The Anderson daily intelligencer. (Anderson, S.C.) 1914-1915, January 23, 1914, Page PAGE FIVE, Image 5

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Tin nniiin 1 All llrilNH ? iiilaVseKta?r 1. This shop produces tailored to meas ure garments which are as near perfect in fit, fabric, fashion and finish as can be produced anywhere. 2. There are no better values in men's suits than those offered here. 3. The Quality for the money is wonder ful. The fit is perfect. Why ? Because the custom tailors that make our work are th x very best in New York city, the city that is famous for its exclusive tailoring shops. None of our tailoring is spoiled by too many fingers in the pie. Each garment is the individual work of one individual tailor. He begins it, he finishes it, and when it is finished he TAKES PRIDE in it. 4. You can not go wrong by placing your order NOW, Spring line is now ready. I?7HEN undecided as to ww WHAT you want to ADVERTISE, or how ypu want to advertise Phone the Ad Man atT The Intelligencer. <i Or, if you know what you want and haven't time to get up copy, will gladly DESIGN same, and srbmit for your approval. q An AD in I Daily intelligencer will get results for you. U Si Small Fire Last Night in Theatre Coals falling from the steve net fire to the floor of the Electric thea tre lastenlght about 8:30. Very few Ul" inc ycOylc ?u l?c lil trail C ni. eile time of the blase knew anything un usual was occurring and Fire Chief Jackson, 'Wiho wes is the theatre ai the time, succeeded in extinguishing it with a bucket of water. Little damage *as done and the people In the theatre were not alarmed. LOOK ?HO'S HEBE. "Bed* Owen to Manage Greensboro Nest Year. Greensboro, N. C., Jan. 22.-O.Tlcisals of the Greensboro baseball club of the North Carolina League, announc ed today that they luid secured Thomas L. (Red) Owen, as manager of the local team for the 1914 sea son. Owen was captain of the An derson, S. C., team of the Carolina Association In 1912 and played short stop the latter portion of last season with the Trenton, N. J., team of the Trl-S4ate League. Owen was also with New Hanlon on the famous Brooklyn team a few years ago. VIRGINIA DEY! The Legislature Has Passed an "En abling Act." Richmond, Va., Jan. 22.-by a vote ot 7 ? to 19 the lower branch of the general assembly late today passed the so-called enabling act under I which 18.000 qualified voters in Vir ginia may demand a State-wide clec- ' j tion for prohibition. The same mea- ' j sure passed the house of delegates) 1 two years ago and was defeated in the senate, to which body it will go j immediately for approval or rejec-1 1 ' tion. The bill provides that gan pe ! tition of a number equal to one- 1 fourth aa many qualified votera par- j ticipated in the last election for State ! officers,' the governor shall order an ! ' election tor or against prohibition. In the event that the->State . should I vote for .tho new law would not toko ' 1 effect until May 1, 1916. SUMMER MILITARY SCHOOL. Kay be Located Somewhere Near AsfcevHe. Asheville, N. C., Jan. El-Capt. Robert Van Horn, of the seventh United States infantry, arrived here today, eecompeined by C. W. West bury- assistant general agent of the ' Southern Railway, for an inspection -tour of the possible sites in this sec tion for a Federal military training camp. After locking over this terri tory, Cepi Van Horn wil go to other sections of this State and will finish tour at some point in Weet Virginia. Capt. Var Horn was shown several altee here thia-afternoon and tomor row will visit WaynesvUle, calling at Hndersonvlile the day following. The pana now being considered by the government look t otho estalish ment of a summer camp where at 1,00 or more military students will be instructed and trained each year. PIEBCETOWN NEWS Special to the Intelligencer. I ( This section in and around old \ Plercetown ls greatly Interested in \ the proposed electric railroad from , Abbeville to Scaley and are ready j and willing to lend any ??sistanco in . their power to get the line built. The 1 building of auch a road through thia . section will open up possibilities that , have been the hope and dreams of? our cltlrens. . If any section through , which the road la to run had sucn. ? as thc Tuckers. Webbs, Rogers, El- f rods, Pig rams and many othera who t -are aa ready as they lo help In ail- x naclal way itw ould not be a great ? while, until the road would be built, j Plercetown being ten miles from a . railroad station lt would be natural t thu a large depot be erected herc. By t doing thia it would enable the thrifty s farmers in this and surrounding sec ' j tiona to have a vant amount of heavy, , hauling: done by the. road that now t has, be 'ono hr wagon and team. And, there is a possibility of a largo oil , mill and ginning being built. i t Our excellent teacher Muss Pearl \ Puller visited home folks near Green t ville last Saturday and Sunday.. Miss Ads, Rodgers la having a nie? dwelling erected on her place near ft here. V.'.tfl The many friends of Mira. J. G. J Rodgers will; be sorry to fc?ov that ri she is at -present somewhat thdlspoa- 1 cd. ? " '- J u Car oldest citizens claim that they J do not remember ever seeing a ? January before tho? has been aa fa- i retablo for farm' work as. thia has' 9 been, and believe mc, they have J made good use cf the fine days, and . a bave already their cotton land ready for putting In fertiliser. Why dont some of our good peo pie get busy and organise a Sunday school al Friendship church. There aro a number of cl.r ree wJ > '.-.ive no way of attending the distant schools and they should be given the privilege of attending one. Every community could and should have a large ?unday school. "BEARD NEES SPOOKS." Abbeville Paper Replies to Sinbad's Article. Press and Banner. In a lengthy article that appeared in the Anderson Daily Intelligencer of the 16th instant, W. P. Board In dulges bi solvi? predictions based on his extensive travel through tho State, anent tho cooring contest for a seat in tho United Sltates Soneto. As might be expected his forecasts all point to the triumph of Bicasc and Mclaurin. He is known to be BO zealous in behalf of both those gentlemen that the facta". ..ie makes lt necessary to take his utterances with a grain of Bait, rock salt, in grains not smaller than it ia quarried front the mines. Mr.'Beard does not travel over thc State extensively, and it mi* '.t al most be said continously and no one peed write him down as an Incompe tent when it conte3 to nowsgathering, but being a known pnrtlzan would he likely h>wr both sides of partisan' politics or if he occasionally heard something adverse to his^views, would be likely remember to make it pub lic. But this is not tho feature of Mr. Beard's article to which the Press and Banner would enter, demurrer, as the lawyers say. Senator Smith may bc holding his own against Gov. Blease or Gov. Blease may be not only holding his own but actually breaking Into the Smith camp, TH cs o are matters of speculation puro and, Blmple, and can be determined only by th A primary. The question ia: Why has Mr. Beard on vague rumor proclaimed a possible frame up be tween the a?rerai candidates 'for Marshal, in the event that action should be delayed on the appointment of Marshal, or rather Marshals, un til after the election? Granting for sake of argument that Senator Smith would gain-little by having four men all the while on the 'anxious bench with disquieting rumors afloat that the other fellow* bad.-the* pTomlsc, ot the plum, does Mr. Beard believe rbr one monument that ?any one.jo^ ,the several candidates would enter lato a comlhmation with his' opponents? Tho candidates may become sick or political torpor, but ibo? will, not de liberately cuw?n5t political suicide. What could they possibly gora . by Buch a course? All of tbam are con-, 9tt*Trtloira!!yi< ?ntl Blease. except Sheriff Lyon, and. it ia well known tact that whatever, he might do he will not support Governor Blease. If all four men should turn on Senator Smith they would be discredited''at the outset on the ground of disap pointment. The Presa and Banner can not speak .with any degree of certainty of what the friends ot the other can didates aro saying, but it ventured the ascentdon that no such statsnents is be attributes to'friends of Mr. Lyon were from responsible persons >r persons authorized in any unmber to apeak for Mr. Lyon. The feet ia Mir. Beard knows that Mr. Lyon is op- j m and fearless In maintaining a posi-, Lion, once he has taken his ste^u, he ?nows that Mr. Lyon is in close touch .vita the forces of Blease, and reading tetwen the lines of MT. Beard's arti-j :le, lt is pretty evident that his pur- j Toses waa to queer Lyon toward smith if he could not drive him to ruppert Mclaurin and Blease. { As -en Sen. Tillman's "leaky bar ?el by way of Spartanburg," referred o by ' Mfr. Beard as the probable lource of the Information that no ippolntment ot Marshals will be made inti! after the election, In the interest >f Senator Smith, it ia tolly to sup pose chat Senator smith believes this >lan to be for hie best interest, sod t la stIH greater folly tb suppose hat Senator Tillman would lend him ?If to a scheme to ?withhold these fat Coderai plums from the Democrats, vhen Cte way ls absolutely open for heir giving. No. Mr. Board, if you have not Bl oated your Imagination to work over ima on vague run?rs, yon certainly lave not drawn, r?arnnable conclu ions from your premises stated. Everybody Haa u <?oo<l Word yt Dr. Jon?*' liniment- Mr. W. P. Swart a, total Hancock, Hancock, Pa., say?: ?'Dr. ona?* liniment eared me of a bad ease of henmatftnu It etruinlr ir, =. ] tia. H. A. Meyer, S3 Mark? E*., : f. JJ writes: "I have given Dr. ? animent s ?sir trial, and behave it ie tbs i ?ai remedy in tbs world for AaesaoV.** i br. Leonard Gibbs, 180 Whitney Piare, ! lassie, H. T.. writes: "I bad been ?2 ? lated with extremely mon coma. Tried rerything bo? waa act benefited ia tibs ?et. Finely I used Dr. Jones- Lhumsat ? nd I nave ont brea troubled since." .j The United State? of Central America Tegucigalpa, Honduras, Jan. 21. An extensivo program tending toward the unifaction ot interests ot the Central American republics was dealt with by the annual Central American republics conference which waa held herc wow t ear s nay unter terms of a treaty signed at Washing ton, Dec. 20, 1907. The most important point of the program was a proposal from Nica ragua that the conference insist that those governments which had not yot done so, approve agreement for free commerce between the Central American governemnt reached at a former conference. Another suggestion was that Central American tfovernUients should put into practice the agreements which the confo-ence already havo reached. These agreements were chiefly as ti uniform systems for money weigh and measures, customs, coromcc and consular Berrica. "0 SELL STATE F A BX. Is the Purport of a Bill Offered by Xr. XcOueen. Columbia,-Jan. 22.-The houce spent the day In routine work on tts calen dar and disposed of several bills of j minor importance. The donate on '.he McQueen ? bill I providing for tho salo of all the] State farms, excopt that in Lexing ton county used as a reformatory for ' J the negro boys, was postponed pend-! ing the receipt of the annual report of the penitentiary directora. The bill says that the proceeds from the sale of the farms shall go toward the ddbt of the State and that the convicts employed on the farms .shall be put on the public works of ? Vio ,."-...,tl,,.. frAn, ..-LIM, ?ha? Anma VELOCITY OF LIGHT. . Roomer's Early Calculations Have Stood the Test of Time. The first astronomer to demonstrate satisfactorily the speed of light was Ole R?eme?, a Scandinavian scientist, who read his immortal poper on this subject before the Academy at Paris July 22, 1G7S. Roomer's calculations and conclusions have stood the test bf time and subsequent investigations on all important pointa. . Knowledge as to the velocity of light was of tremendous importance, to. I 1 astronomical science, since it enabled7: j astronomers to estimate accurately the j enormous distances .with which their science deals. Roemcr fonnd that light ! traveled st the rate of 180,000 miles in - n second. The ann. being distant from ' r the earth 02,000,000 miles, flashes light to us In eight minutes and fourteen i seconda. Yet the sun ia s near neighbor com pared with the so called fixed atara, which lo reality "move with Inconceiv able velocity, although tko moat pow erful telescope? Till not show that I velocity aa anything bot rest. Beyond j the outskirts of our Insignificant solar system are other systems, and beyond them still others, so far.as the sight of i man. aided by Instrumenta, may bridge the ghastly chasm of the Infinite. Distances beside which the Immense ? line stretching from earth to aun ia sn Invisible point are now measured by j means of Roomer a special discovery ss to the velocity of light.-Exchange. f Tho Stono of Infamy* In many Italian cities there formerly existed what was called "pietra d'ln fomte." or a stone, of infamy for-the punishment of bankrupts. In Venice r one stands uear tho Church of St { Mark, and lu Vero rm and Florence i they are near the old markets. On a day In carnival week the old time custom was to have all traders who had become bankrupt In the preceding twelve months led to the atone, and one by one each stood on Its center to hear the reading of a report of bia business failure and to endure the re proaches heaped on him by bis credi tors. At the -end of s certain time each bankrupt was partly undressed. I and.three officers took hold' of his' shoulders and three others of bia 1 knees sud, raising bim as blgh as they could, bumped bira on the stone delib erately twelve times 'In honor of the twelve apostles," the creditors crowing like cocks while the bumping pro ceeded. Pull Information. u In tba smoking room of sn esst- ? v bound Pullman, the other evening, ? ? there were two men-one of them Tj grouchy, the other ene receptive. Aft- . ' mt mtnt>*ln? two indiff?rent cigars the 1 _,i latter said to thc former: j tl "How far are you going." | ? "Buffalo," . acknowledged tba other i u one, taken off bia guarfi. i T "Ia tbat so? Weil. Buffalo br a great 1' town. 1 have a cooalu living there,. and I've .been there myself several tl times. The last time waa twelve years' ego sad over. Kr-what are yon going tb do in Buffalo?" "Change cars." ~ Cleveland pula C Dealer. ' Willina. Outside one of the recruiting depots la an Bugilab town s sorgar.n? saw a smart yoong milkman and. thinking to get a fresh recruit, said, "Yoong man, wonld yon like to serve the king?* "Batherr said tba milkman eagerly. "Bow much does be want? , A pint ?" Progressive Bankers Invite Your i Patronage _ We UJ ge iho.-e who have not yet startt? a bank account with us to START one. Those who are already >ur customers know the value of always keeping their >ar.k balaree growing. Money put into our bank right 1?re at home stays in our own community, and this helps levelop it and helps everybody to prosper. Why send money away v?hen we can increase the value >f OUR OWN property by building up ?ur own town? Make OUR B.u.V Y CUR banjc We pay 4 per cent interest quarterly. PEOPLES BANK,.- Anderson, S. C. Tine Q&eims Natt?msil B&mk | has made a remarkable increase in its business dur ing the past year. .\ .\ .\* There is a reason for this, try us with a por tion of your business now-later you will give us all. ... We Pay iii ter est! on Savings. J. H. Anderson, Pros. J. F. Soasaste, Cash. Th? Faimeirs and Merchante Bamik Th? Farmers i?oaim sm? "li xruns?; V?, Wfeese ccralv'net! resources are a little the rise o? Oas Million Donara are tabing on more new accounts ev? cry day than ever before. .*. /. .*. .*. THERE MUST BE A REASON \ Smr*?F. deposita and small loans are especially desired arad are especially appreciated 'and ' receive especial attention. Interest paid on deposit:? rhe Farmers Bank bf Iva,'Now Ready fop Business. The Farmers Bank of Iva is now ready o receive deposits and transact a general bank tig business. . Taxes will be collected for Corner and lall and Savannah Townships, and remitted o County Treasurer free of charge. The *W tew bank building will be erected on the Vharton lot at the corner of Broad and East Tont Streets/and work on same will begin in he near future. The stock of this bank has een placed ? largely with the fat mers around va, and every reasonable favor and accom odation will be shown its customers. S: B. F. MAUJ?DIN, Pres. apltai Stock $25,000. W. iv. ^IXINIX, Cashier. quest J. P. Morgan to return to the records of Fairfax county the will of Martha Washington, takers from the court house while federal troops oc cupied Ute town. The hill provide* fer legal action in Ute name ot the com^nonrweaithe should Mr. Morgan refusa. OF HABTHA WASHINGTON as Stolen bj Federal Hammers In Richmond, Va,, Jan. 22.-The Vir nla senate thia afternoon passed a ll calling upon Oov. Mann to rt