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Glenn Plumbing Co. "The Plumb Good Plumbers" Anderson's Oldest and Mott Re liable Plumber FRANK GLENN Is Noie In Business For Himself And prepared to do any and all kinds of plumbing at the best prices to be obtained Phones 922 and 508 123 Rose Hill ,TT~ . Bye and Bye Leads to the bouse ol oerer. Begin now, save s part of your esrnlngs Continuous Savings . will soon count up when deposited in 'hs Savings Department of The Batik of Anderson The strongest bank in the county. YOU CAN CHOOSE tho root! best sdtted to your requirements and we will cut lt exactly as you request it. It you don't have time to select per sonally THE MEATS for your table you should send your orders to us. We give every order careful atten tion and will send you only choice cats ot tho best meats. Try our market The Lily White Market J. H. LINDSAY, Proprietor. Phone ?PL Decide the Question next time you suspect yourself of wondering if it would pay to buy a GAS RANGE tackle the coal range all 'day one of these Hot Days and cook for your wi* ?. That will decide the question for you quickly Anderson Gas Co. Phone 844 CHEAP INSURANCE. You can hay a bottle of Dr. Hilton's Life For The Liver and Kidneys No. 2, sad cleanse your system from all impurities of your body, and save lots ot sickness and lost time. Price 26 and SO cents. For sale hy all druggists. Drlstrlbirted by Murray Drag Ca, Columbia. 8. C. thone 87. Lander A lillimur. Tho I .ander Alumnae will meet on Friday afternoon at half past four willi Mrs. I*. I). Anderson on Cullioun street. Senior Pliltathi'a. The Senior Phllathoa ?lass of the First Baptist church will meet this afternoon at five o'clock with Miss Nan Forney, on N. Kant street. Tea This Afternoon. The ladies of the Robert E. Lee Chapter U. I'. C. will entertain this nfternoon at live o'clock In honor of thc old ladles of thc Confederacy, at the home o? Mrs. J. Q. Willile on N. Malu Btroet, Primary rhiliilhea. Thc Primary Phllatheu class will meet tomorrow afternoon at half past four with Miss Ruby ("lurk on Trib ble street. Mrs. George Speer has gone to] Granltovlllo to spend a month with reintives.' Dcrroll Darby and William Bell of Walhalla arc the guests of Mrs. Frederick B. Maxwtll. Mrs. Annie Beaty. MrB. James Mc Kelny and Master James Jr., of Mc Cormick are visiting Mra. Earl Lewis. Miss Helen Norris of Greenville. Mr. Billy McGuire of llendersonvllle. N, C., and Mr. Henry Hill or High lands. N. C., arc the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Willett Sloan. Jnpanoso Tea. MIHS Kathleen Norryce will enter tain her are class on Friday after noon at fivo o'clock, nt a Japanese Tea, in honor of Mi::s Mary Lyon and Miss Cluudia Osborne two members of the class. _ MISB Lillie Brown is nt home from Chester where she has been teaching during the winter. Delightful Rance, Miss Lydia McCully entertained a] few friends last night at delightful little Informal dance al her home In N. Anderson. Dainty ices wore serv ed between the dancing. Thc invit ed guests wore Misses Elanor Frank, Caroline and Sara McCall, Anno Gambrlll. Evolyn Browne, Elizabeth Rollinson, May Ligon, Mary Starke Watkins, Alberta Farmer. Helen Har ris, Harold Sullivan, Robert Cooper, Ralph Smith, John Townsend, Paul Borwno, Albert Bceland. Dan Lcdbet tor, Arthur Barton, Sam Jones, Hale Bewley Robert Burris, Rob. Findley, I Edward Valentino and Mrs. Ed. At klnson. Mr. and Mrs. Bond Anderson and Bond, Jr., returned last nbjht from a short visit to Washington, D. C. Misses Jennie and Lal Cunningham and Laura Horton went to Wiliiam ston last night to attend a reception given "?y tho Misses Griffin. Mrs. Julian Cllnkscales returned yesterday from a visit to Greenville. For the Younger Set, Thc members or the younger social set were charmingly entertained on Tuesday evening by Miss Marcile ) Guest and Miss Carol Cox at the beautiful homo of tho latter on N. Mo linillo Street. About fifty young peo ple were present and thc timo was delightfully spent on the broad cool piazza's A dainty sweet course was j served and ended a most enjoyable occasion. Dance at Rose Hill. The/e wllv be an informal dance nt Rose Hill club Friday. June Uh 9 to 12 p. m. Cooper's orchestra will furnish mus ic for the occasion. All members are Invited. Something NEW Arbuckle'* Breakfast Coffee Vt 1 ?nd 3 lb Package?. 1 lb Package.35c! 3 lb Package.$1.001 Tats Coffee has the delicate frag* rant, rich brown cap quality which I Is demanded at the breaafst table. It] ls a fancy, sweet coffee, especially chosen for Its milder aad atore agree* able flavor. Try a package with year next order. We are handling the choicest fresh vegetables that the markets afford aad will appreciate your orders* J. M. McCOWN Phone ti. 1H tu tfhltacr SU ~TTO T I C E Pure seed Nancy Hall sweet potato plants in any quantity at S 1.75 per 1,000. We guarantee our plants to be pure seed plants | and to give entire satisfaction. Phone Us Your Reservation. Very truly, C.F.POWER&SON 117 201 McDufne St. I DESIRE TO BE CALLED "GAY" "Lightly Amusing" Persons Are Gen erally Tiresome, If They Are Not Actual Borea, Some of us aro always amused at thc different ways In which peoplo try to be clever or pretend to ho nay and lively. Some show lt by spending a vast amount of money on dinners and being rude to the waiters. Others chatter nil the time, and imagino that if they show their front teeth stead ily for Bevernl hours somebody will call them brilliant conversationalists. Soma Uko to make a great noise and carry on a perpetual fire of ban ter, of which "You're another" is a vivid specimen of thc repartee. Oth ers on the other hand. Imagine that if they are daringly d?collette and make goo-goo "cyeB" at everybody pos terity will rango them among the great fascinators of their generation. Not a few find a fund of hilarity in placing a cushion over the door and a piece of soap in the bed, while others hopo that if they talk long enough and loud enough thoy may eventually ut ter a mot and claim the fame of being a wit forever and ever afterward. AB a matter of fact, however, a brilliant light conversationalist ls one of the rarest things in tho whole world. Such a ono ls born, though time and expe rience may elaborate the gift. I/Ots of peoplo talk-tall: an awful lot-but very few are worth listening to. Above everything else In gayety there must be no sense of "strain." Hettor bo silent than force your hu morous "noto." A witty conversation iles not so much In what is said as the whimsical way a person says it. That ls why so many books of humor Invariably get "all-edged" mentally* Inserted by the reader between brack ets. Thnt, too, ls why so many people who amuso you onco drive you frantic with boredom the second time. It 1B so difficult to be lightly amusing, and amusingly light, without being mere ly frivolous and "giggly."-Cincinnati Enquirer. NOT ALL ARE FOND OF MUSIC Some of the Lower Animals Have a Positive Distaste for lt, the Camel Particularly. "If you want to make a camel run play some music within his hearing," was a dictum laid down at the Royal Asiatic society in London by Prof. > ..a yat Khan. He WAB lecturing on the subject of tbe effect of music upon animals. He told some singular sto -les of experiments which he and others had conducted over a number of years. In India houses are set apart for the musicians, and goats, buffaloes, sheep, chickens and other animals are kept in those houses In order that tbe musicians may test their sensitive ness to music. One cow, said the pro fessor, became particularly fond of music, and showed a decided prefer ence for one certain Indian 'nstru ment. It takes, however, a long timo to make a horse fond of music, and It prefers wind to stringed instruments. At the sound of the bagpipe the cows began to jump and dance, but whether this was to be regarded as a sign of approval or disapproval the professor did not say. Birds began to danco when a guitar waa played before them, and this evidently waa intended to sig nify approval, because on one occasion when the music ceased one of the birds went up to the player and tapped his cheek with Its beak, signifying tbet lt wsnted more music. When Virtue Becomes Instinct. No good custom ls worth much till lt hos becor.:e incorporated. It la pleasing as an Ideal. It ia inspiring as an occasional effort in our lives. But lt actually counts when lt be comes a habit In our lives. Beginners in the art of running an automobile are likely to bo Impatient with the rulea of the road. Why cross only on the right side of the center of a square, if there ara no other vehicles in the square? Why always take the right side of a curve, if the left side ls shorter sud no other automobiles are In sight? The answer ls that to follow strictly and invariably the law of the road Implants that law in our very natures, makes lt a habit, so that when the emergency avises and we have no time to think we shall never theless do the right thing and thus avoid a disaster. It ls precisely the esme In the mora*, and spiritual realms. No occasional virtue ls of much value. Virtue ls chiefly useful when lt has become an instinct. Power of Lightning. Lightning has been proved to have struck a building with a force equal to more than 12,000 horse-power. ' A sin gle horse-power, In mechanical calcu lation, ts equivalent to raising a weight of 33,000 pounds one foot la a minute. The force of lightning, there fore, has been proved to he equal to the raising of 396,000,000 pounds one foot In a minute. This Is equal to the united power of twelve of our largest steamers, having collectively twenty four engines of 600-horsepower each. The velocity of electricity ls so great that lt would travel round the world eight times In a second. Insects In Planta. Place plant In empty tin hucket? then crumple up a small pleee ot newspaper, lay on same one-eighth ot a clgsr, split with knife; light paper with matea, cover nail over tightly and leave for halt hour. It plant ls very large ase wash boiler with one-half clgsr svlit. ********************** ? * ? HTA MUNG OF THE CUBS. ? ? * ??*?????????+??*+++??? Mouth Atlantic. Won. Lout. l'C Charleston. 27 18 600 Albany. 25 18 681 Columbus. 2:1 23 r>oo Savannah. 21 2' 477 Jacksonville .... 21 2* 467 Macon . 18 1? 409 Columbia. 18 27 400 Augusta. 16 29 341 Southern Won. I.ost. P. C. Now Orleans .... 30 18 625 Birmingham .. .. 25 18 581 Memphis. 25 21 543 Nashville. 2?> 22 642 Chattanooga .... 23 22 511 Atlanta. 21 25 457 Mobile. 18 28 391 Little Hock .... 16 28 364 Ameriran. m Won. I^ist. P. C. Chicngo. 27 15 643 Detroit. 26 17 605 Boston. 19 16 559 Now York. 19 17 528 Washington .... 16 18 471 Cleveland. 17 21 447 St. Ix>hlt. 17 23 425 Philadelphia .... 13 27 325 National. Won. IxJBt. P. C. Chicago. 23 16 69? Boston. 19 16 643 Brooklyn. 20 18 526 Philadelphia .... 20 18 526 St. LOUIH. 20 20 600 Pittsburgh . 18 20 474 Cincinnati. 15 20 429 New York. 14 20 412 Federal. ? Won. Ixist. P. C. Newark. 22 15 595 Kansas City .. .. 23 17 576 Pittsburgh. 23 17 575 Chicago. 23 18 561 St. Louis. 18 17 514 Brooklyn. 18 19 48? Baltimore. IC 25 375 Buffalo. 12 27 308 ??++**+?*++++++++*+++? * * * YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. + * + *?*??++++*++++++??*++? + + Ameriran League. At New York 1; Boston 7. At Chicago 1; Detroit 4. At Cleveland 0; St. IK>UIB 4; six in nings, rain. At Philadelphia-Washington; post poned, rain. Federal League. At Kansas City 4; Pittsburgh 0. At Chicago 1; St. I.ouls 2. At Newark 3; Baltimore 2; twelve innings. At Buffalo-Brooklyn; postponed, rain. National League. At Brooklyn 7; Philadelphia 2. At Brooklyn 4; Philadelphia 3. At St. Louis 5: Cincinnati 4. At Boston 5; New York 6; ton In nings, darkness. At Pittsburgh-Chicago; postponed, Sooth Atlantic League. At Albany 0; Macon 2. At Augusta 3; Charleston 4. At Columbia 8; Savannah 1. At Columbus 1; Jacksonville 2. Sonthern League. At Nashville 12; Atlanta 2. At Little Rock 4; Birmingham 3. At Chattanooga 3; New Orleans 2. At Chattanooga 3; New Orleans 1. Mobile-Memphis; not scheduled. C1TR0LAX CrTROLAX! CITROLAX! Dcst thing for constipation, sour stomach, lazy liver and sluggish bowels. Stops a sick headacbe al most at once. Gives a most thorough and satisfactory flushing-no pain, no nausea. Keeps your system cleansed, sweet and wholesome,-R. W. Welchecht, Salt Lake City, Utah, writes: "I And Cltrolax the best lax ative I ever used. Does not gripe no unpleasant after-effects." Evans Pharmacy. They tell a story of a man in a great city who forgot his own name. He put an ad. in the paper. Within a few hours he was quizzed by so many cu rious people that he put an ad. in a later edition stating that he wanned to stay lost. Our classified ads. do everything - lind the lost, buy and sell, bar gain and exchange, em ploy and secure em ployment. Use them. - " i FOLEY KIDNEY Pilli? >aa BACttacHfe KioHtva ANO SLAUUEW Read the eighth installment of "The Black Box" in todays paper made .hat preparations have been THE NEBRASKAN INCIDENT T^ ?* ? ? ? -?-? ??. In the coming operations against the ' Germans. (New York Times.) filled with possibilities of misunder- At ,hn oponinR of thc war lhe enecta Several things could have happened standing. If lt should bo established. 3f oxpi0,i,I1E turpinlto were familiar to thc Nebraskan ano all of them as WE C~" DOT BCH?VC J" B? THC ^B6' to thc experimenters working with It io inc .-scDrasnan. ano an 01 inem, that German submarine knowingly ." tIln ...Lratnrv If rould nnlv he strange to say. arc improbable. There dpiivercd a tomedo acainst an 'morl- V i ? , i .u . ... . mieht have been an exnlosion on ^eiiTerea a lorpcao against an ..mon Tpion>d by vibration and that that migni nave _occn an explosion uu c , fihl then lne jnc|??.Rt V;ould oe- ' "P4tripfi nn "af,, ,V(,V nf board, but that is arbitrary conjee- I , ,h fi , maenltude su- "m ., bCtmcfI no, sar? way or ture ?rainorted bv anv suggestion in come.one 01 inc nrst magnituac. su r?rlnp lt from a guni for tne rea80:i lure, ui^iporieo ny any Buxgeauoii w persedlng in a legal or technical fhnt tho vibration raeseri hv the dls the evidence. She might have collld- I pvp_ Binklnir of thp ijllBitan- V. vibration causea Dy mc ais r? with a submarine a euesa which ? f.even tne smiting or inc mustian- ?narge of the projectile was likely to cn wun a suomarine, a guess wnicii, la it would amount to an act of war, .y..,"Hn hnforo lt hurt ?nt clpar or although lt has no official standing. elther to ^ BO regardcd or to bo rc- U bofor? H had g0t Clear ?f would perhaps best account for tho pudlated by Germany Immediately In wg. . a new fleldnlece invented In fact that there was fiiBt a shock and nb)ep? telina If it waa a drlftlne Wlt,\ a ncw riomm,ccej ?nvenicn in then an exnlosion .She mtitht have aD,JC 1 .? \ " 11 , as a n,i g Drcember it is possible to fire shells men an explosion, .ane migiu nave mJno that WOuld mako a very differ- r.nar"p,i .vlth ?"rnlntio without dancer struck a mine, but owing to tho water's k|nd . inpdlent whether an ex- Lnar,PV . turD'nUo witioui uanger denth tt could not have been an an- . T. "fT, wncmcr an ex- t thc fir?ng party. and it ls report depm lt couia not nave neon an an amination of the Nebraskan's wounds "H }h" irrpn,.h and Rrltlsh ar cliorcd mine, and live floating mines ... b conclusively how thev were . , the French and Britton ar ad Hf* on the hlirh sea outside the war ii? . ? conclusively now mcy were Bena|8 ,,avc bocn buHy day and n|gbt anritt on inc nign sea, outsiae tue war inflicted remains to bo seen. As be- f,,_n m,,kinir tnp Bhe?is and the zone, have not yet been Included In the t ccn n CXDi08ion inboard and an ,ne ,,m ?R '.atalneue nf horrors Pinallv she lwtfn an t*?,i081"" ???oara aim nu unR ior firing them, catalogue 01 norrors. rinauy, ant explosion from without, physical cvi- . * Wi.pn ">?",i nv.niniin? th,. CURR..* might have been struck by a torpedo dpnco ou_h, to determine- but as to' wll01nwtho 8he" explodes the gassis frot.i a Herman submarine Thc Brit-I w g oetcrmine, DUI as io fauscd by lbe explosion spread over trota a uerman suomarine. inc whether an explosion from without .... -rniind in " rlrcle havinc a dla sh admiralty said at once that that ? "__.,"__,, bv rontBrt with a mine or . Kro"nu. m a.""rclc ?? a a was what had taken Dlace The Lon- ' aro(lucwIwDy contact wun a minc or motor of about 100 yards. The gases was wnai naa laacn piace. ine uon b a8Sault of a torpedo, perhaps noth- nrnitUf." naralvsis of somo or the vital don newspapers took it for granted. , at a" could bc ovod b the na. produce ffTW?* ^th . the l?SSt The captain was not sure. It was turn or the damaee organs or me Doay. ?un me resuu either a mine or a tcroedo he waB *uro?r Jno damage. I that ottor llv,ng thlns WUhln this euner a mine or a icrpeuo. ne wa? At all events, that Germany should ,.?rrift lK willeri Instantly and nalnless partlcular to say. That meanB, or!rnmmU an act war aeain"t tho ^,RCLE 1K KHICU msianny ana painiess ?niirRn that no Herm?n anhmarlne waa ?? A J J. . . aEa,n8} "JO ly and BO far a8 ,a now known there course, that no uerman suomarine was Unitcd states ntentlonally, or fail to ,'' nn ,ipfpnpp a^Binat nor antidote seen by the captain or the crew. There i renudiat<, Buch an act If commltteri In I ? uetense against nor anuaoie I? ?orne clrcnmatantlal evidence A'S.. ~T " .1 commiuca in for lhp action of those gases. If the IB some circumstantial cvuicnce. A a flt 0f madness on tho part of a sub- flll.ninifP Hoes all that IR claimed for It German submarine was sighted a few maPinp commander ls altncnther tm- ^urDlnuc ao** a'' inal 18 ciaimea ior it, hniir., heforo in that neighborhood J 8. o0TT61106^ 18 aitogeiiicr im- trenches will furnish practically no hours nerore in tnat neignDornoou probable. Therefore, in a kind o? in- ,icfpnHfi acainst it The eases from a But if circumstances- supported the ' tinctivo wav iudement haa been sus- <,CIeP00 aca,n81 1 ne gases ?rom a tornedo theorv much more clearly I .^ T way, juagmcni na? oecn sus- BhoU exploding within 50 yards of the lorpeao moory mucn more cieariy pcn'jed. Public opinion, usually so trench will simnlv settle Into the than they do we Bhould yet Inclino to ,n th|_ country haa been in .troncn WV' "!'".?'* Beiu? think that wa? not what hnnnened or 1. . P country, nas oeen in ,iench and bm the men sheltered .In think that was not what nappeneo. or the last few months wonderfully dis-*Shranncl-Droof and bomb-Droof that there were Important mitigating tln*ulshcd for restraint ? .Pi J P . ..... "omD proor circumstances. The ground of such Mn*ulB?od tor "???nt. covers wi? be of little use, for the an opinion is the utter absence of ra- - SO808 ,n tne>r aeadly work will find tional purpose In a German submarine >Cw Esnloslre Kills bv Asohjxlatlon \ Z&y tn'""UBh the smallest open IPi-nchlng a torpedo agalnct an Amer- >CW fc,?,,0f,,w Kms ^ Aspnyxiation. ing.-JFrom the June number of Pon ican ship, flying the flag of the United Tho rumor In circulation slnoe the u,ar Mechanics Magazine. States, outside the war zone, coming beginning of the war to thc effect --- from England n ballast. Only a few that the French were in possession Restored to flood Health* minutes before the catastrophe the of a secret explosivo capable of de Ncbraskan, according to the testimony stroylng life bn a scale not hereto- "I waa pick for four years - with of the captain!! lowered her flag. It ofre dreamed of, by tho production of stomach trouble," writes Mrs. Otto was coming dark. The commander of deadly asphyxiating gases, has been Gans, Zanesvllle, Ohio. "I lost weight a submarine seeing the flag down. ! confirmed by the French military au- and felt so weak that I almost gave might have acted on the assumption j thoritles. This explosive is called up hopo of being cured. A friend told that she waa a British vessel that1 turplnite, and is the discovery of M. me about Chamberlain's Tableta, and had been flying the American flag Eugene Turpin, tho inventor of me- since using two bottles of thom I have through the war cone. I Unite. It has already been used in a been a well woman." Obtainable' It ls a very complicated matter, limited way and the statement ls now everywhere. Holland Liner in Collision off Nantucket. The Holland-America liofsr, ttyn dam, carrying 78 passengers and a crew ot 200 was In colltsskm with the Norwegian freighter, J. J. Cuneo; off Nsntucket light, Wednesday, May 26. Aner. wireless cali* several vessels I answered, among them battleships of i Ute Atlantic fleet which have been The Ryndam. conducting a war game for several days. For a time tt seemed the liner would sink, and her passengers and most ot the crew were transferred to the C moo. Later the battleship South <V"?Hna took them aboard, and the ..ynrinm, under her own steam, started hack to New, York. The Ryndam has s gross tonnage of 12,027 tons, ts ?6*2 feet long over all and han a 62-foot beam and a draught of 27 feet. She was built at Belfast in 1601. Tbe Cuneo flies the Norwegian flag and ls commanded by Capt. C. Aamodt. flhe has n gros? tonnage of 874. ls 201 feet long and has a 30 foot beam.