or fight to exhaustion, and behave generally as if they were made of India ruber or armored steel. It's all in tho day's work. The that thrill or amuse spectators may bo hard aud painful, but tho actors are paid to do them, and aro deterred from refusing through professional prldo or. fear of losing their jobs. Yet thcro are limits to the endurance of even a movie actor, and wo may ox 'pect ono of theuo times to see a film actors union formed to defy the film producers and protect themselves from bumps, bruises, broken bones, disfigurement and early death. AN ERA OF ?OOO FEELING One of tho moat significant signs I of tho time ls the return of friendly feeling between the corporations and the public. The "Trusts^" which but lately were complaining bitterly that they could not get a square deal, are finding that all they have to do to get .lt ls to moet tho public halfway._ I Recently Judge Garv, chairman bf tho United States Steel Corporation, showed hts appreciation ot this fact when ho denounced the old "public be damned" attitude of many captains f ! industry, and declared that big business men and tho general pub lic had been too far apart for the wel fare of either- Now E. W. Campbell of the Illinois .Steel Company an nounces that "tho class spirit has to be wiped out" and that "men must be men together, must stand shoulder to shoulder, tho. rich with the poor and the ; employer with hts workers, In o wry Issue that comes up," Th^a *s a surprising efa&ajga ?.* aas-i timont from tho days \. lien to the in dustrial magnate the public was "the mob" and to the, public the magnate was the "malefactor of great wealth." It has done the corporations - good to bo under fire; Much ot the criti cism directed against them'may havo been unfair, but most of it was de served, and they have profited by the chastisement they ' received. There are still many corporations to cor rect; and in f?lrneen to tho corpora tion men, it must bo said that thc critical public itself still bas some economic.beams in its own eye. But: in comparison with tho .last deeside this is characterifsticaily an era of good, fooling between capital and labor, between industry .and the pat rons of industry. In spite of vestiges of hard feeling and the flurries o! hostility, conditions for working' out a proper system of adjustment and co operation arc moro favorable today than they havo ever been. Weather FOrecaat--Fair 'Friday and 'j I Saturday. : . What caine near being a serious ac cident occur red at tho -CO.^e* .61 B?si mitoer and,Mc tofday afternoon -when .Mrs. Major, driving a large firestone au tomobile ran Into a small run-about driven by Mr. Ralph iSmlth. Accord ing tb, wltnefises. MTS. Major did not pen' the smaller car, and smashed into the aide of the machine. ?; The cool d?ht'/w?a unavoidable. .{ The small car waa damaged tc some extent and Vinita was .struck by tho front of, Mrs/ Major's car wh it struck, bia machine a broads! : Mr. Smith ls not injured, ' Wea.. v :. ' -J.-:? ,V:.vV'v i-.'. Sports seem to bo ended for ino Benson in Anderson us far as the'eig games aro concerned. There has I nothing at all been heard irom Clem son College In regard to the proposl-i tlon made bj;. ,certain parties in An-1 derson. There ls little chance that| the game wilt be played. A musical service has been arrang- j ed for Sunday night ut tho St. John's | church Instead of the regul?r preach ing service. This is something new and is rather unusual. Nothing but the song service will bo held. The regular choir of St. John's will be assisted by Messrs. Hast, Fitzgerald and Tribblo and Rica and Mesdr.mea Harris and Cely;'" The Anderson high school will play a return engagement with tho Wof ford Fitting school on Friday after-,| noon, November. 12. The gamo will | ho played at Buena Vista nark. Wofford and Anderson played a] game recently and Anderson wu? de feated hy a small score. The game was a good ono, well fought by both j sides. Tlie game for Friday lb expect ed to be a good one. Anderson ls af ter Wofford'8 scalp, as revengo for the defeat they suffered at their j hands. --o A very pretty window has boen j arranged by Mr. Jack M?llala of the Liggct & Mdyer Tobacco company ml Evans' Pharmacy. .The window ls a dh,play of premiums given by tho tobacco company for coupons. Con sidering the great assortment shown, the window ls very attractive and ?hows good taste. o Mrs. Rhett Parker, while attempt ing to drive her .car out of tho back yard came very near meeting with a serious accident ' Mrs. Parker was backing the car and came too close to a wall terrace in the yard. Tko rear wheels went over the toraco and ;the body of the ,car caught oh the| iwall. Had the car\ been moving a lit tle faster, tho . accident might have| been very serious'.1' '- ' '; ! " ' ' . "lt soeniB hardly-^ probable that the game betwoen- Clemson and-Carolina will be played here," said Mr. "Wil liam Lyon Friday" afternoon. "J wrote j the coller, o immediately after ?the tie was played in'Columbia'but; so:-far I havfi hot heard i/oia tbeni. If they ; on s ?der the matter) favorably, it looks like they would ? have lot'. us know something about lt/'- "' Mr... Lyon'wrote ??o.? Clemson Col lege and offered a^guarantee for a game to Lo played, in Anderson to break the tlo betW?en .Carolina and) Clemson. This waa to,Jbs played on November IS when William Jennings Rrynn would be In tho city and a full college, day program was to .be ar ranged. This would have brought ? ! great number ot people to Anderson' t yfinin !J*?LW?F?TE "_:5.TT???H22. SJ Clemson would' have been the most I interesting game possibly to otago in tbe state. Having thc Columbia game j end in a tie h?h set the state cham- j plonshlp up . between the two strong est contestors and IC the game should! have been played, one ot these would | have been eliminated. .; Mr. Lyon stated ', that he under i?tand.a that President: Riggs of Clem son has stated that'no more gamea v.ill be played With ^roliria; Wheth er this means tat^^^^j?ki! of.^his season, and that Clemson will not blay oft thia tie, or ot property, whether ciares, ebOpB or ? cotton mills, be Secure. ; . Whenever ! it *?hRl? bo dem.oastr^'^-''0at;8herinv0'j amt policemen In a city or county can ' not protec* railroad d?pota or eoU mills from a mob, will bo sim) a question of thine .tature thny'.'t fall io protect ginfco-usea and grietj mills. If at any timo .South Carolina reachesl*o pom*bt ^ermltt?ig : vj?- i lence ro bettie disputas b?twa?n em ployer? kn d employe* as a s?bate tato for peaceful and lawful method??, farra properties will n<> scarcely less ; ar.fe than the proportioa of corpora? tiona. '? . , ? ' ?. - unusual labor conditions tn '.theSouth, involved as they . ?rtU?flZsrs?e' qer?t?UO?, it ere ling y^, buy in re sure of every ire. ,d young men at all 1 overcoats you'll everything. Here own, greens and tive stripes. These be delighted with suit at $5vVr*iiore. ood tast?; every ing qualities and 5, $6,- #7.50,. #10, Conscience" ls even more important that lawful methods he sustained In the South than, in' other parts of the United States. Farmers of South. Caldina who see beyond their noses should recognize tho. necessity of upholding laws enacted for the protection of every'class of property. ... NAPOLEONIC ROCUJEENT Carpenter's Diary Throws Light on Dentil ol. Bonaparte :^;?^d^^?S0t??j| 30.-(Associated Pre UH Correspondence. ) -A Napoleo nic document in the;form of a diary kept on St.- Ilelona, by ono Andrew Darling, a carpenter,,.-has lust been brought to light- here,. which gives now Infon?fyit?p-, on doubtful points regarding1\ o p\*> I c ? n v,* .death. Tho diary was kept during May 1821. A description--of. the . dead emperor's bbdy,"'^un??r."tt?ei dato-of'May 5, ls of esp?claf interest, as Darling acted as undertaker, built thc coffin abd ground up some plaster of paris statuettes to makd tba planter fiar tho death mask. Ho wrotevS* "About eight I went with General Mont hot on to the room where ho'was and saw him and was much astonish ed to ooo him so much wasted in tho body, but at'tho same time look BO well,.adyouug, and with such a pleas ing countenance. The size ^f the cof fin I made was, .as , follows: Length 6 ft. li? tn., depth' 12i in. width at the head>30; in.', shoulders 21 in., foot 8 in. At that timo i understood that h? tg-? lia...-in r~ rtr iiid ?O bC opened about, 2 o'clock, but : was not aware chat he was to ho put into the. coffin with ibis.hit on. .i Oa tho 7th there_ls this entry: "I." believe they wished his heart to be taken ome, with them, but did not get permission;.therefore they wish ed to preserve it, which was accord-' ingly done In the following manner : "His heart and stomach,.as I have already mentioned, was in a silver vas?; of tureen, having been-part of his plate with a. cover, tp lt; oh which wii.s his coat of arms.;wlth an eagle on tile top, which unscrewed with anut; this having .been soldered on fast, and tlien the heart having Coon put Tuto tho tureen by Dr, Rutledge in. pres enco of Count Mpntholon. etc. etc., the top having boon soldered-on and a hole having been made In tho bot tom of t??o yesscl.'tho spirits was then poured in by 'Dr, Rutledge, and: au old shilling spidered on tho hole?, ia considerable delay having taken placo owing, to the construction of the ves sel; 1t waa-past 8 o'clock before tho two men finished. ? l^HOLD: THE CENSOR .August Personage Fares TYell Bif?t? Court-Mflrtlnl. . ' Paris, Oct. sp.r- {Associated pres? Oorre3p?hd?nco".)'-~The -censor,', attar coming ia for so much- criticism from Clemenceau of the Homme. Encha?n? :feb<4 . oilier^ oiscontbndea editors has 'Just been attacked boforo tho court martial of . Paris by M. Jacques Bon bon, who was defending -before tho second court-martial ; bf . Parlai Louis .Leroux, charged with spread 9np alarming reports. . "Thor censorcried Mr. Bonton, "la an indefinable person with nine-' teen, t?ameles without apparently a single head.'", .'. "The law of iy$t,V''MV Bohson re called, ."punished only:the publication bf fals^'Jrep?rts spread in *ad fait!:; . have pormittod to the rising republle. " xATiio-'Coe*^^ ^ the^aorVffor -fee?M'VMeV.