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THE ANDERSON INTELLIGENCER rounded 18ft 1M North Main Street AKB2B30K, S, C WILLIAM BANKS, . I Kfftor W. VT. 8JB0AK, - Business Manager ?.ferneren According .to let e! ?ea tress sa Second Class Mall Matter at the restofilce at Anderson, & CL ,' Pasllshei Every Mer*iag Bxetpt Monday 1 Seal-Weekly Edition on Taeaiay sag er??ay asuraiagi Dally Edition?$5.00 per annum 11 f?M for Six Months; SlJtt for Three Mentis. fleal.Weehly Edltloa ? fLM perl Annsa||7& cents for Six Xeiihif M eats for Four Months. I"--_IN ADVANCB Member of the Associated Pr?ts and Serrfring Complete Dally Telegraphic A larger Circulation Than Any Oth er Newspaper to This Co agr?as te aal Wttrfct. The intelligencer la delivered by ?arri?ra In the city. If yog fall to get your paper regularly please notify i as. Opposite your name on lai; A \ ef year paper is printed date tj? which year paper Is paid. All checks and drafts should be draws to The An demon Intelligencer. ' Washington, March 9.?Forecast: South Carolina?Fair and warmer | Tuesday; Wednesday fair. Anderson ia My Town. The Irvei bended matt is the effeclivo man. Oeo. Vi. VandcrhSlt wbb the liest of The next thing ta t o"get" the men] that got Vergara. Shucks. The legislature will have| to meet again next year. Peace; In' Georgia. Then why not In | South Carolina and Mexico. What Is neutrality among Texaa Rangejfsj Verily, nothingness. Jim Craig Wt.th wv&| not poatofficn aspirants, anyway. We nominate General Kelloy, of hobo ftwaa, tg rgflPt flfflfirffM V^la In] open Hntw^.-yT'"""'^' ""' >~"r~~r~ 1 The biggest. ttUpg^ah^uta.Woodrow Wilson is that ho will admit It " who he makes a mistake. ...... !>hy, How nice It must he to beat editorial ' 'squilis" out of some government em ploy? pensioned In a soft Job. Let's have ihe leguminous plant ver sus poor landftaa the Issue In the cam paign this summer. I The Chamber of Commerce ex presses willingness to work for a com mission government If somebody will start o<i. J. P. Morgan sohl)'"You civn't uu-j scramble eggs." nut Woodrow Wilson Is- doing something toward dissolving the trusts. : It Is rumored that Reed Miller sang* at the college last night The fact is that, we see by looking over our files that he had a date. Anderson will be on the Washing ton to .-.Atlanta highway If A. S. Far mer can bring It about, and he is som? worker. If t?o Southern Public Utilities Company ever gets into court. It may be proved that It has been more sin ned uculnst. The Columbia State doesn't think much of Anderson College now, appa-J r?nrly. Bnt Jus twalt until collge ad vertising time. We would like to amend Col. A, B. Andrew's fsmoua expression by ad ding our wish that be rosy I've many I years after seeing the Blue Ridge) .completed. -Because John I.lnd may succeed John BsT.sett Moore, it does hot mean that thore have been "leaks" In the office of secretary of state. Llnd la good for something else besides *1 m*9. . ' ho Y ft?HW If, In the coarse of human events,] some folks showed wind up where An anias- attd BapphIra went, they would blame , their physical discomfort on the water pressure In Anderson. W. Henry Gioen, a director of the state penitentiary, goes to Columbia today to be present at the aale of some perfectly usefgj m nias thst helped to muhe money crops on thu state farm la* i-. yeas. | g| jHKn -Ma*y#,f dy." "{nlfetlck," "loaf?V "stymie, ~?ras^ Hill but Dlain old Scotch golf PLEASE IM)NT FJ'SS f>ur Walhalla correspondent in Iii? zeal for IiIh friend,.^J?^M. ('. I,ong, shows a little too much feeling, we arc (|ultc aure. He speaks of Oeonee'H claims to recognition in?" the mutter of solicitorship.. Wienaus? jto Inquire if Kurtz I'. aoiitii tl^aot: much of un Oconee man hk mvWf Long? Mr. Smith was reared ;in Wallialia. and was One of the bad" little hoys at the local jBjhrf||fl?flpt ,H ,wb<:r#" he learned to WcpawTK&cg'er," add if that Isn't establlshlnga-?M;iftn Jo null vit y and citizenship, we would iike to know what Is necessary i:i and un der the premises. The premises under Mr. Hick's celebrated school for hoys at Walhalla can testify to the accur acy of this statement that Kurtz Smith attended school there. While it does seenP??|lttle bit one sided for Oconeo to have nothina in this new judicial alignment, we call attention to #10 fact fil?t she is no worse off than she was before; and there is an -opportunity for Oconee some tim*:. Judge Prince Is going to the supreme court bench, or if Presi dent Wilson is any judge of good iri terlal he will appoint him on the fed eral bench. We are forced to admonish our cofi respoQdShjfc that Greenvlfyr'Wan: n?jt! so Bwoeti<ahd''unselfl8h toward"Wctens, for Greenville hud one candidate, per Imps more for the position of. judge, and the only reason that his name was withdrawn was because it was seen that Tom Joe Muuldjn. beg. par don, 'Judge Mauhllii. "had Vh? place elnched because of his fine record as a slate senator. Put up your knife, Oconee. Don't fall out with Anderson. EVERY ONE CAN TAKE HOLD. There is always one subject on which every one agrees. That ia in? desirability of "boosting the town." Movements of this kind always en counter the difficulty that many busi ness men won't give time to them. Not merely that, but often they stand off and criticise1 those who are doing their best to puhh. No town can go ahead far or fast where many people take that attitude. Also it Is absolutely necessary for buslnesa^men ,1q be willing to give tirtlftjto serve oh;;commltteesjMUl hold o"mcel In 'organisations formell to pro mote, the collective interest. Too orten effoTirdf ?fls khtatlall t*V cause they are left for a few to carry "OIL..1., -U-'Mfftmhe*1* arymade, It -to uso? any "hechttge* gfew^hare beeu-lWt-to4 shoulder the responsibility. """The jrDSrtrr'uf a1 towti hi lugs1 tilg r dividends to all who own ony proper- L ty or any business there. it every business roan would give u small frac tion of his tii;.e to cafyl; g on work for town advancement, there would re-' suit an uplift that would pay better dividends than can be earned In most callings. Aggressive Anderson. Forward. ftis&fi THK LAW'S DELAYS Representatives of the American Rar Association including erPresl dent Taft. Judge Alton Parker. Sen ator Root and others/ bava jj><v?v ask ing- congress- t?v slwrpllflcatfon of court procedure. Conscientious law yers elsewirajjc will assent. have their big share of kfer> existing conditions. Rut often the trouble lies in laws made by the legislatures. C. A. Smart, a district court judge of Kansas, told in The Outlook somctimo ago the story of a murder case in that state, f Deien dant was sentenced six months after arrest But the law gave hhn two years for appeal, and final action was not taken until a year after that, so the case was kept hanging three years. lawyers ought not to be allowed to keep cases hung up so long, while they complete work they should have turned over to other offices. In the yaer 1911 there were 148 murdera In New York city, and hut 13 convictions were ever secured. In London during the same year, a big ger city, there were 20 murders and 15 convictions. The probability of es cape rever.led by these eloquent fig ures leads the trade of gunmen to flourish, as recent.tragedies have demonstrated. AN OFFER TO COI'NUL "Whereas, we have been informed that members of the Cltyt Council fa vor Commission Form of Government Ifcrithe ctfy er\ Aj^rsot*^^teanyjf other prominent citizens, therefore: BE IT HEREBY RESOLVED, that we the members of the board of direc tors, in meeting assembled, herewith tender our services to the Council In the matter." Sueh was lh? resolution offered, at the meeting of tim Bord-ot Directors of the local c4jnMreialR>rganl*atlon Monday afternoon, and unanimously carrtsd. The Board did not gr.cr.rcc wlhlage to tender lu services la a dis cussion fit the matter* It is a matter of course' ifflfetf 'will I have to come before the votera for de VANDALISM PRAC TICED IN CHINA The Asiatic Republic Being Ruth? fc?ssly Plundered for Antiquities New York, March 9.-In "n mono graph culled "Plunder. and Destruc-j tina of Antiquities in China" the Aslu tio Instl.tut*' pf New York rails utten-j Hon to Jiu* vandalism thar has apemi ed in China by which ??ic ?H being! rut hIc>Haty plundered of her antiquities. TJie Statement places the responsi bility for this situation on the devel opment of the present Europenn musl im) and collecting system, lt consti tues an appeal to nations and organi zations to call a halt in this wide spread plunder, otfen involving blood shed in thc interests ?f science and of fair piny for China und her com ing generations. The monograph contains private offi cial and public pape It VOICPB China's protests thus: "The Asiatic Institute lias received Chinese protests dating back six yearfl emphasizing Chinese abhorence of the European system, whose practices haye now invaded .China- TheBe prac tice;; ure widespread pillaging of tem ples and sacred places.pf the dead and other ancelnt works in Africa and throughout Asia, in the name.ot sup erior civilization, punitive wurfaro, science or' qther subterfuge. , They provost against the introduction into China of u foreign conception of thne, of science and of. history by newer nations whose sense of antiquity as peculiarly exemplified in their muse um nystein enables them to partici pate in and foster the destruction and robbery of holy things." The havoc and destruction referred to ls specified as follow;;: "In the revolutionary interregnum betW?cn the winter of 1911-12 and the . iimmor of 1913 sculptures and pthcr antiquities native to China under went destru?tion on a large seule by foreign and native vandals in the in terest of foreign dealers and museums. "In 1913 there was n general divis ion among museums of the world in cluding at least two American muse ums, of several hundred cases of sculptural fragments broken from their settings by one and the same body of vandals. This evil has grown up so suddenly-it has come about si ?ce 1908-that foreign peoples and: foHggn governments have not appre hended it. No ono is aware, of it ex-: cuisine museums . involved, thair. ng/Ms and Intermediarlos and the. nlnlmod, Chinese^ . , ., . jpf n, statement. made to The Awn fcinhtrt Press, tho secretary of the prtodat lons haye commenced upon, the urcheologlcal and art wealth of China to an extent even greater than the. vai:ilalihin wltli which Europe visited tue art and beauty .oj the snores of the l^itprranean. Tin; marke* Chinese antiquities, particularly sculptures came with the close of the Russo-Japanese war. but no nation bears the s tig m a of being chief van? dal in China The market ls an In ternational one, and has been devel oped under J^panet^ and European direction -with Paris as headquarters. So well has the market been worked by the dealers that the Increase tn prices of Chinese sculptures in the past five or six years has been forty or fifty times. For example one piece of sculpture of North "Wei times-ninth century A. p.-estiinjaed to have cost $400. IQ China, after passing through only;two or three hands, ls held by a dealer at $15.000. One American pmseurn has ten stone beads broken frons'stat n?s in th? ??t?rlor of China AU large museums 'of tho world-have or are ucquirmg, challar fragments. Collectors and mus?ums In America' are sending' special r?presehtailvba to China 'With large sums of money to buy. ' Similar expeditions dre setting forth from Europe. "Ffealtclng the1 menace to' th? seulp turea .of China' th* Asiatic Institute Is co-operating with the' China Monu ments Society of Peking whose com mut?e is' composed of the foreign ministers-at Peking bf Great Britain, Russia, America. France and Japan men who see the situation close at hand and are aroused by lt." , One remedy which the Institute pro poses In Its appeal ls the rHurn to China by all responsible governments and Institutions, ot stolen Chinese an t Inno ?M in accordance "?th a prece dent of the French government and ot the Smithsonian Institution, which In past years set sn example by return ing to China archeologies! and his torical objects ot which she had been robbed, and which had corns Into Its posseas ion. 'fife institute proposes also, the stopping of further indiscriminate purchasing especially of broken sculptures. In ns appeal for the co operation of libraries, museums, sel entine Bocholt?* and collectors, it say? that the vandalism has resched ule Magnitude of a great crime', a?d should arouse - International opposi tion., V Toi pteader and-*ttlr*? China* an tiquities," says th? appeal, "tends to break down Chinese society. It ort polos research and education, and Maras progress: American Influences have.! shaped the Chinese revolution and are working for the'conservation of life In China. To American inst! tutlons of civilisation ts' given the chief opportunity ot combatting in China destructive activities of Western origin. Upon these reals the chief responsibility ot using those means nvH??ua?n in ?ry i?w>niA? for pro moting the welfare of Chinese society. Th0 Asiatic Institute farther em phasliea the fact that "Ulla plundering of China ls a peculiar crime since lt ?aw completo Sure peur. civilisation's alon ot tho erhole chain of au :tvllttatton? aa? ' wlil . destroy s-'c?olbkftMM* SweaWrn! md -et sae* ?evtl* .3ph* Mew <?ttf*HMflsUtare''to feo**] temp|Mt?g< 1he ^pas*s{vx* store ?trthi * * FASHION I.K TT ER * ? ?* ??* * ? i New Volk, Mar. i*. Kvery feature of th? fashion review pointa to a Korge lona spring,' especially from the stand-' point of color. Dame fashion, is dqing Iif;r hest to make gowns simple Irf ef fect and in a great many Instances she is succeeding beautifully, but fr?lSj and furholoWs are also making ji fight 'for supremacy, ami ti? question is re Iducing itself largely to on? of occasion land personal taste. , I ' Tier skirts are gaining in favor and one llnds tbem on models for ordin ary1 street Wear as well an upon dres sier designs. Separate skirts to bej I worn with shirtwaists of silk, satin, or linen have the upper sections form ed into tunics of almost every shape 'a 1 length. There is demand taht 'is conservative as well as popular for effects that round away from the front and lengthen lu a point at the hack. Very tall women can have the tunic quite short at the front, but tills has no analytical consideration .by shorter women, especially if they jare inclined to be stout. I A great deal of attention is paid to shoulder effects. The long drooping line is graceful and the sleeves, wheth er elbow or wrist length are as a rule, of the one-piece variety and close-fit ting. Sleeves cut m one with tho English shoulder yoke are exceeding ly smart. Seldom are thr?y trimmed, '.unless with a narrow frill at the wrist. .Much attention Is paid, however to the finish of tho seams. I We hear so. much about tho tango that it Is getting tiresome, yet what else i>; on-., to talk about when new modes are constantly being Introduced I in connection'with the mm-h-discussed dance? Among the latest offerings In .the shops arr/'tango vests, tango belts and tango bahdhwchlefs. These little details are designed to give chic to ' spring and summer cost tunes and are 10 be found in delightful shades of red and blue. i Nearly all combinations are called by cubist or futurist titles, and they are exceedingly effective. I 'Die l:i i eut nf tin. e)i?ekn nro c-illi il cabaret checks, for what reason one I Is at a loss to explain except that they are popular. ' nlue; of an artistic quality, and browns are ezceptedly the leading col ors of the coming spring, and skirts of either or*these 'ittinUeVs" can be worn I with tlieJsmsrt cbafeesV'bf brocade or velvot, which ar? Just now a fetlBh courtesies. "b|'^'? ;,i ' I NoMtfurtoeHeW*1 a Itlvely new shad?, a bit grayer' Wan' wedge-wood blue. The pew^'lWko 'cp'pe' a'nd pussy wll ,low tnffdf?,,'fov1,> graceful afternoon I frocks .febttwnhSB'yort, *??orm;rig blue, i ' ThfertflAlgT^ai^rarYy }ti the shap .es.of coata^'?oHaH lafS5's^mi-fitted to ttiie figure itf'TWkti<knd ?ooBe-ohiyi'ht1 the back> OUterst'aW d'Ut! awaj> from the front- to alsplay"^?*?**^ornamental bit or vest nefcrtlttfwtffirt beneath'; oth er coats ave^WrartlteS ttver at the bust and thened aiopd'WjWy. -ending just below th'^wfcl&Mriej'Wlvlle the side and bach* seams' ^1M|nftt fit the'figure loosely. But," atritd "the variety, the short, sack Hueifp'raettfcklly shapeless Itttle. coat 4s psr4??ytfi?, Srid it is here that pockt'tfc nrd1 aftpearing openly; and regarded as gl', ihg dee ration aa well as utility. 'z \ It is. Quito probable, though, that the coatee and bolero will take pre cedence In the coming season. j The three-flounced skirt, the cross over flBhu lato the corsage, the wide, 1 carefully wound SjBBh, and the tucked vsHsssV [[ -BACK TO f%0tirf0 S.:'! il5 PART ONE VOL. 1. NO. 1. Weekljr, K t WUhe4 1860;Doily, Jan. 18, 1914. ANDERSON, S. C. TUESDAY MORNING, JAN. 13, 1914. PRICE FIVE CENTS. $5.00 PEF ANNUM. li'l Ij til t.,t, 7,.fi?, ...H.-.. *' :- ? : ij t?-.\hi.. ' i.ii la? The crops as estimated by- the" Da? T? ! 1 partment of agriculture for 1913 were over VI82,000.000 above 1912. The total area of the principal cropB wan 299,425.000 acres. This means nothing but good times?and here , are the good times cloth- [ . es. Suits at$10, $12.50, $15 20, $22.50, $25. [ Ml examples, of good ' ^^ey's w 'O r th. Our guarantee of satisf action or your money refunded. '"Spring hatsi; at th? top I 1 "fjffi style--aU V arie.ties of soff . flats;;; weight spring derbies. S.t'?tsons, $3.50 to $5. E^aW Specials, $2 and $3. '/ ;^ Better^be a leader with a new^fte?der. (y? Head us your mall orders, li-.a ",ii.We.prepay all charges when ?attb, eheek er money order .<uromnanle.s order. Yonr c money bark !! ye- ?ss* It. mm BBS \ Gil t n M ''.'t.-'iii? -.?.Un..^ J m! iL bit?* > ? Ig > -.; . l.<..." m. g ? , Ii- ?? ; - ' v.???Vr.?e??ttr??'y-:',?- - i-lll a H? rrr?3?Jc Jiiria liia nbt?a?iic iquui l r /) J-i ; ?"K? :T ht? -. >l'..i-t|.u -tt ;"l .;.vjinui V:>! J V^- .fit %. M.'iftl hl?Vfl Kilt :? IhOV. li.J^i ^ lj?Ol ? M " m -has wutfi.ia? -v.?' j ^ri-jtff^ ? ? * c* I |t j'/rt .dtwOt?s,-it'lltc??a ^'iwit or'ttfti?Ti '.ytii ; prompt and careful atten tion to all kinds of Insurance, including FIR E, TORN?D?, ?J??LTK and ACCtDKNfr, ' no'.n-i -TOO' ;Ali!tt:r FI?ELITY, O?F?CI?L. ; ,,??1?IMCIAL and CONTRACT *" w ' BONDS. p ,it?.tt .. ... . ??u?ttif v'^'j r &?i Let our k.httu?t (Ml I. fab*nb?f5JT . ;<i. ..... hW.irhtVW ' * ' ' ' .- ? C. EUGEflE TR?BBLE, Mgr. & Treas. Second floor of Brown Building N. Main SU " '"'"' Our Motels "SERVICE." f none 305 dm m r Vf vTv. THE EYE IN BUSINESS is a, .moat important asset. In ali stages of life it Is the one organ that cannot be spared dr replaced. - it behooves yon then to give the utmost .1 her? , at onco and if^elahses will aid frame and parte l?. cent* and up W^WhUa*r St ?h?wMl Fleer vneee sraeBo TOM, * Qbs, FboaeleoJ. NI CHARLESTON * WESTERN CAROLINA RY. i ne Augusta Short Li?? Arr?vt Depart; No. 5,-11:40 a. m. NoL 22~^6s00 au m, Ij?. No. 6?3?S5 p. m. Hfale** etCf ckeeirriilW fur&nshe