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Tender, Juicy FRESH MEAT Rich, Red, Juicy Beef and Extra Tender Veal, Pork Sausage and Mixed Sausage that will tickle your palate? , and at live and let live prices. PHONE 755 NOW Our Delivery Wagon Is On The Job. Sanitary Market Frank Dobbins. You Want [The Maximum Value at the Minimum Price. That is what you get when you trade at the Anderson ss Company r< 'I jj 1 , ' Next time you want to buy, Cook Stoves, Kitch en Ware, Oil Stoves or Fireless Cookers, Allum nium Ware, Hardware, Tools, Machinery, Farm Implements, Automobile Tires and Accessories, or if you need a Plumbing or Heating Job or Re pairs try us. Prompt at tention our specialty AadorsonHardware Co "We Deliver the Goods." , t _ ' Only a few Cor \ Mills and Evaporators left if you need one see us quick. -.dkllUfi PROFESSIONAL CARDS nSBS9BSSSX9BHBSBMna C. GADSDEN SAYRE I Architect ? 405-403 Bladdv skdb&ss ; Andern?. S. C DENTISTS vitm Th??tre RUP?S F?NT, Jr. ATTORNEY AT I.AW OaiiTanaatst TT ff Anderson, >t South CoroSn? The Two Greatest German Industries. The Krupp Gun Works, the Greatest tn the World. Cork Legs to Take the Place of Those Shot Off hf the Guns. & Labor Troubles Are Low-Wage Scales Frank P. Walsh Says Kansas City, Aur. 28.?Low wages was found to be the basis cause of Industrial unrest in ih<* report which Frank P. Wal.-..:, chairman of the tetlera] commission on Industrial re lations and the labor members of that body, wUl nreaent to congress as a result oftpta ^?Vnmiission's two year Investigation into the subject. The report embodying the pcraonal findings of Mr. Walsh and concurred *tn by commissioners John B. Len non, James O'Conneii aud Austin B. Glarrotson, was made pufbllc hero to* lay. "The workers of the nation, through compulsory and oppressive uethods, legal and illegal, are denied .ho full product of.their toil," it was leclared in the report, aud tihe re~ lulting Industrial dissatisfaction was said to have ivached "proportions .hat .ahaady menace the social good v111 and the peace of the nation." llcaponkibillt} for the condition under JvMchr JLftey^Hve jvtas placed primarl V upon fh? workers themselves who 'blind to tbcfr collective strength and >flen times deaf to the erica of their followers, have suffered r^ploltutlon uul the invasion of their most sacred -Ighta without tesl,,tuiH.-.."' The fetaprt In part follow*;: "We *lnd the ba*l?. cf industrial ?Bsatlsfaction to bo low wages, or dated in another way, the fact'that he workers of the nation through compulsory and oppressive methods, legal and illegal, are denied the full >rodiiet of their toll. "Wo further find that unrest among .he workers In tndiftry had 'grown :o proportions that Is already menace :hc social'good wMfWnd-the peace of the nation, j. CR^.c^s; numbering nlllions smart' under a sense of la ust Ice and oppression: w "The extent and depth of Indus xlal unrest can hardly be exaggerat ed. State and national convention of abor organizations numbering maay houaands of members have cheered he names of leadora?. Imprisoned'-. Tor participation in* a* campaign of vio omcc, conducted as one phase of cou 'l.vt with organised employers. "Employers -hove'er atcd mid main tained small private armies and ised these forces to lafimidato and luppress tLeir striking employes'Tfy ieportlng. imprisoning, assaulting ind killing their leaders. Elaborate rpy ayatems art maintained to dis cover and forestall the movements of he enemy. The use of state troops in policing strikes has bred a bitter lostlllty to the militia system "Courts, legislatures and governors i&ve bco n right fully accused of aorv ng employers to the 'defeat of Jus lee and while countercharges come i'om the employers and their agon ta, villi almost negligible exceptions, It a the wage earners who believe, ?s ten and prove that the very Inetltu Ions of their country bave been per rerted by the power of the employ er. "To '?; o support of the militant and iggrrftstve propaganda of organized shpr itaa corn**, wfthln recent years' \ small hut rapidly tacroslng host of ministers, college progressors, writ es, Journalists and others of pro fessional classes, distinguished in many Instancies by exceptional talent which they dovote to agitation, with no -hopo of material reward. j-j "Wo find tlio unrest here to Ik "de scribed but the latest manifestation of the age long struggle of the race for freedom of opportunity for every individual to live his life to its high est, ends. "The unrest of the wage earner has "boon augmented by recent changes and developments In industry. Chief of tbc?o are rapid aud universal, In troduction and extension of machinery by which unskilled workers may bo substituted for tifye skilled and an equally rapid development of means of rapid transportation and communi cation by which private capital has been cabled to organize in great cor porlious. "Work* formerly done at home or in small, iS.eighborhood shops has boon tr?n, tho' poraoual olements under tbo control of impersonal corporations. Women in increased numbers hav? followed their work from tho homo to 'he fac tory and even children .have been en listed. "Now more than ever tho profits of great industries under centralized control pour Into tho coffers of stock holders and directors who never bave, so much as - visited the planta - and who-perform no service in return. Aud while vast inherited fortunes representing sero in social servie > to the credit of their possessors, auto matically treble and multiply In vol ume two thirds of those who toll from eight to 12 hours a day receive less than enough to support themselves aud their families In decency and comfort. "Wo tla'd that mhany entire com munities exist under the arbitrary economic control of corporation offi cials charged with the management of an industry or group of industries and we find that In such commun! ties political liberty does not exist and its""'forms are hollow mockeries. "Tho larger communities where es pionage becomes possible- the 'wage "earner who is unsupported by collec live organization may enjoy -freedom of expression outside tac workshop, but thoro his ?reedom cndB. And it to freedom more apparent than real For the bouse ho lives in. the food ho cats, the clothing ho wears, tho Environment of his wife and children and his own health and safety are in the hands of the employer, through tho arbitrary power he oxercla?B in fixing his wages and working oondi tlons. "Tho responsibility for nfe condl* tlons which have been described above, we declare primarily upon tho work ers who blind to their collective strength and otte ntlmes deaf to the cries of their followers have suffer ed exploitation and the Invasion of their most sacred rights without re sistance. A large measure of re sponsibility must, however, attach to tho great ma til the worl ?lu-ir nesponi collective ftoi governmental any genuine l "We call gardless of;] dit ions to u: tlon, all ?Tel cycry depart government tlccs exposed tho ed that cure the w'.w: >f citizens. But, un-| "thcm*<i!,vel3 Teal i/o ty ami utilize to their I r,' no action whether abruislie can work ! hg Improvement, citizenship Le >0? economic con (taneanB of agita education and %hd function of j ?llnilnato the injus I this committee to I a.tlaaorer may ses,} luct of his labor. Ihrce DollarpSsats at the Mmles. t?^rom Commerce and Finance.) Tho Knickerbocker Theater an nounces Inat^f^begOinlng September 18, seats in thV/Iogcs of the first bal cony will be . sold at |3 each and that thcrd will'he a s-oecial. entrance and exit for the occupants of these logos. The sjjfont drama has been popular because it was cheap. Fov the most wonderful ^nd costly pic tures displayed the price rarely uas been more than -jr. cents of 50 ccms. For tho vast riajbriiy of b?owj tho admission is ? ce:?ts or 10 cents. The $:t rate at the .Knickerbocker does not indicate that an effort ? to be made to raise prices geuorally but Illustrates how1' broad is , the appeal of the "pictures" and how cor.r.Jcnt to great factories whore tho management is that the w-dl-'to al workers become as im-. do will pay little ts'iort of grand op ' era prices to see them it in addition to their view, they . can have the stamp of exclus!venesH by reason of that special entrance .and exit. EasyThaSfng. A commercial traveler was praising his wares wltli-.'? great'btirst of ?lo quence. ''Thoyfre<the, finest things out!" he assured.his prospective' cus tomer finally, ^to'hy, sir, it you-have one of our machines it will pay for itself in less than six months!" You guarantee that?" asked the customer. "Certainly!" replied the traveler ea gerly, "Then, if they pay for thvmsclvcs, you can send me a half dozen,", said the customer. **Bat,. If they don't, can't pay for 'em!** She?Have you boon up to break | bread with the new ortdo and bride groom yet? lie?No, rte\ not fooling very strong.?Boston Transcript it was Knicker? Now they say Noah who ate the ?pple. Bockcr?Being,a well-known satlor, ( he was probably tempted by the sea | serpent.-?Now Yprk Suh. Hoklns? Closeflst claims that when charity is needed he Is always the first to put his hand in hia pocket. Poklns?-Yea; and ho keeps it there till tho danger Is over.?Judger. --r Cumso?When I was at Niagara Falls I went through the Cave of the Winds. Cawker?That's nothing. When waa aj Washington I spent an hour | in tho senate gallery.?Puck. "What do you think or the aOcouo-l tics, Mrs. Nur Ich?" whispered h<jr| neighbor. "Oh. I don't mix la them religions ! squabbles. Let everybody worship inj their own way, I say.''?-Buffalo Ex press. liriii Army Headquarters in France, Aug. 2."?. ? (Associated I'reas Correspondence. )?Triumphal arches were erected by the French soldiers to welcome their successors when the British took over a section of the line from the French a while ago. An occasional sniper's bullet and the oc casional burst of a she", accompanied the Informal cerenicnv. "The peculiar thing is tint the French do not like to go." said a staff officer. "They have spent months in building up their trenches to make them comfortable and as secure from the enemy's fire as posf'.ble. They are proud of their trenches. In a scuse they feel that the results of their lubor belong to tiera. Besidoa they have got settled In the associa tions of the villuges to th? rear where they are billlted, they know all the local people." ' Strictly speaking all that happens is that a British battalion marches in and a French bttllon m-*ches out after tie olllcers of the incoming bat talion have spent a day or two in the trenches e familiarizing themselve with details. Dut to the men of both sides it is a great event. Though the British and "the French are allies the soUHerB of the two armies rarely meet. JOach Is on ills own side of t(xc line which bounds the zone of the two armies. "Probably not one .ont of fifty French soldiers speak* much Kng Hsh," said an officer, "and eertainlly not one out m titty British soldiers speaks much French :" Yet in five minutes they are talking together? and some way or other they make one another understand." What interests them most is the comparison of equipment. They mu-.it try l?'te mechanism of each others rifles. The Briton must try on the new French steel helmet which the Frenchmen wear to protect their heads from shrapnel bullets and splinters. After the helmets he must examine the Frencli knives whic'i the French use at the close quarters in trench fighting when the bayonet is Unwieldly; and after "that comes a comparison of bombs and bomb throw ing methods. Gestures serve pretty well for this kind of a conversation. Meanwhile every bit of school >book French and BiglJ-di is in play in tho midst of laughter. The outgoing soldier expatiates on his "dug-out" and how comfortable he has tried to make it; and the new comer is pro prrly complimentary in this diploma tic interchange between the men in khaki.and blue. When the French go they say "Good-by" and the British try their hands at "aure^olr." "There Is certainly one thing our soldier can learn from tho French, said a 'British officer, "Though a Frenchman has never done any cook-" Ing before he soon learns how to make ai) ajppatlxlng stew. Our me-'i aro doing botte.. Camp life is a good teacher." "Is there any outdoor bp^?t she 1b fond of?" "I should say so. She's dead in love with a baseball player."?Brown ing's Magazine. \ Could You? Use m little extra money to good advantage just now? Haven't you something to sell? Do j ou own something you no longer use, but which if offered at a bargain price vrou?d ap peal at once to some one who does need it? >- An INTELLIGENCER Want Ad will tarn the trick. PHONE 321 SUMMER HEADACHES It s the bright sun, these days, that causes headaches. You need rest glasses. Let us examine your eyes and fit you with Kosma Lensei. . Kosmas cut out the bright rays of light and "ease up" the sore and strained mus cles. "Kosma" and "Comfort" mean the same. Be comfortable. Walter H. Reese & Co. Optometrists Dont Overlook The Seyht Property This tract of about 125 acres is for sale. It lies about a mile from town, and can be bought in tracts from to acres up, and there's money in, it The price now is $125.00 to $t 75.00, according to the land?and ten years from today you couldn't buy it at* TWICE this price. Prof. C. W. Riser bought fifteen acres last week, and is going to build out there on the'new "'road that has rccehly been made through this property. Let us show it lo you. " ? LinJey & Watson Phones 647, 906, 310. Bookkeeping, Penmanship, Shorthand, and Typewriting. A knowl edge of these subjects means SUCCESS. Come, and let us prepare you for an independent career. A good position awaits you. I'Jay and night sessions. Enter any time. Write for catalogue. TEN DAY RATES SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY -THE PROGRESSIVE RAILWAY OF THE SOUTH" To Wi.mington and From Wrigttevile. N. C. Abbeville, S. C.$ 7.50 Anderson, S. C. 8.00 Athens, Ga. 10.00 Atlanta, Ga..10.00 Helton, S. C. 8.00 Birmingham, Ala....;... 15.00 Cedartown, G a..11.00 Donalds, S. C.... .r.......... 8.00 Elberton. Ga. .".no Greenville, S. C.??8.00 Greenwood, S. C. 7.60 To Wilmington; and From! Wrightsville, N. C. Gr?er. S. C.r-% 8.00 Hodges. S. C. 8.00 Lawrence ville, Ga.............. 10.09 Polzcr, S. C. 8.00 Pietlniont, S. C.. .. 8.00 Pockmart, Ga.. 11.20 Sh?Als Jet, 8. C..\. 8.00. Spartanburg, 8. C.......... 8.00 Union, 8. C. 7.59 Willlaxhston, S. C... 8.00 Winder. Ga. 10.00 Tickets on sale each Thursday, up to and including September 2, 1915, bear Lag find limit to reach original starting point, returning prior to midnight of second Monday following date of sale. Extension of final t>.turn limit may be nad upon payment of difference between tho> ten day and season rates. Call in nearest Ticket Agent for Pullman reservations, information or C. 8. Comp ton, T. P. A, Fred Geisaler, AsB't G. P. A., Atlanta, Ga. Atlanta. G a. Girl Life Guards Save Many Lives. i The first crew of girl life guards ?wer organised in the United States s now doing active duty at the Ocean 'ark Bench, pear Los Angeles. All Ivo members of the pretty crew have dready placed several rescues to their redit and proved that men have mining on them at lifesavers. The quintet is made up of the Misses tllci hfcKeoaK Cora Wieber, Vera ?ten tmun, ^ Alleen Allen, and Liln kmcier. all .expert swimmers and ancy divers, who they carried to lctory the colors of 1h* Los Angeles kthleUc club in' amateur competition. Not long slnco the Idea came .\? hem to place to practical nso Mjeir plendid watermanship ahd they or ?red their, services as volunteer life guards. The shoro at Ocean Park is dangerous, owing to a strong surf and violent underto*. sen the autho-ftles wore inclined to laugvr at the proposal But when the determined girls dem onstrated In a rigorous teat that they could handle tmrf boats and lifcsaving apparatus with consummate skill, be-' sides being able to carry a living subject through tho crashing breakers they were appointed without beslta-' tlon. So thojr take turns in patrolling the beach these d?ys, and the fearless and efficient manner in which Ojey have assisted drowning . p?ople to safety has won them the admiration of all who httvo seeu them at the!/ courageous and risky work.