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THE INTELLIGENCER ESTABLISH*:!) ls (JO. Published every morning except Monday by The Anderdon Intelligen cer at 140 West Whitner Street, An derson, 3. C. SEMI-WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER Published Tuesdays and Fridays Entered as second-class matter April 28, 1914, at the post office at Anderson, South Carolina, under the Act of March 3, 1879. ASSOCIATED PRES8 DISPATCHES Telephone .321 SUBSCRIPTION BATES DAILY One Year .S6.00 Six Months . 2.50 Three Months . 1.2S One Month .42 One Week .10 SEMI-WEEKLY One Year ._$1.50 Six Months .75 The Intelligencer is delivered by carriers in the city. Look at the printed label on your paper. The date thereon shows when the subscription expires. Notice date on label carefully, and if not correct please notify us at once. Subscribers desiring thc sddress of their paper changed, will please state In their communication both the old and new. addresses. 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Sound atatements do not always come from loud mouths. ? o High brows In the trenches make better targets for the enemy sharp shooters. If the truth were known, tho Italiana are progressing by Inches and lying by miles. The auto manufacturers probably don't care a rap how many horses are taken to Europe. i The most complimentary newspa per we ever saw called a chicken thief a poultry bandit. J. Pluvius. sends on this mud on the eve of the paving just to make UB appreciate lt the more. Have you ever noticed that noth ing was said about the way of the trangtessor being lonesome? ? ?? o Farmer Accused of Concealing Whiskey.-Hesdline. Pity a farmer can't do as he pleases with his corn. If Prsemysl ls taken we will still regard lt as an unpronounced victory. Honest to goodness, we got to thst first. An Athena dtapatch says the Turks lost 60,000 at the Dardanelles. The Petrograd man's habits are conta gious. e - Portugal has a new president. Telegraph editors, get his cut handy and put a sketch of bis life on the copy hook. -o Forgetting your own troubles and getting interested in the other fol lows, ia a mighty good start on the road to happiness. The small bad boy doubtless thinks lt.well to pray both when kneeling at mother's karee and lying face down, across mother's knee. ? jr ? ^ 1 T III If Governor Manning keeps up his Charleston raiding, tho old lady by the sea wont have one swallow with which to usher In spring. A man's ambition to get In thc movies caused him to leap to hi* death from Brooklyn bridge. Vault lug ambition, aa Shakespeare would say. Th? Oermaua have torpedoed th? Brtistt steamer Ethlope. Though anti berman in sentiment, we know some folks about here who will applaud thereat. MUK AT AM HATE. "Tho constitutional rights of Amer ican citizens should protect them on our borden! and go with them throughout the world, and every American citizen raiding or having properly in any foreign country I? entitled to and must be given the full protections of tho United staten gov ernment, both for himself end hU property." The above quoted lines are a. plank from I he Democratic platform adopted at tin- {{altimore convention in July 191 li. It is mighty good Democratic policy, splendid Republi can policy, excellent Progressive policy, and. in fact, good policy for aby political party that might al ready exist or ?pring up hereafter in thin country. There are those who are ever ready io criticise the present administra tion and contending that the policy outlined in the plank above stated has not been adhered to by the president. Probably the president has not dealt as firmly with Rome of il " belliger ent powers of Europe as ?orne of the Jingo hue would have wished, hut. looking hack over the Mexican ex perience we are not sorry that Mr. Mr. Wilson handled the situation as he did. And we shall not complain If he handles the present somewhat htralned situation between this coun try and Germany with the same far sighted wisdom. Thirteen Leup to Safety-Headline. Crash, goes another superstition. THE COUNTRY BANKER. The country doctor, the country minister, the country lawyer and other persons of various professions in the smaller towns of tho country have from time to time come in for moro or IOBB treatment at the hands of those who would do obeisunce to them. Not in any of this do we recol lect ever seeing a word of apprecia tion for the country banker, truly a person who is a power for good in his :ommunlty and without whom any of these other? would find existence next to an impossibility. Thoughts along thia line bring to mind a splendid tribute to the coun try banker in the editorial columns of a recent issue of the Chicago Tribune, whl?h says: If Diogenes were to return to the world today with his lsntern and tub. this time In search of the man who knows most about his fellows, would he spend his time on tue city street corners? Would he find the mau who knows men and human affairs best in State street, or Wall street, ir Fifth avenue, or University ave nue? The bigness of his surroundings hun been the city man's undoing. Complexity means departments and de partment BpecillBts. The ribbon clerk knows literally everything about rib bons, one vice president of a metro politan bauk everything about foretgu exchange, and the humble president of a railroad knows all about hurd hearted bankers. The city man doe? not meet men. He learns the name of his first neigh bor above by reading of his suicide or divorce tn his newspaper. Henry Grady cut short a New York career and packed up for rural Georgia be cause no one in his fiat was able to tell him about the little girl the un dertakers had called for. No one In the block knew more than that she was a little girl. The country doctor, the country parson, the country lawyer perhaps lead those who know their fellow men, but a place must be made also for the country banker. True, he does not nee men and women in the tonscBt moments of domestic life. That ls reserved for the country doc for, and. tn a lesser degree, the minis ter. Like the lawyer, too, he is limb ed to men for the most part in his dealings. Women seldom borrow and only Infrequently require the services of a lawyer. But modern economics have* armed the lender with questions and the en tire business life of the community passes In review before him. Busi ness ls done on borrowing? and tho man as well as the transaction passes under the Inquisitive eye of the tend er In the country bank. If the farm er wanta new machinery, the bank er learns the cost of farm machinery, the different grades, the different manufacturers, the uses, the savings aa compared with the less modern methods. The astute lender also dis covers how much wheat the borrower has. what the production la per acre, what other assets the borrower baa, and why lt 1/ that he la ont of ready cash. In ?me the grocer, the lawyer, the doctor, the smith, and the station agent will knock at bia door with the story of their Uvea and ambitions. Every loan la a symposium ot other men's businesses. Add a dash ot Im agination, and the country .banker can be umbered among the "wise men ?of the world. THE WORLD THAT WILL BE (From the Toronto (Jlube) Home one said that other day that the present war will prepare the way for '?ht- British peoples to control the world." WITC that the issue, then, indt-ed, hud the cm!fled nations uf Britain and uf the world suffered in vain and wasted their life for nought. Prophecies In the old Testament are Interpreted Ut meau the reunion uf the United Stat?-? of America with the nations und .ountrit'H of the British Empire intu one gigantic wurld power, whose wurd would be law and whose turee wuuld beut down resistance. Tin- dream ls va in. But were that dream to come true it would be a wurld cuiamity mort' tragic than the war itself. There must be nu wurltl-mastershlp by any nation; not German, nur Russian, not Oriental, not American, and. please (Jod. not Britain. No nation is good enough to stereotype the national aspirations of humanity. No race is pure enoguh to make its life blood the motive power of ??ll the world. No people ure so near perfection that their culture is flt to dominate civilization. When any nation sets itself tu muid all peuples after its own Axed type the Greut I.ord Cod does as Ile has done many times in history: Ile smashes the pattern and bgeins again. World power hus wrought the downfall of many an empire. By that sin Germany today begins to totter to its fall. There wus a place of service; service to the minds of men. in delivering them from false philosophies as Kant and Hegel had already done; servite to the botlies of men. in making the mysteries of nature yield their secrets for human good; service to the roula of men, lu making truth more compelling than prophets ever told, more splendid than poets ever dreamed; servit:?- to all the nations of all the world, tn making the brotherhood of man in the neighborhood of races the supreme policy of statesmanship. That matchless place In history might have been Germany's hud she yielded to Christ's Wlll-to-Serve. Instead, sh? was beguiled by Antichrist's Wlll-to-Power. By world ambition Germany lost Paradise. How then can Britain hupe tu win by it? But Britain has learned the secret of the more excellent way. Again and again has Astjuith told lt. Not by might, not by power, not by brute force, nut by ambitions autocracies, not by selfish alliance, not by armed peace. That is not the new British note. All that jungle statecraft ls gone damned and oomed by its Inevitable collapse into Its own inescapable hell. And over uguinst all that diplomacy of deceit Asquith sets "the partnership uf the na tions" in willoh "a'pluoe shall be made and kept for the little peoples and the entailer kingdoms^-their free place in the sun." Partnership, not antagonism' Cooperation, not conflict: Law, not. force! justice, not power! Equality for all, because mastership for none! For that Britain ls ready to die. For that America ought to be flt to live. Nothing less ls worth while. Nothing else matters. PROMISES AND PERFORMANCE (Chicago Tribune.) One of the soundest warnings de livered by leaders of American thought ls that which Col. Roosevelt bas of late year frequently given us. The warning ls against Ul consider ed pledges In the form uf sweeping treaties of arbitration. Be careful, says Col. Roosevelt to our statesmen, not to promise mure than you are sure the nation stands reudy to per form. Tiiere ls statesmanly foresight and sound sense In this advice, though superficial and emotional optimists may deem, lt cynical. In times uf peace when no pressure exista lt Is easy to multiply treaties and promise arbitration of all mestlons. We say, "Why not dispose of ull possibilities of friction anti conflict by urrunglni: pacific adjustment In adance of trou ble?" The answer ls that unless the pro mises are founded on a wise consid erativa of all they involve and of whu: the nation would in fact do when even the most extreme implication mat?rial it?s we may be confronted by the al ternative of breaking u pledge or suf fering a vital injury. In Europ- thoughtful men are reading lessons In events to the same effect. The other day Maurice Mae terlinck, the Belgian philosopher idealist, declared that the exampie of bis country showed the Inefficiency of International law In war. "If lt hue not been for the treaty of London and The Hague treaty there ls nc doubt that wc would have been spared aggression. Thc neutral powers huvc not even lodged a protest against tue violation. Resolutions by peace con gresses are mere scraps o fpaper." The principle underlying these con clusion applies also to the excessive pacifism which has been given expres sion within recent years. Mr. G. H. Fowell, writing from landon In the liibbert Journal on pacifism, makes the fol lt) wing significant remarks: "It has been suggested in certain quarters that 'after the war,' ut a period, that ls, perhaps distant enough for impartial contemplation, our poli tics w!F have to be 'inore Utopista than ever.' We must not have our belief In humanity 'staggered' by any amotin*. of individual atrocities nor our tempers permanently embittered even by years of strife. We must look ubove and beyond the hope for bet ter tilings, though the eagles, red In beak and claw with rapine, shriek uguinst our creed. "But there 1B a sense in which this counsel may appear somewhat alarm ing. For the last ten years our coun try may be said to have been indulg ing in an orgy of idealism. Of the ethereal pabulum upon which ull liv ing nations must feed in their measure Great Britain may be said to have had a surfeit. "Clearly, If our general apd Inter national attitude had been less Uto piste, if our most prominent official spokesmen and jo;t. nulists had shown a little less pious horror of war ot violence ami a Ilde more candor in asserting English rights and duties, there might ne*or have grown up in the mind of an ambitious and unscrup ulous enemy the Impression, clearly traceable in the state papers, that we a sa nation should remain neutral under almost any conceivable circum stances. "In any case and at any time those who lay down the principle or me chanically reiterate the maxim that 'we must not fight' are likely thereby to involve themselves in the reality they dread." Of the "ethereal pabulum" of Uto pian pacifism we In America are hav ing a surfeit, and it is highly desiror ble that an antidote be administered before we pay a disastrous price for our self-deceit or our unconscious deception of others. ? ABOUT THE STATE. ? ? ? +++*+*+ *+?**++**++* * ? + ('nt Worms Busy. Cut worms appear to be worki.'.g great damage to corn crops, according to a number of farmers who have been asked about the matter. In some sec tions it ls Bald that the work of cut w;.rms has been so complete that whole fields will have to he replanted .Yorkvllle Enquirer. Spartaubnrg J it ne j. The first genuine Jitney to be oper ated on the streets of Spartanburg made tts appearance Tuesday with all the 'flaring signs and bustling hustle of the regular jitney. B. R. Brown, the owner of the little new-comer In to the field of Spartanburg transpor tation, said that the receipts for the first day of the Jitney's operation were more than satisfying and.that if they would continue to hold out as well, he would put about four other cars into the field. He anticipates no friction with the other tractlctia companies operating In the city, such as has been the case tn other cities where the Jit neys have come to be operated exten sively.-Spartanburg Herald. Ead of Roundhouse. The work of tearing down the old roundhouse of the A. C. L. shops has been started and In the next few days there will b? nothing left but a va* cant lot. This was the first round house erected by ?he Coast Line in Florence when they built their shops here 40 years ago and has been a faith ful building, sheltering many ? work man and locomoUve and withstanding many hardship?. The best part of the material from lt will be used In build* lng a wall around the tinder shed on the same lot ot ground.--Florence TIM***. _ ? ? ? ODDS AND ENDS. ? ? * ?*?+*+*?*?*??++???+**? An excellent way to keep orna ments from marking a highly polished table or piano ls to paste soft blotting paper on the bottom. No matter how often they are moved, they will neith er mark nr scratch. . To repair enamelled ware, to re pair holes in enamalled pans mix equal parts ot putty, rottenstone, salt and sifted coal ashes. Make Intu a solid naas and pack the holes with it. Level off with a knife Inside and out. Put a little water In the \eewl, and leave lt on the stove till the cement hardens. Mugis polishing cloth.-Dissolve hair a cupful of shredded white soap In a cup of hot water. When lt ts cold stir In three large tablespoon ful.) of powdered whitening: and a few drops of ammonia. Boa: lt Into ? smooth Jelly. Have ready some suit able pieces of old. soft flannel or ta ble linea. Put these lu the Jelly and allow them to absorb as much of lt as possible. Squeexe them slightly and let them dry. A quick, rub with one of these clobs will remove all tarnish from sliver and will give a brilliant polish. Stains on tba hands can be easily re moed by using salt and lemon Juice. Put a little heap of salt in a saucer and sqneese sufficient lemon Juice Into lt to moleton lt. Rub thia on the sula until lt disappears, thea rinse the h^ods In clean warm water. To clean, rusty c?rtala hoops place them In a bowl and cover with cloudy ammonia. Leave for half an hour and then Just ,sUr thees roana with a stick. ?Thc hooks will look Ilka new. "If every man who manufactures any article would make the very best he can in the very best way at the very lowest possible price, the world would be kept out of war, would not have to search for outside markets.!'-Henry Ford. This principle is carried out by some clothing manufacturers; see our $15 suits. You can pay more, but you can't get more in value for $15. Suits $10 to $25. Palm Beach Suits $7 to $10. Oxfords $3.50 to $6. Straw Hats $1.50 to $4. Felt Hats $1 to $5. Underwear 50c to $2 suit. .Tit Stan, muk m QntmtUm? ? + ? WIT AND HUMOR. ? ? + Genuine Innocence. A youthful Ohio man who married a widow and went to Chicago for his honeymoon complained to the hotel management that his pockets had been ri.: -i of all the money he had the very tlrst night. Did you ever think there was such innocence as that in Ohio?-Houston Post. Wet Towns. A colored 'pusson" was in Bram lett & Tarr's grocery Saturday feel ing fine and in a very talkative mood. He was lecturing on the moral, so cial, and economic value of a "wet" town. The gist of his lecture, how ever, may be summed up in one of lila sentences: "If a pusson comes to town and there ain't nothing to stimulate him oe had mought as Well go right on back to the country and stay there." -Pris (Ky.) Democrat. Work for the H'p'nMlst. The hypnotist had conquered the most stubborn of his subjects by the power of his will and eye. "John," meekly remsrked his wife, "would you mind trying your powers on the baby?" I can't get him to sleep."-Philadelphia Ledger. Trying the Corpse. Juries ni our courts often act like they thought the dead man was on trial instead of the man who did the shooting.-Waxahachie. (Texas) Light. Fine Idea. A home for inebriates la to be es tablished at Schlckellemy Bluff. Penn. Putting the "hie" in Schlckellemy. Toledo Blade. The Neighbors* tat. .Some day we are going to go timid ly over to the neighbors', the ynes that own our cat, and Bee if we can't make un arrangement with them to feed her in case we should ever be called out of town.-Ohio State Jour nal. Ideal Retreat. Where, asks Amos Pinchot, shall the Progressive go? Well, have they tried Palestine? It is neutral, and has a navigable salt river.-Cleve land Plain Dealer. Tuneful Infant. Speaking of precocious Kn ta s chil dren, Ike Ollberg says, that his young est son, who Is now three months of age, sings selections from "Carmen" beautifully keeping perfect time. At present the boy's voice ls a high soprano, but Ike believes that later on it will develop Into a powerful bar itone.-Todeka Capital. , Beaut Ifni Words. There ls an argument on concern ing the ten most beautiful words 'in the English language. That ought to be easy to settle-money, kale, dough, lucre, roasuma, rhino, scads, tin, rocks, and spondulix.-Kansas City Journal. The Improving World. A Chicago University professor says the cockroaches of 100,000 years go were four feet long. 'And yet there are disagreeable persona who will argue that the world la not growing better.-Toledo Blade. The $20,000 Ca?. A calf wa? sold at Chi? ".go Inst Frl eay for 120.000. Let us hasten to add that it waa not purchased by an ulti mate consumer.-Toledo Blade. All fer Spite. "Spent fortune keeping spite wall In place." reeds a headline. Another case of millions for de fence.-Phil adelphia Inquirer. Cvery One fer TfJaaeeti. . Everybody mnat wait for bia own street ear. That's one of th? few things a person cannot ask a friend to do tor bim.-Toledo Blade. PRESS CC A Voice From Columbia. (Detroit Free Press.) lt would be illuminating to learn how far Dr. Santiago Perez Ariana, delegate from Colombia to the Pan American financial congress, repre sented home sentiment and particu larly official home sentiment In the speech for America solidarity against European aggression, which he made before his fellow delegates in Wash ington. It might be even more il luminating to discover just how far he interpreted general ouht Ameri can sentiment. Dr. Trian o.'* speech was both a warning and an appeal. "We in America should be prepared to make our inviolability stronger every day," asserted the Colombian delegate. "There may be distrust even in lov ing families. There may be. dark corners in the past history of thia continent, but ?let us see that in the fu ture Our harmony ls diaphanous, transparent and clear. Let the dead past bury its dead. Let the nations here represented in solemn and for mal fashion make lt manifest that none of them covets the territory or any other and that the homes a:id territory of each shall be sacred." This has directly very little to do with financing and commerce. It re flects rather the ^plrit one might ex pect to find at a conference for In quiring into means of mutual defense. It Is a eg"tottegh It is a "get together" utterance born of a very distinct fear, a plea that the nations of the western hemisphere stand shoulder to shoulder and for get their differences before an out side menace. In the suggestion that the deed past bury its dead, lt ls Im possible not to find a hint that Co lombia, for the common good, may be ready to forget Its difficulties with the United States over Panama. In the whole expression of senti ment one Inevitably finds a strong suggestion that South America is re vising ita Ideas concerning the pres ent day availability and desirability of the Monroe doctrine as a rallying point for the two Americans. The whole tread of the utterances by Senor Tr ?ana. representing a na tion st odds with the United States, Is significant, but just how'significant depends of course, on how far it ls officially Inspired. * FUNNYGRAPHS ? ? ? The administration will kindly make a note of the Nebraskan case. Philadelphia North American. The New York doctor who called his wife a cockroach is defendant in a divorce suit. We think th.i man ls a fool, but we can not help admiring his wonderful courage.-Houston Post. Tampa, Fla,, has Just shipped 3, 000,000 stogies to the Northern States. Thus hss the lost cause been avenged. -Buffalo News." On the rare occasions whoa a foreign nation doesn't explain that it's the Lord's inexorable ' will when she declares war on the most convenient enemy, abe hastily mumbles some thing about the fulfillment of her highest national Ideals before begin ning ito throw bricks.-Ohio State Journal. ?? Our bankor frienda' tell us they al ready belong to the security league. Chattanooga Times. Armenia's principal occupation seems to consist in getting massacred et regaler Intervals.-Washington Post, Lord Kitchener Is In a poSltioA to understand how Walter Johnson feels when a man tn the IS-cent bleachers yells. "Take him out!"-?Boaton Tran script. UNIMENT Naval Louses in the Straits. (Brooklyn Eagle.) The successful torpedo attack on the BritlBh battleship Triumph, oper ating lu the Gulf of Raros lu support of allied troops, again emphasizes the serious nature of the task facing the allied forces at the Dardanelles. Al repdy the British navy has lost more ..attie.' /lips in this operation tbau have been sacrificed in all other naval operations put together. The Ocean and the Irrestible were sunk by shell fire cud torpedoes sent from shore tub<*3 in the much-criticised sea at tack upon the Dardanelles on March 18; the Goliath waa sunk by a tor pedo from a Turkish destroyer while operating In conjunction with the allies forces, and the Triumph was the victim of a Turkish submarine. A floating mine accounted for the French battleship Bouvet. It is evi dent that thus far the Turkish de fensive on land and sea has proved Itself superior to the offensive strength developed by the allies. Will this discrepancy continue? The news from Gallipoli Ir.ilcates that within the past week both armies have been strongly reinforced, the allies bring their strength up to 90,000 men, while the Turks have added some of the forces which were operating against the Russians in the Caucasus. This Indicates a forthcom ing clash of decisive importance. The allies can not permit the Gal lipoli operatlones to drag. While the Turkish forts are still in action the invaders' hold on the' peninsula is pre carious. French and ,British troops are operating far from their bases and are dependent upon sea com munications. A serious defeat on either flank might threaten the en tire landing army with capture or an nihilation. A severe storm might In terfere with communications or at least prevent the wavshlps from ren dering effective assistance to tho land, forces. A speedy advance effected' with whatever Sacrifice In men may be required, ought to commend Itself to the allied commanders. As for the Turks, they are ones more protnhg to the world their abil-' Ry to fight. If they would prove as tractable to Instruction-in the - gen tler arta of civilization ss they are apt pupils In the arts of modern war the world might become reconciled to their Continued existence as a nation. ? ?_ 4> ? PALMETTO SQUIBS. ? Cutting the -Tille" Oat of YorkvlUe.? The Enquirer is disappointed at the result of the recent municipal elec tion; but tt ls not surprised, and neither ls it at all sore. It thinks that lt thoroughly understands the situa tion, and knowing' full well bow peo ple are apt to get right after being driven 'to extremes, hopes ttUt things will , finally settle down to a ration baals.-Yorkvlile Enquirer. What the Dlffereure Is. The first nations that went to war claimed to be fighting for what they had, but Italy admits starting ia to fight for what Austria has.-Green ville Piedmont. The growing crops of small grain In York county are In fair condition, according to reports received by The Herald. There ls s considerable acre age in wheat and a large acreage lu oats, with the promise that both crops will fully compensate the farmers for their efforts to diversify. Another thing which now has to bs recorded oo the farms la York county ia al falfa. Aa a cltlxen recently express ed lt, "The county ls fall of alfalfa." There ought to be prosperity In the country, next fall, and thereater In creasing prosperity or years to come, lt our farmers continue along the linea which they havs undertaken dur ing the past two or three years. Rock Hill Herald.