The intelligencer. (Anderson, S.C.) 1915-1917, October 06, 1915, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4
TH? INTELLIGENCER
ESTABLISHED ISM.
* ?
Published ?very morning except
Monday by Tbe Anderson Intelllgen
ter st 140 Weat Wbitner 81root. An
derson, 8. 0.
SEMI-WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER
Published Tuesdays and Fridays
L. M. GLENN....Editor and Manager
Entered aa second-class matter
April 28, 1914, at the post office st
Anderson, South Carolins, ander the
?ct of March ?,.1879.
ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCHES
telephone .821
SUBSCRIPTION BATES
DAILY
Ona Year.IB.00
Six Months .2.60
rbree Months.. 1.25
Ono Month.48
Ona Week.~* 19
SEMI-WEEKLY
One Year v.....81.50
Biz Months .76
The Intelligencer ia delivered by
terriers in the city.
Look at the printed label on your
paper. The date thereon shows when
tb? subscription eipires. Notice date
on label carefully, and if not correct
alease notify ns at once.
Subscribers desiring the address of
their paper changed, will please state
in their communication both tba old
sud new addresses.
To Insure prompt delivery, eom
plainte ot non-delivery In the etty
af Anderson should be made to thc
Circulation Department before tam.
and a copy will be sent at once.
AU checks end drafts should be
drawn to Tba Anderson Intelligenoer
A?YERT?SI!fti
Rates win be furnished ea aaallaa
8km.
Ito tf advertising dis COD tinned aa?
sept on written order.
The Intelligencer will publish brief
and rational letters on ?abjects of
general Interest wbon they are ac~
eoaapacled by the names and ad
dresses of the authors and are not of
? defamatory sature. Anonymous
communications will not be noticed.
P.-Jected manuscripts will not be re
turned.
> "1 " f '. 1-1
In order to arotd delays on account
et personal absence, letters to The
Intelligencer Intended for publication
should not se addressed to any indi
vidual connected with th? paper, bnt
Simply to The Intelligencer.
_ 1 i. ;. ._
r "'"-'y ; '
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 0, 1915.
Cotton baring reached twelve cents.
Groundhog Ed Smith - may now come
out of hie bolo.
ti o ??
Thc ftllioB will have to gire up the
Dardanelles campaign. Three kings
can't beat'a strait
O
All Gaul is divided Into three parts
-those who have lt, those who Want
lt,.and those who lie beneath Its sod.
? " o .
Commission form of government for
cities may not be a failure, but some
times the men tho .Voters put in
charge of it are.
?' ' O; ' -
It looks as if Columbia were doing
its best to win the championship
from Charleston ia a certain brand of
municipal pol?tica.
--o
The man who .borrows trouble al
ways pays more than the logal rate
of Interest, but lt ls mighty bard to
convict the leader of breaking the
usury laws.
The war la said to be costing $1,
40Q a second. How we'd like to spike
the guns for half a minute while we
thrust an icthlng palm into the war
cheat!
-o
A recent Michigan case held that a
turkey if?, an* animal. The decision
will be generally accepted as correct
aa Judge Bird wrote the opinion of
the court
o
The Connan word for starter is
houptabgarti^istelleauflscbtsvorrteheT.
If that' ls what they hurle? at the
Russian army, we can begin to un
derstand some of the robsons for the
retreat of the whiskered hosts.
-0-1-.
When the frost Is on the pumpkin,
And the tang ls in the 'nlmmon beer,
They're no more' taetanchory days,
b'gosh- M;
They're the choler -.t Ju the year.
In a little Pennsylvania town there
la but one ice cream dealer and bis
name is Timothy Hell. And they say
the folks are vary fond ot going to
Hell for their idgfoam.
When Presqu Wilson east bia
ballot tho other day it waa heard
around the United States, but it didn't
count for nny more than" tho vote of
the hod carrier- wab followed hun to
tb? polls.
THE COST OE WAK
After all, the soldier 1? but the
pawn of war. The power tbut directs
his movements and ?mil ? the strings
for him to advance or retreat is the
almighty dollar. The dollar is the
genius that moves armies and cuuses
thrones to <iuake and tremble. And
lt will IK! this same invincible dellar
which in the end will summon thc
bird of peace ut the dono of the last
act in the tragedy and say what con
ditions shall govern the future con
duct of the warring nations.
Money shoots as well as talks.
Money makes thu war horse go, and
the statisticians are very busy mar
shalling ngureu to tell UH how much
the war is costing. All the belliger-11
mil , it has been estlmuted, ure spend-1 I
ir.g liol less than $7r>,000,000 a da-.
Counting In the coBt of property de
stroyed, human energy crippled for
life, and nil the various and sundry
items of waste, an additional SfiO.OOQ,
000 might bu added. Well, that makes
something liku $1.400 for each sec
ond of the day und night.
In South Carolina we have about |
40.000 farmers who rent the land they .
cultivate. If this war would stop ,
just one day and Its cost be applied ,
to starting these struggling citizens ,
to easier living by giving them land (
of their own, each ono of them would
get a $'{,000 farm free of debt with a ,
little money thrown in for Improve- |
ments. <
War ls waste. War ls the moat de- ,
Btructivo agency in tho world, and tho (
peoplo of the warring countries-the ,
plain, producing, hard-working men j
and women-will go on for ages pll- ,
lng up war taxes in thc sweat of un- ,
remitting toll. Tho dollar bas a lit
tle luster now, for the glory of the ,
battlefield and the fame of the battle- t
ships moke it shine with reflected
glory, but when the pomp and majesty ,
of lt all passes the dollar will con- ,
Untie its grind as a hard and merci- ?
leBS master. ' j
Lives are precious, but the cost of ?
war ls measured Iq money. If the ,
measure were less selfish and Bordld, -J
tho world would have fewer warB. |
TO EQUALIZE TERMS OF OFFICE 1
: ?- i l> \ :
It is understood that there is a
strong sentiment among the members
of the Anderson delegation to equalize
the terms of office, of the county of
ficials, and somo action along this
line will probably be taken at the
next session of the general assembly.
Of the eight county officials, the
clerk of court, tho probato Judge, tho
sheriff, the superintendent of educa
tion and tho coroner, hold office for
a term ot four years-the term of the
superintendent nf education having
been Increased by action of diva last
legislature-while the treasurer, the
auditor and the supervisor still con
tinue in office for a period of two
years,
In tho lnteres^o^efflclency and
fairness, the three two-year terms
ought to be Increased to four years
so that all county officials might be
placed on exactly the same equality.
To get the best service from an of
ficial, lt ls highly necessary that he
be not hampered by too frequent cam
paigns and that hts energies and his
time ho not absorbed In a continuous
effort to get votes and thus win re
election.
Tho four-year term ls lu linc with
the plan that has been adopted In prac
tically all counties of the state, and
Anderson is among the few counties
that still cling to the old order of
things. That the change ls needed
none will deny, and that the delega
tion will have the support of the peo
ple lu making lt ts generally conced
ed.
ALFALFA CLUBS
. Among the many ac -Ules ot the
county farm demonstra" n agent. Mr.
Byers, none has more promise ot
splendid results than the alfalfa Clubs
established over the county. That al
fa! *a can be successfully grown has
been demonstrated by several pro
gressive farmers, of Anderson county,
but heretofore the movement has
never bsd tbs stimulus bf any man or
agency to push lt generally among the
farmers.
It ls estimated tbst this county
ships from the wesl and other por
tions of the country a halt million
dollars in hay tor feed. In a way, this
ls all a waste ot good money ss every
bale of hay needed for hom* consump
tion can be produced at home if the
proper effort ls made. Our soil is
capable of producing a wida variety
ot products, and a practical demon
stration of tills fact ought to be im
pressed upon the mind of every far
mer in the county.
Now thst cotton bas reached a fair
price, the old danger ..of overproduc
tion for another year again becomes
scute. ' Perhaps never' in the history
of the county bas there been a more
general dvsiro to diversify crops on
account of the uncertainty attending
the fortunes of thc ull-co'tou farmer,
and it would be a mistake to take
back water now that the lesson bas
been learned.
In this connection, the work of the
county farm demonstration agent is
to bo commended. Ills activities bavo
been muny and varied. Hut if he had
don)- nothing more than introduce the
growing of alfalfa as a practical
mouey-makiug and money-saving
crop, bis work would have been re
paid many times over for the small
?alary be ls getting from tho county.
Two hundred aeres In ti new crop
ot immense value to farmers is u good
?tart, and it means eventually thou
sands of dollars kept where it ought
to remain-at home.
OBEDIENCE TO LAW
A common falling of many people
throughout this country is to flout
openly those laws that they do not
lpprove. This fact ls one of the un
derlying causes of lawlessness, and
ho pity of lt is is that often good peo
ple are HO blinded by prejudice or so
unconsciously Impelled by self-lnter
?st that they lend their Influence, in
i negative or 'mpasslvo way, to the
forces that mock the law.
At times we still bear growllngs
ind grumblings to the effect that pro
hibition cannot be enforced in South
karolina. It can bo enforced, and it
will bo enforced. With a chief execu
tive like Governor Manning, there ls
io reason to have any fear of general
lawlessness in the enforcement of the
aow prohibition act or In the enforco
nent of any other statute.
This from Tho Manufacturer's Rec
ird is pccularlly pertinent to condi
:Ions In this state Just now:
Vit ls preeminently important that
respect for law and order should bo
developed to tho utmost extent in the
louth, and wherever prohibition pr?
rails, it is incumbent on the state of
ficials to enforce the law with the
utmost vigor, for every violation of
law lessens respect for all law, and
.hose who violate a law because they
Jo not believe in its wisdom are help
ing to break down respect for all
law."
THE PENDLETON CELEBRATION
The Pendleton Farmers' Society ls
ine of the few old organizations o?
the kind In tho United States that
las been maintained as an active body
tor a century. The celebration that
lias been planned for October 12th,
13th and 14th deserves the hearty
support of every progressive citizen
if the county.
The celebration, when one measures
the real value of the society to the
community to the county and to thc
state, is kn event of great importance.
It is not simply because Secretary
if Agriculture Houston and other
notables will he there to make ad
dresses that the celebration 1B en
titled to support, but the underlying!
truth that gives it dignity and impor
tance is that in tho minds and hearts
if the gentlemen who composed the
membership of the society during a
former generation the Idea of estab
lishing a great agricultural college
was carefully fostered until it bore
fruit in tho building of Clemson Col
lege. For this reason the celebration
takes on a state-wide Interest, and
thbso vbo ,uiy tribute to the old so
ciety br contrhlutlng their member
ihlp to make lt a success are doing a
rood and worthy deed.
Every rural community would
doubtless be much better off for main
taining an active farmers' organisa
tion. It acts as a clearing house for
general discussion; lt builds up and
broadens the community spirit; lt
levolops cooperation and builds up a
arotherly spirit In the big and little
events of every day life. And to the
lld society that has modo Pendleton
ilstortc, that has contributed so much
a the agricultural awakening In
3outh Carolina, our people owe at
east a debt that should he liquidated
n part by rallying to the supp irt ot
ho men in charge of the celebration
ind helping them to make it a sue*,
tess.
A L IN E I
o" DO P E\
Weather Forecast-Fair In western
joilion; showers In eastern portion
Wednesday; cooler. ltAirsday fair.
o .'?
Our editor, Mr. L. IC. Glenn, was
?elxed with an attack of appendicitis
'osterday morning and had to be
aken to the Anderson County Hospl
al for aa operation. The operation
ras performed yesterday afternoon
hortly after 6 o'clock ana the attend?
lug physicians ?tated laut night tba
lu wa? successful aud that Mr. Clent
waa renting well. Ilia many friends
truBt that his recovery will be speed}
and that he will soon be out again.
-o
.Mr. F. F. Darby stated yesterdaj
that he had occupied the garage ot
East Orr street known as Sadler';
garage and was ready for his friends
to come to see him. Mr. Darby wat
formerly located in the old Sullivar
Hardware building on Kant Whit IHM
street. Before then he was foreman
for Mr. Sadler at the garage on On
Street and later was with the Gibbt
Machinery company of Columbia. Mi
Darby stated that he will have onl>
first class mechanics and that i al!
?work will be done promptly.
?-o
A letter received in the city from
Mr. and Mrs. D. P. McBrayer, for
merly of this city but more reccntlj
of New Orleans, La., states that theil
house was partially damaged in the
severe storm in New Orleans I'aSI
week, the roof being blown off and
two chimneys being blown down
Their many friends in this city will
be glad to learn that the damage
was confined to the building und thal
none of tho family were injured.
? o- ?
At a recent session of tho Paving
commission, tho commission decided
to reimburse the city for the amount
paid hy thc city to tho city englneei
for his services to the paving com
mission in connection with the street
paving, and directed the treasurer ol
the commission to pay the city thc
sum of $200 for that purpose. It will
be recalled that the city uns allowed
the Paving commission the services ol
Its engineer, which has saved thc
commission quite a considerable sum
on the paving work, and lt wac
thought that the city should have re
imbursement to tho extent of $200
i
which is a very small part of thc
value of the city engineer's services,
o
"I feel like I have done a day's
work," stated Mr. Smith of the Smith,
Garrett and Barton concern yester
day. "I have taken tho measures ol
22 suits for tho city il remen and
police. I would like to have a fow
more though." ' *
--O
. .A telegram from tho attending
physician of Mr. Leo Ballentlne, who
is in a hospital at Baltimore, states
that Mr. Ballentlne is getting along
nicely and that his temperature IE
normal.
--c
The following real estate transac
tions have been transacted through
thc Anderson Real Estate and Invest
ment company recently: Dr. J. E
Watson's place at Iva sold to Mr
George Belcher, 107 acres, for $80 an
acre; Henry Wilson's place near Wil
liamston, tiG acres, to McAllister and
Holcomb at $40 an acre.
It was brought to the attention ol
. tho city council that it was. advisable
for tbo city engineer to have an auto
mobile as the various work in which
the city is engsged sqd the paving
requires him to cover a great deal ol
territory in as little time as possible.
It was found that a considerable sav
ing could be made by having an auto
mobile and lt was decided to pur
chase one for $468.50 for the use ol
the city engineer. The machine ol
course, is the property ot the city.
-o
The city directories for the year
1915, which were compiled by the
Piedmont Directory company at Ashe
ville, and printed by the Oulla Print
ing and Binding company, were 'dis
tributed yesterday. A new feature
noticeable in Ute new directory is the
telephone directory ot the local ex
change. ' The book ls very neat and
ls a credit to the printers. Accord
ing to its figures ths city and sub
urban population Is 17,600.
-o- ,
Mr. Furman Smith has secured the
agency ot the American Ballast com
pany of Knoxville, Tenn., for eight
comities in ?South Carolina. For tho
past several weeks there has been a
great demand in Anderson for lime
and Mr. Smith has been disposing et
this product to a great extent.
CAUGHT PAINTING OLD FISH
(New York Sun.)
A new method of. doctoring decayed
fish was discovered yesterday hy In
spector Leiber of the burean ot food
ead drugs In the health department.
Ia the market under the Williams
burg bridge he came upon a woman
who wee dyeing the gilli of an old
fleh wR't a red liquid from a bottle.
The soman acknowledged that th?
process was Intended to make the fish
look fresh. Tbs inopectcr reported
the cass to Dr. Lucius P. Brown, chlor
of the bureau and sent, the bottle,
which 'he believed held coal tar of
aniline dye, to the department's lab
oratory.
The fish was ordered destroyed, and
inspectors throughout1 the. city were
instructed to watch for Limitar viola
tions of the sanitary cede.
ORI ARD MARCH
CRY OF SOUTH
Not since tlie panic of October,
?U07, bas thc situation looked HO
promising for tte South aa at pres
ent, writes Mr. Richard H. Ed
monds ?in Tho Mannufacturera F.'jc
ord.
During the last eight years wo
have had no period of broad gen
eral prosperity in this country. We
have had brtof spurts in some par
ticular lines of industry, and we
had five or six years of exception
ally good conditions in the produc
tion and price of cotton, but tn all
this period t.iere has been a lack of
enthusiaem and snap. Railroads
were feeding thc full effect of the
hajmperlng restriction against capi
tal and corporations and therefore,
could do hut little improvement ot
extension work. New rial roads were
scarcely to be thought of, except
where here and there some daring
at'empt was made to build a small
linc.
In all that long period the iron
and steel industry of thc South was
more or less depressed, and for a
great part of the time was very
seriously depressed and operated at
little or no profit. The dullness in
railroad construction work brought
about great dullness and depression
in lumber, one of the South's larg
est industries. While cotton was
high during a considorablc part of
that time, cotton goods were for
most of the period low in price, and
cotton mills were run without much
profit, except In rare cases.
Qne of the most depressing and
at tue samo time most noticeable
features In connection with a broad
study of the wholo South was the
lack ot that optimism and "MhuB
iasm and determination tu achieve
things which had been so pronounc
ed for many years prior to the
panic of 11)07.
Scene Shifts.
Now the wholo scene has boen
shifted. The stage apparently has
been set for a new order of things.
Tho mighty panorama of broad
Southern development which has
been movtfng so slowly for tuc last
eight years begins once more to
unfold with increasing rapidity.
The spirit of optimism Is spread
ing. Quickened by the very situa
tion which the South faced last
fall, determined that this section
should not bc downed by one year of
adverse, conditions in trade, nor be
made to stand before the woi M as
impoverished, unabio tc meet a tem
porary difficulty, tho people of tlie
South are arousing themselves ,?nd
preparing to march forward to a
victory over every unfavorable cir
cumstance.
No ono can nick up a Southern
paper anywhere from Maryland out
tb Texas, and Oklahoma without
catching the note of optimism which
ls being struck by everybody in ev
ery direction.
The iron and steel Industry Is
crowded as it has not been since
the early fall of 1907. ' Some fur
naces out of blast for 10 or 12
years are being made ready as rap
idly as possible to blow in again.
Advancing prices in iron are giving
a broader margin of profit to the
ironmakers than they have linown
for years.
Cotton mills are fully employed,
and there are more signs o factiv
tty in the enlargement of existing
mills and the construction of .new
mills than for eight to 10 years.
The lumber industry shows a re
viving tendency, with advancing
prices and a heavy increase in de
mand.
The phosphate rock industry, al
most dormant since last fall, be
gins again to show signs of life, and
with increasing activity, mines long
idle are now being started up.
Vast expenditures aro being made
tor the development of shopping fa
cilities and port Improvements along
the entire Atlantic and Gulf coasts
from Maryland to Texas.
Expenditures for municipal and
road improvements work, and es
pecially for the latter, are on a scale
never known before in the South.
Grain Crop.
The South's wonderful grain crop
of 1,600,000,000 bushels, or 346.000.
000 bushels in excess of last year's
yield bas been an illumination to
the entire country as to the grain
growing potentialities of the ?Amth.
Coincident with this ts the heavy in
crease in tho production of meats
and the greater attention that is be
ing given to livestock ratb.?g, hogs
and cattle alike commanding moro
attention in the South now than
ever before.
And added to all this improvement
ls the remarkable change which has
taken place in the cotton market.
With a crop of 10.000,000 to 12,
OOO.OOO bales now being picked ad
ded to the stock of 4,000,000 or 6,
000.0'?0 bales brought over from
last year, the market is eagerly ab
sorbing the supply at advancing
prices-at prices which. indeed,
would have been considered very
profitable only a few years ago be
fore the South waa able to se'.! one
or two crops at higher figures than
for many years.
Running over the whole rangs ot
agricultural and Industrial and rail
road activities, the situation is hope
ful tn the extreme. While some few
industries have not yet benefited by
the change that te taking placa,
they'are very limited in extent es
compared In the aggregate with thoa?
that are cn an altogether different
plane o? activity as compared with
last year, and many of them aa
cnmpHicd with any period since
.1907. " . .
The South now only needs faith
in itself and the right kind of en
ergy, well directed, to bring about
a more far-reaching and widespread
and universal prosperity than it has
-ft
Corvntf*. r>: '.
CLOTHES buying is
rather a nuisance isn't
it?
Well, air, we have no doubt
that you can come in here,
slip into a v
MICHAELS-STERP?
Suit or Overcoat
and wear it right away.
Nc time wasted on try-ons
-no correspondence,--just
a simple business transac
tion, i
And remember, whether you
pay '"'
$10.00, $18.00, $20.00
I
or more, yon are protected
by our guarantee and the
Michaels-Stern warrant too,
that you will be thoroughly
satisfied, or your money will
be returned. a " ,.:,/^ .
i
-7
'TU Slam wHJt a Comckat*'
tad since the palmy days of 190ft
ind the earlly ptrt of 1907. when
ivpry railroad was crowded to its
itmost capacity and when e*e-y
ndustriai cnterprice was running io
lie limit of ks available supply of
nen.
"As a man thlnketa in the heart,
o is he," is as true of a country
s it is of an individual. If the
louth tilings broad world thoughts,
t it things in terms of material
ievelopment based on its limitless
csources, if it things of its heaven
iven opportunities and feels that it
..auld be a laggard if lt did not turn
tiese resources into employment and
realta-creatlng realities, then there
rill soon come a broad sweep of
rosperlty which will lift the South
> a higher plane than -it has ever
nown.
Forward, March!
WRY LAW8 AFFECT SSyWOJJOO
Geting Into Action at Last.
(The Houston Post.)
S re ed upon between Major General
According to an agreement
greed upon between Major General
custon and . Governor Ferguson,
ate rangers and sheriff's posses are
ot to approach close enougfo to the
io Grande to be fired on hy Mell
um from the opposite side of' the
iver, while federal troops will un
ertake to prevent the crossing to the
exas side ot any Mexican male per
in capable of bearing arms who can
ot satisfactorily explain' his pur
DSC.
This arrangement, General Funston
iplains, was desired in order to avoid
asBlbllKy of international convplica
ona.
Texas authority bas all along been
srfectly willing for the federal gov
rnment to afford t/.io necessary pro
motion to the International border,
it its chief complaint has been that
ie. federal patrol has signally tailed
i affording ample 'protection as tn
oty bound, which statement is clear
? supported by the Roubles of the
ibc fo wweeka in the lower Rio
rando district caused by Invasions,
t bandits from the Mexican' side,
ow, however, tibet the federal au
tarkies have shown a moro deter
ilned attitude in the mattel* the Ind
ications are that the situaion In he
Isturbed dlsrict will radfdly Improve
id will stay Improved Until the pros
it federal Vigilance is relaxed.
j, Recipe tnt Long Life.
"To what do you attribute your re
saleable health?"
"Wefl," replied ?he very .>?d gentle
ao, "I reckon I got a good start on
'' people by bein' bore before
was discovered, thereby bavin'
to-worry about."-Washington
New Jersey W. C. T. U. Convention
Hears of Prohibition's Growth.
(Montclair, N". J., Dispatch. )
"Many a man today ls a total ab
stainer and believes the liauor trafilo
should be outlawed boca'- the ques
tion has todched his p Kketbook."
said Miss E. H. Elf roth of Haddon
field, president of the-New Jersey W.
C. T. ?., in her address to the dele
gates at the W. C. TV ?. State con
vention at the opening session today.
"More than 52,000,000 of the peo
ple of tihe United States are under
prohibition law," Miss Elf roth said.
"More than 71 per cent Ot the'area of
the United States is prohibition ter
ritory. Th' ? area will bo increased
nearly 20 per cent when prohibition
adopted bv five states In the, fall of
1914 become effective. One-fourth
of all the people in niue United States;
who livo In saloon territory live
in six cttis-Nw TortC I Chi
cago, Phlladlphia. Sl^. Louis, Boston
and Cleveland. One-half of'the ped-'
pie living in license territory live in
four states-'New fork, Pennsylvania,
Illinois and New Jersey.
Tills afternoon the 200 delegates to
the convention and members of local
organisation Joined in u parade.
Honor to Whom Rae i
(The Norfolk Virginian, Pl?ot.)
' 'Governor Craig- of North "Carolina,
In a recent public interview* rightly
attributed to the financial policy of
the administration tI . ? , place among
the influences which nave imparted a
healthy tone tb the cotton market. "I
"believe," said the governor,, "the dec
laration by Secretary McAdoo that lie
was ready to .put into tb? Southern
banks $30,0*0,000 tor, the protection
c- thf- cotton crop had much to do
with the present healthy: condition
of the cotton market. Thai one act .
or the administration and the attiude
of the administration towards the
south has eaved us millions of dollars
and brought comfort end ' plenty to
the homes of our country. This
administration Stauda by. the farmer
and by the producer in ail legitimate
ways. This wes not always so, hut
ii wit! uv av lung as Woodrow Wilson -
ls president end as long tis the presi
dent of Democracy controls this coun
try.?
"Dr you believe that tber*/ is really
something which can inviolably tell
Vhen ? man'ls lying?" "I know lt.?*'
"Ahr perhaps you have .seen one ot
the instrumente?" "Seen one? I mar
ried one."--Houston Post.
. Gekberg's Potato Gaps Fresh*
and Crisp Da2y, Phone No. 733,