The intelligencer. (Anderson, S.C.) 1915-1917, July 24, 1915, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3
New Wonder of the West.
Dun iel Tipple.
Hero ls tho Indianapolis American
association pitcher form whom Colonel
Jacob ruppert and Captain T. Ii.
Huston, new owners of thc Yankees of
New York, wore reported to have
paid $10,000. They ?<?o not themselves
say they paid that sum, but they
did give enough to make it very in
teresting for the management of the
Indianapolis club.
At the closo of the seventeenth cen
tufy a ta\ "was placed on widowers
in England.
Wear
ole^sei
Fro La Say
j &ront. j(heed Corse fa
/ Fitted perfectly by our corsetiere
, , \ O $3JQO to $Hh50 p. ' ;
Mrs, B. Graves Boyd
TAKE MY
ADVICE
-Mr. Squeegee
"There are some motorists who
seem to expect tire trouble-think
mat, like measles, you've got to
have 'em.
I Prescribe
DIAMOND
?f|11
Tread
TIRES
.j M m
V .
i'or Sale by
Anderen Hardware
OF WAR IN GERMANY
Msmbers of Fifth Royals Say
French Soldiers are Poor
Fighters.
Goettingen, Germany, July 20.-Late
In February the Fifth Koyule, one of
the crack Canadian regiments, eleven
hundred strong, left Montreal, en rou?
for England and tho great European
war. Less than four months later,
after weeks in the trenches at Ypres,
only thirty-seven of those eleven Hun
dred men were known to remain alive
and they are prisoners in the great
military camp here.
Overpowered by the gases wafted
toward their positions, tlesertcd by
colored troops supposed to come to
their support, all hut decimated by the
deadly German fire, the little baud of
four non-commissioned ofilcers and
33 privates was easy prey. Before they
regained consciousness they were in
captivity.
T he thirty-seven at Goettingen bone
that ?onie of ?heir brave regiment may
have escaped and may still be fighting,
but they do not believe J.'. They
were on the outskirts of the gas col
umns that swept over thc trenches,
and they escaped with their lives be
cause they did not have to breathe
the noxious fumes in their full
strength.
Many.of them have as yet not been
able to establish comniun\:atlon with
their families in far-off Canada, and
are not sure whether mothers, wives
and sisters know thal they have es
caped death.
The men portray the fig.it at Ypres
as one of indescribable horror; they
chafe at confinement and thc lack ol
assurance that England is winning;
they express In varying degrees sur
prise that the Germans are not the
"barbarians" they had believed them
to be.
Harry Anning, a Montreal boy, serv
es as well as any other member or
tiie little group to describe their feel
ings as they now loaf about in cap
tivity.
"There isn't any question," he said,
"but that we all have had to revise
our opinion about the Germans,
though not all of us work prepared to
believe all we had heard and rend
about them. The wov*' thing about
being in a prison camp is the Inac
tivity, and for that the Germans na
turally are not responsible.
"The food is fair, though as a mat
ter of course monotonous. I for one
haven't any complaint, though I man
age to get a good many extra things
from England to piece out with. I
imagine that the man who hasn't any
friends and wht doesn't get any ex
tras does a certain-amount ot suf
fering. , '
+++*<*+*****+++**+?* * * *
* +
v YT. STE KD A Y'S BESULT8. +
Notional League.
At New York 1; Pittsburgh 6.
At New York 3; Pittsburgh 4.
At Brooklyn 9; St. Louis 7.
At Phlldelphia 2; Cinclnuatl 3; ten
innings.
At BoBton 2; Chicago 1; eleven in
nings.
American League.
At Cleveland ll; Philadelphia 3.
At P?ti"Mt 2; Washington 1.
. At St. Louis 3; Boston 8.
At Chicago 3r New York 2.
Federal League.
At Kansas City 5; Buffalo'7.
At Pittsburgh 3; Newark ll
At St. Louis 4;' Brooklyn 6.
At Chicago 4; Baltimore 1.
Sont h en? League.
At Nashville 6; Birmingham 3.
At Chattanooga 8; New Orleans 7.
At Little F.bck 7; Mobllo 0.
At Memphis 4;"Atlanta 2.
South Atlantic Post Season.
At Macon 8; Columbus 8; called al
end of ninth on account ot darkness.
?> ?
? STANDING OF TEE CLUBS. ?
? ? ?!
Southern
Won. Lost P. C.
New Orleans. 56 37 602
Memphis. 54 41 668
Birmingham. 61 42 549
Nashville .. . 52 43 547
Atlanta. 45 . 47 489
Moble.? ... 45 48 484
Chattanooga ..... 37 56 39S
LlttV. Rock ..... 33 58 363
Americas.
Won. Lost. P.C.
Boston. 65 29 655
Chicago. 66 33 629
Detroit ... 53 32 624
Washington. 42 43 494
New York ... .. .. 42. 44 483
Cleveland. 30 54 341
St. Louis. SS 61 393
Philadelphia. 30 63 861
National.
Won. Lost. P.O.
Philadelphia. 4 S 86 656
Brooklyn . -,. 45 39 636
Chicago. 43 41 512
Pittsburgh.. 42 41 606
St. Lens". 43 46 489
Boston. 41 44 482
New vork .. 38 41 4SI
Cincinnati .T. 85 46 488
Fe?e?aL
Won. Lost. P. C.
Chicago. 50 37 676
Kansas City ..... 48 3? 671
Pittsburgh. 46 87 649
St. Louis ....... 46 89 641
Nswark. 43 43 600!
Brooklyn. 41 48 461
Buffalo. 4? 61 440
Baltimore .. 88 62 888
Causes Row in Baseball
J
Johnny Evern.
Little Johnnie Evern, who has
caused much troublo In bascball
usually tc the opposing clubs-has
stirred a row among tho officials of
the National League by his remarks
during a game In Boston the other
day.
Evers, taking exception to a deci
sion by Rlglcr, who declared Bob
Bescher safe at thc plate on a close
play, was quoted in a newspaper as
having' shouted:
"They're trying to get the crowds
out; they'vo ordered a closo race;
le .7<> them alone, boys; they're only
foiiowSng instructions."
Evers later expressed indignation
because his remarks had been inter
preted as a claim -that the National
League race was "fixed"| He said:
"I claim no such thing. I've been
1 baseball long enough to know
better. To be sure, I might have said
anything on tie ball field. When an
umpire hands you ono like Bigler
did at the home plato what you say
will invariably be the result of hard
feeling at the time.
"You're out there fighting, and any
thing you can get away with goes.
Nobody living could fix a race like
the one in the National League just
now. It's the greatest ever, and we
all have a chance.'.'
Georgfle Stallings said: "There in
absolutely no truth In the story that
Captain Evers said that the National
League race was fixed."
CITBOLAX
CTTROLAX!
crraoLAXi
Best thing for constipation, sour
stomach, lazy liver and sluggish bow
els. Stops a sick headache almost at
once. Gives a most thorough and sat
isfactory "flushing-no pain, no nau
sea. Keeps your system cleansed,
sweet and wholesome.-R. M. Welh
echt, Salt Lake City, Utah, writes: "I
find Cltrolax the best laxitlve I ever
used. Does not gripe-no unpleasant
aftor-qffecta." Evans' Pharmacy.
Condensed Passenger Schedule.
PIEDMONT & NORTHERN
RAILWAY COMPANY
Effective June 6, 1915.
ANDERSON:
Arrivals
No. 31.
No. S3.
Nd. 35.
No. 37.
No. 39.
No. 41.
No. 43.
No. 45 .
No. 30.
No. 32.
Na 84.
No. 36.
No. 38.
. 7:35 A. M
. 9:35 A. M
.11:40 A. BL
. 1:10 P. M.
. 3:40 P. M.
. 6:00 P. M.
.. 6:50 P. M
.10:20 P. IL
Departures
. 6:25 A. 1
. 8:26 A. 1
.10:30 A. J
. ..12:10 P. 1
.. ...2:30 P. 1
.4:30 P. 1
.6:40 P. 1
.9:16 P. ]
C. 8. ALLEN.
_Traffic Manager.
No. 40.
No. 42.
No. 44.
Charleston & Western
Carolina Railway
To and From the
NORTH, SOUTH,
EAST, WEST
Leaves:
iNo. 22 . . . .6:08'A..M.
[No. 6- . .3:37 P. M.
Arrives:
?No. 21 . .'.11:15 A.M.
INo. 5 . . . . 3:07 P. M.
Information, Schedules,
rates, etc., promptly
given.
E. WILLIAMS, G. P. A.,
Augusta, Ga.
WANTFH
287
New ' Subscribers
TO GET
A SET OF SIX
Oneida - Community Souvenir Spoons
Guaranteed Forever.
PAY SIXTY-FIVE CENTS
And Get Spoons
To the first 287 responsible and reputable citizens of 'Anderson who sub
scribe for the Daily Intelligencer for THREE MONTHS, pay.65 cents, and
agree to pay ten cents each week for twelve weeks we will deliver this hand
some set of Six Souvenir Spoons FREE. . ,
This off?t is LIMITED to TWO HUNDRED EIGHTY SEVEN New Sub
scribers. First come-first served** When quota is finished no more
Spoons on this proposition.
Out-of-Town Subscribers
Owing to our inability to collect from ^weekly subscribers by mail we
would have to have the money in advance'from all out of town patrons. -
I
Daily Intelligencer
Anderson. S. C.