flfINTELLIGENCER K?*ABL!8HSI> UH. Pnbllobed oro ry morning except Mooney by 'the Anderson lntoUtgaa eer et 140 Weet Wbttner Street, An ?sraon, e. ?. ? BMI-WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER Published Tuesdays and Fridays ' .?..fm lt, M. GLENN....Editor and Manager Entered as second-class matter april 29, 1914, at tbe post office at Anderson, South Carolina, under the act cf March 8, 1879. ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCHES pviapfeoa?.*.S21 fl-" ? 1 -- - Y *'' - I ? . fCBSCBIPTIOB OATES DAILY uno Tsar ...95.00 sMK Months. 9.60 tfbroe Months. 125 Ona Month .41 Ona Weak.40 SEMI-WEEKLY OB9 Year.,.?.11.60 ?Ito Months. .76 earriors In the city. Look at the printed label on your super. Tho date thereon shows when t&a subscription espires. Notice date Klabel carefully, and if not correct MUS notify us at onee. " Subscriben desiring the address of Ihalr sapor changed, will pleas? state tn their communication both fha old and now addresses, -fte Insure prompt, dollvcry, com plaints of non-dollvory In the city af Anderson should ba made to the (Vrcnintion Department before Dan. and ? copy will be sent at ones. All checks and drafts should be frown to The Anderr.ion Intelligencer. ARYEBTU?mG laataa w?l ba ifasalsaed oa appllea ?taa. No ti adrertliing dltsentfnasd ex sept en written order. . U?..P .i . i r.i.. .j ...M.,, ,-, :'!fche intelligencer will publish brief and rational letters on ' subjects of general interest when they aro ac .ompanled by the cam?s and ad dresses of the authors and sire not of a- defamatory natara. ' Anonymous eossmunlcationa will not be noticed. Rejected manuscripts will stet bs re? lurapd. Di order to avoid delays on account af personal absence, lottere to The intelllgeneer Intended tor publication should not be addressed to any indi vidual connected with th? paper, bat .un?!; to The Intelligencer. ? .' ' awiwawMaaMwaaaaw^^ TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9. 1915, ^Vaaa^waaawMaMaSaw*^^ THE NATIONS POCKBTliO?H: O? September 2, ?i&comptrollcr of tho ?edernl treasury' reports, the . de posita In tho,national banka.-of the United Btat?i amounted: ?0,229^000,000. The total resources of the:banks were ??iipunt 3:1,000,000,000 moro than that. ,.'-;.The deposita.. wara-''9408,Q0O,O9O more thou on Juno 23 of.the present year. That is to say, in tho ten weeks from Juno 23 to September 2, our people pitt money in the bapk ot thc rato of about 140,000,000 a week. Qr moro i i than 92,000,00,000 a year; The rate ot ?avtng ls. undoubtedly still higher now; for the business improvement has boen steadily, growing week after week. : The total deposits appear ' to' bo abount twice aa large as the ini?l And lt should bo observed that they ' de;; not.represent by any, moans the total savings ot the American peo ple. There remain millions ot dollars In the state banks, mutual savings banks, prlvato banks, and loan and 'truantcompanies. ^ In case bf great national ' need, it ls obvious that if the United. States government had the power possessed by tho Russian government, of taking people's bank savings for a; govern ment loan without their consent, : we should >avo available for war pur pousa'itt Cieto national banka alono .nearly nine times as much money ss tjf)o< yuitl?i? owed' at tho close of the civil war. . i - ?? it wwro necessary or advisable to persuade the people-, to invest their -sayings in \var bonds,Vas-. Gerniany; han dort?, .wo could dcubtlosa .. raise $5,000,0,00,000 without: turning a hair, flttd loi a year or two?'^?*^ - aft?y^ratae. ^ OOO.OOO without calling on any foreign ' 'ibo fpr a dollar. ? Tho European war? is relegating women to a now;"'; sphere and* *hang ing. ali eStabllahod. standards. > After ^beiagi solemnly ac^Ure? for. several ! d???dej? to^ \ ?orne/*we' are. aarprlsed to Isarn that woman'a place ls really the coal . njilhtt. In tho subway , excavation, lo the blast furtraco and rolling mill, in tho harvest ileld, itt, tao city street .o? awesjier^^d ^ven lb Ctbe mlUtory trenches. .-; It wan not; so mitch of . a shock to ..find; earlier In the war/Jthat woman's Iand bu? und trolley car and various otber foulis of semi-public occupa tion. . But lt does jar sn American to discover that little by little the wo men of the Old World are being bur dened with all the hardest, most ex !isust!st's assurance; "I do not doubt thfei upon the first occasion, upon the .first opportunity, upon the first definite challenge, that voice (tho roal voice ot the nation will speak forth in tones which no man can doubt and with commands which no man dare gainsay or resist." Theso words express not merely a hope but an imperative .necessity. It must be sb. Just as lt became obvious onco that t?te nation "could not on?! nure halt slayo and half ftee," it ts now obvious that lt cannot endure half native and hait, allen., And tho best defensa we can haye against for eign ugfcressiop ^rom any quarter ia a now, unanimous Am?d religion. . And do?b?S8s^%*y^ ; ' ; ?H 1 rlgbt about it-for themselves. 'Jfot'whan any; fihancier or captain of industry or professional man or woman or >tatesta*n OT. anybody "eise who' bas risen to eminence tries to make ? tormula fer universal success; bo go>3 ;>rrnn^?Bu^^ In any ^??JHfc ? any morei'Hnaa-JM' ?fio ! can; V^': ; c ; . i.? '.' -'&fi?--. ^ |.v',Taiy',thMC^V'sira 'iaat".^!, arion U Ua?i of all c?p^l?^|)W other, ?nen how. tb Ryeto a rlpa't)id [?sa^'(^The';weakin?g<- who dies, ajt-fcrty ls likely tu know far more about tho only vital factors than men can con trol, the common rules of hygiene which may add a few years to a nor mal life but are no guurantee of pre eminence in age. Just SH lt IR primarily the vital en ergy born in a man that carrie? him through to eighty or a huudred while others fall by tho wayside, or tho nat ural talent that makes a poet or nov elist or painter, lt ie the natural gift for business that usually makes busi ness BUCCCSS. There are business geniuses, Just as there are artistic geniuses. Tho geniue does i-usiiy what thc man of moderate endowment struggles hard to accomplish and what the marc plodder can never attain oven with the aid of all thc advico In tho world. And there is tho factor of accident to reckon with, too. A man may be come rich through a lucky chanco, just us a strong man may be killed by an unlucky one. Many a business man who owes lils prestige to a casual event or tho friendly favor of a business geniue gives the world ?odious advice on *.h* r?ccret of suc cess. Giving advice isn't a very profitable oort of business anyhow. Few aro capable of giving it. and still fewer aro capable of receiving it. " There are as many kinds of sue COBS as there are kinds of people, and as many kinds of people as thero aro individuals. Every person is a law unto himself. And he will suc ceed not In proportion UB ho imitates somebody cloe, but in proportion au he develops his own personal talent along his own lincB, finding hin moat congenial work and puting himself into it. Moral and professional ad vice can merely help a little to oil the machinery. A LINE o' DOPE j Weather. Forecast-Pair Tuesday and Wednesday. Colder north por tion, ; . -?- . IA Baltimoro .man who. lived to be i?O and thoa died within two weeks maintained that he did lt by, sheer, will .pov.'er. He determined to round oat a century, and he did. - Then, having no further object in .lifo, ho died. .The will power recipe for old age is BI (nothing new, but. there's probably .acre in, it than there is In the usual line bf "reasons tor long evity given by old men. --o Now American bankers are talking ?of another British credit loan-a mat ter of somo $300,000,000. And wo have come so used to vast sums and BO imbued with the belief that our credit ls limitless that this announce ment raises scarcely a flurry ot in tereBt. ' ? -o 'Marriage," a?ya a New York play wright, "ia that relation between man and woman in which Independence is .equal, dependence mutual and the ob ligation reciprocal." Which la almost clear and convincing aa Herbart ; Spencer's cole orated definition cf evo lution: "An integration of mailer and concomitant dissipation, of motion? during which the matter pas sea from an indefinite. Incoherent homogeneity --" but we forbear. ? ? 6 ? The Frankfurter Zeitung says grim ly . that the German nation can "nour ish itself on hate." . That's much IOBS nourishing than war bread or pota ?toca. And yet, unless Germany finds !a new food supply , B?OU, Herr Lla souers celebrated "Chant of Hate i Against England" may! be tho regular enu. ? <> \ It looks aa if weVS have a record crop ot presidential candidates, too. ---o-- . \ The railroads ore nearly all mak ing money now, and tho anrnrialng thing about It ls that while their In come is Increasing there la no cor responding increase in their op?r?t? lng! expenses. And we seem to .re number a time, not very long ago, when the railroad men wore utterly contemptuous of the experts who maintained that tho railroads could maie monoy by. savina lt through moreVoffl clent operation. . , Ohio vernal ns wet, ta. ?pite ot Mr. Bryan's efforts! there bi behalf ot pro? hibltlon. Which leads an Irreverent ?owspnper to. remark; that the Oer aUoH muBt have failed ; to stand ; by Since Pennsylvania ?.almpist went tor women suffrage, the country Ja changing its ancient belief in Penn sylvania's traditional conservatism. Kaiser Wilhelm hat. promised to be the. godfather tc all thc seventh, eighth and ninth sons horn to Ger man families. In other words, he proposes to be thc godfather of thc future German army. -??.O'- ? "We never bad aggressive designs before tho war; wu have had none during tho war; we have aone to day."-Now, who' do you suppose ut tered thoso gent?o words? None other than Count Tissa, spokesmaa for the mild, ultra-pacific nation Austria Hungary. -, -o .Manager Walter Beaty of tho local tolephono exchange mentioned yes terday tho fact that a new telephone directory had just been issued, con taining telephone numbers of all subscribers up to . October 15th. A great deal ot pains has been taken with the compiling of thc data ia this directory and' lt is believed that it Is correct. However, should any er rors) occur1, the parties discovering them are requested to notify Mr. LJcaty at the telephone exchange. Subscribers who have not been sup plied with the now directories aro requested to provide, themselves with them. * Tho cotton receipts for thc season ap to last Saturday night were 6,317 bales, itu eel pt s for tho correspond ing period of last year amounted to ?.7G1. .The30 figures were given out it tho platform of tho Standard Ware 10USO. Tho many friends of Mr. I. C. Switzer, foreman of tho local tele phone plant, will regret to learn that ac was operated on for appendicitis yesterday In Spartanburg. They will bo pleased to learn, however, that he ;tood tho operation well and is do ing cicely. Mr. Switzer, was operat ed on at 10:30 o'clock in tho forenoon jy Dr. Steadly. Work was started on the homo of Mir. D. C. Holland In North Anderson recently. This home ls being erected lt a cost of about 93,000 and ls to bo a very pro ty one. It is bolng built by the H. C./Townsend company. Mr. Keith Pr?vost of this company mnounced yesterday morning that the work on the South-side Grocery Co.'3 icw building in progressing rapidly. Mr. Newt Campbell;'.tho secretary >t tho Anderson County.Poultry asso ciation has announced tho completion )f the premium,- list for tho coming poultry showrby'thetaddition of 1 two moro prizes... These are for fancy ygeonn, a Urft and. 'second, the first prise being a two:ycara subscription to Tho Industrious Heti, attd the ...ve nid, a package of'Pratt's F?>up.Curo. Mr. Campbell announces that he has secured several special .prizes which io offers for any good trio not ,11st sd. If tho trio is deserving bf a prize, whether H ls on tho lists lie says for the owner to come along with his chickens and a.prize will be made up tor lt. ? --o- ?-. "The Montrose Sisters,"-, this we3k at tim Palmetto, started ; off;. with a packed house. It seemed that all the follows had been saying"' up for this show and it being a good'Opo" wanted to get their money's worth, they ap plauding, very vigorously and-'calling back each performer many times. A rory appropriate song Was sung by DUO of tho comedians when he was re called for tho third time. Ho sang a few lines of a parady on "Do You Take ih?s Woman For Your Lawful Wife," In which hr? lit-, lt erl ihn nnnsUnn. -'DO you expect me to sing to you all sight. " The" principal? raf tho' show' irv well supported by u iwuii chorus ind have new billa. Their first ap pearance was a decided success. '. ;.- o' . y\ , > News ot the marriage of Mr. 'Charlea Burton for a long time half owner of the 'People's Grocery company, of this City, but recently of Pendleton, to Miss Estelle Buzhardt of Ward, B. c., was a great surprise ?to his many, friends, tn Anderson. Mr. Burton md Miss Buzhardt were very quietly married at the nemo of the bride at li?t' o'clock Mondav morning. - --o-? . A businass campaign conducted by tho negroes of Anderson is attracting bonslderablo attention, among the col ored people of the city. Tho plans. Of Ibo Nvgro Business League ot Ander don are to go over all questions per taining to their business and have three meetings, at . which ' meoUoga .ruccossful colored merchants,. -doc .Ct*. and farmers will make, short talks. ' The mee tin ga will bb held Iaiesday. Wednesday and Thursday sights. -<_??- ''?'?-' . '- ??. . "Henery." tba porter at the Owl Drug company tells o? tho, death of tilt cousin, Durant Thornley, at Cen tral on Saturday evening,' Thornley waa Kilted by tho Southern train No 16 as lt neared Central. ? It seems the negro :as driving iv bu^gy. and was on bia way home when ,he cross: 5d the tracks and was struck by the train. Ile waa Instantly killed.b? the collidion, there being but' a-few bones' In his body left unbroken, '",' A Hauor case was tried in ?tho city Dourt before Mayor ?ndfrey Monda*'" i?te-rnoon, The case waa ??Jury tr (at Ddgar Wnbbard sottr * ?*int ot whl? l?a?^e Bab ?Birod .wi^^?t^rday ; and is the city bad the proof the Jury was ?ut only a few. mlnnteevv;^ They ' re turned, a veroico bf ?ig$3wt biit with reeomroond ?ilion to meTcry. sa the bey la;not 2i >ears of agc. l .Hubbard ha?, beet? .roanUW a tunch ?Und near the Bnrrie; Roller, mille, ind sold his whiskey on Saturday af ternoon. Dr. Frazer, will go to Townvllle Friday o von in g tu deliver a humorous address on tho Southern uegro. Dr. Frazer ls a master of the Southern negro dialect and his address ta suro to be enjoyed. o- ? Norton and Kelly in a musical np*)?* laity at the Bijou theatre are preecnt ing a good aot this week. They were at tho Palmetto theatre la3t week and wore a very attractive feature of tho singing "yodeling" songs ar.d Norton with tho violin make a good strong team of entertainers. ?iSSisirS?is LlQiOR S?BSTIIU?ES Petrograd, Oct. 31.-(Associated Press Correspondence.)-Atter more than a year's trial of the anti-liquor i decree it appears that some Ameri can prohibition history ls being ro peate? in Russia. A memorial to tho city council of Petrograd sets forth that the union of drug clerks finds the demand for eau de. cologne and variety of. bitters has been growing steadily. It ia estimated that the 150 licensed drug stores In the city have sold the j equivalent of 216,000 gallons of pure alcohol Blnco the anti-liquor edict took effect at thc beginning of tho war. While some of this is legitimate drug business, it is asserted that tho trade mainly consists of sales to per son who uso thone alcoholic prepara tions In beverages. Further, lt ls stat ed, tho drupgglsts havo bewun tho sale of surrogates for various trade articles, such surrogates consisting or alcohol that ha been allowed to stand upon aromatic seeds, roota and leaves, or ..iiioh baa been moro simply doc tored *ip with aniline Ingredients, The drug storo trado, in fact, seems to bo carried on without any false pro tenses as to the purposes for which thone surrogates are offered for salo. The memorial has been takon Into consideration by the city council. OT still greater proportion thaa tho sale of the drug preparations mention ed, has boen the use of denatured al cohol as a beverage and the rectifi cation pf denatured alcohol Into a palatable, if not a wholesome substi tute for vodka. ' Tho effort to render fuel alcohol re pellent to the workingman's taste doe? not seem to have succeeded. Equally fruitless has been tho cam paign of education undertaken by the government and the press. The gov ernment has finally been forced to adopt restrictive measures. In view of the te:.i j) er an ce program adopted at the outbreak of the war, fuel al cohol may now be sold only to per sons having a Ucease from the police. But naturally the pollco cannot bo certain that a great deal of the dena tured spirit that ls asked for to beat business and domestic premises and fov' prepare food ls , not later peddled tor"beverage. ' The relative'scarcity bf wood and coal has forced many householders and merchants and man ufacturers to Telly upon alcohol heat ers for warmth', lt ls impossible to deny tho requests of legitimate- pur chasers and it ls difficult, to draw the "ne between them and'"secret recti fiers. Nevertheless there is now?ln?om parably less drunkenness In r^us3la than there was before tho war. i Co n? hine il Life Preserver and Travel, ling Bag. . Designed not only to look like an ordinary traveling bag but to be used as ono under ordinary conditions, a life preserver that has just been in vented apparently .provides a sensible solution of the problem ot safety at soa In timo of Budden emergency. The bag is equipped with a false bottom that serves to hold in folded position a water-tight union Bult which it at tached in such; ?.'way that the bag and Buii act as d Vi ter-iight unit, in on emergency all ?.?tat ia m-c-.n-siuiry ?* im dump o lit the .cuStents cf the bas. re move the false bottom to lot the ?ali untold, and get inside. The irner then closes and locks the top over his bead and jumps Into the .water, the re quired buoyancy heine supplied by the' bag. Tho body of tho. bag Is equipped, with a dlndow and .with valves that admit air but not water, inside, there is-space for storing food and water auffielen t j to last several day*. To'prevent disaster in caso tho water-tight suit is: punctured an air tight bas that is .easily inbated is in stalled inside the traveling bag. The device ls illustrated In the November Popular Mechanics; Magazine. . -:--;-i-; Pocket Device Substitute For Camera ^ Tripod. ? When h> is without a tripod or an adequate substituto for one, ia ama teur 'photographer often experiences difficulty In finding a means of hold ing a camera while-making a time or. bulb exposure" To obviate this and aiss wu ?Tv"ay frith the vruuule bf; car-.. Vying a tr!prod, a New York inventor has designed a folding -dovir?!, nnv?i enough to be slipped Into * vest pock et, which may be secured 4o a tree, or-some, other convenient .object? to support -a camera. ' It has; two sharp prongu whielt, when pressure ls ap plied against a small lover; fasten themselves lu the ?bark bf n treo er In other wooden objeeia against which, they lire- set.- A".friction ..damp at tached to this holda > the ; camera, By folding back tits prongs and, cm-; ploying-nether fast?ingni?diun?,which ls provided,' the sanie' device ^nay fited lb a atona or metal surface te^t?tia?e%?rnitoro. A pict#ft: the device ^ |^veh: In tlie: NoVemftb Ponular Mechanics'Magazine. - - . : . ?- - 010?/M? Fire. Hkfat*4}t^t}.rtM*&i^lt&M nV determlned origin hove Saturday night completely destroyed the plant of , thc Mickory Manufacturing company; An entire city block waa wiped out: The losa ia- estimated at moro than $100. O?O^V: -A : .?. .'.'. mi Qualit _L, JT wouldn't be didn't put "qualii easy to tempt glamour of iow wonderful how ; large type, fills t pletely that the qi price is lost sight The suits and ove here were select ever keen for qui Suit sand overeo; character. That ately priced is la buying and sellin the advantage of B-O-E quality su at $10, $15, $1 a % ?.ti ffi ? -7Ar Si V$??ndedCoi Parts, Oct. 31.-Associated Presa ? Corr cs, pondo a ce. )-Long .trains j of wounded' keep rolling into tho La Chapitre station of the Gare de Nord} train, after train, even after thu fierc est.-'fighting of Champagne b 53 oc curred, for the ebb and flow of the struggle keeps, going' on with its steady yield o maimed and stricken soldiers. The government:gave tho correspondent- facilities tho other day to' see .this procession of .Incoming trains, and the methods employed for promptly handling this enormous daily inrush.- oT hum^n ?fw???i? ? .TU 11 ? i-jni? inn mCot u?xu?ui?te a?u ??l??aii? u tie n* La Chapitre is the station in tho most northeaster nsectlon of Paris, .hearest the fighting Une, 65 miles away, and lu - tho. natural point for these' trains from the front .to' empty into Paris;. Here the trains Of wound ed averaged 26' a day, with 298 to 300 wounded on each train, even af ter the lull in. the fighting, or from 5,800. to 7,800 wounded to bo cared for dally; . When the fighting was flersc eat, th?se figures were far exceeded, and ,ono o? tho offlcors Tstatpd 41,000 wounded had. been received in four days, and : added tho remarkable fact that only two out of the 41,000 had diod; . . Tba platforms to 'which these trains of wounded roll np, are all thorough ly organized for fast and systematic work. : Near at nanxTis-a huge kitch en whfeh. ca nf urn Ssh.4,000 meals .'on short, notice, so that the wounded may immediately receive hot . tea and sus tent?e.';..'.; There ore' many'cooks, and scoTd&.of siirsea rt^i?y to carry dosetis of rif^??s jacked In wicker bask?t?,: Twetyis surgeons ure-'-cn duty tu'give first v??-d in a pressing-case, though this atatten is* not for t.re^tm?-nt or tlio -.voided; lt ls nierely to; receive and distribute theui to the bpBpitaia iii pQrls. or in central, or southern Fr?jtce. " ? Strain or wounded from tho froid id. Just come in as the tnpsecting r-irty aTrlvftd nnder .governruen^ ea* oort. *vRome ilfty; ambulances wore drawmap on tho platform ready to T-^ft^-tfr??n?ba men, arid already u??i^?lant?o,;. Were \ Well tilled and W&pff to the -varioiia hospitals. F ambulance, received six, two ^.three*: the ltietrs sliding; On i into their places .th ?the am* ices- Only a ' roll fit yoi lbw Ititi' appeared on the ?trotchera. f .hero and there a lice; but nsual Ut?>?h?ads Ornar? covered, seeking complete quiet.. There'waa no com plaint; po groan?, tfvry thing rao veil ?lonp swiftly and with absolute pre elster, and not long after the > tadn came from the traine:they were, -on their way to the hospitals. y fair co you if we ty first." It's very people with the prices; it's really a small price, in he eye so com uality back of the of. rcoats you'll find ed with an eye ility. ' its of the highest they're moder rgely due to cash ig and giving you it. its ar?d overcoats 8, $20, $25 i : . -: I Train of ne FrotriFront Occasionally some caso needed special attention,. ' Ono rodfbeared peasant soldier,, well ? along' in yeats, was ashen 'pale as ho waa rolled by In an invalid: chair to receive tho o arc of surgeons. Au o th r younis sol dier was laughing as his chair rolled by, to assure., Bm visitors that his wound was Blight. Most of the men, the doctors, said, were only slightly wounded, ami-Jhere wero not.tbe.hax-. * rowing scen-l's as v/hoi? tra?na bearing/ the desperately wounded empty mtd:, La Ghappolle. . ' . -f; While the men wero being carried-; frnm Ibo *S?d ."?SLC'd in thc ??"^ was going on amoung an army Of/. ' i??lit~r7" ??er?rs, kesplng??. ah accurate register of each. man. his' wound/,., which hospital' was best suited- to hia4; needs, whether his condition pormit?-, ed further travel to the hospitals in I . tho Interior of . France, as there is'_ need to avoid tho congestion ?'in .?these/: PnrlB hospitals. . The registers were,' . made up with the exactness ot a "bank-' "Wo find that two hours sum ces ? to dispose of tho most difficult trainM load of wounded;" said tho officer aa & the last ambulance moved away. \ Play String Instruments by Pressing s, Bottons. An electrically -operated tremolo;ot-;'. ' tachment for. banjos has recently been ,1 Invented which enable;-, amusicians to play this, and Bindiar stringed; lnstru- ii.'. ments by prosalng a Hork? Of push-? . buttons Instead Of doing ihe customary % pick work. Tho apparatus. t%hlch ia *{ Illustrated- and described;,ro.-,Jibev'No*.-^r vembed Popular^Hechanics Rta gasino, i ?5 SjQUn-tea onr?' i?ro?A and .is "supplied :-' with'a ?ickW^yhich the baujb is hold firmly. ' Tho tremenolo doyl??^ which < is partly incased' in an aluminum r . housing, consists of a eeriest ?mal! shafts, at, tho end of each of. which aro', fixed ?'.three, fiber .nleksVvj These rods, corresponding in number^to the, r strings which, they parallel?. ar<* ac tuated by. a motor- and contrOlVed/by '<- .. burtons fitted in th? front sido dt the caso, which whoo pressed ; move the picks in contact, with the stringa, '/ii heavily or lightly as the plover de Blr?s. The-?speed of tho *od?:l? rogu- ':? lated by' a rheostat ? which- lilli.wa n> K ; variation ot from 600. to 2,000 pinks a minute. ? - . 1 ? lsDS| Connell ? Hee?? Tomorrow. . The regular monthly mevUng;.; rf ''?':. th? city council ?or November will 1 be held at the. city halt at 3:30 :'; o'clock Wednesday ?ff*moor.. ' Th* : postponement ; ir om . " Tuesday after- ? conn waa made because one or two ; - aldermen will ;h? ?ut ot the "ojyty>tp-. . -