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THE INTELLIGENCER Iftk?BLISHKD lhie, I; Published ?Terr morning except Monday by 'ihe Anderson Intelligent Mr at 140 West Whltner Btreet, ?n f?"?n' 8' C-_ LKUI-WKEKLY INTELLIGENCER Pabllohed Tuesdays nod Fridays I*, li. GLENN....Editor and Manager Sintered aa socond-clfiss matter April 23, 1914, at tho pout office at anderson. Routh Carolina, nader toe tot ot March 8, 187?. ASSOCIATED PA ESS DISPATCHES Vtlopnona .321 ?UBBCfiiPTlOB SATK8 DAILY On? teat .<B00 (Six SSonthe . 2.50 three Months . 1.25 Soe Month.?...*. At Goo Week.-ji J* EMMI-WEEKLY O?* Teat .1160 Silz Month?.7b " ' ABVBBTI&IK? St?ts? will bs furnished on assUaa FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1915. AU aboard for Xmns. Wo wonder if ono of these aolf-mado mon over feels ashamed of tho Job. _ro Serbia might as well maintain her capitol on wheels. Tho Eastland investigation has turned out about like wo predicted. ?-o--. ' "AlaBka Faces ,Severe Winter." Headline. Well what else would you expect? All ol us aro for "peace at any price," but wo have differing views as to prices . Exchange of congratulations, among tho surviving gentry nf the barnyard is in ordnr. 1-o-. It is bet* ir to havo eaten heartily and had Indigestion than not to have eaten at all.: - .Visitors to Baby Chow Get Thrill. -Kaodlirio. And perhaps heard a trill or two. . ?--o We. don't know which Is the harder, to put money in tho bank or got money out of a bank. -????o ?-. . Tho vlslblo supply of calves in creases very materially ? during windy weather. V/o presumo all nowspapor men aro strongly In favor of u "woll balanced diet," King Constantine's position seems to bo ono ot "be d~-~ if you do and be d-- lt you don't." That .Chicago .woman who swallow - . od o table knlfo has nothing on tho ono who ato a Charleston waffle . ; ?--O--. . If these .paragraphs sound punk thia morning lt's because wo were "too full for utterance" when wo wroto . ; them. -. Ono of tho perplexing mysteries -ot ji ' tho prosont day in South Carolina ls k.,.;.an "anti-saloon l?a?uo'.' when saloons -'havo been under the Dan for a gene ration. N,-'., --o~ :,. Somo of tho nuns on Turkoy and Thanksgiving Day are no worSe than como' of tho pains follow!', 'g a repast T. . Of turkoy on Thanksgiving Day. v 'turkey on Thanksgiving Day. If any ol these paragraphs sound ]1 i> like warmod-oyor efforts ot a year ago just (refiect that it's not tho only : - warm-over stuff you're getting just ^p^i^l^l' ;.'-. Judging from what one sees sitting about on tho floor of the express ot nee thoso days, snakes are going to "; ' continue biting throughout the ! win ;. '.ter^ . ( . mLWm???. --?--? Henry Ford is going to Europe to try tb end the 'war. / Luck ' ?o you, ; ^nry, but we would be more, ?Hiing ?: tp' bot; on the success of your venture : were it a conquest or the moon in? ? uteatf. ' Forty tbob?snd bforUi . Carolina farnt?rs have Joined in n protest ..' against additional national prcparod nes3.v ; Farming communltlca general ly look it tho platter In. somewhat the same way. .: J?'o ? ibo' .i^dusti communities that are particularly . .tovosted'lu i}t^hto^i^^ ^i^\^ er fosls th/iV war can never , re ivvhim.' ' ; GROWING TINTED COTTON Ono o? the most Interesting mon as wull au ono of tho moat valuable mon In thc South just at thia time is, to our way of thinking, Mr. A. W. Brab ham, of Olar, H. C., who for some time has been currying some wonder ful experiments In Hie growing of tinted cotton. His tests have at tracted attention throughout the coun try and already he has been called upon to write much and much ha? been written by others about his ex periments. Just how much of lids lian been read hy the farmers of Anderson county wc do not know. But nt any rate we are very glad to have received from Mr. Brabham a highly interest ing communication with referenco to hlu experiments with tho growing of colored cotton. We feel sure lt will prove of very great interest to grow ers of tho staple throughout this sec tion. Just what the future holds for nat ural colored cotton, we confess wc do not ?mow, but If tho experiment turn:; out to bo a commercial success we seo no reason why lt. should not mean a complete revolution of cot ton growing and cotton manufactur ing methods. If lt can be made to take tho place of artlflcally colored cotton, that ls, cotton chemically dyed in tho mills, wo seo no reason why it should not provo ono of tho greatest achievements of tho times. Anything that will take the place of the chemical products nocoseary to color cotton now, and which are man ufactured almost wholly In foreign countries, and particularly In Qor many. ought to be welcomed lt seems to UR. Tho inconvenience to which cotton manufacturers dyolng their own cotton woro put on account of tho shutting off of shipments of chem ical dyes from Germany at tho out break of tho war ought to be sufllclcnt reason for tho welcoming of naturally colored cotton. But, above all, there ls tho probability that tinted cotton growing would prove moro profitable to thc grower than tho staple In Its present state, and that is a change which, would be most wolcome. As wo sold in the outset, wo do not know enough about this subject to diacuss lt at any length. What we have said is only wild guessing on our part. Wo submit below Mr. Brabham's letter as ho wrote lt, boping that it will provo of Interest to farmers gon *T'M?1 fl , i ??1$|? Ed?or 'Intelligencer:' i: have Just read your pun on my j letting up on raisins blue.cotton till tho present dopiesslon in business j passoa. I can asa uro you I feel the i depression as badly as any ono, and no color of cotton cou'.d get mo "deep- j or In tito hole" than the white sort. ? Next year Mn ope to give the cotton world, black, blue and other shades of cotton. . 'My hopos, like my past, may bo blasted, but time will make tho crucial test. I firmly bolievo that "tho tide" in my.own astaire ".U?HJM? taken at tho flood" {ind ? least as every student of Shakeapeare knows j where, -is coming my way. Tje South wants the seed of cotton in na tu ral colore; New'England -wants tho cotton. Before mo in a letter from ono of tho largest cotton mills in New England, consuming 120,000 balea of all kinda of cotton per year, and the texts they have made with my cotton, and the good words they write mo would make Any plani. hrno/lnr shout, Selah j and kindred words . Cotton in natural colors, bred rltf.it, will soil, and sell for better than tho .white sort.' American mills Imported dui inn last October 1G0.000 bales of cotton, and the talk of lt wau colored', brown? ecru, yellow and red; ahd:tn,b South ern farmer can raise tinted cotton' as .well as Peru. India, Africa; and China. More than this:. COUon has a great affinity for colora.. Grow whito and brown, or .white and yel low- together two or tiree years, and watch results. The shades',that I. havo produced. rtmclng..from a tull cream, up to almost'blue'and bronze aro from the ecru tinted Egyptian and a. native white. I make this de duction at t?e start/Black cotton had been "swallowed up" ages ago by other collons; and tho parent plants wore selected wibi great care; the white sort, having blue-black seeds, and the Egyptian having doop black saeds with blue apota on them . Tests prove beyond doubt that my deduction was no hypothesis, but..a. clear,..cut foot. Prom these tiaro parents I hrvvo. several abados and tune alono will tell tho variations t'tat are. pos sible, r?oWlng very clearly that white cothra ant kindred sorts assimilated or "swallowed op," tu, use a slang, ages ago the different;', colored bot tons. Birt Ute plant breeder can ?reit acsurod that eo long as the. Speeles exist the lost variety can be restored. Let me say to the ?rower of color ed cotton s th eso words of true ad vice: Keep all fixed colored cottons away from the whHe sorto-TrtsOla'tlon and segregation are t?e watch-words for tho growing of o ny tinted cotton. Just as whtte com will "awtaMow up" black corp h/two Or tihree ybar^, so also will white cotton complete ly change the color, of any tinted; cot ton in two or three years. .White, though not,a primary color, .in both, plant and animai life has tho tendency ot -predominating-tfcet ls changing pity of tho primary; in tact any; coter to .WtoltOj; of.'iAlmost; white, at r???st. , Nev good friend, /blub cotton couldn't mako me any "blber* than the white port has done, and I Care say many'grewer? ot white co*iOn to ?ijS^Jife^? ?m Methodist, Arnon! .,. ;<..->. .: .. . . "j^TO store ever built mon s X^l d<>,: litely to give absolute ->a has more thoroughly succeeded ii ideal. Money cheerfully Young Mens 1T% "V that we mean that [j p) and models that m etrical lines in tailc And here you have the bi? men. Let us repeat the invitatic tomers more value, bette: like to demonstrate this a Suits and F preme Hat Styles ?y OU'LL find a hat here that o you the opportunity of fei and looking a little better fitted you've ever enjoyed. Stetsons shapes and shades sure to please a $3.50, $4, $5. Evans Specials in duplicate colorinj that have all the ear-marks of the 1 ones, most unusual values at. Prrcel Post Prepaid WAU ON GREENWOOD JOURNAL This is to announce that we are at war with the O reen wood Journal, one of the Bmallost but wittel one pt the best dally newspapers in the. Caro linas. But this war is not of our wil ling. (apologies to the . Kaiser), and wo are found far from a state of pre paredness for war with on. esteemed friend. Walle thia is called "war", m widen we are engaged, the term needs to be qualified. Neither of us are UBing weapons common tb a real war. We are armed with squirt guns loaded to tho mutxle with grape juice. 1 lie re fore, wa .submit, -it is at least a hu mane war. But, to the fray. Hero ia What The Journal bsd to say about us yesterday. We wish to say in advance that, .wo have only tho kindliest feel ing for The Anderson Daily In telligencer and Its editor as . we . haye for?ait the good people of .that city." Even it we did not we ' should be above making flings at ;:them or at any other people. Wc say this much to quiet our es teemed contemporary .who-bsa taken exceptions, and makes a per sonal application ot two editorials that recently appeared,, tn The . < .'. Baily journal. ? We lots you, v . dear contemporary, and wiSh you great success in your work. Yop ".'.'are" ntakm?'ft'sood pa***, : olidly, or tried more tisfaction, and no store i attaining this lixed refunded after test of wear Suits and Ov we have specialized with odern young men insist c Dring designs that radiate i unlimited choice of all tl m, let us urge you to com? r cloth and more genuine bility over and over again. Overcoats $1C fifers eling than , in t %s and styles ligher priced i .$2 and $3 ?j Boys9 Suit Values ... ,".i::u??ri r;. .; * ."'V UR boys'clothing offers you mi ?mum values. *MWe apprech mt our boys' trade today will be c len's tomorrow; it's ? a good reas hy, we do our utmost lp boys' apjp?r allie and variety aplenty in suits a vercoats in ages from. 4 to 20; n< ilks and double breasted suits. uits $3.50 to $ 12.50,'j Overcoats , > $7.50. , . , mi-?".;''.- '?: . >. m^c?' e>'2rsible mackinaws-corduroy a laid cassimeres at $6. .-vi;'; ' are sure that lt la appreciated I not only by y >jr own people, but .. I .wherever lt la-known and read. We can not help lt, however.1 If . yop find things lu The Daily Jour nal and apply thenV, personally to yourself or to any ox your peo- J pie. You should not. do this. Walt until your name ls called, and, then, lt will be time enough for you to apeak. You eh oui d rot "I have taken the editorial which ap- j pear cd In The Dally- uToarnU; bf Tuesday on the bad taste of tho . : fellow who is called vifpon train- .. traduce a publia speaker, -?M'!c. given it ? loot application. .This V.'i Was presuming too pinch,.;-'and : v ' bora, evidence bf the fact that you aro on the lookout, for thiner, of this kind. Nu one up this way is ? out to-knock you orV-Aaideranv - Wa , are not knockers in > Green wood, but boosters. ParCon xu*t we should not ? have ' atdrt, ' one ; word about- this, and ypnr:reterV enees to the fellow wi JO thought he was. alway a right and the Other ; man wrong, had yott not. oalfed ' The Dally Journal by name. We do not know who yon c havad; Itt - ; mind, nbr do we care, and aa you mention no names in that,particu lar connection we wiatt to assure A'oa that "we ?re not going to ap f^Ty it to ourself or toany man cir Set ot men in Greenwood or else where. Take a day oft and come down to see us. We will give, . - you -tho. ?lad. hand of welcome, and do.all wo can to make you ?f?jBy. vt<ttt -ca nuva warm hearts, IF we could lind a way to do : you can be sure. As it is, w final satisfaction by this double ; - or before-on any thing' you ercoats Accun particular success in deve >n. We'd like you to see action and spirit; brillian lat is best, the most wante 2; we're proud of our abili satisfaction than is possit ?, $15, $18. $2i Extren .-? rp HERE'S ? * every pa similarly prie We've always our manufacU to you to prov comfort and s fort on our part.can s< what we mean when in all leathers and siz from. Under IX ite tur on el. nd )r *3 nd A BOUT, the m ?**. part of your lected- here. We've dal pride in our ui there's no better v/a man. We're featuring unit mous Vassar and Co fold, the two fabric ?nd two-piece, suits; Mesh, lt's a wonde in all prices from . Soc to $6, and that Greenwood la a better Iliaco to live-over. batter than Anderson. Of course we would not' expect you 7to tell''Anderson . . people that you felt this :%ey- lt j does not pay. to walk around with 1 chips on one's shoulder. This- is. bad business. Of course you ?o: not do this kind of thing. If we did not have every reason for believing that tho editor of the'es teemed Greenwood Journal dashed oK the above editorial before ho partook of his Thanksgiving dinner, we would say thats the dressing accompanying the turkey contained too much Buge and'he was suffering at th tl OJO from an attach of indigestion. ' Na, brother,, w? are not gola s about with chit on our shoulder and.V.? do not scan the editorial columna of Tho Journal for '^Mtw'ts^^^.'-pfoktog.r/^ scrap whh "yon. Ton dl4 not read our (^lloriai; in question carefully.; we graced; it with thia hypothetical ?tatise ^Wa have sn Idea to whom our contemporary 'refers, ??jd, ?F we are correct in our S?ESJISEr-ete," Tha? was na cat?goriel charge that The Journal was referring to an Ander? son incident. But the fact -that our os teemed I mend and contemporary winces under what we had 'to say. In dicates that our "surmise*, turned out to bc a center shot.. U<w*,recaH Tito more for you we'd do it; e prove your certainty of issurance. buy here. itely Built ;loping the colors the graceful, sym t tints and shades, d things for young ty to give our cus )le elsewhere; we 0, $25 ie Shoe Values ividence jof superiority in ir of our shoes over those ed by other standards. been very exacting with irers; we feel we owe it ide the very best in.wear, fyling that any extra ef ;cure. You'll understand you see the values here ;es reasonably priced at .S3.5o to $6.50 wear ? - . ' . ost care-requiring dress is easily se i always felt spe iderwear stocks y to get next to a " in suits ot the fa oper makes; Duo : ?vrments, in one Dr. Deimels Linen :rful showing herc 50 Suit. . i journal's editorial correctly, it said, in part, "A gentleman ot national reputation (undoubte^iy?t\Bi7Bn).wp~ introduced to an audience, lo a neigh boring town-etc." As the Great Com moner spoke in only two neighboring towna ot. Greenwood--Anderson and Grconviilo-and tho i?tr?ddqu?a giv?& tho -speaker inj Anderson,.was- almost] as noticeable as the address by the Bleaker ct the occasion, il was natu ral tu Infer, thu The Journal was re ferring to Anderson. ; . At any, rate, The Journal bas not PENIEI> that we were correct lb our surniis?, and ; thftt ' ^tl^ itself ia sign in (auif. Ii oar valued contem porary was not referring to Anderson, tbSn ba should not "knock us do tja" with , the hint. If you are not going to;e*ii sames, brother, then be a -Ht tie inor? deft st. the art of conceal ment, and .we won't think you /...are talking about os* So much ??r that Our friend doea not seem io under stand who we bad In mind when wo (s^^.:o?-ttte "fellow who' was sot in his own views add conr'dored those ivbo oJssjrreed yfith bin ns "two-by fours or scoundrels." Wo meant the sims fellow te whom Tbs Journal .re ferred as a "gentlomen ot national T gethe i?1.5( ?3.5( The you quest Your use v Shirts IE greatest values we've been able to see in shirts, we've brought to* r here for you. Manhattans at ), $2, 83.50; Eclipse at $t, $t.50, ); B-O-E at 50c and $1. ' , ' qual?ies and colorings are just as would expect at this store-un ionably correct in every detail, verdict is sure to be gratifying to rthen you sec these shirts at 50c to S3.50 Money Cheerfully Refunded Thanks for the invitation to come down, brother. Wo aro going to take advantage of it the very first oppor tunity. We are euro we aimil be tho one. to profit by making this acquain tance. We are sorry you got "all bet up" over what waa Intended for a cor rection/ot your impvv- jsion that tho introduction Which -Mr, Dry an re ceived in Anderson VAS'ah example ot bad taute ; nud whop we finished with that wo queried The Journal a3 tb how.'it would relish being caliea a ''jingo :paper'* ?C it held views on pre paredness for war that were contrary tb those heW by tho Great" Commoner. -'op, we. are coming to see you, brother, and that right away. Have av big bottle jot grape julee bandy ?nd we'll drown our mutuat . woes, and ai'ler into-a 'solemn treaty : to pre serve peace with you at any price. V PASTING BRYAH OWE ?nd?r tho caption "Big Men Can Bo ?mall," the Greenwood Index, ono of the best weekly papera in the south ern states and owned and edited by jHarry L. Watson, than w^om thora ia no mere upright and honorable gea tlonmn tn any profession, tolls in the igtterinl columns of it? current issue the ste.*? bf a performant?*'t^'?^