The Anderson daily intelligencer. (Anderson, S.C.) 1914-1915, May 12, 1914, Page PAGE FIVE, Image 5

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After ?13 lt ?ndtlr?tldri wil? Cc .Is to b?iy where "'yoiiiif^ theB^ practice economy ?y D|uy I ? from US? Ail the new colors and styles, S arr.-ir >fns??^e.c '. JLiLlL -.. CONDE I This Di mviftce You. rhoi SPORTS North Carolina League] Ch ario tie 8;. Durham 0. At Oraecnaboro 2; ABheviJl? 1. At K^Ieteb 5; WJnBton-Salem 3. At Albany:"{l; Savannah 6. At Cqlombus 2; Augusta 3. At OMujpbla, 7 ;, Macon" ,3. At Jacksonville, i; Charleston, o, . AMERICAN At Bonton % New. York, 6. At Washington 4; Philadelphia 8. : Ko - other scheduled.' FEDERAL _ *~ TT na. nuimio ?j; joaiuuiore 4. At Brooklyn 0; Pittsburgh 2. At Chicago. St. Louis wet grounds At Indianapolis 6; Kansas City 3. SQUTHF^HLJEAGIJE ? -"TO??tfiOIScFy t; N???iV??t? S. *t Atlanta. 13; Birmingham 4. At Ndw-OW?MB I; Chattanooga S; At Mobile 1; Memphis 2. (14 in ninfea.) ' - At Nt w York 8; Boston ??Wv^,M?? : At J* lUadajaaia I; Brooklyn 3. At & .! Louis ?;. Chicago 5. (called end XZt i account darkness.) vi?|a?^^4^: r- Xjt.'Porbxmottlb ?; .Newport .Newa *, (10 innings.) s^^lBoanoka ?i-. Nor?oJk g. i?.At' Petersburg y; Richmond 3. AKERKAN ASSOCIATION At Kansas Cliy ?; Louisville 13. I At M?lwaukea-IndianapollB post I p??ed rain. Ar. ?u?ueapoiis-Cievelaaa postponed Wet grounds. '?t St, Psul-Columbus postponed wet ground.R tlfTOe&r%&A? LEAGUE At Buffalo-Newark postponed ac count Fcdeial league opening. At Rochester 6; Jersey City ?.. At Montreal'2: Providence t?. At Toronto.2: Baltimore I. (10 in nings.) Cup Saee At Exposition. Wow York. May. H.--Both the Van derbtlt cup race ?and the Grand Prix will be eontested ?arly ia ike- spring t o* at tba Panam* Pacific Export Li1.?.11- : T.bl8 animnacenxettt waa made j today nicer a coriierenco between rep rcs&ntatlves of-tho Automobile Club j Of America,; ?se American Automobile rm DAY m CONGRESS . Washington? May il,-?>ay In con gress. House: Mot nt rir^n .J-Uipreseatativti Keeley, W*i<t I RapresentsUvv Wash, New Jersey. I introduce! resolution aouroorisfctns j $20.000 fot' installation ol olectrlb vot i togr?evlee lo th? house to reduc? t<ms loi akm?'roll ?ii 'ACUUH H^prte ^THl ie wai and we will BASEBALL DE< S8?0NS National Board Against Bedou In t'lMrieaton Case, Auburn, N. Y., May .ll.-The nr-? tlonal board o? baseball arbitration to- ] day handed down the following d?ci dons: Bristol and Johnson City dropped from - the Appalachian '.teague: the franchise Sad players ot-Pinevllle, Ky..| hi the Appalachian-iesgue transferred to Harritnan, Tenn. Services of players awarded: Ftes peraran to Charl?le; Smallwood to! Savannah, Claims disallowed:, lnoman against Norfolk ; O'Brien and George Beded against .Charleston ; Hargrove against Durham; Mead against Texas-Okhv! homa league. JinUCDTJGIttO TI! Ut nuwunnmu inuw (By Phelps Bsnseen.) BUSINESS BUILDING, (Continued from Yesterday.) _ ILb^.eL*l?^?^w*i W'the sales and physically, ia "order*-To inspire confidence and sell his goods and the' same is absOfutery true' of the institu tion, the hOstneea itself. v' i !?Kata ? are ? matte salesman ?orkipg ead getting4 results, not b^uie^tlS cohWenoo%*tW?tner' ar?- able to in spir? in themselves,' but because of Ute bighyO?ass reputation, which their ?'bous* enjoys.1 ' '*'!:'' .".><. Of courte, this Bailsman : would ob tain a bigger ahecese if bo himself had es Btroug & personality,?rantho good y?pp tatton ^b^hlsikenss^stajeyss^'> livery business Mnst?uUoh - wniOh bas for its object tfce-eele ;:of ?oodto fpr profit.is a-ootspottte seteamab. ? Ev?-ry l&divldaal; fr?ai thc heed of the'.business down to ?iti hujatttiee employee, is a part- of the whom 'Sha; the e?ccefta-?of<: tn? eatfrO business, wljl bejlncreased in P*0^rt*oojtO the la: that institution. If each one is making good in his way, the lusti item la taking cair^ oi Itself. ' . You ?jse lt ls not beihg^'team of stars, if ls b& ag a: star team, which wins m basin*?a, just a? baseball . r. ? ... The other d y, I san7, a team of Hue horses tr. lng to pull a heavy load, from In irout of the Lambert Walker hardware company. Tho driv er did not understand his business or it... -. ..- - -? - .p.? M IT. .-M Vt?? aMUIC VI ?IIC. V.^f?m. ? ?to . 1VVUIU first holler at one horse and then strike the other ono with his whip lu an effort to get them to pull tho load up the alight incline Crom the curbing tc the middle o?, the street. It waa- not but a few minu?s outil be had . one of the horses very ner vous and excited and taerefSo+Vwnabife to do its part. Had he succeeded lb getting tnonp two, norBes y*b ? pimma every ounce of Whlcn"they were" cap able and pulling together, they could hara easily ,pulled, the-Jogd-., ,. .* . Tho Ow?er of tho ifeimJcame cut at thia point, dtomlsoe^ Uh^ d?i?er!tem^ porariiy, patted one of tim boree? on the neetc;. quieted boa btihetot and ta less than three minutes after he bo Jgan. without any yelling or' whipping, ' th?t t^eam pulled the load.' right out of the gutter. > Why* . The management knew how to di rect There Viss no friction. .Tba en tire team eMtOrsea and man wtre_in . harmony. ?h^s illustration!!: ant that lit heiv&nytMng to ?tt particularly //?lecrannshlp, but for the purpose j of r/nowing the employer that vome times lt'ta not ?he fault of the em ployee, that jesuits are not obtained, but it it hts own fault, because he is not prO|fcrly; directing his business. That fe? is not getting thc team work nat of hts organisation that oe should, He should infcnaae his hntlnesa ia saoh n way, that the entire .organisa, iic?t Should pull together, to the ead ?ai benefit. v \ rt?yee can also learn a les " Illustration, that !*, that 9cA$? <m*?? ?asman. a harta men,.. In. the bo* tu? per cen the Windy ^ E CLEAN V 1 send a machine SOUTHERN SOUTHERN POETRY NOT ALL MEDIOCRE The North to Claim Edgar Alka Poe LANIER, HAYNE AND TIMROD Poe's Genius Waa Unlimited, Bounded By fifo Time Or Place ,' and Ruled a World ' Baltimore Sun. A literary critic baa.. said that "Among Southern Poeta there la a dead level of mediocrity, from which but one name (that of Poe) may rise." It is not tor even the moat enthus iastic adis!?er? o? poot* nf the south to claim for. them preeminence In /jong. Thia would be aa idle aa to claim TOT all the postasters of New England the fullness of the gift of Longfellow for all the rhymesters of England the genius of Tennyson. We may. however?- .-whether we., are ot horth, east, west or south, yield tv our native poets, love and admiration. This given, a critical examination ol thc ??tia!itiC? of '"*CCi*C*^ ?r^al IranAA itt not to disparage hut to grado in our re gards the objects of our affection. By the comparison of our paets with those own in the large scale ot universal of other people , we may estimate Our values.. The correctnes;./of thia* val uation JB not to be ascertained except through the meeting of many minds. It is interesting to examine the es timate: put upon come of the Southern poets' by critics who are not. in entire sympathy brc&uae ot the birth, or "?fa? enptiqa^with tho- south. The detail ot such- ah -examination < would, be here tedious. - Tl>e general result can how ever, oe -briefly here stated. In c previous article we have spoken of '? host of singera whose voice? have tung clear and true, but. we will nov? \jpeak of men whpse ^olee h-s rfpD a snore wide-spread recoguitlen .' thp.c their fellows. First among them 30'l*aT<<<ai --aarons* ? ? -?>-u ^nv?nr with Lanier, we shall apeak lo a fu ture aritQle). Of Poe. Barrett Won try History of America," says: "To turn only to the heliography le the'last Volume of Stedman & Wood berry's admirable edition of Po?, ii appears that btween 1890 and 1885 there were at least ten translation! of his works in the foreign l&nguaget , among others Swedish, Italian. Dan ish anti South American Spanish. Certainly among the literary classe? cf Europe sc Americas author has cr? ated more attention than Poe, whose influen?a, still seems extending." Thh from the distinguished professor ol English at Harvard college but voices tho sentiment cf mest critics and at least lifts one poet above the dead te. vol of mediocrity. 1 la .the later years with the forget Tu I ness n* personality In the rising ?Mtii?vM vii** ?Urr?uTi<in th? T?tiT??i of Poe, there bas arisen the claim thal Poe' was not ot the south, and todas thin Opfnlon finds expression (n thc statement that Poe must rightly ix considered or New York.. This easer Urn wi'l not however,- receive the as eeat Of msny, Southerners. PaHKl? nice, however, was not unlimited; ll In truth seemed bounded by no lime or plicc; it ruled a world of ito own It was king ba tho room of imagina tion. -'-SgaS? The dame of Sydney Lanier ia gath, erlag glory with the rolling years, au? the circle of bis influence as the ex pression of his poetical genius is stud, led. And today by one or the mo* critical as well aa one of the mosi jodlet?! of northern cities it is sait that 'the moat gifted of Soutbert poete was Sydney Lanier," This os tlruate does not dethrone Poe. tor th? same critic does not class Perara southern poet. The works of Lanlei are today more frequently in demaac and more widely read than at any pre vious -date. Their beasties are <ps coming mere apprecla?ed. and ihoogt appreciation has not yet reached itt xeaith, tra way say that in Lanier an jotker southern poet has risen .et?oy< "the dead level of mediocrity^ but h ai i uaw claim our attention. These ar* {Henry Timrod and .Pah! HnmiUoc Kayne. ?Henry Timrod born in Char latan <nM**rVedHeatetf &t the Untrer, sity of Georgia waa destined for tb? bar. Literature claimed him and he gr>ve his life to ibo service. Hb peeves at time? possess a power thai A? . -1. - At^? i, ., - KH^MIM^BMM^MBBW poem ia a nnishen representation ot ? beautiful though?. Tijairod'* style/ say? Henry Austin, "midway between tho elaborates of Tennyson and the til?? weedy naturalness ?? Wordsworth bears a great resemblance to Lowell's but has more grace prehana sea' lets power." VAY." ?nd expert for i PUBLIC UTI ?i [feet or Tim rod's poems ls tho ode the! ? was written tor the occasion of dec I oration of the Confederate gravea lo Magnolia cemetery, '"that approxi mates perfection-thO perfection o! Collins, not that of Lovelace." in thu poem occurs the s tan sa: Sloop angela hither from the skies! . There is no holier spot ot ground Than where defeated, valor, Ilea, , By .mourning beauty crowned! But to our minds the genius o Timrod ls most clearly shown In "Thi Cotton Bolt/* In thia poem all of Tim rod's varied moods find expression. Wi obsecre the poet's soul in reflccUoi and in action and wo find that whld not only calls forth admiration for lt beauty, but for ita force. Wc quot as best showing the lyric qualities o Timrod'g verse, the opening and th concluding portions of the poem: mile I recline At ease beneath This immemorial pine, Small sphere! (?- MnoSM IjjnnoM ?lil; mnra tog here. I turned thy cloven Sheath, Through which the soft white fibre peer. That with their gossamer janos, Unite like love, the wen divide lands. And slowly thread by thread, Draw forth tho folded strands, Thar, irhkh *)-~ tre^bli?s Ilse. By whose frail help yon startle . rpider fled Down the tail spear-grass froi hi? Bwinglng bed, ls scarce mot floe; And aa ,the tangled ?kein ?JnravBla in myunda, Betwixt me end the noonday light, A veil sewma lifted "and for ralU , v, and miles, The landscape broadens on my sig! " An In the little boll there lurked I ;;pcll .... '] l?k? th?t which'in the ocean nhal L T > With mystic sound II Breaks down the narrow wane th? 1 bern us round. ? ./-^ * 1 And ?Urns some city lane Into the restle?Sumaln . < With a? Its capes"and Islet?! ' >} lint Timrod strikes a stormy, a..moi ' j i o Bp?r?n s aaa as true, note ia mo cos " elusion of thia? his greatest poon . [Words of fcriUeUm. wprdB or prals C&uuOi, ?.?vi 'iv ?n? effofcv iii ?li? |Krcl itself. Not even the gnowing, viboroi 1 stantaa of "CTviloa," In which Prom Sachem's head to Sumter ?ral?. ?toaoun?o tu? voice or nut and naif 1 Carolin? 1 can equal the fervent beauty of tl ? close Of "The Cotton Boll." AB men who labor in that mine 1 pf cornwall haUj#ed.-out.' ben'eai tne bed N?-?^tp ocean when a storm rolls ov< ; head, 1 Hear the dull booming of the wort ? ot brine ? Above them and a mighty mufti? roar, Of winda and waters, yet toil calm: on [: v And spilt the rocks and pi le (he ran : . t. sive oru. Or carv? a nitch er shape the arc) ed roofj . ! So, JV aa calmly weave my woof ) Of song chanting the days to come Unsllenced though the qaiet sun mer air. Stirs with the fruit of battles ar SKch dftwn * i Wakes from ifs starry talonee i bum Of many gathericg. armless still, In that we sometimes hear, Upon the Northern winds the voh I cf woe Not wholly drowned in tviump though r !anow. - The end moat crown us and a fe \ brief years -, 1 Dry all our tears. s I may not sing too gladly to tl win ? Resigned, O, Lord, we cannot s i forget \. That there ia much ?von v|etoi 1 ' must regret. And. therefore, not too- long Prom the great burthen of our com i try'? wrong * Delay o?r inst release! ? And If lt may be, ?are J. These ROC ret? fields of peace i From stain of n?triot or hostl .j blood! rJ<"*,T#lp us Lord! to roll the eric i \ SOB flood ::rj lt? course and . while ot < banners Wing . Northward ?trike With ?s! till tl Ooth shalt cling > To his own blasted attar stenos an ' crave i . Mercy: and we shall grant it a? diefc-.r > j Traer* where some rotting snips ar crumbling; quays j Snail on? day mark th? Port itu 1 mied the ^festem seas. With sock lineo a?-thesesrrftto nt "dead level 6i naedlecrUs?' 1 son them poetry. Prate ?Ot Ofe^t? IMworthlessness of southern poe?jf?* LITIES CO Fop Rent j <I A ll sorts of houses in all parts of the city. Anderson Real Estate 6 Investment Co. ?hos; F. Cartwright? ?|j the for "ri!. U3 waa mc aoulijern .genius, In Charleston, 8.-C., he became an adopted soo of a<nud^ H^-dlm-j.*! ?HM; Mill JOjmva _ $own) ie that'.fitftfe, *jMly~C. "is88 Of the singer we read bo "The Poet? Of America" by Clarence Steadman, that "Hayae's vitality, courage, and ?a? .toa, Ui*4n?M??nl?e have kept ! voice;" At this Urne an apprcoltt?' o fhis work h.? Maurice Thompson, (author o? "Alice ot Old Vincennes") w$jkrt}culary interesting. "The Mountain ot tho Lovers", "The IS |Ma?FPbiAn Bo^v", "McDonald's Kald". a ftmVelled." "The Vengeance ' of the Oodd*ss Diana" '1&?r*VM " i8o!???ry Lake are workp worth tlid crowu of an academy. Aa a sonneter. Heyne wjui-btrong an*t 'ju> descriptive verse luxury'Of southern rights, sounds ?n? tastes, perfumes and colora wo in his poem "Muscadines',' th uo lesser aeniua ?han fi:.. \.\. Heading thia, we can pay 1 e, |tootion to the'assertion that ern poetry. But when wo read ot poems themselves presentiment r ena into conviction. Of his. sont?e we choose to il l?strate Kayne'a sty . jarate or aod," the poem selected .?. Steadman and Hutchinson in "Ame ie can Literature." Of this poem Burr Wendell says: "Few American sonnets cet th' Maoere/v - j Beyond the record of all ?r j : thiogB, .:} Beyond the rule and regies e? time r Prom out antiquity's hoary-! ed rime, Looms the dead phantom of a of kings; Round .the vest brow the, gil' ' circl ul worshipped half-embodied Him fflfnb' , O'er AHantoan limbs and breath stib *' . ' Deep cn law of 'measureless power fn awful state. Gird and uphold Ulm: a mtrxtf rod, To heal or smite, arma His lofallib! . hands;; . /Janowh.-in nil ages; .'I'ttKlauds, *^o*ht- * aamcx thia mystery-Fate, While faith with lowliest rever?n?e, whispers-43od? ; is bot one of a host of uoan?ta, ftoaye of which seem to na to exceed in quality that quoted. Of these we can give but one. It Ia entitled "The Pthen Mystery." Listen! the sombre foliage of the Pine, A swart Gitana of the waadlS?* trees. Is answering ^vnat we leay bat half1 divine. To those soft whispers of twilight breeae Passion and mystery, maraier ?friiegn tho leaves, ir'r*:?:ftt??*!on and mystery touched by deathless pita, ie Whose monotone of long, low anguish id i For something lost that shaft not U*v??' ? live aaaCi! ' ion