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THE INTELLIGENCER Ifr?fABLISHED im Publl?hed ?very morning except Monday by The Anderson Intelligent eer at 140 Weat Whltner Street, An derson, 8. G. jj SEMI-WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER Published Tuesdays and Fridays IV M. GLENN....Editor and Manager Entered as second-class matter April 28, 1014, at the post office at Anderson, South Carolina, andar the Act of March 3, 1871. ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCHES ttelsphone .131 HUMHCBIPTJOlf BATES DAILY One Tear .16.00 Bia Months . 2.60 , Taree Months .1-26 One Month.42 One Week .40 SEMI-WEEKLY One Year.11.50 BLz Months . .76 The Intelligencer ls delivered by .arri?re in tbs city. Look at tho printed label on year paper. The date thereon shows when the subscription expires. Notice date on label carefully, and li not correct please notify us at once. Suu?^iv?r? desiring the address of their paper changed, will piesse state ia their communication both the old sud new Addresses. To insc's prompt delivery, com plaints of non-delivery In tho etty Ot Anderson should be made to the Circulation Department before 8 a. m. and a copy will be sent at ones. AU checks and drafts should hs drawn to Tbs Anderson Intelligencer. ABVEltTISlKG Rats? wUl be furnished OB apposa Hon. Ko tf advertising discontinued as sent on written order. The intelligencer will publish brier and rational letters on subjects of general interest when they are ac companied by the names and ad dresses of the authors ?rd are not ot a defamatory nsture. Anonymous eommunlcatlons will not be noticed. Rejected manuscripts will not hs re turned. Ia order to avoid delays aa account of personal absence, letters to The Intelligencer Intended for publication should not be addressed to any Indi vidual connected with the paper, hut ?hnpbr to The Intelligencer. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1916. The wnr ot the Toms continues In Georgia. o It's about timo to begin saving up for Christmas. -o Tom Loylc* seems to havo smoked Tom Watson into his hole. A German submarine has fired a Norwegian bark. Now there'll bo a howl. If folks tried as harr1 to be good as they do to be groat somo world tills would bo. In' about 90 days from now tho crusty old bachelor will bo receiving proposals of marriage o A fellow didn't realize how short ho was on geography until the Euro pean war got well under way. ! It ls now possible for tho human voice to AO by wireless. All of which .Will niako is possible for a He to travel even histor. ..: 0 J Add to tho numorous things wo can't tolerate : A loud voice on a little man.-York News. And a little voice on a big man. --o Aud nov; a scientist tells us that radium as a Cure for cancer ls a fake. How g'.nd are we that' we didn't hay a pound or so of lt as an investment. - , j,, o--. Ever notice that "those stories about Anding 3100-pearls in a 26-centa or der at oysters always come from un-heard-of and out-of-the-way place In a distant ucck of the woods. -a A dispatch says that when Presi dent Wilson motored to Bellmore the other f ay he planned to call on hts brothc- "but found him out" Now wonder what bud bsa been keeping kiverod up? --o It teems to have done lohn D. Rockefeller a lot of good to don a cnn'.-dtggor's suit for'a day or two in the Colorado mines. It would do him still more good if he'd wear that suit for a month, doing a ruiner's work and living on a miner's wages. Every young millionaire who has never done any manual labor ought to take a pre liminary course tn wage-earning toll, lt's what Peter the Great did, when he was fitting himself tb rule Russia, and lt made.him the greatest snd wisest of all the Cxars. GEMIAN REFORMATION Wc can no longer dig up much en thusiasm over "concessions" made by thu (?crinan government. Our diplo matic experience of tho last few DlontbB has taught us to bc cautious In our ecstasies. When it comes to the Kaiser yielding anything substan tial to law and humanity and the ful fillment of treaty obligations, most Ann ric ans have definitely taken up their residence In Missouri. They don't eire to wawte/ahr more emo tions over this diplomatie game. When they are convinced hy deeds that Germany means what she says about her naval reforms, or means what Ambassador Rernstorff says she says, thou they may relax their cyni cal 'show me" attitude and give back to Coonany the frank confidence due in honorable nutlon. It must be admitted, however, that the reorganisation of the Gcrmun luval staff looks very much like evi dence of a real change of heurt In Berlin. Admiral von TIrpltz appears o have shelved, ulong with the policy 3f assassination for which he stands. Tho blood-and-lron doctrine of 'frightfulness" semes to be repudiat ed. Strict orders are said to have been Issued to submarine commanders to return to legal methods of warfare, recognizing their obligation to re ipect neutral shipping, to give all loncombatants a chance for '?heir lives, and not to destroy any vow-jel >i commerce except after due waru ng or for just cauao. Assurances, .uo, have boen sent to Washington .ending to corroborate this reputed 'lianm; of policy. We shall soe. If, for a reasonable period, np more liners aro attacked, io moro American merchantmen are down up and no more citizens ure orpedoed* antf if reparation is actual y made, or pledged beyond posslbil ty of hedging, for tho American lives md property destroyed unlawfully >y Gorman submarines,. we? shall then legln to look upon Germany as a respeuMfble and civilised neighbor worthy of renewed business and BO :lal rotations. THE GREAT AMERICAN FLIRT Mrs. Alec Tweedie, an English wrlt ir, in a recent book on "Women the iVorld Over," pays a special tribute to American women. It isn't tho usual me, at all. In comparing them with ho women, of other lands sho is struck lesa -hy" tbssT i Wited beauty ir intellect th>>a. by . their supreme ten lus for tho worldr?td game of Hrtlng. In this realm, wo are told, the Unorlcan glr| hos only^jc-ne competl or. "Of ali'Yc?quettee off this globe, >f many races and Alvar?; colors, tho greatest flirts aro the American and ?panish." Tho two types, however, ire characterized^ by very ' different no thoth.. "The apanfBh girl ls a silk >n. sinuous Olrt, wlth',hcautirul little ?andu and feet and lazy ways. The American is an effervescent one. She lubbles al! over with life and enthuB aam, is virile to her finger-tips, 'jol ies' men until they do not know vhether they are on their heads or heir heels." Undoubtedly the compliment-if it s a compliment-ls deserved, as mil tons of male Americans can testify, nany of them to their sorrow. Vhether tho unfilrtatlous feminist vin take any satisfaction In this mluonce is somewhat doubtful. It is Still more doubtful whether ny American women except tho hand ul. that .hope to marry Into English Itlos wilt be pleased by Mrs. 'woodie's conclusion that "the Amor - can woman is what the modern Eng ishwoman might have been had she ot centuries of conservatism and tra ition behind her; wo \ (tho English) ro what the fair American may yet income." Let our men, at least, utter a word f pretest. If tho evolution, of the Lnierlcan i's going' to maka her more nd more like the English women, we rant no. moro evolution. We prefer unorlcan women as they are. VILLA'S BUSINESS AGENT Here are the outlines ot ? story- that >. Henry might have written. A hobo found himself "set out*' In he little way station of blorra Blanca, 'ex. A generous cowboy listened to da tal? of woe and gave him a ?v*' ,ollar bill. He rode Into Bl Paso on , first class ticket, got drunk on the hange and ?limbed onto the roda ot . Bleeper on a' west-bound train. He apposed ho was en rout? to Cal if or la. Ile woke up covered with alkali lust in a Mexican town. ..Ai rough oohing man o?i th? platform laughed it the spectacle he presented and ut ?red a few words in Spanish. A uni-, brm ed Mexican approached the hobo ir.d said: "Gen. Villa offers you Use ns? of da bath In his privat?, ear. He will provide you with a new suit of clothes, You are to walt until ho re turns." Tin hobo entered the luxurious car, bathed, donned a fine new tailor-made ?ult, smoked some good cigars, and men Gen. Villa returned. He looked his guest over critically. "Ho you know unythlng about busi ness'" he asked. "Try me!" answered the hobo. Villa gav?: bim a roll of banknotes und told him to gut busy and sell a lot of crude rubber that had been con fiscated and was stored at Torre?n. Thc hobo got on the Job. First he adopted u Spanish name. He took the initial "D" for "damn" and in vented tito cognomen "Soucedo," which he judged ought to be Spanish for "souse." Ho hurriedly gathered detail? of the rubber industry, went to San Antonio, sold tho stuff by wire to New York dealers, got a big draft for the money and turned it over to Villa. Tlie rebel general thereupon made bim bis general business agent. Soucedo quickly learned to speak Spanish and write it He has been remarkably successful. They say Vil la's campaign would have collapsed months ugo if lt hadn't been for his cleverness and loyalty. Business men m nearly every large city In the coun try aro familiar with the signature, "D. Soucedo" on war contracts. This is the Btory that "Soucedo" himself tells of his recent career. MJ early lifo ls a mvstcry. Really what's tho use of writing fiction when things like that happen in real life? THE TRUFFLE INDUSTRY Giacomo Glavelll of New York City in dead. Ho's tho man who discovered the American truffle. And if you've never heard of truffles, they're a sort of croBs between a potato and a puff Mil, which grows underground with out any foliage or roots, and ls worth eight dollars a pound. Truffles are used chlfly for flavor ing food. You can get meat Berved "with truffles" In the bost New York and Chicago restaurants by paying two or thr.ee dollars oxtra. You prob ably won't sec any truffles at that, you'll ftt a whiff of them in the sauce which you can recognize if you're a connoh-B<Mir. Clavelli originated the truffle In- ' dus'ry in America. He had come from a famous truffle region In Italy, bringing with him his truffle hound Milan. The tuber 1B always hunted with dogt. or pigs trained to scent lt. Ho didn't see why truffles shouldn't grow in America as well aa in Italy and France, and so took his dog into the Jersey woods. The Drat day trusty Milan dug up about ten dollars' worth. Then he formed a partnership with Lorenzo Kobba and imported some moro trained doge, and for many years they have made a good living out of ugly looking "roots" from the woods ot neighboring counties. They tried to interest the depart- , ment of agriculture, and Glavelll of-? fo""d to mako a truffle survey ot the. United States if the government would pay lils expenses, hu reasoned that. Inasmuch as France produced $7,0v0. 000 to $0,000,000 worth of truffles a year nnd the United States ts much larger, there may be from $50,000.000 ?lo MOO.i'00.000 worth of truffle* going to waco every year. Dut the gov ernment never took s >y action. Undoubtedly there arc millions of dollars worth of thean elght-dollar a-pound tubers benoath tho. oaks, chestnuts; and birches of 'American woods, and nobody getting any bone fit from them. A LINE o* DOP E Weather Forecast: Fair Saturday; slightly cooler east. F-unday fair. o ? Mr. W. R. Osborne, who has Just entered the Insurance business and real estate field, stated yesterday that he felt like be waa getting back home again with his outee now over Evans Pharmacy No. t, "I am celebrating an anniversary today." stated Mr. Osborne. ''.Exactly 25 yean ago I began clerking In a little store near where the Citizens National bank now stands. Thia store was run by the firm of Andrew and Pr?vost and carried a Una ot confec tioneries and groceries. I stayed there two years and then went in a store run In th? place where Runen stein ts now. After being there for six years, I went with the Bleckley Fretwell company on the corner whare. 8. Fleishman Bros.* stand ls now located and whare I waa in busi ness for a long tim?. 'Yes, this ls my 86th anniversary in (he business world in Anderson and I feel just Uko I was getting back borne at 101 1-2 Eaat Whltner street." --o Tho following ls taken from the Newberry Observer and waa entitled "Good Man Paaaes:" "Charley Langston 1? dead-the long time publisher and editor of thc An derson Intelligencer ; for many years secretary of the Suutn Carolina as sociation; kind hearted, generous, pa tient through years of suffering. Peace to his ashes." --o Mr. E. R. Horton has Just returned from the l'eo Dee section of the state ,and ho reports a splendid trip and alao a very interesting one. When asked about crop conditions Mr. Horton said: "Well those fellows down there told me that their crops were poor, but I thought them might linc* That ls certainly a fine farming section and if our farmers up here could grow such cotton as I saw down IV e, they would not complain of having a short crop. The land is very pretty and is ns level as Main nt. cut." Yesterday afternoon someone stole a bicycle left in tho door of the store room formerly occupied by Carring ton next to Anderson theatre. Tho wheel was the property of Harvey Dickson of Evans Pharmacy Main storo and ho stated that ho left lt thero while bc wont into Bee tho pic tures. The police have been notified and they are on the lookout for the bicycle. 0 Mr. M. L. Cochran, fonnorly with the Peoplo's bank of this city has ac cepted a position with Linley and Watson on North Main street. Mr. Cochran has, been book keeper at thc People's bank for the past several years. -o Mr. Pinkston, manager of tho Pal metto, stated yesterday that he would have at the popular vaudeville house next week Hall's French Follies. This ls recommended to be one of the best and cleanest shows in lue circuit and will come to Anderson from Rocky Mount, N. C. Tho shows at the Pal metto for the past few wooka have been attracting large crowds. o This is the apple season, rho large bright red northern apples aro now arriving in the city and look very tempting. The crop ls said to be good this year. The northern apples are selling at 40 cents per peck and the home raised at 25'cents per peck. -o There was a regular meeting of the board ot trustees of the city schools held In tho office of Supt. McCants. Only routine mattera were attended to. Many people of this city* will go to Clemson this afteraoop to see tho gamo between tho football teams of Davidson and Clemson Colleges. Both of these teams have been rather > .j? r ' ? . - evenly matched for the past few sea sons and the contest , is expected to be a good one. Many will go to the game Just to get a Uno on Clemson so that they can better, appreciate tho Auburn-Clcmson game in Anderson on October 16. --o The advance man pf. tho Barnum and Balley circus stated yesterday that he was positive that there would be only ono circus In Anderson this full. Hagen back and-i. Wallace are scheduled to be here on October 21, but have made no arrangements' for railroad transportation. John Robin son's show aro billed to be hore on October 31, and have m?de transpor tation arrangements. It. ip thought, however, that Barnum and Balley will crowd out the others. AWARDED CAR AS DAMAGES. Judge Gives Fanner Who Was Baa Bown Cause of Tremble. (Frederick, Md., Dispatch.) As the result of a smashup in whlcbj be and lils three dhttdren were slightly injured and his two farm wagons demolished, W. A. Jones ot near South Mountain was awarded the automobile which caused the damage by Justice Posey. Jones can keen the machine unless Thomas M. Mason of Hagerstown makes good the damage ih the farm wagons and the loss of his produce tn the mixup. In that case Jones must return the automobile. Mason also was fined $50 ror reckless driv ing. The wreck occurred about a mil? west of Middletown early in the morning and ls said to have been due to the lack of lights on the au tomobile, which carried only a lan tern on one fender..'The .utomohlle rounded one farm wag?n and -crashed lato the vehicle driven by Jones, who, with a daughter, was hurled to the pike. The machine then .mashed Into a wagon driven by Jones' son, Edgar, with whom a sister was riding. They too, were thrown to the Toad. Th* automobile was so badly battered that lt waa left at the scene of the accident with tht two wagons, and Jonas bsa taken charge of lt? The merchandis isfaction-the test of wear, ev is your safeguar Good wearables young men anc best possible; mission. And it's ju3t th a stock that a^ inspection here way short of will you be able ciate the values A new hat now is impe man's well dressing. ] creations that are sui greens, blues, grays, browns; the newest lin ed in every detail. S $4, $5. B-O-E $2, $2.6 RADII A FAKE AS CANCER CURE New York, Oct. 1.-Recent claims hat radium 1J a sure cure for cancel vers disputed yesterday by Dr. Rancis Cartve Wood, director of the tancer research work under thc George Crocked endowment of $3, 00,000 lu the College of Physician? .nil Surgeons. The denial was dar ug an address in the exercises that ipened tho college year in the bulld ogs in West Fifty-ninth Btreet. "Even writers of scientific pa ters," Dr. Wood said, "speak ci tho magic power of radium"-rangle, be aus? they do not understand lt. Vhen its physical qualities are fully inderstood we will -hear very litthi bout the use of radium in the treat ment of cancer. In spite of all tat?mente about the wonderful mes radium produces, we know that I will cure only a very small num ier of cancers, and will do nothing ihIch cannot be done by surgery. Hints at "Quack" Practice. . "Owing to the furor and, publicity iver it, however, it is not always ossible to get patients to HU bin it to urgery for the removal ot a tumor, bey are so anxious to bo treated .Uh radium. The farmer in thc urtherest New England hills, rend us in his weekly paper that radium s a certain cure for all kinds of can er, comes to town and refuses an peratlon which, might ' save him, my to fall into the hands of the earest quack who has a little pow er in a tubo." Dr. Wood quoted from an address cfc re a committee in congress -fast ear in which radium was extolled s "like the blessed light from hcav u." pentrattng beyond the reach ot urgery and destined to perform utracles in chemistry and physics, asking what there is in the element f radium which so warps judgment "d n' rlly intelligent. Dr. Wood an we.ed by saying lt ls the element pf nystery and the human liking for lents with a dusty microscope,-ant ans mlglcal. The same impulse, he said, am ounts for the success of .high quack ry, which displays Itself In a nin es tic array of instruments, or rc orts of complicated chemical an lysls. Just as the doctor of a genera ion ago impressed his wealthy pa tents with a dusty microscope, and uacks of a period still older em loyed the magic of skulls and stuff d reptlls in the decorations of the onsultlng room. The muses ? like list sort of thins;. "A remarkable example o' crowd eychology," Dr. Wood continued, affecting both the medical profes lon and the lay public end showing *ie appeal of th? occults, was seen in onnectkm with ths Friedmann tu erculosts cure a few years ago. The yndlcate which shielded Kseli he lad the discoverer, who was prob* bly honest In bis belief that the arterial cultures he used had some aloe in the treatment of iuboroulo b. "In ermany the remedy met with cold reception, but in this coun ry, owing to the ?rest advertising niuo of the dally press, to the aup o-eclsutific way In which th? whole uestion was ventilated sad to the pposftion of the medical profession D the use of thia secret remedy, con I de rabie sympathy, for Dr. Fried ?ann was aroused even among thc utelllgent, and there resulted a atfcer bitter feeling toward *he med ial profession as jeolooslly prevent er the public ?rom beneficing by a -arr?tons discovery: somewhat as Blay ina attitude of a portion of eback of the B-O-Ej broadest guarantee, er made dand ours. for men, I boys, the that's our at kind of waits your now; in no seeing 'em ! to appre rative to any Sere are rich e to please; gun metals, es are follow tetsons $3.50, 0, $3. You know h get shoes tl they often ! both fit an< maximum - Snow Shoes, $4, $4.50, $ The Store with a the press on the subject of 'twilight sleep' is that the physicians have banded together to defraud the peo ple of something valuable. , . "This influence of the mystical ar fect8 us all. Do you refuse to open 1 an umbrella in the house or cross be tween thc carriages of a passing ' funeral? Do you avoid passing un derneath a standing ladder or knock ; on wood lest your boost bring bad luck? Probably you 'do not because you are a r. orstitious but because, as a witty fi lend once said when ac i cused. he liked to be on th? safe , side." President Nicholas Murray Butler, who .stamped thc college opening as a Columbia University function by starting the exercises, said in his ; brief remarks that within five years buildings will. be under* construction for the 'project of Columbia and the Presbyterian hospital, to establish in thU city .a .medical centre, wi/lcl will rank with ' those of Vienna and Berlin. The proped calls for sub scriptions of $15,0011.000. DEATH LIST FROM STORM STILL GROWS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE.) reported no loss of life but a heavy property damage. The hurricane struck here late Wednesday night and 1 the full force apparently swept the neighborhood of Uouma, a city of five thousand. The last report from Houma stated) that many refugees were arriving from gulf coast points. St. Bernard parish was flooded by a tidal wave two to eight feet deep at the lower end, couriers reported. Crops through the storm district aro reported almost totally destroyed. Fears are felt for the safety of residents along the Mississippi to the south. The last word' was from the 1 steamer Creole anchored off Fort St. Phillip, which reported water flowing over the levees and many houscB swept away. Captain Mengos and three of tho crew of the tug Corsair who drowned off Nine Mile- Point when the Cor sair and three fleets of barges were sunk during the storm. These fleets of over two hundred ojal laden barges were worth a million and a half. The:clearing of the streets has be gun, andi lt ls expected that the city will appear normal tomorrow. A por tion of the western section about thirty blocks long and fifteen block wide IB flooded one to four feet deep. Mayor Behrman issued a statement that no outside aid will be needed ? H said he believed the property loss nere andi nearby, would be several million. .' Eleven small craft were sunk tn the harbor, ?Ix steamboats were dam aged, the bark Helena was sunk and '.wo of her crew drowned. The Unit ed States converted yacht Stranger wan rammed by a drydock at tho naval station and sunk, and'the mon-, i ter Amphttrlta was driven aground.. Passengers from Lake Charles, Morgan City and Baton Rouge re? ported all the telegraph poles down and the lines down for miles. Direct communication -wttl be impossible for several days. Cotton and all other exchanges are closed. STORM ROW SWEEPING THOUGH OHIO TALLEY Washington? Oct. 1.-Tho tropical storm ts ?weeping through the upper i Ohio valley. A secondary storm had I developed over southeastern Virgin it and fa moving northeastward. Both are accompanied by ratas and north? . east gales. .Storm warnings are or dered from Norfolk to Portland, Maine on the Atlantic In the Chesea peake Bay, and cn tho Groat Lakes from Port Huron to Oswogo. The In . tensity of the gulf storm has ~d*lmin toked. It caused general rains east of the Mississippi. guarantee of sat , with your own ow hard it is for you to hat are 'right; if they fit lack style; you can get 1 style here; of course, a of wear-value always. , $3.50; Howard & Foster >; Hanans, $6.50. BUSINESS CONDITIONS STEADILY IMPROVING Washington. Ofct. 1,-Improved busings* conditions in practically all sections ie reflected in reports from federal reservo agents in twelve districts made public by tho reserve board. Three southern districts report present cotton prices and the efforts of the 'ederal board to finance the crop had a beneficial effect on oth er Unes. With cotton at the present prices Fjlchmond reports a large part of the crop on tho move from the first hand. The consequent liquida tion is generally helpful. Leaf to bacco palees are holding well : ' Con ditions are nonnd. and ..promising. A bright cotton outlook is an Impor tant factor In the Atlanta district? The railroads traffic has boen in creased considerably. The tobacco crop averages above last year. The general conditions, in the Dallas dis trict is Unproved ?vter Augt?t. BUILT FIRST TINY SUBMARINE L. ?. Speur, Shipbuilder, Challenges Both Henry Ford and Prof. Parker (New London, Conn., Dispatch.) The controversy between Henry Ford and Professor Parker as to Who was the originator of the plan for a dimlnutlce submarine .boat has been met by a statement of L. Y. Spear, president of the New London Ship and Engine company at Groton, a sub sidiary plant of the , Klcctric Boat company. In 1910 Mr. Spear bad pjasffi&raft ed for three submersible ,?Hjd& each capable of acuommodatJg??pnw of three, or, if necessary,'TMpKvnl The bulls were built in /sectlqntf at the Fore River shipyard and sent across the Atlantic. The plates wer* quickly assembled after reaching their desti nation, which is not mad o public. Deisel '*A\ engines and electric mo tors were installed and Uve subma rinos were equipped with two stand ard size Whitehead torpedoes. The boats, put In commission In 1911, were capable of traveling sixty miles, and could develop ten knot speed cn the surface or nine knots submerged. The hull sections wore built . and shipped from Fore River secretly and it is reported the total cost of the miniature submarines was less than ' the sum mentioned by either Ford or Parker, lt is also said that the craft hare been doing excellent work dur ing the present war and are still afloat and searching for marine prey, according to last reports. General Grant's Attire. It was at ?he closing exercises of one of the public schools in Boston ,that Marjorie was reading a compo altltn of her own, "Grant's Work in the Civil War. She got on most cred itably until sh o reached Lee's surren der at Appomatox Court house. She then related how Lee wore his' sword v.nd wa? handsomely Attired in full uniform, "whtlo Grsnt.55 she.. an nounced, "had on nothing but en oldY ragged union ?ult. "-Pittsburgh Chronicle-Telegraph. Financial Backtab ''What you must do. eon, ls to lay the foundation for a solid, business success/" -Thatw wy idea dad. Now, first of all, I require sound financial back ing." "I get you< sou, 1*11 provide car faro until you land a job."-Birming ham Age-Herald. Gelsberge Potato Chips Fresh, an? Crisp ii&iiy, Pbo&e Nc 733. XT