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Speeded up the Factory : A BIRMINGHAM Seiimg House re j /"\ceived a rush order l&r machinery. ? The sales manager called the factory i at Pittsburg on the telephone, and was . assured that the order would be shipped as desired. , ! Bell Telephone service is an essential link between the selling house and the factory. (K i ? When you telephony-smite SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY Palmetto Detective Agency Criminal and Civil Work k corusco! trained Specialists whose services may be secured In strict ly legitimate work. A?dress P. O. Box 402 % ? ?f % ? % I t ? f ANNUAL -TO Jaeksonville!* Fla* fi TTamiFia^ Fla.; Jj -LAND OF F LOWERS' 1 - ' ' . ? .--- J; Tuesday, Sept. 22nd, 1914 < ?.- ,-, V VIA : ' - ? '!:' f SOUTHERN RAILWAY I PREMIER FARRIFIi OF THE SOUTH J Greenville, Anderson, Abbeville, and all J intermediate points at the following < VERY LOW RATES: 5 lt.Ttfarr H.T. Fare B. T. Fare ? to to to K Mu talinah Jacksonville Ta re pa 4P Feficr . i (Ml.._7 00 . 9 09 A. nillianstoa.. .4 00,..... 7 00....WW Y ! Andersen ..V ... 4 00...,.....7 00. ...OOO V Belton. 4-00....7 00.0 1)0 ? Hohe? Pftlh.8 00.? ?.">.8 00 JNnmhlK .:. 8 00..8 7.V..8 SO \ Rk??ls> junction ... !.. .3 Ta...us.5 TS ^ Abbeville .* ...8 80......... 6 6*.8 Sft 4 Hodges . 8 00....0 40.8 60 ? flrccnwr-od .? 00. VS 85>.?00 J A SPECIAL TRAIN will be^ewi?ed Co^ < lurnbia to Jacksonville on the following A schedule: <f rT^Tj?ilh.o?s 1Z.3C r- m. Ar. Savannah 4.40 p. m. (ct.) ?J Lv. BWkVrfle 25.30 D. tn. Ar. Jacksonville 89.00 p. m. # llrcdrs?ou Tickets wni IH? ^end going ott ?pe? mi irai? A and all KEW LAB 'f KALKS, 5.00 a? m., Seplrm?jer 39,1o LOSa. K m., SeptcM?bcr iSSrd. <F Tlrferts good ; ?It ruing on aU Regular Trains to reach # original starting pola on or before midnight as foUonss \ SnTannah, (ia.; St?pl SW*. 1014? tn 4ack?oiHliic, Fla., ? Svpt. t"th, ititi to Tamp*. Fla., October 1st. 1914. # * (h ?lass day coaches and Fntltean Slceptng cars without j rasage. - 3 ATRIP TO THE TROPICS J Florida. "The Land ?f Flowers," Hesita nod Pl?asnre* ? Wond?rrh! ogrlcolfun?, drvclhpmentH niirncifrrf? itroplc from \ an overlb* world. & S??v?r.huh, (.a.: With tts l>. nut Ifni parks, wag? If'cent ship- ? ping derk*, ThunuVrbalt end Tjbee ts brad fantons fer Sra Fosas \ wad Surf hf tates;. '? ';' / ^ - v' For fall lalVrma I lon. Pullman R-*^*tlons cf^ nr>|wy to J Ticket Agcsta; ^nthe.n Ballway, er W. E Hc?Kt, W. H. TABER, J. K. ANDERSON, J AML 3?h. r?ft*?Afrt. Tra*. Pass. ARL Sept B R Ky J I Columbi*, 8. C. GreeavUle, 8. ?. A adenia, S. ^????9 EARNING AND LEARNING. Every Youth Should Work for . Collage Training. Philadelphia Public Ledger. Mau is triune, and the higher! ideal of a Complete man or wo man is a healthy body, a strong clear mind and a P"? e ch?'rac?ei The absence.of either makes Iii? a failure and a pain. An ?deal ?'d sealion, (hen, includes physical mental anti mnr.il development The omission ot.eithei is a gtca weakness in ans scheme ??f cdu cation. Therefore, forlunafr* is the man who han au opportunity t<? \vorl with his hands 'or body while hf is training his constitution as foundation, and weaklings must fall ?mt Hut with thc inherited ??. acquired physical b?sis the stu dent who carns his living and ll<" living of some dear (?nc while he studies in his college Course will outclass all competitors. The bis tory of our great men and women, past and present, prove:, thal statement. The boys and girls who" pail! their own way and learned to economize closely and to work hard are the most influential cia-: in every community. Many a ric' man's sm? has been destroyed b\ too much money in Ihe-days whet: he needed most to be laugh! I? earn money and to lake care o himself. It would be a great blessing ti the nation if every student Was ' ompelled to earn all of his ex penses while in college or univer sity. We would become agnation of mighty men. A very rich man in Vermont informed me that he loki his oldest son that if he (tht -ron} did n<M earn his own ex-, penses during the four years of college at Burlington he would surely disinherii hirm Thai son r now one of Vermont's foremost citizens, respected, ny all. ._,.,, ? ,?/ , ? . -_? VALUE OF EDUCATION. t think we may assert that in ' 00 men there are more than 90 xvho are what they are, good o: bad, useful, or pernicious to sb ciety, from Ihe instruction they have received, lt is on education that depend the great differences observable among them. The least and most imperceptible impres sions recei\ea in our infancy have consequences very important, and of a long duration, it is with those first impressions as with a river, whose waters wc can easily turn by different canals, in quite oppo ile courser so that from the in sensible direction thc stream re deives at its sources, it tates dif ferent directions, and al last ar ?ves at places far distant Iron each other, and wjth the sanie fa cility we mav, I think, turn tint ninds of children lo what dircc lions we ptease.^-L?Gke. . .-.-'-^_>--. THE BONDING COMPANIES ARE AGAINST DRINK. Men desiring to occupy certair positions of trust in the" Unitec states must be bonded by r?gulai "bonding companies," one ol A hose main questi<jns is, "Do yoi drink intoxicating liquors? " " ll this question is answered in th< iffirm?tive, the company will re fuse tc bond the applicant, lt i; said that over/two-millions ot thf jest business positions in the conn irv are closed to all but total ab ^tamers* EMPLOYrJBS PREFER TQTA! ABSTAINERS. Rcpsrf cf ii OeVeinnjrPsit ??*rvcsti gsbon. Hie United State*? Commis nioner of Labor made an investi ?at??n into thc queslion as h vhat extent thc fact of bein/ ; kinking min bars a man from ob faining employment Circulars of in . [o 7,000 employing concerns, al 'i which arc repr?seutaiive ii '.heir lines of business. There 4>v?fi &,976^replies received. Of thea 5.363 state they tak* the dfrinl habit into ? consideration in em ploying new men. Thc J-vr??soi ?Jveti by inost is that it is simpl i business precaution. The em ployer is liable for damages don tiy accidcnt i? Iiis establishment ?nd it is only prudent to emplo nen with clear heads. - Th?* reason is a good one, au should >?w pandered by'/ ever workingman. To have a repula iou as a sober man is distmctl in a min's favor in obtainin work, and in Ihese tlays ol itftens ?mfl^tio? ?very man' who dc Hres' to -prosper Viii see the nt c&ssity, as a bit of business p>c Jence, foi abiding the drin habit, v WAYS OF WORKING THROUGH COLLEGE Henty of Opportun?lir? Where There's a Will. Madison C.- Peters in New Yolk Press. A college education is an in vestment of from $1,000 to s lo, 300 and thc only'men who eau not make interest on the hive t meut ate thoje who have no spe ia! qualifications as nun. li i iot so much a question as to what ..liege you Iwive gone through, a how much *f the college has ..ou: through .ou. I he majority who d<> go to col l?ge must work (heir wa; thtouglO I lu- cNpcnditurc has mightily in leased with the piospci ty ol Hi times, Hut there are hundreds ..' :ojlcges whose tniti??ti i'. low ?md .Hen lice, and where Hu- ex [lenses can easily he mel hy OIK-' . vu exertions, and the envejed prizes ate the most frequently car lied oil by these seit-reliant sin dents. Many a hoy hy earlier risinv has made his way by selling news papers. Those with musical talent have found au-easy way- Th young man who staits off with a good knowledge^ of stenography ind typewriting has a small for ! Unie at command. Newspaper re porting ot college gaines aru' other athletic news can he made ! a source of income. Teaching evenings opens a wide field. The teacher's desk has been the best stepping stone to fame and fortune. At many college: young men with executive abilih run eating clubs, whereby they ge' their own board free; others art waiters for a few hours a day come have little stationery stand1 in their own rooms and not a few have bootblack parlors. Every col lege has its agency for laundries Athletic goods, etc: . If an ambitious 'barber should happen to read this, and would ike a college education, let him to ahead, take his chair, his razors and scissors, his soaps and brusher along with him,.set up thc para phernalia in hkr'room, and sue cess is bound to come. If you are a-tailor and sigh fo: new worlds toconqirer get a move on, make for the college bes cuited for your capacity and star right up to keep your fellow stu dents' clothes in repair. During vacation seaside resort' hotels, clubs, swimming pavilions and mountains clamor tor help give e*?tra employment in summe? to thousands, atwell as the liol ley lines-and as/R general rule, the college student gets firs! chance. lt often happens that the extra labor involved, the worry and mxiety to get ?on,; undermine health and thc whole beautiful vision of-the future crowned witt the glittering stars of success, masses away, never to return, fl college '.education can be pur chased too dear. Always confide* ?he greater wealth-health. Don't be ashamed? to work your way through college. Thou sands have done it and came oui on top. What others have done, you can do, if you have the will. Usuallv self-supporting students are the most desirable-they can Y afford lo drink, smoke, gamble or lake part in me reckless excesse vhich so often characterize the c ollege life of the scms t>f thc rich.. Epeetetus says: "t/ifliculties arc trjings that show what men are-' LOOK YOUR BES"**. There is great .power in ap pearance. You are usually judged VT the way you look, and you usu iilv look t?ie wayv.you feel. Gut voil can feel the>ay you like, and \on ran live in any mental atti tude von like. Therefore, discard ill attitudes of inferiority. Never .?-.-._?.-. _* _!.. t-_l.-l? lum'. ui jruu*jcn tij ii?i.?n(i. {?ever appen' as If you were in crior. The mind ?hd the bod\ lhotitd bc Wi.11 dressed, especially {he mind. \\) you look common, you will think of yourself as com? tn?fi, and he who habituait* think?"or nin< oiiiuion bc-} comes cominnii. To look your best is noi ex fiensive. Clothe y?rif J m'md ns ich?" as von can; that will Cost von "nothihg , imd be as neat, ii ?lean, and as bte in r?ir sou ft?, you eau. Anything that fetws'to make you icCkless Will i/caken mind, character and ?WI hy. Make it one bf your strong points to always look your best, {.otb in person and in courrte* nance. And to Vole your best you must think your best, and fee! your besV-Progress Magazine. A RISING MAN. He's willing and promet, a de pendable chap, The busiest man in the store. He does what the boss requires of him, And always a little bit more, Ile doesn't spend time louking ur al the clock. To see how soon he eau uu?; fte's full of ambition and w'flling to work, And some day he's coing lo Iv it. He's boimd to fc<* np, (or ?I he should leave I he whole shop would notice the loss. Ile makes himself useful from morning till night, And so he stands Ililli with thc boss. He works just as if it were all for himself, Not waiting in sloth |<> he led. The business lu him seems already his own. And some day he'll stand at the head. -rrSomerville Journal THE CASH VALUE OF EDUCA TION. The best way to illustrate the cash value of an education is by a simple process of arithmetic. You can easily obtain the value of the time spent at school by subtracting the earnings of a life of UNKDUCATED labor from the earnings of a life of EDU CATED labor. If au UNKDU GATED man earns one dollar ind fifty cents a day for three Hundred days in the year, he does very well indeed, anil if he keeps it up for forty years he will earn 3 l.5oX3ooX4o, or $18,000.00 An educated man usually works '^y thc month or year. One tho? rand dollars a year is a low aver age for the,earnings of educated labor. If the educated man works for forty years then y\ui have s l,oooX-io, or $40,000 as the earnings of the Educated man. By subtracting $ 18,000 from $4o,' ooo you will obtain $2 2,000 which must represent thc value ?f the time spent at school getting an education. What Mien is the nsh value of each day spent at school? Suppose it takes a child eleven years, counting ?oo school lays per year, to objain a suffi cient amount of ?ducation to ilace him in the $1,0*00 per year ? lass, making a total of .2,200 lays spent at school. A simple di vision, namely-$22,000 divided by 2,200 will give TEN DOE LARS per day for the days spent in the school rooms. DOES EDUCATION PAY i SUCCESS. ii One of the most impressive facts of history is that thousands, of the world's most" successful men started without the ghost of i chance; There is not an occu pation or profession in .existence] that has not been glorified by men or boys who, at thc staff.j were no greater than the average boy or man. Getting started has aver been the supreme moment in most men's careers. It's Impossi ble to learh to swim without first getting into the water. We learn by doing and we learn it in no o? her wi?*/. John Wanamaker va'ked f??i'tr miles as a buy in or fer to clerk ii: a Book, store fur one dollar and twenty cents a \yeek. He and the book store Trew together, finally he outgrew thc --od: store, ar j tt now takes .he largest -.department ?tore i'n ?'ne world to held him. W?jj <>? mir successful men in American < life today started on a small sal? ary. Robert C. Clowry com menced as a messenger boy, and was fifty years later the president of the Western Union Telegraph Company. Andrew Carnegie wofked it? a colton mill as a dof r_.. i... ...... I..11... nriA tu/ontv it? . ?>* '/?V uyi?i ??.? ? y -?. 'j centra week. John D. Rockefeller clerked Iii a grocery store, and later burrowed two thousand dol lars to go into business for him H-'If. To succeed/is the only nat ural wa v to live. To fail is con ?iarVJ? ?f?ihir?'. ' The mar. who does the seemingly unimportant .hing well from the siati, and does it cheerfully will have no tumble viii, more important mat tcrs. - When we are burdenrd with the dally toil and ceaseless grind, it wilt nc worth while to remero ber "that John Mitchell; forfn?r president of the United Mine Workers of America, once dug in : minc,1 and that MT- Bryan deaned up a business man's office In order tc pay part of his college expenses. _JU- J Listen fo Monday, Sep SAILING OR DRIFTING--I .VHICH? There are iWu kinds of men in] Ihe world; those who sai! and those who drift; those win? choose the ports io which lhe\ will go, and skilfully and boldly shape their course across thc seas with the wind or against it, and those (rho let the winds and tides carry them where they will. Thc men who sail, in due time arrive; those who drift, often cover greater dis- ? tances and face, far greater perils, but they never make port- The j men who sail know where they want to go and what they want to Jo. They do not wait on luck, or fortune or favorable currents; they depend on themselves, and expect no help from circum dances. Success of the real kind is always in the man who wins it. not in conditions. No man be comes great by accident; gre.v things are never done hy chance; a man gets what he pays for-in character, in wotk, and in energy. A boy would better put luck out of ni?- mind if he means to p.cconi; plish anything. There are few really fine things which he cannot iii if he is willing to pay thc price. Men fail, as a rule, because they will md j-ay the price of the thing they want'; ilicy afc not will ing to work hard enough, to pre pare thoroughly enough, ti? put themselves heartily into what tuet are doing. The only road.to a.' vnncemen1. is to do work so wed that you are alway aJiead of the iemands of your position. Keep ahead of your work, and your work will push your fortunes for you. Our employers do not decide whether we shall stay where we are or go. on and up; we -decide that matter ourselves. We can Jrift along, doing our work fairly well; pr we can set our faces tu the front and do our work so well ?hat we cannot be kept back. In this way we make or mar our own ?in times. Success** or failure arc :iot chosen for -ns; we choose them for ourselves.-Hamilton vV. Mabie 'MAKE GOOD.' Wake Good. LTut ont "if," "could," and "should," \nd start in to saw wood, i*ou can still have the-best Things in life, Tike thc rest .)f the men who've achieved fud because they've believed LD themselves. " You're deceived if you think fortune Conics With a rattle of drunis >nd a fanfare of state To hand yours on a plate Thttt isn't the wav That she visits today. Vou must get out and rustic and bustle and hystte; You need all your muscle, io. you've gol to tussle, Plunge into the fight, Hiv to left and to right, fad keep crashing and smashing Don't ??H up with your striking Till things meet your Ukin ,'. Pot God's sake, stop bawling Instead, do some mauling. lt makes the world hitter 'i . ? d? t. ~i _ ...iii--. - ? i .. loos, a? a ??jliluc i , Kite scowls when **he sees <\ grown-up on his knees, A -man with his health ls a mine rammed with wealth Pull of unexplored lodes, Why, the freckle-back toads ! lave, the sense to keep jumping And here you are frumping 1 Come now, strike your ??it tl isn't i?? late, There's rio such thing as fate! Drop that fool-talk of "luck," ?et a grip on your pluck, Abd buck. Begin r-: , To-Grin And frht.?-^-~. lerbert, Kauf mau, in Everybody. ? T^-T~?^Y^.?.I inf jfim'tii the Beti teraber 14th THEN GET YOUR ? mt's Book Store ANDERSON, S. C. Farmers* Cafe EAST MARKET STREET Most sanitary place In cit j; nen liuittlinpr with cement floor. Expert tfook who HorreM noth ing bul fresh eutahies-no "left. mtrV* or slulo Junk offered. Etcrybody asked to give UN a fr!? I 1! leas il cs, Joneslles, Han. krllifrs, Soilthite? a?4L Hull .Mousers-one prier tu ntl and. nothing charged to kin people, "close" friends or anybody. . Victor B. Cheshire, PROPRIETOR "Iteceased" T?ndr?kte ' bf ' Late ' WaT?rm~- * - CONDENSED PASSENGER SCHED ULES PIEDMONT AND NORTH. ERN RAILWAY COMPANY, , Effcctlre August: J?, 191?. Anderson, S C. Arrival? . Der-irturea No. 31 7.45 a. m.No. 30 ? 50 a. Ukr No. 33 9.40 a. m.No 8> 8.20 a. m. NoxRG 11.85 a. m.No. 84 I0.?6 k-m No. 87 1.35 p. m.NO.' 3? "11.60 a: m." Ko. 30 3 30 p. m.Np. 38 2.10 p. m. No. Al 4.45 p. m.No ,40 3.30 p. j?. No 43 5.DD p. m No.x?i? 4.*5 if. m No. 45 7.15 p. m.N?. .44 5 46 p. m. No. 47 ll 15 p. m.N?. 4? 10.00 P. ?. . Ur-Wniltcd. truing. C. V. PALMER, Genoral Passenger Agent. ii ' -? CHARLESTON A WESTERN CARO LINA RAILWAY' -Tl* August Snort Line Arrives: No. 5. .11.40 a m. No. -1 . 3,45 p. nt Learest No. 22 . 6 00 a m No. 6 .3.36 p. in Information, schcduloi, ratea,, atc, promptly given. ?> WILLIAMS. G. P. A. Augusta, Ga. T. B. Curtis, G. A. Anderson, 8. C. MUTUAL ENVY. ( Hy. I.ouisii Fletcher Tarkington.) Said Tommy Toole, "1 wish f knew As'in?Ch as Willie Wisc. He always has his 'r?thm?K,?'? . And wins the spelliiig;^^* lid Willie Wise, 'Tf rc?j?ld pla> nasebhir like 'l om^ Tool?, A And win thc tennis-match, I'd b(J Thc happiest boy*in school. " PERSISTENCE. Nothing in the world can ta the place of persislen^^au viii not;"hothi?e is m?tejcqr13 than unsuccessful men. Genni* wiii not, un rei nitn is ainir.si a prove t:on will not; the wof educated derelicts, ind d?termination niputetit. Thc slogan, .''1 has solved and always will vuve tue problems of the h?man tree. m *??? MILLION r ." ? D?LLAft MYSTERY" r-rANlX "thetrwOVHearU^ -AT THE BIJOU Thursday! Sept. 17 -AND SAY! Only ONE ADMISSION alinee . . .