University of South Carolina Libraries
THE INTELLIGENCER ESTABLISHED 18M. t r Published every morning except Monday by The Anderson Intelligen cer at 140 West Whitner Street, An derson, S. C. SEMI-WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER Published Tuesdays end Friday* L. M. GLENN_Editor and Manager | Entered as second-class matter April 28, 1914, at th* post office at Anderson, South Carolin?, under the Aet of March 3. 1879. ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCHES j Telephone .831 SUBSCRIPTION BATES DAILY One Year .15.00 Six Months . 2.60 Three Months . 1.26 One Month.42 One Week . .10 SEMI-WEEKLY t One Year .31.60 Biz Month* .76 !_ The Intelligencer Ii delivered by : carriers In the city. Look nt the painted labol on your paper. The date aereon shows when ' the subscription expires. Notice date on label carefully,'and lt not correct ' please notify ns et once. Subscribers desiring the addreaa ot ? their paper changed, will please state In their communication both the old and new addresses. To Insure prompt delivery, com plainte of non-delivery In the elty et Anderson abo aid be made to the ? ^ircnlatloa Department before lam. > ud a copy will be sent at once, All cheek* and draft* should be : drawn to The Anderson Intelligencer. i ADVERTISING ' Ratea will be furnished on applica ? Hon. No tf advertising discontinued ex I eept on written order. The Intelligencer will publish brief , and rational letters on subjects of ? general Interest when they are. ac } companied hy the names ead ad t dresse* o? the authors and ar* not of a defamatory nature. Anonymous l communication* will not be noticed. , Rejected manuscript! will not be re ! tarn ed. tn order to avoid delays on account af personal absence, letters to The Intelligencer Intended for publication ?hould not be addressed to any Indi vidual connected with the paper, bat ?imply to The Intelligencer. I mn?II HM-?nanoT -?II.min TUESDAY, JUhV 6, 1915. WEATHER FORECAST ; Fiar Tuesday, except showers the coast; Wednesday fair. Did you spend a safe and sane Fourth? (Showers Expected Throughout the South,-Headline. Expected ? j J. P. Morgan's Cousin Leaves $30. j 000,000.-Headlne. Oh, these poor . hl?. t Speaking of ancient customs, we f aee where a fellow ii writing on the i causes ot the European war. ' A dispatch says all labor ls short . ta the British kingdom. Wonder where I all the people are; they're not at the s front We hope Mr. Morgan has a health t and accident Insurance policy that's I causing hts pay to go on while he'a i laid up.* j , , o i .German Submarine Raised to Sur [ face.-Headline. By the way, that re J mnda us bf the F-4 at Hon'.' >ilu; has j tt been raised? j; 'The two Long Island children who choice between two evils, let's agree < went to New York with 15 cents be , tween them to see what metropolitan ; waa like, and were rescued from . starvation hy a friendly policeman, re no more foolish about lt than a i good many thousand grown folks ( h?ve been. ; Becker- May Squeal Def oro He Goes to tho Electric Chair, ssys an ex i tige. We risa to remark that would v ba; the bebt time to squeal provided he i wishes to be heart!. "How to .Get Married'' Is the sub pect of a sermon- preached by an Augusta pastor. "How to Stay Mar gined would be a more appropriate ono, judging from ^i|^ratput of the Geor gia divorce mill: "What About Scandal!" ls a reader vunninp: through. Hearst's "Atlanta j Georgian." Don't know what it means, but lt it's Intended for an adv. for that paper it would be truor to petit : "All Aboul Scandal." ? -o ?? . "I should Jlke to aa*," write* aa "Anserlcan-horn^ oltisen, "Which i* i the more dangerous to this country. Prussian militarism or British naval ? ismr* Well, without making any invidious ?hat the wortd wMi?d be much better off without either. MV.UH.UHi SATIVA. Th? vinni's ut alfalfa have long been trumpeted by the federal depart ment of agriculture, but now the medi cal profession ban taken to boosting tblH particular brand of fodder. At a national convention in Chicago, Dr. Alexander Clack wood of that city an nounced that alfalfa is just a? good for human b?lngn ss lt is for cattle. In fact, he declare? it is not only a nutritoun food product, but os val uable medicinal properties. lie experimented with seventeen students at the Hahneraann Medical College, feeding them a compound preparation labeled ".Urcdlcago Batlva" - which ls merely tho Latin name for alfalfa-and they not only disgestcd the stuff and throve on it, but hud their appetites for other provender BO stimulated that they were Impelled to eat five or ?ix meals a day. Alfalfa may Come in timo to form an Integral part of every family meal and restaurant menu, and there may be an alfalfa bed in every garden But economically, the discovery doesn't seem to be an unqualified blessing. Even if it cures indigestion, ns Dr. Blackwood nays, we're not going to save much money by a hay diet that drlveB us to oat six square meals a day. Why not discover something that will mako one meal a day suffice? BICK OK CRACKED. Edmund M. Allen, warde?, of the Joli et penteutiary, has bene a firm be liever In the honor system for con victs. He has put his belief Into prac tice as far as he possibly could. And the other day his wife was murdered by a "trustly." It was a frightful experience for the warden to go through. Has he become embittered? Does he feel responsible for his wife's death because lt seemed 'o have come as a result of his sys tem? Does he now feel that he WSB wrong and that there is no honor among criminals? Not at all., Ed mund M. Allen ls a big enough man to look outside his personal grief and nerve shock, outsldo the pressure of forces working to niter his life Pgiciples, and to see that these prin ciples still hold with all their origi nal power. His explanation is: "There are two classes of men yon cant trust, the sick and the fellows who are cracked. I can do nothing until the legislature makes lt possible to classify the men. We must divide them according to their possibilities. Some of them must be kept in a stockade. On account of their sickness or Rome twist in their brains they can't be trusted." "I have done what I could, and when my term is out I shall retire. But I hope that my successor will have the chance." Too long has pathology been con fused with morals. The sooner penal authorities realise that the weil man ls a good man, the better lt will be for all society. Few people are hope lessly wicked becnu>9 they want to be. There ls usually some hidden force at work making them abnormal. They are "sick or cracked." Prison reform demands that there be adequate claa itflcatton of mental and physical types. Prison elimination demands that chil dren be looked after In early life so they shall have no chance to grow up "sick or cracked" and therefore un fit to be trusted. Sound mluds in sound bodies make Tor good morals. A man ot the quality which recognises this even among criminals ought to be given his chance to carry out his ideas. I AM THE NEWSPAPER. Joseph H. Finn, president of the Nichols-Finn Advertising company, of Chclago, delivered an address before the convention of the Associated Ad vertising Clubs ot the World, in Chicago. June 22. on the newspaper, io fine that an excerpt from lt ts be ing reprinted without comment: Born in the deep, daily need of a nation-I am the Voice of Now -the incarnate spirit of the Times -Monarch of things that Are. My "oold tpye" burna with the fire-blood of human action. I am fed by arteries of wire that girdle the earth. I drink from the enp of every living Joy and s or ow. I sleep not-rest not I know not night, nor day, nor season. I know no death, yet I am born again with every morn-with every moon-with every twilight. I leap into fresh being with every new world's event. Those who created me cease to be -tho brains and heart'e-blood that nourish me go tho way of human dissolution. Yet I liv? on - and on. I am Majestic in my Strength Sublime in my Power-Terrible In nay Potentialities-yet as Demo cratic aa Ute ragged boy who sells mr for a penny. I .am the consort ot Kings-the partner ot toll. The Inspiration ot the hopeless-the light arm ot the needy-the champlonof of tue oppressed-the conscience of Ute criminal. I am the epitome of the world's Comedy and Trag edy. ? My Reapuastblllty ta Infinite. I , apeak and the world atops to Ita* tan. I ?iv the word and battle fumes the horizon. I counsel CHANGING C'bcrago Tribune.) It is unofficially unnounced thut there are no more "abandoned farms" in Connecticut. Probably tile Hume could not yet be Haid of Massachusetts, New Hamp shire, or Vermont. But one suspects the dream that has haunted HO pleas antly the city wary professional man or clerk since the back to the land romances first began to appear In the popular magazines is fading rupdly. What s repopulatng the New Eng land farm? In Connecticut probably, the automobile in an Important ugent. With that convenient and compara tively Inexpennive annihilator of space. New York and lesser cities in that region have boen brought nearer the back country. Remote places are now adjacent to railway points, und a busy man cun leave hiu office at the end of I THREE KINDS (From the Col (Colliers Weekly.) Frank Johnson of the flat region of South Carolina raises six hundred bales of cotton annually on UH many acres. He employs an expert to di rect his negro laborers and "dopes" his land with $25 worth of commer ci?l fertilizer to the acre. .When cot ton fetches twelve cents a pound, he makes a "klllng;" when the price drops to seven cents, he goes broke. Jim Brown, another cotton grow er, lives on a rented farm, knows lit tle, and has little except leisure. He raises a scanty crop on supplies* ad vanced by a lien merchant. In a good year he "pays out" and has a little money for Christmas. In a bad year he has what the Hen merchant doeB not take. The non-resident land lord has a first lien for rent cotton, and, ns a rule, he gets it But no lien merchant or non-resi dent landlord pesters James .Shep pard, who lives In the hill country. Shepard had 45 bales of the 191*1 crop when the war news reached him last August, and 60 more in the held to pick. "I refused 13 1-2 cents for my old cotton last July," he said, "but I'm not going to worry much. I guess I'll bold both crops till the price goes up again. I don't owe the I ABOUT Tl Burlington Wheat. Darlington county can claim a rec ord for wheat production. If anyone has any doubt as to whether wheat can be profitably grown In this coun ty, the following fautp. related to The News and Press by Boyd Dandy, one ot our most reputable r'tlzens, should dispel such skepticism: Mr, Dandy, whose place ls in the Mont Clare sec tion, planted ten acres to wheat. About June 15 he threshed nine acres, real izing an average yield of 44 bushels per acre. On June 27 ho threshed the remaining acre, securing the phe nomenal result of 54 bushels and 27 pounds of prime wheat.-Darlington Mews and Press. An Amusing incident. An amusing Incident occurred on Mr. Sam Balles' place, about finir ailles north of town, Sunday, caused by a negro farm hand getting mix ed up In his count of the days of the iveek. Under the Impression t lint lt was a week day, the darkey went to the stable early In the morning and catching out hit mule commenced plowing. When Mr. Kalles went to the stable some time iator the mule was missed, and Instituting a search for the animal, he was mucli surpris .?V to find the negro and mulo buay kt work. When Informed of tie fact that it waa Sunday, the darkey was naturally much chagrined and made taste to get the mule back to thc stable. He will doubtless consult the calendar a little more often I j the future, and will bo slow about go ng to the field quiet mornings when ?vorybody else is resting.-York News. More Onions. The Record office wnc presented last ?reek with a few handsome onions by Miss Amanda Edwards, canning club kgent of Williamsburg county, which vere equal In flavor to the celebrated [1ermuda variety. The onions were raised by Miss Walline Huggins, of Hemingway in her winter garden and ire only another example ot that roung lady's abilltl for doing things. It will be remembered that she w n irst prise last fall on her exhibit of : an ped and preserved fruits, etc., at be court house here. She is now tak ng advantage of the short course at iVinthrop.-Kings tree Record. Watermelon Time Agata. The watermelon lovers ot Green wood were made glad on Tuesday vhen the first shipment of .the year vas received. Some aery fine look ng melons were In the lot abd* though he price waa rather high, many could tot withstand the temptation and a arge number of melons were disposed ?f.-Greenwood Index. The Place For lt. On Wednesday of last week a lot of titrate of joda aid the car on which peace and thc war-lords obey. I am greater than any Individual more power than nay group. I am tho dynamic force of Publie Opin ion. Rightly directed I am a Creator of Confidence. Abnlder of happiness in living. I am the. Backbone of Commerce. The Trail-Blaser of Prosperity. I am the teacher of Patriotism. I am the banda of the clock of Time-the clarion voice of Civi lisation. I am the Newspaper. i AMERICA a long ?lay and bo lr. the hills fer din ner on the porch. This does not rout h help a distriot like western Massachusetts, hut the automobile Is not the only agent of bte restored farm. The agricultural school ls another at least as impor tant. Better methods make bad farms good, and acres which the loose ex tensive farming of past times had ex hausted are now yieldlny profitably. The Immigration oi foreigners whose living standards are lower than the natives has been a factor, and perhaps also the fact that free land In the west is less plentiful and avail able ls another. The disappearance of the "abandon ed I'.rm" is a portent of significant change. The lavish days of the past ari? to bp succeeded by generations of a more thrifty mode. America Is beginning to settle down. OF FARMERS Hers Weekly.) bank anything, and I have plenty of corn, potatoes, fodder, hogs and poultry." The group Sheppard represents, which is very small reduced their cotton crods this year because com mon sense dictated lt; the Kra??k Johnson class did so because their bank and fertilizer credit was re stricted and the poor class of tc nts because lien credit was skimpier. The general reducton throughout the South is about 15 per cent. Southern farmers, knowing cotton to be their most profitable crop, will continue to raise lt; but they are learning that one crop production means idleness of live stock, labor and land about half the year, while overhead charges must be paid on the whole outfit. They are beginning to understand, too, that while tb. y cannot compete on a large scale with the wheat growers of Minnesota, wheat raised as a by-product is near ly all profit. Diversified farming calls for diversified Information, and that ls something ignorant people can't buy. even from a Hen merchant. Cli mate, soil and all other resources in the Pouth, are diversified., but re sourcefulness ;<i not. Diversify knowl edge and the crop's will diversify themselves. IE STATE lt was being hauled hy the Mullins Lumber Co., to Mr. Sam P. Gerald in 1 lorry was burned. Mr. Gerald bought th0 soda of tho Palmetto Grovcery Co., and they arranged with the Mul lins Lumber Co., to haul lt. The lumbermen report that lt made a mean fire and that it was. with much diffi culty that they saved ihe tram en gine from the flames. The tram had almost reached its destination when thc soda was found to be on fire. Energetic efforts were made to put out the fire, but to no avail.-Mullins Enterprise. Fresh Home Raised Flour. Mr. Bill Anderson near Mayesville we consider one of the progressive farmers of L<ee county. He cut his wheat last Tuesday, which turned out 18 bushell o fciean wheat to the acre and he had three, acres. On Friday he took lt to the mill, on Saturday it was ground and Sunday morning he had delightful fresh biscuits for breakfast and has a bountiful supply had delightful fresh biscuits for breakfast and has a bountiful supply of flour for his family for two years. When all our farmers can do this they can pop their fingers at low prices of cotton and secret farmers' societies. -Bishopvillc Leader and Vindicator. No Cot (on For Him. Oran S. Poo ls apparently farming tho right way. ile has just finished harvesting 2,200 bushels of oats, .350 bushels of wheat and 45 bushels ot rye. He ls now preparing to plant SO acres in alfalfa. Now, that surely Is farming along proper linea. Not a word about cotton you aee. Mr. Poe is going in for feedstuffs and his land' is producing bountifully.-'Rock Hill Record. Early Tomatoes. Mrs. C. G. Todd ot Belton is on the honor roll when lt comes to early to matoes. It ls understood that a good many gardeners in town have grown tomatoes, but last week Mrs. C. G. Todd gave the editor of the Journal several large ripe tomatoes, grown in her garden in Belton.. One of the tomatoes weighed over 13 ounces. They were fine. The first in this sectloniof the state. Mr. Moorhead and several other good- gardeners were forced to stand aside and give Mrs. Todd first place In the tomato contest.-Belton Journal. Farmington, Me.-Twenty-two years ago Fred Butterfield gave a diamond ring to Ida M. Adams to bind their engagement. Miss Adama l?st the ring in a log-cabin In the woods. The couple married and died, and the ting was found the other: day burled In. a decayed log. Wisdom, Mont.-M. M. McGregord of Plains has a crab-apple tree which produces rase blossoms. No apple? forms where tho rosea have loomed. A white rose bosh waa punted last year ten feet from the tree, and lt ta believed the root grafted Itself on to tike tree root. \ Pueblo, Colo.-A nail factory tn this city makes the largest and smallest nails In the world. The 3-16 brads require 30,500 to the pound, and a half a million are cut a minute. The 12 by 3-8 inch spike, used in bridge building, weigh three to the pound, and are made at the rate of 200 to the minute. . ,_ **+++?****+?.>**+?++ .?.?.> * ? * CHINESE TYPEWRITER ? * INVENTED. ? A young Chinese student of en gineering in New York University has Invented what is said to be the first Chinese typewriter. He completed the model a short time ?go, and has patented it In this country, China and Japan. The new machine has only three keys. One of these is a back spacer, another the space key, and tlie third is the key with which 4,200 characfTs are struck. It ls possible according to the Inventor, to make 50,000 characters by combinations of "radicals" or base characters. There are two cylinders, five inches In dia meter, and about ten tnches long on one of which ls a copper plate con taining 4,200 minute characters. The other contains a paper copy of the same characters, and is used as a guido to the location ot "eacip charac ter. On the rim ot this cylinder is a Hst of 110 "key-words" which Indi cate the location of words or charac ters which start the same Bounds as the key-words. The operator turns the copper cylinder until the desired character is in front of a key, then be hits the v?\v and the character ls printed, after which the turning pro cess is gone through again. At pres ent this is done by hand, though the Inventor expects to perfect a mechan ism to control this. He claims t^at after becoming familiar with the lt ca tion of the characters and the mech anism of the typowfiter, a person should be able to write forty words a minute oo the new machine. ? WIT AND HUMOR. ? * + William H o wad Taft, the man who has the most right to a grouch, has none.-'Florida Times-Union. The jury sometimes falls to convict on circumstantial evidence, but tbe neighbors never do.-Topeko Capital. Love at first sight ls often hard on the eyes, judging from the tales they tell la thc divorce court.-Ogden Ex change. Some people seem to think that ex Secretary Bryan is a blanket indian, who has left the reservation.- Mem plkis News Scimitar. The explosion of a jug ot grape luise in an Indianapolis flat seems .to be an coincidence that is well worth Washington's notice.-Indianapolis News. ? . ' -i -Premier Asquith says the number In the British army will not exceed 3,200,000. Not if the men are kept near enough to . the front,-Terre Haonte Star. According. to Disraeli "we., aro all born for love," but seven-sights ot ns are destined to bp more ? consratfiJy}. tn-the clasp of dost.-Louisville Cou rier-Journal. The Russians ?ult ' vodka, . the , French absinthe, the British the ' whiskey and soda, and now the Teul tons might swear o^, trying to take Warsaw.-Indianapolis Star? An interesting Item in exposition fnance is the fact that although more than twenty-years hale passed since the Worid's Fair act' Chicago' the Mi rectors have only recently balanced their accounts and ?tist^nded the or ganisation.-San Francisco - Chroni cle. -? - Aa exchange remarks that peroxide baa knot-led all ot the sentiment out of that beautiful old sapg, "Silver threads among the gold."-Mc Alaster (Okla.) NewHJTapttal. I ? Detroit tailor ls said to be able to '?at a ?satt- from memory: , TS&t must be' the material of walch some bf the ladles' summer clettfes aaa made.-'Macon, (Ua.) New?. , >.<- ....... . .?.U. ? . Bring in your frame a color scheme that will advantage. Your che Mohair, Tropicloth ari From five to twelve \ will do the tricki Suits in the right ton complexion, patterns build and styles for ye Neckwear 25c and $3.50. Socks a dime to a dol else to complete the p . See our special displa 25c ties today. Nortl PRESS CC Making the Next War. (New Republic.) It has been said that the business of e^er peace congress 1B to arrange the wa. of the day after tomorrow. The epigram deserves indeed to rank among the treat safe commonplaces. Half our professors of history have made an honest living by illustrating this generalization fom the records of the congress of Vienna. The con gress of Berlin ls a case hardly less notorious. One may safely say thnt i it made this particular war by handing over Bosnia to Austria, as lt made the two Balkan wars by restoring Mace donia to the Turks. The epigram, however, ls not quite fair to congresses. They are com monly Impotent even for mischief. The sinister arrangements which they ratify-are commonly made In bar gains between individual powers out side them, and before they-meet. Russia, -for example, sold Bosnia to : Austria as the price of her neutrali ty during the Husso-Turkish war. When and where the aged survivors of the present war will meet In con gress we do not know, but already i we can catch a glimpse of one of these characteristic arrangements. It l has been signed and settled for about i a month in nominal secrecy, over thc I heads of all the people concerned, and if the next congress should rall- i fy it, even a cautious prophet may 1 safely predict the nature and cause of the next European war. It will be at all an original war. i It will simply be another war for the completion of south-StaV unity, and < the only doubtful point about it is i whether it will be Uko this, a universal < war, or whether Italy and the new ! Serbia will be left to tight it out with 1 a limited number of allies and sec- < omis. The arrangements have been i made chiefly in London and Paris, but > Petrograd has given a reluctant con- i sent. I refer, of course, to the bargain: ?j by which Italy has' adhered to tho < triple entente in the understanding- I that she shall .annex the entire part 1 of Dalmatia. * Porfirio ?las. < (Chicago- Tribune.) i Porfirio Dla*, dead in Paris, gave i Mexico the only long continued period I of tranquillity it shows in its history I as 4. republic. Judging him simply in ' tho light o twhat had happened in c fact, and In the light ot what has hap- i pened since his abdlctlon, the opinion i would be forced that he, 'with his i strength, remorselessness, and < shrewdness, waa the only bind of ral- i cr who could keen Mexico peaceful i and Inhabitable. . t If Dla?, had been tempered by some f of the qualities of: Madero, or if Mad- | P ? ? ? ? ? GEORGIA PRESS. ? ? ? ?*?+??*?**?*???+?** Writing Abont Wfillam J. Some newspapers are still writing long editorials abont William Jennings Bryan. Some people never know when to etop.-Rosne Tribune. Hts Impossible Task. Clark Howell might as well try to stop the flow of Tallulah Falls as to attempt to keep Bryan's sayings from the press.-Wuycrnse Journal. Benno, Safe, te the Point Governor Harris' message com eares favorably with any that have been delivered in -Georgia in a num ber of years. It was a Harris docu ment.-sound, sane and tn the point. -Griffin News. (handag Ifta fae War. .Automobiles are cheap and ar?vgo ing to get cheaper-another result ot lie "war.-Rome Tribune. Maktag a Safe Bet. lt's a safe bet that Cnamp C'ark aili have Use support ot The New Orleans Item If he cares , to ran for iresident ia l?tC:-Americas Trlb md we'll frame up a I set it off to the best )ice of Palm Beach, id Silklike. nd one-half plunks vi es for your special for your particular :>ur individual fancy. 50c. Shirts 50c to [lar and everything icture. . " ty of 5Oe Shirts and i window, j , \ % ?MMENT ero liad been strengthened by some of tho qualities of Dia?,, Mexico might be different, but to walt for th? for the fortuitous joining of these charac teristics in an occasional leader is to have small hone for an established re public. Diaz's great achievement was the stabilizing of conditions which made economic development possible. His failure was to raise and encourage a middle class who would make continu ance of the tranquillity possible after the strong hand had been removed. Possibly no such compromise can be made In Mexico. Its fate may be to be thrown from the exploiting aris tocracy, headed by such as Diaz, to tho unuled peons, headed by such as Villa, and back again, torn in ea ,h tossing by devastating revolutions. If this be the case, then such periods as that of Dhu will be Us only periods of security so long as it exists "in name as a republic. The Attack on Morgan.* (Charlotte Observer ) Mr. Morgan ls paying the penalty of wealth and prominence. The attack upon him bears all the earmarks of, the act of a-crank. By no conceiv able meshed of sound reasoning could he be connected with the attitude of the American people on the exporta tion of arms. If anything were need ed to carry conviction on this point lt would be the assertion In the ram bling note that if Germany were able to buy arms America would straight way refuse to sell them. The coinci dence of the attack on Mr. Morgan and the wrecking of the public re ception . room of the senate in Wash ington, by an explosive which seems to have been placed there with a similar motive Is striking. They serve to raise the questions whether or not Lhere has been formed an organised: program of vollence to enforce the propaganda against tho exportation }f munitions. It ls a more reason able and a more charitable view to believe that these aro. the actions of weak-minded persons whose mental ?quillbrlum huB been disturbed by contemplation of the war* and by de lire for Germany's success. Every rreat catastroph?e finds reflection tn that fashion. Men lost their minds nerely meditating on the wreck of the Titanic. When the 'Fatherland ls un lergoing a death struggle it is pos dble to understand how an ill-bal mced" man might succumb to the -train and do rash -things. Ii is scarcely necessary to say that If any attempt at organized violence were nade by asy organization or group >f persons, the heavy hand of the ?overnmcht would repress it and re ire ss it sternly. ??+**?**?**????*? ?> ? CAROLINA PRESS. ? ? 1 . ? ?+?????????? ok ??????.?? t..,..-, The One Thing,?ceded. With all' the elaborate plans now be ag worked out to bullolup a live stock ndustry in South Carolina, only one bing ls lacking. Will the ?mall farm sr rise to the occasion and Secure cat ie?-Greeuwood Index. Oise Trial After Another. Life to Harry K. Thaw-seems to bo sst one trial after another.-Dor chester Eagle. ?thing la a Name. Prohibitionists of Georgia have la letrsed a Mr. Eichelberger for super ntendent of Ihe Anti-Saloon League. Ve know now there is nothing In a ?ame.--Greenwood Journal. Chance fer BetternteaL We do not know that we could have aln-proor roads in thia country with Htt at least pending more money ban. would be Justified, but certainly vitia a little better f.ystem we could tay? better roads than, we have now or rho same .exp?43dUu^?.T-^'$Tv-t>erry ^er-hld.