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THE ELECTRIC FIRELESS COOKER Opiates from any lamp socket and does the cooking for a family of seven or eight. Costs no more to operate than an iron. Ask Mrs. A. G. Means, i^o?sts, Bakes, Bolls, steams, Etc. Telephone 223 i . Free err? Company w tri In fertilizing- your cotton and corn, care should be taken to .apply at least 600 pounds of high grade fish, blood and hone fertilizer to the! acre for the best and "most lasting results. Where less than 600' pounds pf fertilizer is us?d to the acre, it acts as a stimulant only, and the crop takes more plant food from the soil than it furnishes, andi your soil runs down, bufj where you use 600'poiinds or more of fine: fertilizer to the acre: you furnish the soil wj|h more plant food than j the crop takes from it and your soil improves. And besides, the, more fertilizer you use, the faster your crop grows and the quicker} your land is shaded and you know that is an advantage. And then 1 with he'avy fertilization you have larger stalks, more limbs and leaves and bolls. This givefc you more vegetable matter for the soil this vegetable matter furnishes humus for the soil and soi. without humus is like leather without oil, its usefulness is greatly impaired. And iucTi uc?vy fertilization miikes ii??i c bolls and ibis makes more .bales, and there is where.you make your money in farming. The diff?rence in .cost of fertilizing an acre with 400 pounds and 60O pounds of fertilizer is around $3 an acre, the difference in the ^cwp will be at least 100 pounds of lint cotton and at present prices ' that is a little the rise of $ 13.00.. That i$>how it pays. There is:-??f doubt-of its paying and Coo pounds to the acre will pay better than <?oo pounds or 300 pounds. . Unless the ground is in an unusually high state of cultivation we doubt if it will pay to use more than 600 pounds to the acre for cotton or corn. If your lands are red our 8-3-3 or our 9-3-3 or our to-3-3 is about what you need. \t ? -: '. . ?' . " If your lands are gray use our 3-4-4 or our 1C-4-4. If you are a little late in planting,' use our 10-3-3 or our JO-1-4; as the extra per . centage of phosphoric acid will hasten the growth1 and maturity of your cotton. If you don't care to use 600 pounds to the acre on all yyiii Cxo\>, iry ii ott naif ?itujsec where yuu make yuur money. We are,getting out a tish, blood and bone goods. ijiat has no equal, --..-..'S i';ri^..U ;;.;n-. '.' r.-.-jr -.y]!! '?iii.' n*%?i> Sr*. ,-r.-?.?-. '-.-l'inii ,,..v. ...............a ..--...- -r-?--or *?* ---i- -.,v, that people who are deprived of it will not understand. We hope you have noticed the.analysis of our goods this yea?? issued by. Clem son College.. Not a single s?mple has fallen down, the analysis of : every one ot them stands up iike a little tin soldier.'J I Where the price is the same, get the best. ANDERSt?M PHOSPHATE a Oit GO, J\ R. Vandiver, President. D. S. Vandiver, Manager. li UIIM).l A?ki>? IT.IAAS ir-i.-.-. in. . ._ ....v.. j^.^wv... ?j .univ ?ri ..no nuj nnjii TOUR XYK8 ARE A THEA RUSK ' that once lo/Jt can never, be replaced. TJiat Ia why the irreatent cuva ahmAii\ be t?'-cen ot them. "That's why that! .caro. Includes an expert examination j when glasees ar?' ' required.. Come hero for the examination and the olnauac TrtJ. v..!..- .??a1 p-; rcaso?ablo $3.-30 to $5.30 and upward Repairs on frames'and parta 10 cents and upward. Dr. MR. Campbell 11? W. WMtner 81. Granad Flea? Office -YJtone $88& Mea, ?Pfcefte mi J THE ?EST EVER! PIEDMONT BUGGY WAG Gm*t be Beat iim ST. Ii KRESS BUILDING I STARTS BY MAY 10 Representative of Ute Company In Anderson Yesterday, Made This Statement A. I. WIIB?U of New York city rep resenting the Kress Company, spent yesterday In Anderson looking over the site on which will he erected the Splendid Kress building, lo gb up lu this city, and making a few arrance ments in regard to the beginning n' the work/. i. When seen by a reporter Tor Tho Intelligencer last night. Mr. Wilson said that he did not know of.anything ha could aay tn regard , ti? the matter dbw. except that the building*, dpcr. tiona would most certainly be under way wlth's. the next SIT days, work i_t_j _ . ir^e>"-'''u& wuntiucre ttcuuuu .Tiny JV. Mr. Wi|son said that any statement in regard to the company's plans at this time would bo a little premature. The first plans drawn for thc build ing did ;not meet with the entire ap umyal -wjf tut?. LT.o*n SHd SC Hi?Uy changes' had to be made in them tharj it was found necessary to draw a X)tu p?ete set of now plans. This work ls going on now and until lt is completed it will hardly be possible to make any definite statement In Tegard to the building. President Right \ Says Henry White Washington, April 14.-*?enry Whit?, ' formerly ambassador to France, ' and secretary td the Ameri can embassy at Great Britain at the time . th? Hay- Pauncefote treaty was negotiated, -told tba senate! Inter/ oceanic canals committee, today that it never waa his understanding, nor that of any of the other negotiators for Great Brillan that the United Stated ever contemplated exempting aii?i>i>?ciB trut? "?ii il ?in c??Bi Collo. MORE SPINDLES; MOUE CONSUMED Cotton Statistics For the Present Season AJ Compared With i 'M li?t'Year, Washington. April 14.--Cotton con I sumption and 'distribution atat?stles. for " March wart i-nnoanccd to?ay . by I the cehsus bureau as follows: Fo.-t ;.;n j colton equlvalmt COO pouud bales. Consumed 490,77v. coinpare<i wtt$r4?4? r>."H) last year. Thin yea.- 18.170 foreign ! hales included. it?n on hana maren 3?B* ni THKU u?actuflug establishments 1,704,344, compared with 838,468. In independ ent ware houses 183,977 compared with with 1,770,552 last year. Imports 30.846 compared jwrth 27.8S9 :portg C9r>,::or>, cora parra .With 372,073. . Linters consumed 24.71? compared with SI,180. Unters on hand March 31st in manufacturing establishment? ; iT? ixuuimren wiiih v?.GS?. in rii rende?t ,'war? - 57,328 compared with 40.7?e: Active cotton spindles 31,127,904 compared with :i0,r>75.028. o O O O O o o o oo ooo o PERSONALS. o o o o o o o o o o oo o o o o D. W. McLean a well known trav eling mau of SpartonbuNt. spent yes-i terday ? the city. j Col J. c. stribling of Pendleton 1 Was among the business visitors to. ?spend yesterday in the city. r *x . rv- uv- nk..i-^.? ? ? ? i - 1 J. mUtu Watson spent yesterday in C<nnsbis where ha went on a abort buAlneSts trip. | Vi. Orr of Charleatna waa amona. the bnstnea? risltors to speed yee-j terdayin the city. * S PO TY COBB A H?RO ON HOME GROUND . * _s_: Won thc Openmg Game Foe^His .Club In a ^.creely Contested Game D?tfclct, Mich., April 14.-Bonflres were .flickering through-the haze In conter; field in the last half of the thirteenth inning today when Ty CoH? drove a triple which counted two -ma the tally which enable Detroit to tnkp the opening game of the Reason from St. Louis, 3 to ii. IIt was a pitcher's battle from be ginning to end. Neither team acored until the final inning when good, bad and reckless baseball gave St. Louis two runs and inspired n -Tiger rally. Ppr twelve innings 'the struggle waa anybodys. Each tea? threatened again and again to ncore. In the eleventh. Cobb risked ? broken leg lu an attempt to d?cide tlio struggle; Ixi the 18th Agnew scored ?the second run for St. Louts by a ,r^iklpea slide and was carried off the field with a spike wound in his foot, Score: St Louis ...COO OOO 06? OO.0 2-2 8 0 Detroit .OOO OOO 0?0 ?pO 3-S 8 5| Batteries: Wei unan/Jan^?e* and Ag new, Crosaln; Dubuc, Dansa and Stan age. Time 3:03. A SLIOHT &&TAKF. "Hube" Benton Bid ?iot Thro* Away Hts Ar? At Ml "Rube" Benton, pitching for Cincin nati yesterday, in the opening game ot I tl?, ?uasnn. lat i'.hf.>oirn : dtttra. ?flih one I hit and beat the aggregation from the1 /indy City by a score of 10 to li which linden an Anderson fsa of a game pitched in Columbia-some sev etil seasons ago. Benw? pad JU?i started to pitching baseball and came to Columbia p?ith the Macon craw. He va? sent to thc box for the opening game of the season and straightaway, began to. corral: th? An gora of the Columbia team. The An derson fan remarked to the brilliant scribe "at that time holding down the Itlon ot sporting ^Uer ot a Co bla paper, on :he .. "uderful pitch . hiing done by th? "green" hand tim'box, whereupon ' tiie wiseacre marked; "Yes, but he will blow ap .. fore a month'of the4 season lg gone." That gink is no longer writing base ball and "Hube'1 ia still fllhglng them .- - .. - ii?uiu ?** f ?Sisa mi staci Baseball 7faves, Brooklyn Federals and Pittsburg went to 10 Innings yesterday in Brook lyn in tho nra?<?nt*ft of an immense crowd. This was the only game in the Federal league. Score-Brooklyn 1; Pittsburg 0. For Six innlnan Walter Johnson held ? JOHN it M'GRAW. Manager of Naw York Na tional League Baseball Team. ALEXANDER. ?Pitcher of th? Philadel phia. Notional Lcauua Team. j f?f?wl ?L - ^^8Epsn*B"*,*fljj|j^^ M^aBBBlHsyl8BsBSTslPniW- . \ Jff Photo by American Prca A werta M-i the Boston Americans hitless .ind won [or Washington handily, 6 to 0. CMoaao Americans and Cleveland bad a hot battle up. to'(fte 7th inning when Duly, a recruit, drove in tho winning run tor Chicago. l here waa a gr??t surprise lu rCoW fork when Frank Chancea New York Americans defeated the Athletics. 8 to 2. This ls the first time th years that the New York Americans have opened the season at home with a winner. Mc H ale pitched. > , Philadelphia rait away with the.New york Giants. Alexander pitched Philadelphia pud Marquard abd From me for New York. Magee ot Philadel phia gut two home runs and a single sud walked once, driving In six runs. WI in go caught in tbs game lu which his St. Louis club defeated Pittsburg, and the players inst asisied fo win the game Were traded last summer to St. Louis by Pittsburg. It was s clo game. . Gov. John K. Tener of Pennsylvania, head or tne National league, pitched the first ball In th? game at Brooklyn between that' club and Boston- The brooklyn team was pitched to a beaut, tlful victory hy Keulbach. Buhe Benton yielded but two hits and there were no errors behind him, rho Cincinnati club defeating Chicago ltjo 1. AXE&ICAX LEAGUE At Boston 0; Washington 3. AtXhicago 5; Cleeland 2. At New York 8; Philadelphia ?.. At Detroit Z; St Louis. 2. (13 Ina* r?f?.) ._ . NATIONAL LEAGUE At Cincinnati 10; Chicago 7. At St Louis 2; Pittsburg 1. At ' Brooklyn 8; ' Boston 2 At Philadelphia 10; Now York Xi SOUTHERN' LEAGUE At Montgomery ?; New Orleans 3; (ll innings!. (Called 7th. ram). Birmingham ft; Mobile 7. . Atlanta. Nashville, Rain. AinsUCAx-j?iim? A? I_/.iitouj!l?J'nlumhiia ?ame rWMt. Ikmed. At MSlwankw 4; St. Pani & At Clovelond 0; Indianapolis A. At Kansas City fi; Minneapolis 3. ftO^TM ATLA?fTtf At Jacksonville S"; Albaay sIc^^O At Columbia 4; Savannah $. At Auguata 'Charleston wet ero nude -OF A VEHICLE let us show you our stock We carry a complete stoc ness,, Whips and Robes. We have some extra goc Horses. Liberal terms a to all. J?* .Si? JHC PROGBAM FOR THE AN . The folio wins' ia the official program of the aplsfodtd events for the entire ?esk of the Chautauqua, April 28 to Uar 4: Program begins promptly.: Morning Lecture 11:30, Afternoon Music 3 : 'JO, Afternoon Lecture 4:00. Children's Hour 4:30, Evening Music 8:00, livening Entertainment 8:45. Tuesday. ?st*7MGOu "Cklrnsrn^s^nr---??.*** ?1*7 iitr?? Ringers and Male Quartette. ' Lecture-"The Noeds of the Hour" -Hon. Geo..D'. A'/en. ?Mlims's H=?ir-i^i--- r?irr. Evening Concert - Dunbar Bell j Ringers and MaJ> Gpartette. i Car?cter Studies from Life-John1 ? it. ratio.. Wednesday. Morning Lecture-"Twp of Us"-Mr. iAftereoon Concert-Tho Harmony Concert Company. Monologue - "That Printer of ITdell's"-Everett Kemp. Children's Hour-jYUss Fllce. Evening Concert - The Harmony Concert Company. Lecture-'"Sour Grapes."- Edward Amherst Ott. Thursday, Morning Lecture-"Where the Rain how Comes Down."-Mr. Long. Afternoon Concert-Welch" . " Chris tenaen B?ker^C?., _ Lcviur?-~ watching ino worin uo Over.','-Wallace Bruce Amsbary. . .Children's Hour-Miss Pike. Evening Concert--^Welch-Ohristen sen Baker Co. _ Drama: - Suake?jp?Br?"r? '"Tweiiih ^.*l , t . ., fl-l-n~.. J-I_-_.. TT** i i' r ; Ml'MU -Ilia l/DH uiwv A.?j? ? MR. SULLIVAN IS INVITED TO SPEAK Assigned io Topic For Stale Meet ing of S. C. Bo&dW ?nd Loan Workers G. Cullen Sullivan, one of Ander son's beat, known attorneys, baa re* ?Nfived an invitation to deliver an ad- . dress IR Rock Hill on June 24 wu en the Building and Loan Association of South Carolins will be gathered in Us annual session. Mr. Sullivan lit a splendid speaker and there ia no daunt j hot that ka maka o fl?.lmnro?. I ?ion upon the association should lie see Ht to accept the lr.ritr.?ion tendered ' him. The subject assigned to Mr. Sul livan is "Sentiment-N"-? To Be Ovar-j iooaed in in* uononci of iaaiii'iHPiw.'' ht W, Goldsmith of Greenville ls presiaem or tins sassotnaiion wails J. ?, i Blores or Abbetnn? ts the first vto*-| jT-sideot. j ?HA?. S. ?RtLE!? ?? PREF ' ! fiase Against Fermer President Baa ' Been Kel Prwuwi. j "^ftd-ii-epos-t Conn., April 14.-Coartes ... S. Mfcl?en. former, pr?sidant of the Neal Have? railroad, who last year was. prretitpd on a hench warrant. etmrg-1 lng atm with raanalaugMer been, deaths tn wreck mi TfftmijoTi. ?ai dis- > ; charged nona cn?trxty tansy following ?: ?F ANY KIND before you buy. k of alt kinds. Also ?ar id values in Mules and nd courteous treatment r**,TTnr??r rr A BAT T?J A JU 1 JL7L KyJt^MWJJUAJ/S X* ?ON CHAUTAUQUA Grand Musical Festiva'. . Morning Lecture-<"A Modern Vis lon"'-'Mr. Long. Admission 25c; Children IS c. ?? Afternoon Musical Recital-Marcus A. Kcllerman. Admission Ww; Children fine. ' ravening Grand Concert-Th* thedral Choir. ttatnrday. Grand Musical Festival. Morning Lecture-"A Constructive Cyclone*'-Mr. I .on g. Kryl and his Band. Children's Hour-Miss Flke. shrcnin-g- Bend . Concert ana Grand Opera- Bobumlr Kryl and his Baud, aa ethe Denton Grand Opera i*o. Hunda). Afternoon Sscr?d Concert-Farnell! Company. ? liecture-"Tho Modern Mormon Kingdom/'-Hon. Frank J. C?unon. Vesper Service. 1: SSveolug Sacred Concert-Farnell I Company. Lecture Sermon. "Tho Greatest AmerlcahV-A study Im American manhood.-Riv. Geo. R. Wallace*?j- ?>.- - ??> ? Monday. Morning Leccyrc-"An ounce of pre ition"-Mr. Long, Afternoon Concert-The Kellogg Slnglng Party, ture--color Guard and Picket ie"-Monteville Flowers. xlldren's Hour-Miss Pike. Evening-Light Opera-The Kellogg iging Party. (Adrn'ssion to Children's Hour Free Ia nolle pyosse ot the charge by Judfce Tuttle. Action by the court was tak?n on recommendation of the attorney general that the ease be dismissed fjftr.. lack of evidence. SingiBg reav?Btion. The At.dcreon-Oakwocd singing convention will meet with the Orr ville Baptist church on the 26th. .tho 4ih Sunday. 10:80 r clock. AH lovers of music are cord ally invited. All are asked to bring their booka. Un denominational: Vf. P. Stevenson, For the Committee. Revival Services. Reviva? services will I? held every <?a nt, ? uni] MI -;^ut ai ?v??n In the Wesleyan Mehtodist Church on south Mata street, from Tuesday until Sunday week. Rev. J. A, Clements of Central 1? in k^k^iiiBB?aSBHSn?BHBVHHBHB RILLT BPRKE SAKR?f-r?. "??aw York. Apr? 14.-Announcement wan made here today ot tho-mariage on saturday at Hoboken. N. J., of Mien Stns?eid. Jr.. theatrical manager. The couple plan to sall (er a honey In Europe at tbs close thin _ of Miss Burke's pr?sent 'New engagement. Zeigfeld married Anna Held ia Paris In 1W7. They separated twt, rear* ?KO ?od tn January, 1013, Misa Reva was granted a divorce h?re.