COLUMN WAHT ADVERTISING BATES Twenty-five words or less, Ono Tico 26 cents, Tb roo l.'mes 50 cents, Six Timos |1.00. All advertisement ov.or twonty flve word? prorata for eacL ad ditional word. Ratea on 1,000 words to be used in . month t?ado on application. No advertisement taken , for lesa than 25 cents, cash ba'ad vance. If your namo appears In the telephone directory you can tele phone your want ad to 321 and a bill will be malled after its in sertion for prompt payment FOR SALE '?li, ? ? Qi FOE SALE-Brand new No. 7 Oliver Typewriter at a bargain. Oliver care* Intelligencer. ll-23-3t j FOB SALE-No. 2 L. C. Smith TypoT writer In perfect condition. Address L Care Intolligonctr. ll-23-3t FOR SALE-Agricultural Lime. Ap ply now to your gardens at rate of from ono to flvo tons por acre-lt's cheap and tnero is uot a garden in Anderson but that needs lime-it will correct blight and swooten your sour soil nnd make your fer . tllisatlon readily available. Phone j 404,' Furman Smith, Seedsman. FOB BALE-Ono second; hand' two | horse wagon. W. L. BrlsBey Lum ber Co. FOR SALE-English Peas. Plant be tween now and tho fifteenth; Al SU IT, and Morning Star varlotlea. Don't'let this ideal planting season get away from you. Farrar.n Smith, Seedsman, Phono 464. FOR SALE-Forty acres ot land in 'Hopewell Tov/nuhlp, 3 room bonso, v,;nw two small houses on public road. Land fairly level and ia of fered for one thousand dollars. W. |f? Walker. FO?I SALE-Everything in the line of | fresh'fruits that are in senjoa: pears, apples, bananas, grapes, : frang?e, lemont', cocoanuta, nuts of v r.w, kinds; and . caudles that make .'. your mouth water, and at prices rthfit don't make you sick either. J. | ' ;-iCv Manos... .. ; ; - ? J^J?kVfcaBpHne and motor oil ~:" vlf^ua ' ?n? maor tirai neons your pat? . rouage. Caudle, Corner of Main and /V-fijari BtroPts.w ,?-"':; -, , % WILL AI?IiTV? . about November int 6 car of-good mules; best to be had, ricca r ad terms.right Wiil pay you >'f:.oo us if th need of a mule. The " t^ll.:?o. 10-2*-6t m WANTS CWJ?S^lt?*** or three nice untur . nished ^riibms light housekeeping, ' might' no reasonable and .have al! " faust M .reasonable And have all ii uar abd god neighborhood. Quick, Caro inteUIgenoer. ll-26-itp. ?TitiT xjcij--? competent cook wanted af once.. Apply 116 Pr?vost St.. Mrs. Raymond Cochran, ll-24-3t IVAN TED PEAS-Wo Vin pay you . highoat market pries cairn-or will i exchango Agricultural Lime-you certainly neod ?no Lime for all your email ' grain crops. Furman Smith, Seedsman,, Phono 464. 11-18-lGt. m _z?----. . ?-1 WANTED- Thirty home loving r-co pio to ' read our dally ads In this papor. Wo Imvo something that . you wont, and our proposition is splendid. Linley & Watson, Phono ?ft,. . . . 10-S4-t? WHEAT MEAL A breakfast food. Health restoring.. Recommended by j physicians. Made from native grain. Has a. Ono f.avor. Servo ae other { cereals. Burrisa Milling co. WAFTED-A good farm for one ot o;xr CUD tonier o. It you havo a farm ' for sale we. will be glad to consider it Linley & Watson, ( Jno. Linley .frf?;?. watson.) TO /^^OHAHT TRADED Ona ear .{'.Taipb Red'Rust Proof Osts, car n?ro shorts, and all kinds of feed, .y g. SX Tarbcr at P. fe N. Depot MISCELLANEOUS WF>NOW BAtE the largest stock of Pianos) in the city. . They w?re < bbugbt at right : prices . for cash, abd we vvl.il allow bc man to undor [u iityl UaV. Bee us before buying/ Pat- i torson 'MUnlc House, East Benson Street'Under Masonic Temple; ll-23*'t........ 0:15 P. M. Charleston & Westero Augusta, Ga. To and From the NORTH, SOUTH, EAST, WEST Leaves: No. 22 . .tm .6:08 A. M; No. 6 . . . .3 :37 P.M. Arrives: No. 21 . . .11:15 A. M. No. 5.-. . . . 3 :07 P.M. Information, Schedules, rates, etc., prompt!} given. [FOR PUBB 8WEKT MILK and Pure .Sweet Cream with satisfaction mutant oed or money back, Phone 4494. Bonham O'Neal. ll-23-6t. '-- ' . ' ? ? . i',--' ? Vv i M i, . 'i ? i I Hf PLACING your Hr* insurance 're member that Fran JW ;& DeCamp Rt-ftlty Company represents only strong, old line companies. Yoar business will bo appreciated. 10-7-tt -. , ,;"Nj,-^'; ? . ? ? WE ABB PATINQ ftS per ton for cot ton, seed, selling hulls at $18.00 per ton and will exchange'Scions .bolls for 1 ton seed and 1 ton of cotton seed meal for ton ot seed. ? Martin Wood ?V .Coal Co. [WYATT, tho 15 Coal Man has yot got cds! to hum; ho doesn't like the smell of the smoko howover, un less some one oleo has paid tor tbs coal. Ko Bays'however that he ls still saving tho people lota of money ott their coal bills. His phone ts COTTON MANUFACTURE FOR NORTHERS CRINA Peking. Nov. 24.-Announcement that fne Chiiiose government Jias |>ar- | tlclpated In tho organization of the Huaheln Spinning and Weaving Cor poration which 1? to have a monopoly of t!//o cotton induwtry hi Shantung, Honan and Ch loll provinces of North China, has created much comment Li China as well as In Japan. Chow Hsueh-hsi, the minister of finance, woe tho original mover In the scheme and'iiiB brother. Chaw H^ueh-huan has been appointed director general of tho new company. Other prominent and wealthy ofllcialH and merchants aro co-opcratm-ir with the government and will raise sixty per cent of the proposed capital of ten million dol lars Mexican, or about four million dollara gold. The monopoly grants to the com pany in the threo provinces named is to continue for thirty years. De spatches from Japan announce t ut such a monopoly la regarded by many Japaneso 'business men ap an in fringement upon the rights of for eigners to engage In trade and In dustry in China. Thero had been no cotton mill of any sort in tho three northern pro vinces covered by tho monopoly, and an lnvlOitlgatlon of conditions made by tho minister ot finance convinced him shat colton can bc manufactur ed profitably in North China. Preparedness. At last as a nation wo are waking from long years of comfortable, In different lethargy, and the cold fact ls staring us in the face that our boasted Btrength ls a myth. If attack ed today we have, as compared M other largo countries, very little ut the shape of coast defense. We could be whipped o dozen times whilo wo were organkilng for protoctlon: The kind providence which has watched over us thus far should not be over worked; wo must now do for our selves. Tho plan for increased army and navy walch tho president will sand to congress will meet with approval by the largo majority of Americans. Such substantial increase in equip ment calls for a corresponding- In crease in men. Privates nnd Sailors can bo trained to a fair degree of use fulness in a few months; but officers, such as this country needs, require heve ral years in tho making. At pres ent wo have ono military school, West Point, and ono navalncadomy, Anna polis. . The present capacity, of West Point is about 700, with an average annual graduation of only 130? j During the pr?sent.,war the Englitft have frequently lost in a few days mere officers' than the entire yearly graduation ' at Wost Point. In . view, tli ere fore, of. tko fact that the training a-ydttng man re?oives at the military academy specially - fits him for life work of a high order as a civilian, it would seem advisable to increase tho number of military academies by es tablishing Oho in tho Central Weet and ono on the Pacific coast.. Tho graduations of all three would in time produce 600 or SOO -trained o ulcers per year. Even at this rate, deduct ing deaths and disabilities, lt would requiro at least 10 years to produce a total of 5,000 officers; and this as sumes doubling ?he capacity of West -Point find ibulldiDg tT more nehool? equally large, m tibi?se days, mere courage; of however high on order, will not com pensate tor lack of training in tho of" flver; and now that armies are spell ed* in millions instead of thousands, the necessity for officers' by the' thou sand bectsaes evident. Tho United, -States Naval Academy at .Annapolis, established, in 1854 and enlarged a few year? ago, bas a capacity of 1,200 and an average an nual graduation ot 165. Somewhere on tho Grcat Linkes and on the Pacific ci ?st 'elster naval academies could w?>ll bo operated to advantage, pro viding in time reserves of trained men available when needed, but who other wise would .engage in various profes sional, or enginoerlng occupations,. H. Hi Windsor, in thf December m. u m b e r of. Popular - Meehan tes Maga sine. ?No Girl Cnn Disappear" Says Burns Why no pretty ?lr!'.can! .leave'ber borne without leaving some ? trace be hind that can be followed lt taken. In time la explained by Detective Wil liam. J. Burns ia--tho December issue of the * Woman/a Homo Companion L Tko story ot-bow be discovered Edna Kent who laid her plana with the pr cate st-cleverness, is a proof of (lila point. The guiding clue in this caso rested with a negro porter;. . There were ? a ever al others that In-the end would have answered equally Well; "bot.any porter." says Mr.-Burna, "can usually remembor a pretty girt who has .trav eled alone, in bl? car: -, "Tee wqrst ot real detective stories : is that when the mystery bas been ox ! plained you ; seo it's nothing but good i common sonco 'properly applied," bo says "Every person who steps out of the beaten path, even in noe en tl ly, leaves footprints in a dosen different places, if ono ls only trained to seo them..'*-. . How io Prov?ntCroup? lt may be a surprise to: you to loarr that in many cases croup con be pro ven tod. Mrs. tt.\M;-V Jobas, Elida, Ohio, relates, her experience. as fol lows: ? "My little boy ls subject to cr??b. Daring the past winter t kept c bottle of Chamberlain's Cou&X Mem ory in ? tba bouse, abd waen be be gan having that croupy cough - I would give him ono ot two doses ot it and it would break the attack. I iHce it better for, children than any cluer cough medicine because chil dren take lt willingly, and it ia BR?O and reliable" Sold by ail dealers. SCHOOL DEDICATED IN NORTHERN CHINA American Minuter Chief Speaker At Installation of Protestant Institution. Tungchou, Chili Province, China, Nov. 25.-Dr. Paul S. Reinsen, American minister to China, was the chief speaker at the dedication of tho North China . :.icrican Behool on October 25 by (fae Methodist Episcopal, the Presbyterian and tho American (congregational) Missionary boards. Tlie now school was erected on the site of the American board compound In Tungchou with fands gh on chiefly by the Presbyterian board. Money for the annual expenditure is provided by tlie OiTee board?. Miss Flora Heard is principal of the new school and ha:; three asaiRtants. The scope of tho institution is from tho fifth giude