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i m, m i Ipi m ? Review Pattens FOR AUGUST ?? SMI i'/ It's a mighty good pattern, too; certainly none better for the price, toe and 15c. Try them once and you won't be satisfied with; the other ii \. "''sort: r ... v. il"} . .". '. HV/"? $&? "V- .v ....\*%v/.^vv>s^w-> ... j 3*0*5 Pictorial Review Fashion Books * sell for 25c, but with, the purchase ol a i 5c pat 9 v tern they only cost toe The Summer Fashion Book is profusely illustrated in colors, which gives you a better idea as to how your garments will appear. ' Pictorial Review Fashion Sheets For August N t are free, for the askings. Eleven pages "of ii- fi. lustrations. If you don't get one irv your pack f; age, or if you are not dowii town, phone us. . \? ". r; | $ ?||jj ??? 'I Mi .'K>t ^ Ti ? W% Pictorial Review p-f :"-- . .7^ . * m ^ M har, i'fM fi Sometimes we haven't patterns in stock want ed, but the Company .having .a^ranch. fwuse -in Atlanta enables us to deliver-your pattern In twenty-four hours. . ... ^ Y Try one next time. v.'...... . . i ? ? - \ . . ? . ? . ' - x vlv.-i : , MQ?RE-WILSON GO 1hemline LeatherSuitCases These are Rountrec Suit Cases, made of genuine cow hide, . linen lined, and with strong handle and lock. Si*e 24MnchesJf Substantial Brass tf?nmhigs, one inch leather straps all around. . Good S6.50 worth, : .tfe? AA Our price each ;...-.......... W.**? V y lit? Largest A?8brhtt<9iil ?f Ttwnfc? fct the City All go?? feincl? up to $215.00 Each ??lg*???????????????? ? ? ? IISOOETY j Palmetto Chapter. Tho Palmetto chantar . will meat thlo afternoon at fire o'clock with Mm. C- M. McClure on Arlington avenue. . Pretty Party. Little filss Sara Trlbblo entertain ed twenty of her friends at a Par chest party at her home on Greenville street *n Monday morning. Many In teresting, games wore played *fter which the hostess assisted hy .tfss Ella May Tribble served a delightful liol lunch. Punch was served by MIBS Ola Tribble. Birthday Party. {jj . Little . MIBU Elizabeth Tribble cele brated ber eighth birthday on Tues day afternoon ?'lth a delightful par ty to which abput thirty-five, of her little friends were Invited. It - waa a .very happy afternoon for, each one, delicious punch (being (Served by Misses. Sara and Dorothy Tribble. Later a dainty sweet cou rac was served the little folks, and all lett wishing their young hostess many happy returns ot tho day, . 8ubscrJption ?nuco. Several ot tho young mon of . the city aro arranging for a dance, on Thursday evening in the 'iall over the Anderson . theatre. Good music has been provided and as there aro .a good ..many visiting young ladies In tho city it promises to be a very delightful affair. Mies Lalla Marshall is visiting friends in Edgcliuld. Y. WTA. Tho mcmb er J of the V. Wi A. of the First Baptist church will please meet at. the church Thursday after noon, at . 5 " o'clock. After a snort business meeting, there will be au tomobiles to take the girls to the picnic' at McKInneyB Spring. Come and bring ''well-filled"- baskets. , Meeting nt First Presbyterian Church .'The members of the Baraca, Senior and Junior phtlathea classes of the First Presbyterian church ave urged to be present at the meeting to be held ,there this afternoon beginning at half past four o'clock, and lasting through the evening. UNCLAIMED LETTERS Following tIs the list of letters rew matnlng uncalled for in the post?t flc?.at Anderson, 8. C., for the week ending June 28, litlC. Persons call ing for. these will please say that t^oy were ;'advertised. Lne cent'due on all advertised matter. B-W. F. Brower, Mina Claudine Bosman, B. T. Burdett. MU<3 Bessie Benson, t C- Cob en a Commissary, Mrs. Dol la Causby;^; ii I. D-Miss Elizabeth. Dickson.. ;;^ Gr-Clara Gambrell, Lizzie Gall Miss Fannie Giana.' ' H--Bilk l-l ugJ en.. J-Rosa Jonis, Mrs. Ola Johnson, Ed Jones. ^ i ?? L-Mre. Bessie Lawson. M-Walter McCurly, Will Kose( ! Ejcv. S. O-'Mitchell,-'Mary Jane Mat ? tison. Miss F. -M. Morrlet? : ?rnet Martin. Mrs; Altee McMullln. \4?% N-Miss Ana "Norris. : . -'? . ??' , O-J"; H. Oliver. ''M ? P-Miss Mollie Porter. II. W. I Powell, Emma Patterson. R--Mrs: Hattie Richardson. Lizzie ?M.?jnson. .y_-% !.. S-Mrs. Katht'-a Stevenson', J. D. Stonecypher.. . .? - >T-Graham Tunstull. . ".&'::>, W-4Mrs; >Annlt? Walker, Ola rWeite, Emma Wheeler, Miss Lois Webb. NINE M?T?EIR?CRUITS TO. JOINS -LOCAL'VOLUNTEERS ?j* -v., ?, i ?-- ,- .-. ? - :.'.,.;;; Two Youngsters Signed wp 'aa Train Ready to Leave. r Nivjio yonog mou, x^ecrnlted by Lieut. J. J. Trowbridge, tert An derson -yesterday afternoon over the Bluet'; fridge railway for Cc^umtbia, where : they will, join the Anderson Volunteers; Vernon Wright, Edgar Barton, ' Phil ' Picken?, ' Jess .'Gadsden. fames Jennings,- Tillman Hamilton nd*. Wayne-' Hillhouse were signed up yesterday : by Lieut, 'trowbridge, and as tho. train - was -leaving tho shed two other young men,'.whose names were- not secured, arrived'al the' sta tion and stated that they were going as .volunteers.,, '.tfhes? : wore, given transporbiUoni. > .. ! ? r ? '-. A Strange ?VarmJnt.w .:'. Atlanta? Ga,. - June .,. 28.-~Whi?a makfng..a'^ii;'?i*th^\bbm?''o? a farm er near' Atlanta.._ a : loc&? . physician saw oomo strafe looklnr fowls, which ; the farn>,ir claimed were a 'cress between ? gui?ea ?owl and a Rhode Island:Red chicken.,. ?'\>r? -. The physician .?aid the - .'varmint** were very wild, and resembled a young, turkey. |⪯ than', anythiang else. They caira little Ilk? ? raines anad bayo, a .reddish, tinge and apota UNGLE SAM FIVE TIMES ?4 MEXICO Southern Seigiioor Before. SCOTT'S TAMS OF CAPITAL Texas' fight For independence Whloh Lsd to Massacre st tho Alamo-No ttatitfiVHat Provoked Uo Mora Than Has Bandit Ridden Republic- Near . War Whon Austria Ruled Mexico. . Once again us the United Staten cele bested Flag day Old Glory waved on foreign solL Down In Mexico the stars and stripes are flying over campa ot American troops. For. tho fifth time in history the American nation is engaged In a dis pote with her obstreperous southern acighbor. Ko other nation on tn* face of the globe has harassed our feelings I aa provokingly and ns persistently na I Mexico. And the end ls not yet. ]. Tracing the beginning of the trouble takes us bock to the early days ot Tex I aa. In 1820 Texas was a Mexican province. The territory'was originally Included ha the louisiana purchase, ] but bad been ceded to Spain lu 181D I to tho treaty which gave Florida to the j Among the emigrants who flocked to Texas in response to laud inducement.-} j was n baud of Connecticut Yankees I nader the. leadership of Moses Austin. Who rode Into ?an Antonio in the fall pf 1820 and coolly requested a grant of bind- for a colony of Americans. HI* request was granted. Slowly the colony grow. By 1885 I 3.5,000' Americans had drifted into lt j across the border.. By virtue of their I .Industry they ncc ii mu in ted power and I incidentally aroused tho Jealousy of j Mexican officials.'. This jealousy cen ! tered in Antonio Lopes de Santa Anna, j One ,of his first acta .was to send an army ; toto Texas ? tb oyera we the sefc I Tho Alamo Massacre. The Alamo bi a name that bas be come a watch word of lovers of liberty the world over. Here to thc strong j hold of San Antonio 180, T&xana took their stand against 4,000 -Mexicans and fought till they died, and died to a "Remember the Alamo!? became the slogan of the Texans.: Under tba -le?d j etebip of Karn Houston they met the . Mexicans a'few doya later on the tm I taortai field of San J?clnto and gara I them the worst thrashing that any j army ever receive** on n linnie tie kl. I ! The next time Americans carried a; j flag toto this region was to 1840, when tho Mexican war j began.' Thia' waa j over the Texas boundary. " Q?? flag j Waa flown- In the Mexican breeze for j two years, brid during the entire limo oar troops won every pitched battle to J. Which they engaged, General Wln I field Scott marched Into the enemy's j couutry and wrested stronghold ofter j stronghold from the hands of greatly I superior forces. Scott ' then went to J Vera Cruz, capturing that cjty ami I working his way to the very capitol j itself, where be raised the American I flag to thc breeze.. Meanwhile, General Taylor wa> sweeping Into Mexico. Matamoros; was j taken. Monterey. followed: then came Buena Vista with ita overwhelm ing victory. J .. Soon ofter the beginning of bur civil J war' France sent troops.'Into ' Mexico J to overthrow the government and cs. tabltsb an empire. Archduke Maxi j millan, brother of' Frans Joseph. t% j present emperor of Austria, was tb j reign ot Ita. bend.',' President Juarez j the full blooded Indian patriot, waa j ordered treated aa a bandit; ]M j Maximilian.Oeeertsd, .' J$?? Our government refused to recognise j the empire co lom? on it was supported by France. In July, 1803, it empha j filled its disapproval by masstng troops on the border to Texas. Napoleon Illy1 liilmMrew' bis troops from Vera Craik ! I leaving Maximilian ?ta lils fate. From that dapt p?tll 1014-cbmpsra . tiri? recent history^all, went Well be tvtSr?eu tho Unit vd States and Mexico, j -After Blas carno Madero. Madero'* j power was soon weakened. Victoria**; j Huerta esme upon thf scene. - Hlg j rc-ev an president of Mexico waa mark. j ed by the warder of bis predecessor, j ? '. - ??oW ? ?VW? tho. ?ppra?rab?o meinen?; [ pt Ai>ni &, :1B14; an insult/tb th tc aa. ] Tho United. Sta tea government upon j being Informed of'the Tampico. Inel J dant demanded an apology of Huerta the chape ot b salute to the flag that [$ad ?>een BO unjusUjr hisnitetL ."''B?felm^ j Away', weat tb*, battleships to .Vet? Following the <Wipat*ec of Vera m?? Retir? preptujgttemi for t?otp1I?> *S^S^va?aen.f S^*1 J TO BiEJrtREO HERE CAPT. HENDERSCJN OF; AN DERSON VOLUNTEERS WILL BE IN CHARGE. TO ARRIVE TODAY i i'mn*. W01 Likely Slay Here Until Re called to Take Charge of His Company. In a long distance telephone mes sage from Columbia last night Capt. R. D. Hearson of the Anderson Volunteers 'stated that he would re ! turn to Anderson at noon today for the purpose of. openlug up a re crultlng office. He will be nc com i panted, home by Lieut. J. L. Farm er, who -iyl!l remain here until Sat* JU ?* ?S-ns?.^B?wu how mag iCapt. Henderson will be on recruit* I lng duty here, but , lt ts presumed lust he will stay until he is recalled I to take charge of his company. Capt. Henderson stated in the mes en go that the Anderson Volunteers bad been inspected and accepted into tho-Berrico. Jost how many of-tho -men -who went away, from hera as members of the company passed the medical examination, could not be learned. * . OPERA SINGER MARES RECORD? MOTOR 'TRIP-OHARA TO NBMT YORK IN EIGHT DAYS From Omaha, .Nebraska , to New' York city in eight dayo--probably the .fastest automobile run on record I for a woman-waaf blade, by Mles : Li) 1!an Stanley, la Metropolitan Opera ?Sluger of Now York, the report of ? the trip reaching D; P. Sloan and Son., Inc.; local Crow Elk-Hart re* presentat ives today. Misa Stanley loft Omaha Sunday morning and arrived in. Detroit in four days. .Pour,days later sho was In New York . City . All th*? dtaculty ? she had was summed up in a single puncture. Tho car she drove waa. a, beautiful [Crow Elkhart " Clover-t?e?f roadster I which she .drives Uko a veteran. ; One of tho startling fact*' abbift her trip wu s that Miss Stanley, had never run a gasoline car before she bought the-Crow Elk-Hart, several j months prior to her trip. She was ,tbe- solo operator of the cad on the trip. iv.] Her esr is ? 2t> horsepower ma (chine of handsome lines. On the j trip it was very economical in its UB? lof gasoline and oil. Thir: wno a eur price ,. to Miss Stanley, who had known something of higher priced cars, and whose rorute - took her through some ol the worse roads tn the middle , west. She enjoyed the a similar trioetaoln shrqiu omwfy trio immensely and expects to main ? similar trip again this* summer. Miss Stanley declared that every -wo man ought to at some time during the year take a motor trip for its re I creation benefits. She makes the I statement that the fresh air and the exercise of driving ls a wonderful i energizer, " . ' #* For Sunburn try A. D. S. Per oxide Cream 25c Vanilla, Cher ry an? Strawberry Cream today. pwi Drag ??; , gm $6.00 Grades, now .... .. ; 4.50 Grades,vhow .:;.... . 4.00 ?r?des, now .'.!.. . ^'3,-So Grades* now . v.. 3.00 Grades, n ow .,.. 2.50 Gracies, rtuw .... 2.00 Grades, flow .-.. t.5o grades, now. ..... la ?.00 Grades, n^w rrr? i? M* .'?^T'^T 60 ?H Don't ''queer'' your ap pearance in a yellow hat that neither fits your face ' nor head. We have 204 WHITE ones^-all sizes and styles . that we are going', to sell fast. ; See Window Dbp!ay andi Buy Your? Today . JU. j/Difl .'1816 ? ? .. ? -?? ' 'y' - m - 'lx' COLLEGE OF CHARLESTON ^b*?^i??^*l4??^ Vt : SoutLi Carolina's Oldest College ? ?O JUOltftOIS I Ho"/i?fi . ,? . !32nd Year Begins September Mia. .<4_? lan. ? . , .? 7 TO Ii 'rance examinations at all tho - ^? figgS V10 ?ow?of, ^'iW?rW cor y-seata Friday, July ?lt. at 9 a. 1 "8"b>fcr^00,ior Wf,okIf> H^IOou ; m ? ? ? ? ? ot The London Tienes," sal ? Wood? ; i *.year courses lead to the B: ' ??w.-J?lte"0J?' ?r??dc?,lot United ; A. md B. S. degrees. A two-year s^-..??}*>?Vc/ry phase prb-med?cal course la given. SL^???? J?^^l?*1*, eocia1' A free .tuition scholarship lc as- f1????* RDdl#^]Lte*y/ Blgned to each county of the State. ?.K2?Hn?i^ ? SUSS eend us ^ Spacious bulldln?s and ' athlotio fv8"SP,?'?" ?33w^0n W?^v grounds, -well equipped laboratories, * Times 33,20 per yea* > . unexcelled library faciUtlou. ingaim?n tiAtfiir ??iMAa*WVV-' ?SSt^For termB ; W BOOK S?0RE HABRISON , RANDOLPH, PwaUlent \' - ,". 11 1111.1 ''.J!1 ?' ? ? 'Vi^? ?? u-v: When that time comes io you, you knowwJf&ttbttt?/:'?W' ?3 to take-Cardui, the woman's tonic. Cardu? b t^. - j posed o? purely vegetable ingredient^ which ?rt / ia? Bently, yet surely, on the weakened wofn^ly;ojgarjs, PS? tes? and helps build them back to strength ?n? ?iessE Wgm lt hat benefited thousands and thousands ot weak ' M?: L_Jj ailing women In Its past half century ot woatofol L**S Bi- success/ and it wilt do the same for you? ^ WHI SH Miss Amelia^ fg* p*i says: *! think Cardui is the greatest medicine on earth* |rW ,or wor?en- ^Before I began to take Cardui, I was mai* PB so weak md nervous, and had such awful dtw HS L?3 spells and a jujpr appeHte. Now I feel as wei! ?nd Ol Brag as Strohe as Vfever did. and can eat most anv^ns/0 |B| ^^^c^^^ig C^ui^a^ ^^^^^^^^^ A sparst Of patriotas? has been lite ?pre^ommat?n? mdt?i* standing virtue o? tho Aaaeri?aa people air<ce tho ???ent?t?l 'day thnt ?he fVIayflower lan?ed at Plymouth Rack . v- }K0 ?K ^V V,' A?HS WOO bo unto any nation that &?g lake ?&eirt?ss ?f?fc a??r honor became tho same sp,mV Uves? end burna >aa eur beerte Just ns it did in thc breath of those sturer ^toneer** ..Another^ form of patriotism cea foe applied ^/^wam?as meth ods-that of Riving honest val?es-for iii? mtrchaafc v?hc* ?sm 'tot, can be neilher a good patriot, a good CREESES or ?'????w&t?:: chant, ? . .v , , - V.^^;?nvi^yefitO;?Jg^^ /i/.o?^W?tt?ton's.--- now. ,-^^S^?^M^ , . Si^?^Gfades^^n?w^ ,v... v;. : *'';^./'.'V^S?J;Mf VSit?o Gredas,J now- ..., *? > t - ' 4,So Grades,'now, V..0 -3,7fii 4.00 Grades, now .... ;>.V f^^^fid^now. ?i A, ^r J ?<rw,5L??i;? 3.00 Grades, now ........ Yv,. : ': 'I VV# ^ ?*g . ?:So -Grades, now't/,,. ; 3^? f|l