The Anderson daily intelligencer. (Anderson, S.C.) 1914-1915, October 15, 1914, Page PAGE FIVE, Image 5

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Buy your season ti Neapolitan Friday evening, Octo Single Admis* Coil eg e Ai School boys and girls mu Tickets oh Sale at Change In Location I am now located over W. A. ower's grocery store at 212 1-2 S. Main Street. I thank my friends for their past patronage and ask con tinuance of same. I make plate* at $6.50 I make gold crowns at$4.00 Silver fillings, 50c and up. Gold fillings $1.00 and up Painless Extracting 40)c :I make a specialty of treating Pyorrhea, Alveo laris of the gums and all crown and bridge work and regulating mal formed teeth. All work guaranteed first class._ S. G. BRUCE DENTIST LEGAL NOTICES Delinquent Road Tax Notice. AU dinlenquent road tsLX collectors are provided with ap official receipt book with u um bes, and stub numbes attached. Pay no money to collectors unless you get the official receipt as above provided or. J. MACK KINO, ti County Supervisor. ? NOTICE OF ELECTION. STATE OP SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Anderson. - Notice is hereby given that the General Election for United Statou Senator and Representatives in Con- J gress will be held at the voting pre cincts Axed by law in the County of Anderson on Tuesday, November 3, 1914, Bald day being Tuesday follow ing lue firBt Monday, as prescribed by the State Constitution. The qnalilcatlons for auffrage are as follows: Residence in State for - two years, tn the county one year, in the poll ing precinct in- which thc elector of fers to vote, Tour months, and tho payment six months before any elco lion of any poll tax then doe and payable: Provided, . That ministers in charge of an organized church and teachers of public schools shall be entitled to vole after six months resi dence ip. the state, otherwise quali led. Registration-Payment of all ta ves, Including poll tax. assessed and col lectable Urning the previous year. The production of a certificate or the receipt ot the officers authorised to collect Such taxes ahall be conclusive proof of the'payment thereof. Before the hour fixed for opening the polls Managers and Clerks must take and subscribe to the Conatltu COULD SCA Aid Fer Three Summer* Mrs. Vin- j j cent Wa* Unable to Attend to | ?ny M Her Howewwk. fi Pleasant HUI, N. C.-"1 suffered *r three sommers," writes Mrs. Walter Vincent, of this town, "and the third and last time, was my worst i had dreadful nervous headaches and prostration, and wai scarcely able to walk snout Could not do any of my housewotfc. I also had dreadful pain* In my back awl sides and when one of nose weak, alnkbyr spells would come on me, 1 would have to give up ?ad lie down, imt?iiworeoff. I wa? certainly fa ? dreadful stats of | health, when 1 anally decided to try r.M?t *M ?www?! to?fo and 1 firmly cket and hear the Orchestra ber 16, 8.30 o'clock ion 50 cents. udkorium at half price for this Tiber. Evans Pharmacy. ional oath. The Chairman of the Board of Managers can administer he oath to the other Managers and o the Clerk; a Notary Public must idmlnister the oath to Chairman. The Managers elect their Chairman md Clerk. Polls at each roting place must be >pened at 7 o'clock a. m., and closed it 4 o'clock p. m., except In the city )f Charleston, where they shall be jpcned at 7 a. m. and closed at 6 p. m. The Managers have the power to 111 a vacancy; and if none of the Managers attend? the citizens can ap joint, from among the qualified vot ers, thc Managers, who after being iworn, can conduct the election. At the close of the election, the Managers and Clerk must proceed to >pen the ballot l< xes and count the ml lots therein, and continue without idjournment until the same is com peted, and make a statement of the esult for each office, and sign the tame. Within three days thereafter, he Chairman of the Board, or some >?e designated by the Board, must Iel iver to the Commissioners of Election the poll Hst, the boxes con alning the ballots and written state nent of the result of the election: Anderson Court House-Andrew Todd, William McClelland, Dave Dren lan. Anderson Cotton Mill- H. H. Broad veil, R. D. Suttels, Fiank White. Belton-John Harris, Press Shirley, S-ndy Williams. Belton Mills -Charlie Cromer, A. ?. Warnock, Kerk Darby. Bethany- J. N. Evatt, S. J. New on, N. S. Reeves. Brogon Mills -Prank Kellara. Beaty lossett. Charley White. Craytonville- D. C. Blackwell, T. 3. Banister,. J. O. E. Ashley. Cedar Grove- Thomas Gregory, L. 3. Johnson, T. B. Cox. Cedar Wreath-C. C. FoBter, W. S. Mauldin, J. N. Long. Centervllle-Alvin Pskew, L. E. Abercrombie, L. A. Glenn. Concrete)-Newton Oats, Frank El ?od, John Belton O'Neal. Campbell's Store- W. O. Kay, T. J. Sriffln, W. L. Anderson. Five Forks- Will Dalrymple, Tom Elliot, , P. L. Slater. Flat Rock- Claude Brooka, Tom El .od. P. T. Haynie. . OiucK Mine-J. 15. Thompson, Cliff tohnson, J. P. Peace. Grove School House-William Per .in, Crayton Watt, Sebastian Cllnk i eales. Holland's Store- J. A. Winter, L. A. Todd. J. A. Jones. Hones Path- D. S. Branybn, Allen Williams, John H. Cox. Hopewell Springs- T. L.. Webb Tohn H. Kay, Tom M. Vaudlver. Iva- Sam McAdams, S. E Lever ?tte, A. A. McCullough. Long Branch- N. E. Cromer, W. K. Maddox, I. T. Holland. Martin's Store.- E. W. Ashley, Jr., fames Murdock, W. T. Ashley. Milford- W. P. Bell, John Latham. I. M. Elgin. ! Moffetsvllle- W. Barnes, P. C. Brown J. M. Craft. Mount Tabor-Harrison Moore, Pink Williams, J. W. Palmer. Neal's Creek Church- Rev. J. T. Mann, Walter Burris, Jun Erskine. Old Friendship Schcol House - W. RCELY~ IK ABOUT Klieve I would have died fl I hadn't takeoff. After I began taking Cardal, I wa* greatly helped, and all three bottle* re lieved me entirely. ! fattened np, ?nd grew co much Monger tn three month*, 1 lett like an other person altogether." Cardal is purely vegetable and gentle eeting. Ita ingredient* have a mild, tonic effect, on inf womanly constitution. Carani makes for Increased strength, improves die appetite, toaos up the ner vous system, mad harps to make pals, sallow cheeks, fresh and rosy. Cardin has helped nore ?knn a mlilioB weak women, during the past 50 years, lt wm surely do tor you, what lt has done for them. Try Cardal today. Frank Towns, Alonzo Gaine?, J. T. Cooley. Orr Mill- J. H. Hancock, Will A. Todd. W. F. Pickens. Pelter- John Bray, Jim Martin, W. G. Pearmans Pelzer No. 4.- W. M. Caldwell. Claude Callah?m, J. T. Simmons. Pendleton- Edward Trescott, Sam Whitton, Brown Wilson. Piedmont Mills - Rufus Reid, W. L. Wilson. George Reid. Jr. PJercetown- A. W. Plckens. John El rod, Lee Elrod. Sandy Springs- D. A. Taylor, Sharpe Hobson, Marshall Blackman. Smith's Mill - D. S. Bradbury, E. R. Pslmer, Bill Dobbins. Slabtown- Keith Algood, Zern Bry son, G. L. Gillespie. Starr- A. 3. Bowie, Eugene Mc Gee, W. R. Chamblee. Three and Twenty- W. O. Pepper, James Carpenter, Harrison A. Fos ter. Tony Creek- Gordon Acker, Charlie Cheshire, Bill Acker. TownvMle- R. H. McClain, Rufus Earle. M. V. Sullivan. Toxaway Mills -John Acker, Pate Ray, Oscar Roberts. Tu Ra loo Academy- A. C. Cromer, R. L. Bradberry, D. B. Milford. Whitefield Church- L. E. Knight, T. W. King. Thos. B. Kay. WilliamBton- John C. Manning, M. E. Ellison, Claude Johnson. Williamston Mills- Ralph Gossctt, Will Campbell, W. I. Mahaffey. White Plains -J. G. Lollls, W. J. Johnson, J. F. McAllster. Williford's Store -J. Y. Busby, John Wright, D. F. Busby. The managers at each precinct named above are requested to dele gate one of their number to secure the boxes and blanks for thc election. On and after October 30th, 1914, at Aaderson court house the -boxes and blanks will be delivered by W. G. Wil liams, court house Janitor. Victor B. Cheshire, W. H. Canfield, Commissioners of Federal Election for Anderson County, S. C. October 12. 1914. EXECUTOR'S S A ?E. By virtue of the authority vested in us by the last will of Mrs. Julia P. Clement, deceased, we, the duly quali fied executors of said decedent, will sell - at public outcry to the highest bidder on November 2nd, 1914, sales day;, during the usual hours of sale, in front of Court House at Anderson, S. C.: 1. All that certain lot of land in Williamston Township, County of An derson, S. C., containing one-half of an acre, more or less, and known as Lot Mo. 48 of the Pinckncy subdivision, as surveyed by W. F. Lee, surveyor, on Nov, 5, 1912. This lot was deeded to Mrs. Julia P. Clement by A. Q. Pinck ncy January 22. 1913. 2. Ten shares of Calhoun Mills stock, preferred, par value $100 each. 3. All that certain lot of land, situ ate in the Town of Williamston, An lerson County. S. C.. containing one md thF2e-feurlha acres, more or less, ind lying on the Bast Bide of the right rt way of tho* 61 S.~& A. R. R., and hav ing such coUrscs and distances as are ?et forth in the deed from Julia P. Clement to Albert and Sarah Miller o' record lu the Clerk of Court's office for Anderson County in Book OOOO, page 736. This lot is sold subject to the life estates of Albert and Sarah Mil ler therein. ' Terms cash. R. B. Goodgion W. H. Cllnkscales, As Executors. JoEephuK Daniel? (n Tenir?.*-**. Knoxville, Tenn., Oct. 13.-Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels began a tito days tour of caetera Tennes see today.-speaking at Bristol. John son- City, Greenville and Morristown, md concluding his day's program with tn address here tonight Will Ron Cars Two Weeks? Mexico City, Oct 13<-The striking itre?t car employ?s here today agreed >.o run the cars for fifteen days on .he old scale of wages. The govern ment has promised that, at the end >t this time, it will arrange a satls Tactory settlement of the strike. The government now is in actual control of ill the street car Unes. POSITIVELY MASTERS CROUP Foley's Honey and Tar Compound, cuts the thick cheeking mucca, and clears away tho phlegm Opens up the air passages and stops the hoarse cough. The gasping, strangling' fight for breath giros away to quiet breath ing and peaceful sleep. Harold Berg. Mass, Mich., writes: "We give Fol ey's Honey and Tar to our children far croup and lt always acta quickly." No wonder a man hi Texas walked 15 miles to Ute store to get a bottle of Foley's Honey and Tar Compound. Every user ls a friend. For sale hy Evan's Pharmacy ? __-.- ,., li i r i ; One . of the cowgirls with the 101 ? Ranch, coming to Anderson Tuesday, ' Octobev ; / CATHEDRAL THE GEF m The famous and stately Cathedral one of the most beautiful structures of set afire by tho Germans because, thc French for observations. Wounded Britons Tell of Valor of the Kaiser's Men. i i Do Net Know What lt ts to Be Afraid ; of Either . Rifle Fire or the Bayonet. By HERBERT COREY. < Special Correspondent of The Chicago c Dally News. J London.-Tommy ls getting to * know Hans better. Groups of tdlgluly wounded men are beT^ Bent back 1 from the shattered British front casi | of Amiens. Every man has been told by his officers that ho must not talk for fourteen days, even of bis per- j { sonni adventures. The Impossibly stupid British censor office would have all knowledge of this war kept from the world. "Yon can talk about tho Dutch men," I suggested to one chap I met at the Charing Cross station. "That'll | j do no harm." >^ He agreed with me. He was ? nico, | 1 clean cut boy-Private Harry Clark of the Staffordshire regiment-and ho wno just sweating to talk. A hole through his arm only Inconvenienced him. He was smoking a huge pipo. "They fight well," said he. "They're afraid of 'nothing. They come on when the-dead are lying in heaps be fore them." The war office has persistently put . out stories that the Germans cannot | stand the bayonet, along with a com panion piece that the Germans ham string wounder men. "The 'ell they cawn't stand the bay onet," said Private dark. "They don't know what it ls to bc a-feared. They keep a-coming on, and lust i 1 trample all over us." i t Clark's regiment was Intrenched ? i somewhere on tho front at Mans, ' i The British were forced to bear tbe j 1 brunt of the Gr man attack through- te out this first great hattie: Long be- ; < fore they first came in contact with { the foe they had been cheered by the ' j \ .war office statement that the Ger- t mans were afraid of the cold steel. The war office had also said that the s Germans are Inferior a? to field ar- ; f tillqry and In rifle practice. j s "Their guns was good." said Pri- c vate Clark, "We used Just to get a J j hole dug for ourselves, and they'd shell us out of lt I didn't think much ? ot their shrapnel. 'Seemed to rae lt f didn't bare much force. But they c could sure lt us." particular German. regiment ! j tb* ?trnc?ced apon Clark and his comrades was not composed of sharp shooters, according to tho Briten. ;i For an hour they lay In thin* trenches i1 and fired at each other. On the other1 [ f bard, other soldiers have asserted the ( a German shooting ls quite np to Brit ish standard. Then tbs Germans scrambled out of their trenches and started on a dog .rot across the field. "Looked aa though Ikey said to 11 themselves, Ton. bally beggars, wellli myke yon get eat or that,'" said Pri- 1 vats Clark. < The English lay In their trenches < and fired their rifles until-they be- i esme almost too bot ta hold.' They i were supported by a company of i French light artillery. 1 "You couldn't miss em,"- said Pri- . va*e Clark. "It wne like shotting at < a welt, they were that clone together. ^ Tbf*y didn't 'ardly extend their crder < at all." 1 tte could see through tue thia . smoke of the modern rifle mea faning l iij3MMgrjMaMroMM?>?wiTrTr-? ,-nrm ?MANS BOMBARDED. of Notre Dame at Reims, considered the middle ages, was bombarded and j ;y assert, it was being used by (he n groups. But the Germans kept Ight on. The fleldpleces cut holes brough their mass, but thoy did not mit. It ls Privste Clark's own opin en that no braver men ever charged mder fire. "They wasn't 'ardly fifty feet away vben i slipped some more cartridges n my rifle," said he, "and I emptied em all before they got up to me. I enow I accounted for some In that ness, slr. You couldn't 'ardly miss em if you tried." nut the Germans kept on coming, i Dark could see them falling as they :ame, but they kept on coming. They vere innumerable. They swept down he British force by sheer weight 'fThey aren't fawecy with the bay met like we are," said Clark. "They ust dig in like they were pitching my." No ono will ever make him believe bat the German has a distaste for ?old steel any more. The Germans vent on sud over the Britons. Clark ound himself where the British lfne lad ended and near a clump of small rees. "It weren't no good 'anging," said ie, "and so I ran. I thought those rees would myke a nice cover for ne." More ?hon one hundred other Eng I Rh soldiers had been taken with tbe tame thought. The trees were i ot >Ig enough to hide a cow. But they ill got away. What's more, they all tad their guns,- and as soon as they ame to cover they re-formed and liked on until they came to another iritlsh unit, which they Joined. REVENGE OF FRENCH MOTHER \?-i Cross Nurse Makes Wounded German's Parent Suffer for a Few Moments. Paris.-The following remarkable luman document ls absolutely auth?n ic, but for obvious reasons the real tames of the persons concerned are lot revealed. It ls a letter sent by a french Red Cross nurse to the mother if a wounded German soldier in her ?are. The letter follows: "Madame: Tour son is seriously rounded. His life depends entirely on he assldioos careSof myself, his nurse. "While at his bedside, I think of my ion, who, lying helpless on a battlef ield only slightly wounded, was cow irdly finished by a revolver bullet by me of your soldiers, perhaps even by 'our son, now under my cara. "I am not a saint- My revenge ts issy. Tonight an extra dose of mor thia will bring tea justice for the death if my son. - "J. am sending you hera tha last rood-by of your eos. le. A.. "Red Cress Nurse.** "P. 8.-Madame, yocr son is safa Ie win be well within two weeks. I lave merely wanted to make you UTO or a minute the long hours ot incoa iolable mourning which now will ' be ny life." Hard ta KM Sams Men. Reports indicate lt sometimes takes i lot to kill a modern soldier. Bar? feast Foug?re ot France received eight juliet wounds, a broken ann and oth ?r injuries, and although shot tn tba mlf, thigh and ankle, escaped being captured by Germans, and limped ten atlee to nts regiment Another French midier received six bullet and three bayonet wounds), and ia recovering, rho French war office estimates only two men ara killed out of every hun Ired hit The penetration ts so clean sae saldler did not know hr '..id been Lift tar three hours, and another bullet weat through two soldiers and lodged in a cavalryman's saddle. To throw the ?pot light on any average business. ?1X001 of our country, will reveal many average stores. The store of . today, however, wai always stand alone, even though H be in the group. This is as it should be, for modern ric*, hods of retailing re quire that a store be something more than, a trading place, and the modern demand of the 5 and 10c business requires that a Kress store be something more than just a 5, 10 and 25c store. This is just what the Kress store means to any community. A department store in miniature, with a price limit of 25c gives a definite picture of Kress' Anderson store* SATURDAY MORNING, 8 O'CLOCK OPENING SALE IN OUR NEW STORE. INFORMAL OPENING FRIDAY AFTERNOON-3:00 TO 5:30. EVENING-7:30 TO 9:00. No goods sold during the above hours. Salome's Orchestra will furnish music during both after noon and evening. Souvenirs will be given to the ladies. WATCH KRESS* WINDOWS'* Church Advertising. The old custom of publishing free church notices in thc newspapers once a week, on Baturduys, has pretty wei died out because times have changed and churches have found a bet ter way, vi/.., they pay for their advertising and In that way' get better display when they want it, and just ns they want lt. The ancient habit Still pr valla in Syracuse, hut some clergymen aro getting out of lt and are doing effective advertising. The episcopal churches have combined in one at tractive advertisement every Saturday. Thc cost ls comparatively small and thousands of people have authoritative Information as to tho hours of service, ?tc Thr newspapers ginrilv nuhlisi news of thc churches, but tho church will po bettor satisfied when they buy space for their official announcement. And porslstent advertising always pro duces results.-Syracuse Journal. The Methodist church of Henderson, Ky-, began using display advet early last summer, and tho pastor found that this method of publicity much more effective than the old style Free Church Notices, and continued the naid display ad vertising, using a four inc!) ad.? three times each wock; and whon there was anything special, ho used extra space Customs and methods have olnnged tn (ho management of churches as well as other kind ; of businesses. V/iille the Intelligencer ls not - willing, but glad to publish any notice for tho churches, it ?H positivo that they will get better rosulta by follow ing the lead of Brother Speak of the Methodist church. ls ft your eyes or glasses bi question? Alright then doat seek farther, Just see sse. I specialise on these troubles and can give yon that finish on work that spells satisfaction. Prices $8.00 te $6M up. Ba? pairs 10c np, DR. M. R. CAMPBELL 112 W. Whittier-St Ground floor-telephone BOC tiens. Charleston & Western Carolina Railway Tacky Party. The Phllahthoa class of tho Presby terian church of Iva, will give a tacky pprty at tho Iva Skating hall Friday evonlng, October 16th, tho public is invited. It Always Pees the Work. "I like Chamberlain's Cough Rem edy better than any other," writes R E. Roberts. Homer City, Pa. "I have taken lt of) and on for years and it has never failed to give tho desired results." For sale by Evan's Phar macy. All dealers. To and From the NORTH, SOUTH, EAST, WEST Leaves: No. 22_6:00 A. M. No| 6 ..... 3:35 P. M. Arrives: No. 5 10:50 A. M. No. 21 . . . . 4:55 P. M. Information, Schedules, rates, etc., promptly given. E. WILLIAMS, G P, A., Augusta, Ga. T. B. CURTIS, C. A., Anderson, S. C. MVedding Presents of Quality and Taste When a friend marries, the mest natural thing tn i the world is to remember him with a present in coan? I memo ration of the ev ?nt To be airs, you wish to give something nice--?'ten where elsa would you go rather than to a First C'iss Jeweler? Solid Silver It sounds well-there !s nothing quite so sweet to tho eera of the bride as sterling silver. Cut Glass There is nothing handsomer, nor more prized for ' its beauty and elegance than a piece of sparkling eat' gloas, of the first quality-aaa houp that kind .only. Wa carry a wry comprehensive line of Jtaralry that is very suitable for wedding gifts at almost any price that yon caro to pay. JSdarchbanks & Babb