University of South Carolina Libraries
THE INTELLIGENCER ESTABLISHED I860. Published every morning except' Monday by The Anderson Intelligen cer At 140 West Whitaer Street, An derson, 8. C. SEMI-WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER Published Tuesdays end Fridays L. M. GLENN_Editor and Manager Entered aa aeeoad-claae matter April 28, 1614, at the post office af Anderson, South Carolina? under the Act of March 8, 1879. ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCHES Telephone.321 SUBSCRIPTION BATES DAILY ii One Year .86.00 Six Months .2.60 Three Mon tba. 1.26 One Monta).48 Ona Weak .10 SEMI-WEEKLY One Year .$1.6? Six Months . .76 The Intelligencer ls delivered by Barriers In the city. Look at the ?Irin ted label on your paner. The date thereon shows when t** . subscription expires. Notice date on label carefully, and If not correct please notify us at once. Subscribers desiring the address ot their paper changed, will please state tn their communication both the old and new addresses. To insure prompt delivery, com plainte of non-delivery in the city of Anderson should be made to the Circulation Department before 9 a. m. and. a copy will be sent at once. AU checks and drafts should ba! ?o to The Anderson Intelligencer. ;-4T ADVERTISING Rates will be furnished on appllca- j Uoa. No it advertising discontinued cs eept ttjrJnten order. Tba Intelligencer will publish brief' rational letters on subjects of g?n?ral Interest when they are ac companied by the names and ad dresses of the authors and are not ot a defamatory nature. Anonynous communications will not be noticed. Rejected manuscripts will not ba re turned. , In order to avoid delays on account of personal absence, letters to The Intelligencer Intended for publication should not ba addressed to any Indi vidual connected rrlth the paper, but cnaply to Tba intelligencer._ TUESDAY, JUNE 22, 1915. WEATHER FORECAST Fair in Interior; probably showers on coast Tuesday. Wednesday fair, | not mach change In temperature. H Art well baa a new bank. That's P. knock-out blow for hard times talk. ??? o ?? Blames War to 8un Spots.-Head lines. First time we ever heard the ? Kaiser called aun spots. u Judging from a photo of the man Who swore tba Lusitania waa armed, ba might swear to anything. Governor Manning baa pardoned a maa named Bragg. The latter caa brag that he deserved hts pardon. Bryan ls Not a Menace; Only 6j Preacher of Folly.-Atlanta Georgian'.' But mighty good folly, soma of lt. ta,. Bbootlog Follows Argument on Bl ^^S*ft?^Ieadilne. Arguments on the Bible never were profitable anyway. -o- I Atlanta has another citizen oft for the war front. Salting down "copy" ls in order with Atlanta newspapers. Frands Revealed la Oleomargarine. -Headline. Sometimes hairs ara re vealed In butter, sb what's tho differ ence? ?? ? "O ? ? No Fight Likely in Council on Lock er Clubs- Headline. What ara they doing with locker clubs la council chamber? -o Suppose-a Buff should run for of fice and the man at hame fall to sup port her.-Columbia Record. Thea she'd have one supporter lesa. The divorced wife ot the author of "Bought and. Paid For" ls suing the latter for $7.006 back alimony. "Paid In Full" would probably ba more to bar liking. ??mi . Qi ll I ? King of Italy Bata in Trenches at Front.-Heau?ne. Gallivanting around the treneb.es at the front seems to ba a fad with crowned heads these day?. Bat they ara mighty deep one*} though. Governor Slat on issue a 15,000 word explanation of why he commuted Fran Vs sentence. Wa once knew ? governor who explained *uc$t acts by rfS?aaHy shoaling, "Thrstt' tkat don't ike'it can't help U.'* A TWO .MILLION DOLLAR TUA UK BALANCE. , Sir George Paish, financial expert of tho landon Statist and adviser of the UrltlHh government, prophesied last Bummer that tho United Slate? would, as the war proceeded, ooconte the llnunclul center of the world. We have already attained that distinction. He prophesied then that our favor able trade balance for the year would reach a billion dollars, and that fore cast has been closely approximated. We are prepared, now, to listen rc ? Hpectfully when he announces that our excess of exports over imports Tor the next twelve months may reach V2.000, 000.000. Tho greatest favorable bal ance we ever had, before the present billion dollar year, waa $666,000,000 In 1908. A two-billion balance in our fa vor would be precisely three times that. Such a situation would mean that wo could usu two million dollars a year In buying up American securities now held abroad, and In lending money to foreign nations, without in the slight est degree impairing our own domes tic credit or money supply. With a billion-dollar wheat crop In prospect and other crops doing weil, with the Btcel Industry reviving and the prospect of geting altead to the extent of two billion dollars a year in our foreign buslnesa, tho few busi ness pessimists left might just as well stop croaking. A weightier man than Hr. Taft for secretary of state would be hard to find. BREAKING THE POSTAL RULES. The British people habitually as sume a reproachful air of Injured in nocence when we criticise them for anything. "How could you have the ?heart to do lt?" they seem to ask, re gardless of the' flagrancy of the of fense. Nevertheless, we are obliged again, gently but firmly, to call Eng land's attention to an Irritating breach of international law. If the Swedish minister at Washington knows what he ia talking about-and e'thcr a Swede or a minister general'/ does know-the British censors have been tampering with diplomatic correspond ence on ila way to Washington. That Is tn plain contravention of the rules of the Unlveraal Postal Union, ot which Great Britain ls a member. The regulation' establishing' the Inviolabil ity of diplomatic correspondence tn the malls is aa sacred aa waa the In ternational guarantee of the neutrality of Belgium. It la no more legitimate to violate one than to violate the other. It's bad enough to have private mall opened In Its passage through Eng land, but It's Infinitely worse to have official government communications read and Interfered with. Whether the grievances of which the Swedish minister complains are due to mere stupidity of the British censors, or to Intentional wrong-doing th? practice ls indefensible. Unable to Right Schooner.-Head line. No. that's a marine note, and not one from a beer Joint. THE ATTACK ON YON BEBNSTORFF The German ambassador at Wash ington has committed improprieties in the course, ot his American mission and has. been punished for them. It io evident from hts whole attitude since the LuMtanla affair that he has been trying scrupulously to llvo np to the. requirements ot ht? difficult position. It ls unfortunate, then, and grossly unfair, that the ambassador has been subjected ' > the humiliation ot the re cent Meyer-Gerhard charges. No trustworthy evidence has ever boen produced to substantiate the accusa tion that Mr. vo?> Bernstorft abused his authority and deceived the American government by smuggling back to Ger many under a special safe-conduct "Dr. Alfred Mayer ot ?he German war office." The aznbse*ador hais declared that he has no knowledge of any such person. Even lt he had. and even lt He wanted to procure a safe paasage home for such a compatriot, and oven If hq had been willing to deceive the state department to that ead. it is Incon ceivable that he would have santloned such a breach of dlolomatto regularity In connection with the delicate and widely-advertised peace mission ot br. Meyor-Gcrhard. The German ambas sador appears to be working sincerely and earnestly for peace, with mutual respect and honor, between Germany sad America. Any attack on him, Im pugning his good faith, tends to de feat his efforts and to hapern the re lations ot the two countries. Even if carping and suspicions critics lack re spect for the German ambassador, they should at least respect his office, and relax their hostility until they har o unquestionable occasion fot i*. Hard Liquor vs. (Chicago ' Nowhere hut in whiskey and gin ad does any good. The harm don?' incret l>rohahility facing hard liquor drinkers thing from the cemetery to the m.-.un it is contended, with a show of rea hibitionist, that tito use of fermented ti< rent in man. There may be somet? hlH nervoua system, in lils philosophy, existence which drive? him to pul gra get therefrom a liquid which exhillarat Experience shows that an men ha have done this, and, although a prohi lng, lt is maintained and can be main In operation. A somnolent, easy going race, bu compulsory inactivity, may avoid ail put their nerves to tests and expose t out for means of high lighting spots in The argument does not permit dogn reveals more than mere perversity ii drinking. A habit that so nearly appr a record of continuity through all hist u dominant error in life. Whatever argument may be made f< may be made-none can be made for s] which find that they b" .e a drink prt been caused by the cr )ding, mind d in the usc of distilled ! ,uor. Where e Uv? authority theie has been prohlb of spirits. Probably no section of the United Iiibit the sale of spirits and permit thc un experiment which would be a corni lat'tude for personal discretion and n fenslblc traffic. If a part of the country, If a part of this possible it would be au interestini try it in Chicago, but, to no one's ast less, there is bound to bc an effort nt c The prohibition of all except wlnei problem to its least offensive state. WI crate use of the least damaging kinds i the Issue would bo one of fact. If temi properly be left with the individual Jis< opportunities. . ABOUT Tl Chester's Beef Cattle. We don't understand how any com mittee could puss over Chester's claims when lt came to the location of tho various live stock markets throughout the state, an Chester not only produces a considerable number o stock, but this city's railroad facili ties have very few equals in the state. -Chester Reporter. Home on Wheels. Mr. A. C. Hurdoin, of tins place, hns Just completed and turned over to Clarendon county, a large movable prisoners' stockade. This cage ls 6 1-2 by 16 feet, mounted on wheels and ls painted grey and red. It is a hand some piece of work and shows the skill of our local mechanic.-Manning Herald. Colored Farmers. J. E. Quick, one of the largest col ored farmers in this section, who lives four miles south of Osborne, planted JsOO acres in cotton last year and used 800 pounds of fertilizer to the acre, has reduced his cotton acre age to 2.">0 and applied only COO pounds this year but will usn a hun dred pounds of soda later. Last year ho put 60 acres in corn. This year he has 00. H0 also sowed eight - bushels of wheat and forty nf nats ult of which are promising. There are ? number of colored farmers lu that neighborhood who own r?rmg anti do good farming aw^wMU mil mill)1 homo supplies, plat lng loso cotton. Pee Dee Advocate Traps Ito aler Cat. The pigs and ch: ;kenn ot the MAVS Bin a* section have 1 very nason to.ro Joii2e and celebrate for g.cnt ls their emancipation from a terrible enemy. Tor several month: past the fanners of that section bo o been missing members of their flock:*. Pigs have been going by the coro and realizing that the enemy wi s ooma variult ot prey and that he ived in tho wilds of the great Poo D e, a f?rmev of the community set abo t to capture him. A steel trap wan s t which wv. halt ed with a nice rat sen, and the next morning when the armer approached the trap he saw at once that ho had his prisoner. Bro' uer Wild Cat was ia the tolls hard aa fast, tho trap had clamped one of his tegs so tight that lt waa impossible f< r him to free him-' self. He bad bec ?rae exhausted In his efforts to get 1 ose and seeming ly bad quietly res rued to his fate. He was sitting up ? fer the trap when his captors approa bed and even tn thia hopeless condi ion he made one more attempt to de end his dear life, with a coarse snat he attempted to spring forward on c ie of the men, but a bullet was shot I trough bis head. The cat was brougl t to the city yes terday and exhibited on tho streets, lt was the biggest tl. t has ever been seen in this section ? f the country, lt's hide has been presi rved and will be stuffed and places! i a exhibition. It Is said that the das aga. done by thia cat to stock and oki kens in the Mars Bluff section will s munt to over a hundred dollars.-Bccbaage. Seme (teat Wheat. The best avfn go wheat prop hear of thu? far i aa reported to your correspondent by ?fa good friend. Mr. T. It. leatry, who ac cording to his ?tatt neut, mad? a lit tle o/er 25 bushels of wh*at to the acre. This most ll) ely will be above th? average tn thia county, for if memory serves rae correctly, the average in this St? is last year waa about 16 bushels \> r acre. When Commissioner Wafs{ iv made an ad dress here some UM' ?ago, and said that he thanked Clad for Use breaking oat of tho Europe**, war. your corre spondent at that ,t| a? vtth hun, but It it ti fc< people to raising fa i to tivi ot flour to the acre, which at present prices means $-io U $66 u and then haye tbaj tad tor a cora or, hay crop. l^-wlt**js***j**B*MH longer.-Summerton Cor. ot -Mar nia* Times. Winf?nd Beer rrihone.) H ?H lt HCl 1868 With is hard a: y hun. son whichj li<luorH m liing in th In Iiis dcs| in, vegetal ea. ve been bltionlst talned tli? mod by tl forniB nf hi'lr lives their exisf nat ism or i brewiiiK.t ouches ii ii i\ ory can nc jr wines ar plritH. Th? iblem on tl estroying. xeoutive wi Ition of tt State? ia sale of w ir promise, bi ot tolerate IllinoiK. w< g expcrimci enishment, ompromlse s and beer latnver maj jf drink woe leranoe wei crotlon to rtli that spirituous liquor uko made of it and the |ktbg, which means any )Uld not appeal to a pro meet some demand In konditlona of hi? life, in escape stark terms of or fruit into a vat and ^SBIVI- and vigorous they not allow the reason have cause and effect Iiot sun and reduced to Xlcant. but races which lordships seem to reach rt ?DH, but experience rmenting, distilling and snllty and presents such ascribed v wnrlght to trows-assume that some lake wreckage. Nations hands find that lt has ly sapping Intemperance pm is Joined with execu aanufacturlng and aale rganled that it can pro ina" beer and thUB make .iilrh might allow some existence of an Inde [so organized as to make An effort was made to thout result. Neverthe |ng this linc, lld reduce thc drinking urged in favor of mod then be upon trial and ie consequence lt might a wise use of life and IE STATE New The pollci Spartanbu: hall and jail henceforth chain gang new Btructi been Install ment, retail and the mal in thc old sj now a thin turo for the city goverm but will prol soon as lt ai will move ll tanburg Hei tollee Quarters. lepartuient of the city of ta now in thc new city Broad street, and will ye its headquarters, and rrack in this handsome The telephones have for the police depart tbelr former numbers, lip police headquarters ile on Spring street, ls the past. The rumi ner departments of the it has not yet arrived, ?ly get lu this week. As es, the city government HB now home.-Spar Bud Worfls In York (County.) Phillp Lugftbill, director of the Uni ted States laboratory tn Columbia, spent severaralayB In this county last week investigating the depredations of bud woram in various localities and adrlalngve farmers how"to com bat the rav?jfl?s of this pest. There has been aiwtausual 'outbreak of bud worms in thJpstate thlp year, and In some sectlonK'entire crops have-had to be replanted on account of the'r destructive work. The farmers hare appealed to tan government entomolo gist for help, and in answer to this appear. Mr. LuglnblU, who ls an ex pert of national reputation' in this branch of work, 1? touring the state for the purpose c* conferring with the" planters and directing them In their IliUl lUllia 111*1 aa abandonnsStt of the practice of early planting? the easiest solution ta the mWterSjadvising York far mp u to this effect last week. The worms hare not appltfred hi as great num bers In this county a smany places olsowhere, bat have already done much damage- In many localities. York (ville) r^ys. He Salas Cabbage. ? , iP?aL Mr. W*. Pc.? Wannamaker shipped, several cr?tes of cabbage from his farm near he*a to Montrent, N. C., Monday. Th?fc*? his first effort at shipping cabba?? from this point, and we hope he will" find it sufficiently re munerative for him to keep lt up. Con siderable truck''has been .frown in this county this-year, but this ls the first shipmentilftabbage sent away. Calhoun AdVa|m? ; li? (HMtlahosa. Several young men of Greenville, and one from the lower section of the ?tate left Monday morning for Okla homa, whore taw will be employed oh farms in the work of harvesting the wheat crop.^: These young men, mont of them o&t 0 fcol'iAge for ibo summer, had seco*ed Infor nation con cerning the work, and decided upon tho trip. They expect to stay In the West until September.-Greenville .C.: Bled ?ram Shock. ' :-' |Bfh\* resal! bXj&e shock caused by j the drowning of bia brother and sls $?IY Harry and firvellne Mima, ia a pottd near ??aluda" orr Tuesday, John WHin? died on OPJIday. Ula exertions la trying lo sara others, and the shock, reaaUe-d tat heart fallare. He W?s 31 years of age and lived ta Charleston, bufaras aisittag home When the accident' hapr?ned.~-New MStT Observer. A Seal Hog. A real live groundhog, raptured by i Mr. Horace Vicker in the Battle gi wno* section of tie county and ex ?ted in the cJt&JStaday, waa an hv hg curiosity for many people w H. The ajaimal. considerably than a rabbP and of a dar? brown coUrf. weighed proba bly four or five pounds. Tbl? was tb? first groundhog eise seen by malay pebble.r-^Oaft'?sy ?j$2i Don't be a Goat! When a great big ad you scej Of all-wool suits at eigty: thirty-three Don't be a goat Don't swallow it. j hor #15 you can get at B. O. Evans Sc Co. an all-wool suit that includes every d< Arable point you could wish in wear, quail/, pat tern and style. v Everything from light grays to blu serge, all cold water shrunk-and your money, back if anything goes wrong. Palm Beach, Mohair, Tropicloth a d Silk like Suits that defy old man Summe ; every particle of weight removed that it's ?ossible to eliminate without affecting the w ar. Summer Suits that suit the summjr $5 to $12.50. V v Everything for men's and boys' colifort. The Store with-a Conscience"! 1 I ???????????* 4 * I* THE SIDE TABLE ? ? ? (Charlotte Observer.) Claude Grahame-W?ilte and Harry Harper, In "Aircraft In the Great War." have made an entertaining contribution to the literature of the day. In giving a summary of the military value of aircraft, they sa? that so far gunfire has not been ef fective .against aeroplanes, and Messrs. Grahame-White and Harper pnt the case thus: "A high ?peed scout, traveling at 120 miles an hour, covers In each second a distance ol mor0 than 170 feet, while & projec tile from the ground, fired at such a craft when lt ls 6,000 feet high taken several seconds to roach this altitude. To aim directly at the ma chine, therefore,, ls hopeless. 'Phi gunner must point his weapon, ai the moment ot firing, at a polni some distance in advance of the aer \ opUme; and this precise point, un p6WFTBf^irranr tha speed o?, th a -orafij can be found only by trial and er *or." r > . ,. ' Sometimes aeroplanes are disabled '>y the enemy's fire; again enginet balk or other mishaps occur while aviators are over hostile territory; in either case it ia necessary to descend and lively; adventurer have come about in thia way. M. Pegoud, th? first aviator to "loon the loop" ii public tells a story of thia kind. He had to alight, through lask ol petrol, at a point behind the Qermat lines. He managed to concent hil aeroplane temporarily, then niovet cautiously towards a village and md nome French peasants. They we? cager to help him, but could promise hun. no petrol; the entire stock it the locality had been commandeered by the Germana, frat a little peaean boy said he believed some contd b< obtained at a garage,, a few mile! away, and set off resolutely in quea of it. "It was, said M. Peguod,' a dan gerous Journey for the little chap bat ha, walked out through th^si German camps with the courvge or i saint, and X felt like a coward foi letting.him gp. In the darkness! be fora dawn broke be came, toggling t ttve-litrd tin as big ?lm?sv as himself had set the precious liquid befor< me with a smile. Then ha bur rle? away, as he said, 'to keep a w?tei for Uhlans.' I had no sooner pourra th? petrol in the tank and .treggei my machine Into thu open that I ea* bin tearing frantically back. Hur ry Uhlans coming!" The fl?chette has proved an effec ti ve. weapon for the aviator, the au there say* With the aeroplane, th world's roost - modo rn instrument o war. has been adapted the use of ar rows-the weapon of antiquity. Th Idea comes from Prance, where thor baa been a quest for a weapon rrhtcl should augment the us? ut bomb and yet which would, tike bombi erooloy gravity to. tjla Its strlkln force. Exps/troanta were made first-thl was about two yura ago-with heavy metal arrow, or dare But oof & few of these could be carried, so smaller type wa? preparad; an arri* mada ot et eel, about seven lache tone and a third of aa inca .In di ametcr. with ouo esd pointed sha rpi and the other bellowed out on foo an arrow. PRESS CC After Teddy's Own Heart (Roanoke Tln??s.) JsmeB Topping of Bellhaven, N. C., died recently at the ripe old ago of 105 years. He was tho father of 46 children, the oldest of whom is 82 years old. Mr. Topping made no great display in this world and spent the nrenter portion of his life as an ordi nary everyday business' man, but ho dio] his share toward making North Carolina the great state it is. With 45 children to keep his name all re Mr. Topping needs no monument to keep his mer .i ry green. He hun lu uren reniembiL.ee in the best pos ai' lo way. Col. .Roosevelt, if he were th i president, would certainly have re ognlzed Mr. Topping as one of tho in st valuable citizens ot his state. T _ Battle Cruisers Needed* (New York Times.) -tfttbe : s?a?iaL aMr hamaneoin ai I rlhu ? c|^wr-f? ?ttf?ibr? on the. British dreadnaught Queen Elizabeth In a let tir from a Belfast naval officer quot ?it in the Times dispatches yesterday I? probably the kind that only real practice in war can develop. One abell demolished a camp with .500 sol diers and stores for six monti's. Another, fired o\?er a mountain top, ink a full transport. -According to the newly published ditton of thc annual "Fleets of the iforld," the British navy has eeventy jur battleships in commission or un or construction. In tonnage rang as from i~.??0 to 27,500, the Queen ?aisabetb alze, while our thirty-six ANARCH (Charleston Post.) The war aS<?it has degenerated to mplete anarchy on all aides. The {raiding of open cities hy aeroplanes, [?which drop bombs upon non-combat ants, killing women and children In discriminately and destroying private property-though, in the aggregate, of comparatively small, effect abd cer tainly bearing little influence on the final result of tb? - struggle-la (he worst lapse of all the offences ngalnst the laws ot warfare th?-t has appeared In this moat barbarous ot wars. The Berman raids upon Parts and Other French eitles, and upon the villages and country side of England, with a final reaching ot Loudon, (a matched by the French attack upon Karlsruhe, It has probably been matched by poa other towns of tormany oi 'tory occupied by the Merman* fdr attacks on Isolated military airship factories, ammunition rehouse sand fortifications, then: be found no Justification for this? g tn any of the accepted rules ot nj war or the principles upon which atare based. They -servo no militar) 3 j purpose and are designed only t< spread terror among the general ulatlon. There ls a fl Ismay prsietfci usually that th? attacks are mari against fortified places, the pressai* pt a barracks or aa; arms factory oi ajan seroplane shed In the neighbor vj hood, or even of a gun - to detent a against airships, being taken- ?la suffi battleships, in O i water, on the stocka, or provided for, range from 11,346 to 32,000, and sa e of the new boats are to have i equipment ol guns larger than tnt biggest of the British ships. The German have thirty-nine bat tleships, thoug) sorae of them are not as large as i ir armored cruisers. Uoth the Brig h and the German navies, howear, haye modern battle cruisers, the J traer-ten, with -heavy butteries und capable of steaming from twenty-ri : to. twenty-eight knots au hour; the1 ?erman. navy six. We have no wai vessels of this type. Undoubtedly ve shall continue to build tho grot : floating forts, but we want the fast battle cruisers, too. We haw only tb4 beginning of a great modern navy, but it ls a good begin ning.' We are justified in taking great pride in its ghi ps and in the zeal and "average of ??? markMnanshlp nasal? ways been high, bu tit couM ba made higher with.more practice. The need of battle cruisers is the first consideration, the need of oo?? men the nert. The submarine prob lem should bc speedily solved. Tberj> will be ammunition enough\ for an; ? emergency" hereafter. It ls (essential, however, that tho public 'interest ix. the increase' of the navy should ' no : subside. The subject la one to kee] > ever freshly in mind. Every attise] chou Id learn all there is for landsme:. to know about our warships, aa th ? navy exista tor the protection of ever; > :t'citizen. ...... ' V I it ALOFT fortifications nor have they any pur prise of crippling the defences or th? etty, but are intended oaiy to wreel and ruin Indiscriminately and caus< death in the. public streets. They ari not preliminary to Other operations nor are they expected to redure th? places attacked to surrender. Thee * are wanton and frightful ouly. L^ltt the raid upon Karlsruhe, ihi French aviators made a score of death among non-corofcatants, including wot men and children, surpassing any that baa been nado by the Germans in their numerous visitations to communities off th? allies. Hie Germant, ignoring th?lr own depredations, have crier out mightily upon this oatrstge arie have sworn to wtwM. reprisals, aa il they had not anticipated them. Tl? ?French Justify the raid on the grout?! of retaliation. A?MI SO the lawless nets Is in full swing, wit's each aeons ' t?nic tho oth?r ot responsibility for lt. t l Thci-o cr.n bo ?l ,U& quosikl that thu 1 I aviation raid upo? opeti cities ls -a s.|^frcater offence against the taws ol flwar thad the submarine attacks upon r. I merchant uhlppiug. These latter h?v? r j a dormite and an effective purpose, at > j least. They arc porBTed.*? Goramny Malone o? the belUgarenta, but If G?r s j man shipping >Hed th* acas aa freely ? i a* ilrltish shipping plies, it Is a con-, ? i elution warranted by the avis) I iou r se it all the- nwstss ?trola oa the ?ea "hat of the rlsbta rut mwv&mtm nant shipping conform to the ? j rules of the sea ar be abandoned?