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If your pocket - book could talk- it would rec ommend the Ford. ' The man who practices econ omy and wants utiliy in vests his dollars in the Universal car. He knows it serves his every pur pose best and at lowest cost. And don't forget Ford service and guaran tee. Five hundred dollars ls the price ot the Ford runabouts; the touring car ls flve lifty; the town car seven fifty-f. o. b. Detroit, complete with equipment. Get catalog and particulars from Archie L. Todd, local dealer. Anderson, fe. C. FIRST EXCURSION :0F TUE SEASON TO: 9 *. :: :; :: AND THE FAMOUS :: :: Isle o! Pal m s -VIA Southern Railway Premier Carrier of the South. THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 1914. From Gaffney, Landrum, Greer, Sparenburg, Greenville, WaUialla, Ander son, AbbevlUe, Alston and all Intermediate points, on tbe following schednle| and Excursion Fares: Excursion B/B. Bi B. No. 12. Fare Leave Walhalla..7:00a.m.......34.50 " West union . .7 :05 a. m.4.60 " Seneca.7:23 a. m. 4.60 " Cherry King.7:44 a. m.4,40 " Pendleton ..7:56a.m.4.25 " Altman.8s:04 a. m.. :-4.25 " Denver_..8:12a.m.4.20 " Anderson... 8:31a. m.4.00 Arrive Belton...... 9:00 a. m.4:00 Train No. 18. Leave Greenville. 8.00 a. m.94.00 " Col. Place.. 8:05 a. m.4.00 " Piedmont... a:25a. m.4.00 " Pelzer.8:36 a. m.4.00 " Williamston. 8:43 a.m.4.00 . " Belton.9:00 a. m,.4.00 " Honea Path 9:15 a. m. 3.90 Ar. Greenwood 10:15 a. m.3.60 Sliver St....ll:18a.m. 3.151 Newberry.ll:38 a. m.3.00 Pomarla-12:10 p.m... :.-'.*: 2.85 Prosperity... 11:63 a. m. 2.90 Ninety-Six. 10J2a.ro .3.35 Peak..-. ....12:24 p.m. 2 80 Old Town..ll:06a.m.8.20 Newmarket 10:20 a. m.3.45 Dysons.10:44 a. m.3:30 Shoals J'c**, 9:33a.m...*.... 3.76 ' Abbeville. . 9:10 a. m. 3.75" Hodges.9:48 a. m. 3.65 Donalds_9:27 a. m. 3.75 Columbia. .1:35 pm. J Chappells. .10:65 a. in.3.25 ' Alston.12:30p.m....... 2.76 Special Train leaves Columbia 2:36 p. m. arrives In Charleston 7:80 p. m. Excursion tickets will be good going.only on trains and schedule mention ed abo** and w?li be good returning o n any regular train np to and Includ ing morning trains leaving Charlesto n Monday* Jane 22 ,1914, except train train 27-Carolina Special. Ample coaches wfl be provided on nil trains scheduled above to comfort? ably handle the excursionista. Spend n week-end at the Isle et Palms with Its magnificent hotels and restaurants. Dancing every afternoon and night In the largest pavilion In the south. Remember yon have four days at tba Seashore. Make ap year parties for a delightful outing. - For Farther Information apply to Ticket Agents ort W. G. Z?cGee? Asst. Gen. Passenger Agent, Columbia, 8. C. J. B. Anderson, Supt. B. B. B. B* Anderson, 8. C .. YT. R. Taber, Traveling Passenger Agent, Greenville, 8. C. Through Sleeping Car Service , Between Spartaaburg, GrenTlllc, Belton, (From Anderson) Elberton, Athens and At . tanto, Go. . ' . . ' '?M0 ' " : Via', ... ' . * G. 8. & Greenwood nnd Seaboard Air Lines . ^ EFFECTIVE sim RAY, MA Y ti,- IOU._ . Latest Improved Steel, Electrically Lighted, Twelve Section Drawing Room Sleepers will ho used in thin service. ?>'J Operated on the foitewlag Schedules? Southbound . V ' ' Northbound i THE- BEST .WAY.1*! '?'"'..?!.! , ?. . i . (Trado MarK) / LeaVe Spartanburg_ r...7:50 pm Lesyy^AUtjffi^JJ.v.. .'. .18:65 pm Leave Chick Springs ...i.. 8:37 pm Leave Athwa^....i .'. 12:03 aro Leave Greenville ... -.9:10 pm Leavo Elber^pg '.;'.]. .. .... 1:04 nm Leare Anderson ,. ... .. .. 0.45 pm Leavo..2:?2 am Arrive Oreenw?d.11:20 pm. Arrive An^h^tf^, .... 7:8ram Arrive Elberton .. .. 4:02 1? Arrive,Qrt?aWKB^Sjfif ;.. .. 8:05 am Arrive Athena V. .. .... ;.;5;03;afi Arrive Chick Springskt.8:36 om Arrive Atlanta Ti ... . V. 8:20 an> Arrive Sparta^ffif??.-'.. .. 9:20 am Through Tickets Sold, to, All Important Points,.' Call ofc Your N^ v rt}*; , ^,GBKEXY4LLF, 8PARTANB?BG & ANDERSON RAILWAY.- , ^ ?. Si Allen, G. P. A-> Greeny IHe? S, CV Q o?,o oooooooooo o o o BOYD'S ADDRESS o o o 00090000000000 A. R. Boyd of Ijowndesvlllc, cadet major at Clemson College und one of the strong men of the graduating clase | made a somewhat remarkable address on thc occasion nf bis graduating this week. Mr. lloyd is a summer resident j of Anderson, being connected with the . Rank of Anderson. At the request of ( this paper he has furnished thc follow- , lng synopsis of his address on the subject "Why Poverty Prevails Amid tile Greatest Abundance." Thc present century has been mark ed by prodigious increase in wealth producing power. The utilization of ? steam and electricity, the Introduction* of improved processes and labor sav ing machinery, the grander sub-dlvis- I lon and grander scale of production, I the wonderful facilities of exchanges ' have multiplied enormously the cf-: fectivcncss and efllcioncy of labor. At the beginning of this marvelous era it was natural to expect, and in-, deed lt was expected, that labor saving inventions would lighten thc toil and Improve thc conditions of the laborer; that thc enormous increase in the power of producing wealth would make poverty a thing of the past. Could a man of thc laBt century-a Franklin or a Jefferson-have seen. In a vision of the future, thc steamship ' taking thc place of the sailing vessel, the railroad train of thc wagon, the threshing machine of the flail; could he have heard thc throb of thc eugine,' that in obedience to human will and for the satisfaction of human desires, ex ert a power greater than that of all the men of the eat I ti combined: could he have seen the forest tree trans formed Into finished lumber-into doors, sashes, boxes and barrels with hardly the touch of human hands; the factories where under the eyes of boys and girls co'ton become:! cloth faster than hundreds of stalwart weavers could have turned it out with their handlooms; could be have seen steam hammers'shaping mammoth shafts and mighty anchors, and delicate ma- ! chincry making tiny watches; could he have realized thc cnormuoB saving of labor, resulting from improved fa cilities of exchange aqd communia- ) tion-sheep for instance killed In Au tralla eaten fresh In England. utI(1 tho order given by the New York banker i executed tn London on the same day.1 I sny could be have conceived of the 1 hundreds upon hundreds of improve ments which these morely suggest,1 what would he have inferred as to the j social conditions of mankind? It would not havo seemod like an ' inference, further than the vision went, lt would have seemed as though 1 he saw, and his heart would have leap-' 1 ed and his nerves would have thrilled, j as one who from a height beholds just j ' ahead of a thirsty stricken caravan the 1 living gleam of laughing water. Plain- 1 ly.in the sight ot . Imagination, he,' would have beheld these new factors | elevating society from its very founds, tion, lifting the very poorest pauper above th? possibilities of want, ex- 1 empting the very lowest from thc ' anxiety for tho natural needs of Ufo; |( ho would have seen these muscles of I iron and these rinews of steel making 1 the poorest laborer's life a holiday, in 1 which every high quality and noble ? Impulse could have Bcopc tn grow. ' 1 And out of these bounties and almost 1 Inconceivable material conditions ho 1 would have seen arising, as a neccs- i ' sary consequence, the golden age ot ' which mankind has always dreamed. ' More or ICBS vague these have been 1 the hopes; these the dreams horn of i ' improvements which give this wonder- | ful century its pre-eminence. But. i true, and tis true, that disappoint- j 1 ment lias followed disappointment, and i that discovery upon discovery, and in- ' < vention after invention have never les- i ?urned the tolls of those who most need t lt, nor brought plenty to thc poor. As > we see these results we must ask our- J selves the question, what ls the cause 1 of all this? From all parts of the. I world comes Complaint of industrial * depression ; of labor condemned to In- ' voluntary idleness; of capital massed j t and wasting; of pecuniary distress i I among the individual business men; J1 of want, suffering and anxiety among j the working classes.. All the dull, i deadening pain; all the keen, madden- . 1 lng anguish;', that tq the great masses I of men are involved in the words ( "hard times**" ?ffeel the whole world :< today. This state of things common I j to communities, differing so.Widely in] , situation, in political Institutions, in ( fiscal and financial systems, in density j of population, and In social organiza- j tion, can hardly' he- attributed to any , local causes. . There ' ls distress , where large armies Vare maintained, . but there ls also distress where stand- j lng armies are normal.. There is dis- . tress where protective .'tariff stupidly . and wastefully hampers trade, but there ls also distress where trade la free. . There ls distress where auto- ' eratic government yet prevails, but ' there ls also distress where political j power ls wholly in the hands of tho J people. Evidently, beneath all these ? wc are forced, I say, to look for a 1 common cause. :' There is a common 1 cduse, and It is something very close- 1 ly connected with material progress, f because lt is noted that the. phono- 1 mena wa class together and speak of as Industrial depression aire but Inten- I siflcattons'of phenomena which always I accompany material i progress and < which show themselves more clearly' t and forcibly as material progress goes i on. Where population is densest, < wealth greatest? and the machlnory of i production abd exchange most highly i developed, We Und, the, deepest po vcr- t ty, tho sharpest struggle for existence t abd the most of enforced Idleness. .It. t la to newer countries- that ,ls wherey't material progresa ia yet in its oarlx;" stages-that labor emigrates tn search h whero-n?itortfl ""progress has reached I later tdo?es-=thut widespread doaUtu,- 1 tion is found in thc midst of the great est abundance. Go back for a moment with me to the time when this great country of ours was first settled by the Anglo Saxon race, where the machinery and exchange is yet rude and i nellie lent ; where the accumulation of wealth is not yet great enough to enable any class to live in ease and luxury; whens tho best house is but a log cabin, and the richest man is forced to work daily. There, though you will {ind an absence of wealth and all it implies, you will find no beggars. There is no luxury, but there is no destitution. No oneinakes an easy living, nor a very good living, but every one can make a living and no one able and willing to work ls depressed by the fear of want. Hut Just in proportion as wealth in creases population becomes greater, connections with the rest of the world more Intimate, labor saving machinery lessening the cost of production, so doos poverty take a darker aspect. Some get an Infinitely better and eas ier living, but others find it hard in deed to get a living at all. The tramp comes with the locomotive, prisons uro as surely the marks of material prog ress au are the costly dwellings, rich warehouses, and magnificent churches. Upon streets lighted with electric lights and patrolled by uniformed po licemen, beggars wait for the passer by, and In thc shadow-of tho colleges and libraries are gathered the fiercer vandal of whom Macaulay prophesied. This fact, this great fact, that pover ty end ull its cominittancus show themselves in communities just as they develop Into the conditions to wards which material progress tends; proves that thc social difficulty exist ing, wherever, a certain stage of prog ress has bo"r. reached, do not arise from local circumstances, but are, in some way or another, brought on by material progress itself. And, un pleasant though it may iv to admit it, it IB at last becoming evident that the enormous increase in productive power, which haB marked the present century and is still going on with ac celerated ratio, has no tendency to ex piate poverty or to lighten the bur dons of those compelled to toil. lt simply widens thc gulf between thc moneyed kings and the poor and makCB tho struggle for existence more intense. Amid the groatcst accumu lation of wealth, men die of starva tion, and the unscrupulous few wal low in thc greed for gain. Wealth has been greatly increased, leisure and refinement have been raised, but these gains are far from general. In them the lowest, class?e do not sitare. I do not mean'by this that thc condition of the lowest classe? has in no way been improved, *but that Inventions which increase pro ductive power tend to better the cap italist and not the laborer. Nay, it tends rather to depress the lowest classes. In the United States it IE clear that -squalon'and misery every where increase as the villages grow tc cities. It is. in the older and ricuei sections of the Union that pauperism abd distress among1 the working das: are becoming more abd more appar ent. When Atlanta reaches thc point where New York now ia, who eat doubt that tbero will bc just as mans ragged and barefooted children on bet streets as are now found Sn New Yorl city? There ls a problem of today and w< must solve it. Civilization so basec cannot continue. .The eternal lawi of tho universe Indeed forbid it. It it something grander than benevolence something more august .than charity lt ls Justice herself that demands o us to right this wrong.- Justlco tha will not bo denied and cannot fv? pu af. Shall wc avert there facts bj raising churches where hungry chit Iren moan and weary mothers weep It 1B blasphemy that attributes to th? unchangeable decrees of an all-wlsi Providence the suffering and brutish less that come from, poverty, that layi m Him the responsibility for the wan ind crime of our' great cities. B: mcb, we degrade the Everlasting; wi slander the Just Ono. It ls not tin \lmlgbty, but we who are rcsponsibb 'or the vice and misery that prevai imldst our civilization. The Creato mowers upon us Hit* gift?- which an nore than enough for eil; but, Uki twine scrambling ' for'- food, we treat .hem in tho mire, while wc tear am .end. ono another. ' ' >?ow\ friend.' we'certainly have ar *ived at conclusions, which there cat JO no mistaking. ' We. have: now traced the unequa listrlbutlon of wealth, which is th mrse and contamination of our civ lizatlon io some common cause, an we know that so long EB the in st I tn lon bf ibis cause exists no lncreas n productive power can permanentl >enefit the masses. There ls but on way to remove an evil, that is to rc nove the eau BC ' Squeeze the w?\er out of monopol es, regulate competition, and deatro be institution of. private property 1 and, and we have the problem solvei 'Among some people.yihcre is a mb aken Idea that monopolies tend to dil ort the .economic phenomena of ou ?Uhry. Certainly they do. under e> sting modes of regulation, but. the ire a blessing to the economic wo ri when properly .handled. ? Certain] nonopolies are nhedful. . They ? so rv is ns the only channel through whlc tuen' extensive world*wide trade, a .vc have today cai! be. bandied. While exchanges of goods were Cot lned to communities,Jibe Indlvidui JuaineBS man's capital -, was sufflclei o handle .it, but as .apon aa., intern! ional c?rame ree comoft into play, requires Um combined capital of so' irai men, to answer, tbtj call. , Tbl ire soo that modern tiprto-dato eci ?omlc development demands the li dilution of monopolies.' An d we ? ce a}* jutish w8?p&ftovm?Y'ti l*Wlr?l? ^Jisluess man .Vs., to ..fae vailing giant monopolies .in.by. pro te less man bas to fight hie battle, al or n nn open'field of competition'. Tl dca- bf -protective tariff la ho long< imuslblc In this country where indu I I ooooooooooooooooooooooooooo j o THE FLAG OF OUR COUNTRY o 0 Hy Cot Watty G. HIM it lt, Past Exul tod Ruler Urangcburg L?dge, li. P. Q ! Q 0. E. S/o. 797 * 0 j 'O , . o' 'ooooooooooooo o? oooooooooooooo As tho Elks aro to moot tn tho Kier- The ?riler of Elks is today Imparting trie ('Hy this week, no doubt many a newer and truer meaniiiR to the Mug. would like to know what kind o? peo- Wo aro toduy making its red patrlot pi? we are. whether of bovine spoclcs blood glow all tho redder and the puri st of the tribe of Judah ( as there are ty <;f Us stalnloss white gleam all the comparatively few lodges In the state whiter. Wo today blaze Its 45 stnrs many are unfamiliar with our true with increased splendor upon their worth). Well, we are of the tribe eternal field. Everywhere from thc o? Judah and originated in thc com- Orient to this Occident and back I mon fatherhood of God and the great again, everywhere our purple banner purpose of our order bas been to ro- Moats proudly and insoparnbly store ns fur as possible the brother- in company with the stars and stripes, hood of man whcro existed the theory each kindling the lustre o? the other, of euch brotherhood. No less are wc rendering our country Thc cardinal principals of our order a service beyond price by lessons of are Charity, Justice. Brotherly Ixive confidence in each other und by prov and Fidelity and when wo pray lt ls of lng that men are worthy to be trusted our deliberations with Ills most gra- and that the incorruptible constitute clous favor and further us with His the overwhelming majority. Wo are continual help, that in all our works, at home nt any Elks home in the begun and continued, ended lu Him United States. Present your card al we may glorify His name The two the door of any lodge of Pilks in any principle? most practiced are Charily par! of America-tor this Is excluslve and Brotherly Ixive. We believe that ly an American order, and you tire re charity is the scope of all God's com- ceived with open arms und made lo mauds and that we should feel a feel as much at homo ar. If you were re brotherhood towards our neighbor In your home lodge. It is true when 1 and establish in thc heart o? our we have finished our business session ' neighbor a responsive feeling. we have a social session-forget tl nc With the Bible und the nuthnrs to all their troubles of this world, cn guide and inspire and protect us, we Joying good fellowship. We say: worphlp at the shrine of thc flag, en- "Lei us drink a toa:;t lo those God forcing the rule that no lodge of Elks |naplroa characters whose lives prove can proceed to business until thc altar ... _. ,. , " ." _ ?",,.".." around which we galber and sing and lhal lho>- nmkc ,,,c 1TT*T?? ?f 0,??rH pledge our honor, is adorned with tlic ?<lliln uP?n which they build their freedom's symbol. own happiness. ._ trial development has reached such ^QW TO MAIL EGGS an extensive ?cope. ?-.-v*-^.w When wc hav?. brought about such _ phenomena as wli. enable the small business man to i??n i kilato thia bus!- WnshluiMi n, June 13. That cg^s ness with thc same ?rnneo as the bplendor. Indeed, ll Is Hie relpn -if great monopolies, thou * not till CCh be marketed successfully Ly por then, wilt'wo set comme: 'Mons r.t>i 1)0st and ?hat this method M equei.t in their prop.jr sphere. ]y 'secures a better price for the pro Wherever we can trace the early (|IICer and a rrcsher url ?...lo for the history of society, whether in Asia, in consumer hus now been dcr..r,n>:ti atul Europe, tn Africa or in America, we lo nic ButlsXpctlon or thc expert* In Ute find this rame phenomena. TMf ?bso- \\ ri. department of agrlcuitUi t. The luto individual property in land, which department conducted torts that rov moderh civilization derived from Home crri? a pCriod of five months. At Un reached !ts full development there In CIl(1 of that porioa it canK, tn the ?. ?li historic times. When this ancient. c?"s;t.n that tho parcel post waa M mistress of tho world loomed up in particular value to thc UIAU whoso her greatest power, each citizen lind flock wa.. too 8IuaU or wh:, :?VU? U)0 his little homestead plot. But as far from exprCB8 service to permit Caesarian, slowly crept In and large hi t "", ,,|3 in thc roglllar estates, were divided out to tho fowl , , caR0 w,llch "0,d8 30 dozon j and thc legions were forced- into rent paying gangs of the enstern type; this BB ? great empire, even while lt embraced In thc courre of these experiments the world, becamo in reulity a mere thc department shipped 9131 eggs in shel, kept from collapsing only by tho 46? lots. O? these 327 or Blight ly loss heathen frontiers where land was pub- than 3.6 per cent, were broken, but lie property. lt was thus the heart only 2009 or ?lightly less than 2.3 nor was eaten out of that * great emnlrc cent, wore absolutely wasted. Tito and Rome perished as other great others, though broken, could still bo nstlons of similar type have dont. To used> The "percentage ot breakage, them may be fittingly applied the moreover will bo greatly reduced, lt is thc wordB of a tribune or the Roman said, when the employes of the post people: "O' men of Rome, you are otTlco hpcomo moro accustomed to called the lord : of .tho world yet lun e handling cjich fragile matter, no right to ? square tti'ot of soil Tito That tho CSE? should bo properly wild beasts have their dens, bu*, tho packed, is of course essential. . This common people of Italy have or.iy implies timo, care and some oxponsp water afld air." * and is one reason why no attempt Can lt be that the great Creator nils- shou|d be made to market by parcel appropr'utcd his rich gifts In s'tcl. a I'?8t nny but thc finest quality of eggs Way to make the creatures >?t Ills for they alone will bring rcmunera ?wn hand suffer for want, while others tlve prices. Moreover if tho customer have more than enough. It ir a light who buys in small lots (linds that any thing 'MeX labor should bc .-obbed of considerable proportion or his pur its earning while greed TOIIB In wealth, chases is undesirable or oven unat th.it the msny should wat. r wit Ho tho tractive in appearance, ho will not few are satisfied? Can this state or trouble to ask for deductions on that t?'ngs continue? May we oven sn.", account, ho will simply discontinue "After us, the Deluge?" Nay, wo can- his orders. Tho producer, therefore, not go on educating our boys and girls must see to it that ali tho eggs the in our public schools and then refusing postman delivers aro what ho repfc thom the right to earn an honest Uv- scuts them to bo. mg. But if, while there ls yet time. I This can only bo done by candling we turn to Justice and obey her, il thom. Candling! "The process of we truBt liberty and tollow her. thc titting eggs by passing light through dangora which now threaten us must them so as to reveal tho condition of disappear. With' want destroyed, tho contents," ls omitted by many pro wlth greed changed to noble passions, duccrs who rely on care in collecting with mental power loosed by cqndl- thC CKgJ}. \n this manner it ls Mons that give to tho humblest com- however Impossible tn avoid an occa rort and lci3iiro. who yhall measure alonal accident and candling h thcrc the height to which our civilization forc advisable as an extra precaution, may soar? Words fall -Jio though*. A 8iniplo outfit can be made out of a It ls a glorious vision which hos ;il- 8mall hand lamp and an ordinary paste I ways haunted ptan with gleams of board box sufficiently largo to be thc Prince pf Peace! 'Placed over the lamp, after the cuds! -?TI? ?TT ? have been removed, without risk of Found Child s Body. fire. In order to simply "?r to the Philadelphia. June 16.-Thc body of enclosed lamp, not chm should ho cut Warree McCarrlck. se\ m yeera old. In the edge on which the tiox rests. A who disappeared from here on March round hole ls then cut In the box at the 12. was found floating In tho Dela- level or tho lamp flnrne and the cand-| ware.river off.thiB city today. Po- |jnR dono by holding each ogg against tloce believe the chiM. whoso dis- thjD hole w.,|i0 the ro?t of thc room I? pearance lcd to the search In many fn flatness. The light from the lamp cities, met death by accluent. reveals thc contenta or the egg and MALATAN CONR1TI03S EVIL \^athal 8h?W tt"y defCtl ' Sn On Board ?. S. S. California, Mexl-,j if possible only infertile cggB should Co, June 16.-(By wireless to San j be sent to market. Fertile eggs dc plcgo, California, Jun? 16.--Condlt-?. tort?rate rapidly lp warm weather and lons in the besieged city or^Mazatlan | are cauuo of milcn |088 A broody are rapidly growing worse. Disease is3 heQ the neHt accldental exposure making heavy Inroad* on thc Inhabl-, to h, h temperature may start la tan tr- who have been weakened by the, _"Hnf. * " . "_"._ Illt ""^(i lack Of food. Tho gunboat. York-4 ??!^rt^i^*?l?^l?m?r*?? r*n?i?l?i?n ii town which has been in Mexican wa-1and lnJuro the ?nipper s reputation. It tors"aiSc?Jone*?* w^i^vJjm?e^to- ?B ffvlsable therefore, to retain the morrow for Mare Island to be over- fertile eggs for home usc or dispose of hauled. Reports from Acapulco say *?om ,D BomB othe!L,wny. .n thrfHph, many of tbe Federal troops thero are th0, parcel post. Thin ls ??Jqo tru* or deserting, takiug their arms and am- ?oiled eggs. Eggs sh unid nevov bo munition. washed when intended for high class _, i . trade, since the process remoios s DOwn To Work. natural mucilaginous coating- rand Washington, June 16.-With Prest- opona tho pores'of the shell, dent Wilson Insisting on the enact- After this thorough elimination of mont of the lull program ot anti-trust the unfit the ORRS that remain should legislation at the present session and. be carefully packed Im a container of tho fall campaign calling for activo corrugated pasteboard, metal, wood or. work, democratic leaders today began other suitable material. The postof p reperat ions to put through trust leg- flce regulations require this .container lslatlon and get away from Washing- to bc so wrapped thai nothing can. es. ton late in July. oopo '?"on? the package and each ogg itt , , ,T,.j ._ ? addition to be wrapped separately In -Catholic*vfieW Chosen. excelsior, cotton prtsome suc.h materr Rome, June IC-The Catholic and'???- Any soft paper servea the.ppr Morochrlst ticket was elected at the poae quite welt. < As for the container municipal elections held Sunday, the i Itself, there aro many kinda on the results- of which became-*. kiiowA? io- market and the department of agrl day. Prince Corrona headed the Hst culturo investigators -have ? not ^at Wtth.?v,or.i?.'0w to decido wrllcli ls the best, to Nathan,, former mayor, who lett j Instead they refer i no ti lr ern to the the apti-clerrcal cotriRlon; * ': . varions state r experiment stations' which have ava Hub' . Information on this <|uess"~>n. I? psckii K ?B well to Hort them aa far a? is. .practical according io size and color and to keep for homo UHC those which are Irregular In simpe, unusually long or thin shelled. Containers that have been badly stained by broken eggs should ho re pluced by new ones and the package wrapped as neatly as possible. In short every effort should bo made to deliver as attractive a packago as pos sible into the bands of thc customers. The extra oxpense will be little and and the returns in increased trade great. The larger the shipments that the producer can arrange to make, tito cheaper can he afford to sell his eggs. Within the first and se?ond zones of* the parcel poBt service, a package costs live cents for the Hr st pound and only one cent for each additional pound. Ordinarily! eggs weigh about 1 1-2 pounds a dozen, which with the? additional weight of the wrapping and container, would make a packago of a dozen eggs weigh between two and three pounds. The postage on Hil? would be 7 cents. If another dozen epRs were included in tho package the postage would not be more than fl cents, or 4 1-2 cents Instead of 7 cents a dozen eggs. To the value of the eggs and the cost or postage must be added the COB! or Hie container and the wrapping. For two dozen eggs this may bo estimated td K cents. With postage at 0 centu it would therefore, cost 17 cents to market two dozen eggB. or 8 1-2 cents a dozen. By shipping in 10 dozen lois, lt Is esl (muted that the market Inp cost can be reduced to 4.7 cents a dozen. Whore the container cun bc used moro than once, this cost can of course be somewhat reduced. thargo sized containers will stand from two to four trips, smaller ones three to five, so that lt will pay thc producer to Induce bis customer to return tho containers periodically. The postage required for this ls of course deducted from thc bill for thc ucxt shipment. Eighteen With Typhoid. Charlotte. N. C., June 16.-Eighteen of Iwenty-threo persons who attended n reception three weeks ego ot Scot land. Neck. ti. Ci have contracted ty phoid fever according to a dispatch received here today from Scotland Neck. A salad, eaten by the guests at the reception, is blamed by tho phy sicians for tho cpodcmlc, the dispatch slates. 2 Plus 2=3 No? Well, Read By MOSS. I Btjr^KfWBH *^ wasn't wiped j *TNB~^"^1<>fy Ibe.ninpofrca j J^^^^^ul y e u r H ugo. ni ' ^i^?y^yJS though lt certainly !1 Jj?Fvf*- deserved.,to be. 1 x(??F. .( ^ ; "The j Sophists in . . ancient . Greece, .you remember, ttiugbt raise ! philosophy or life and things. I their premises being based o? ftfllitey. They tried to make two i plus two ?iiuai t*^re$.? I Tko Sophists are not nil dead. j'A few thrive today. Tliey argue nf newspaper advertising: il "Oh, I. neverIbuy anything widely advertised or patronize i merchants who mn ko n splash In I Hie newspapers. Their articles ur?? elf uer Inferior or more cost ly because they have to include the cost of advertising." BOSH: Aa a matter of fact, advertis ing enables you to buy BETTER things at CHEAPER prices. Through advertising the sales ure INCREASED ten. twenty; . fifty fold. The mtinufvcturer or merchant Ia thur? utile to sell I BETT Ell and CHEAPER goods I Sud still pay for his advertising. This recognized BUR I NESS FACT ls bmked up by the ex I Derlciice of successful business mun of this community mid by wise home providers ? ho close ly watch the itd.4, lu this piper. . . . . SAYRE & BALDWIN ' * . ARCHITECTS * . plecMcy Bldg. Anderson, S. C. % ? Citizens National Bank Eld*. * . Raleigh, N C. * . e' BS. VT. a, WOOD? * . - ? . 8P?CSALIBT f: . , ,?. . DISEASES of the Eye, Bar, flote ? . andThroAt Caiasocs Fitted . . Ifonrsj . . 8 a m. to l p. m. 8 p. ?.tolp.B.* . Orneos j 808-10 Bleckte? Bo lidias * . 'LJ^???? hy Appemtssea? . . TELEPHONE CON SECTION . . ?. i t AWDBMoir, a a ' . . . . ?V * . SUBSCRIBE FOB THE ANDERSON DAILY'INTELLIGENCES, THE BEST VAMILY NEW8PAP?B IN HOtTTII CMioiJNA^ ?f? THS ?EARJ