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THE INTELLIGENCER K?ifAIlM8Ii?0 ince. Pu blich ca ovo i y moraine except Hooday by Tbe Anderson Intelligen cer at 14C Webt Whltoer Street, An derson, 8. 0. 8BMI-WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER Published TuoBdays and Frldsya li. M. GLENN....Editor and Manager Entered as second-class matter April 28, 1914, at the poat office at Ander Ton, South Carolina, ander the Act of March ' 1879. ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCHES ffciephono .821 ?L7JHUKIPTI0N BATK8 DAILY Cn? Year .$6.00 ttlx Months .2.60 ?"arco Months.1.26 One Month .42 Un? Wees,. .10 SEMI-WEEKLY Ono Year.ll.EO Six Won th a.76 Tho Intelligencer li doutered by Barriers Sn the city. Look at tbe printed label on yonr taper. Tho dote thereon showo when the subscription expires. Notice dato en label carefully, end 1! net correct elcMo notify us nt once. Subscribers desiring the address of their papeT changed, will piesse state lo their communication both the old and new addreeoes. I: To insure prompt delivery, com plaints of non-delivery in the city of Anderson nhould be mude to the Circulation Dopartmoni before 9 a. ci and s copy will ba sent st ones. All cheeks and drafts should be drawn to The Anderson Intelligencer. IDTESTIBIKCI Batts will be furnished on amputa tion. No tl advertising discontinued ts ar pt on written order. Vbe Intelligencer will publish brief and rational letter? on subjects ot general intercut whon they aro oc eompanlod by tho names and fcd dresses of tho authors and aro not of a defamatory nature. Anonymous communications will not be noticed. Itojcctod manuscripts will not ba re turned. . *+> In artier to ovoid delays on account Cf personal absence, letters to The inteUlgencer intended for publication should not be addressed to any indi vidual connected with thc pspor, but Bi&ipiy to .ino intelligencer. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1915. :.v"Grabo"an^r^Hce no unto you" can no longer be applied to Charleston* -Lo-.. Pity 'tis tho Italians can't odd Ves uvius to their heavy artillery, ?.o ' j Tho emphasis on the man In Man ning ts daily becoming moro prononc cd. ? T-"-? Tho Gorman submarinos scorn to "tavo follower' Muglnty to tho bottom ot tho sea. -o_ After tho war, is over it will be up to Venus do Milo- to start a now dis armament movement. . AU tho countries at war would cheerfully' wolcomo peace, if only tho piece were big enough to satisfy their greedy ambitions. Tennyson aadly missed tho mark when ho san;: of a coming day "when . war drums throb no longer and the battle flags arc furled." Wc confess .to having a taint of tho bargain -fiend;-hut wo gracefully sidestep when tho butcher marks lita moats down'tiffy per cont. . .-o . . Tho now mayor of Charleston, must play tho gamo straight ia order to wln?publlc confidence. Let thoro.be no Jekyll and Hyde business. vVv'\!-: ? ro" - '.' Tho young man .who goos into tho fields thcB? glorious October days ' and gathora an armful of goldenrod for his girl ls facing a real yellow peril. Tho mountain schooners have be gi<n their annual: pilgrimage and arc Bell inn a whole ,pint of juicy, wonna encased in chestnut, hulls for live cents. Francis joseph;.:of Austria must l^ave ss many Uvea as a cat, for ho has Ji?Bt como to Uro after having died eight times: Better look out, Joe. Tho reaper man'U get you on the next :.. Kin gr" Colton ufo1* .* Have been In Jail, For they say. that He's out on bale. -The 8t*te; :?tl? Oh, well, .hcV outi N?w^letn?rA'bu?i1 ^UL PYOkets full. GOOD FOU rilAhl.ESTON Tile election of Maj. Hyde over Mayor ("race in the Charleston prl inary rises above the mere plano of a Incut routes' for political olilce. The eyes of the Hinte have for a long time been on thc city, and there had un questionably arisen a serious doubt in Hie minds of thc go?vd and thinking people as to whether .Charleston ni heart really desired to Improve her civic and moral conditions. There have not been wanting signs mid symptoms for some time that a strong and determined undercurrent of revolt was nt work In the city, and Hie result of the election provea that this healthy und vigorous sentiment fur lu.Mor t?'i?igU Y." 5 3 Stronger I ll M (I many of us believed. Charleston bas a tine opportunity to assert the bettor qualities of her citizenship, which have been held in a sort of enforced abeyance for' the past several years, mid the prospect for a more whole some end a purer political and civic atmosphere is fairly bright with promise. All tho stat?) knows that Governor Manning's efforts to enforce law In Charleston, especially nguinst the blind tiger element, have been re markably successful under thc cir cumstances, and lt ls snld on good authority that nearly half this class of lawbreakers are ready to quit and seek moro congenial Holds. It is ns gratifying ns lt- is singular to sec indicted blind tlgerB march into court and plead guilty, whore ouly a fow months ngo cvon tho grand jury mocked thu majesty of tho law by fail ing to return true bills against those charged with liquor soiling even when tho evldenco was as plain aa the nose on ono's face. Maj. Hyde's election will have been worse than lu vain if heroes not llvo up to the expectations, people of the statt and inaugurale a new day for tho city he governs. Ills is a big responsibility, and oYnsldo of Charleston ho will be watched with a critical oyo by every citizen who hopea to brr ak down th* uiffe ronces that exist between Chk.*des?oD and the rest of South Carolina. NATIONAL PBEPABEDNESS President. '.Vii?jon ha!) done well to agree upon a tentative program for national defense In keeping with thc needs of tho country. A big army and % navy that covers all tho seas are not needed -to maintain this oountry's position among the world powors, but Ibo United States ought to have a land and sea force sufficient for any reasonable emergency. Wo have a long stretch of coast on both tho At lantic and thc Pacific, and. if our navy should not bo tho largest In tho world IB some claim it should be, it ought to bo stronger than lt ls In fighting units af a modern typo. Evory year congress passes a "pork barrel" appropriation bill, lavishing ?i?iions or dollars on harbors ihat uro seldom honored by a visit from a merchant vessel and on streams that would do well to float a flatboat. If the leak in appropriations of this kind could bo stopp od and . the ninney sav ed could bo applied to building war craft and to equipping an army for [lcfonso, tho governmont would not be taxed an extra Cent1 to bring about the improvement - - . Whtlo other countries aro groaning under the burden"ofsupporting im nonso armies :nnd navies, .wo should bo careful us'a "nation not'to go as for as they baw gone . But wo do need a ^navy blg_'ol???gt? to defend ns against the Invasion ot a combi na lon ot powers and an .army large .'Hough to defend our shores from )ld-world ambition, .and groed. EQUAL SUFFRAGE IN THE EAST For the first tim o tho Eastern states in vi: taken the equal suffrage qnes ton seriously, and In tho approaching dectlon New York,' Pennsylvania, tlassaohusotts and other great com non wealths aro going to decide tho ssue on itu merits."-The voters arc livlded, and in* all. probability the lauso that the women are fighting for .vin be lost But no movement ot -the past gen? nation hes gained as rapidly os the ?use of equal suffrage, and, lt there s no check or reaction against it. mother decade1 "will -sob it in actual oreo in most of the states. In the vest it has worked well, but In' tho iputh there are conditions of a local lature that might give rise to provo loncern for the protection of thc bal ot; The negro question must be on irily solved by the repeal of tho ourtcenth and the fifteenth - amend* nen ta and the ballot restricted abso utely to" the white people before lt rill .become safe to make suffrage ap ?ty universally, here. Tho best iuter ,yts of* tho Southern states and of the iatfen demand-the repeal of these mendments, and other sections of bo country aro ^ccniltrs rapidly to our view as tliey BOC for themselves something ol thc dangers that threat en us. From the standpoint of tho "votes for women" party The Philadelphia North American thus HUIIIR up their creed in a brief statement of prin ciples: "1. Because we arc for D?mocratie government. 2. Because woman's moral in fluence is needed IQ I>U???C Ute. 3. Because modem industrial and commercial life has taken v/oiuun out nf thc protection of the home and she needs tho protection of the ballot. 4. Because we need woman's house keeping instinct in municipal afTr-irs and her home-keeping in matters per taining to children. C. Ilecausc lt is justice." These are sound and reasonable arguments, and it is hard to contro vert them. THE HEADY PISTOL In ono of James Leno Allen's novels thc distinguished author sati rizes thc pistol toting habit In old j Kentucky, and he said thnt the prac tice of carrying weapons to avenge real and fan'ied Insults hud gone so far that a man could not blow his nose without endangering his life. If this humorous Illustration ls ap plied to a case where two men on had terms happen to meet, it might he entirely within the hounds of proba bility. Whenever a homicide takes place, a usual dofenco is to say that thc victim thrust his hand to his hip pocket ostensibly for a weapon. It may be proven that thc dead man, ns a mat tor of fact, did not have a gun in his pocket,- but such is the latitude and liberality granted the defendant In a plea of self-defence that a jury will often acquit him of a murder charge on a flimsy and ridiculous ground Uko this. Pistol toting ls a habit that thc law seoms powerless to break up. Secrecy, of course, is the protection the person enjoys who carries an array of light artillery about him, but In his-power to do harm and to spill innocent blood, there Is no CIOBS ot lawbreakers who can surpass him. Tho brave man does not need a pistol to defend his character. If he is the right aort of man and behaves himself ho can blow bis nose in peaco without fear of hav ing some nearby enemy plug him full of holes. Wcahor Forecast-Qonorally fair Friday and Saturday; gent?o to mod erate oast winds. Miss Saii'a Striming, supervisor rural schoolR of Oconce county, was in tho city yesterday with a party ot I teachers which she has boen teaching, Bhowing them the graded schools in Anderson. Among those in tho party were-'Misses Elizabeth Striming, Katie, .Jane and Hattie Miller Harri son, Olive Hunt, Margaret Hill and Myra Fant. They returned to Walhal la at 11:60. :". - ? ' o- .;.' Solicitor,-Vmith stated yesterday that ho imd applied to Governor Har ris of Georgia for requisition papers tor Edward Hamilton, alias J. W. Wil liams, on tho grounds ot a true hill at obtaining goods under false -pre tenses. lt will bo remembered that this is the samo man that Governor i Jan-la a short timo ago refused.) to grant requisition papers on because lie had beon tried and convicted In Anderson while he was absent ? O' The laying of the foundation of tho Barlo building on Church street has seen started and ls going right ahead, rho work of excavation has boen fin ished and the building will start io sarnest now. Thia is to be a two story building and will be a nice ad lltioa to West Church street. ^ . o Mr. T. Frank Watkins, attorney'|or Feaster Jones, who, is In tho' county |?U charged with the killing of Dr. [j.;p. McCalla at Starr last 'Saturday norning, yesterday prepared a state nent for the press In regard to, the ict of his client. This statement wno prepared and given out be causo Mr. Watkins thought lt bett now to let the jubito -know something more abo ut to affair. ' The statement was as follows: ? "Tho cause ot tho killing was the violation ot the sanctity ot Feaster fones' home by the deceased. While it?ting at the time that he had auf t clent canse for his act Feaster l"-?CB refused to divulge the painful 'acts even to his counsel, and they vero learned only through members >f h ls w i fe's family on .the' day. of tho ISTINCTION in values; the best merchandise at lowest possible prices; the quality considered be fore the price-these are the characteristics of this store. The latest fashions, of course; without that, quality and price don't count for much. And everything backed by reputation for satisfaction giving; we re fund the money to a dissatisfied customer for our own sakes. Suits and Overcoats that are a revelation Here's for your approval a wonderful showing of suits and overcoats from the country's best tailor shops; better than ever; suits and oveiv coats that are closer to perfection; for service and sightliness they're without a peer. $10, 15, $18, $20, $25. / Specialist in high grade hats You may as well have the right hat for your head; one that will look well with the rest of /ou; a hat that wi?l show that your head is the important thing about you. Stetson hats are the right thing for'young men, old men, every man; they're the style leaders. We're the style center for Stetsons, $3.50, $4, $5. Evans Specials $2, $3, Thoroughbred young men's clothes This department is one that receives extra close attention; the product of expert knowl edge? of what young men want; the colors of youth in them ; the smart lively styles that are pleasing to young men. Fabrics in stripes, plaids, checks; new lapel ideas; new sack suit rnodels; new overcoat styles. $10, $15, $18, $20, $25. Exceptional value and style showing for boys In boys' knee pants suits our showing of fall styles greatly excels our every past effort. Of course, there are many new style features; new model nor folks; new featured in trousers; sturdy wearing qualities that are sure to set a new standard for service. Rich, snappy coloring in stripes, plaids and checks; blue serges in many qualities. All sizes from 4 to 20 years. $3.50, $5, $6, $7.50, $10, $12.50. A handsome guaranteed watch free with each hoys suit at five dollars or more. The Shoes men prefer There's no way we'd rather have you judge the meaning of B-O-E quality than by our shoes. We've certainly gone the limit in our extra value policy in our offering of fall footwear; all by most renown makers; guaranteed by makers and sellers and fitted here with the Mea of your advantage. $3.50, $4, $4.50, $5, $6.50. ^ . ?0 VT .?.ir v ; ,t Vf ?.a V V; m?m Store with a Conscience. Inquest. Liven after this Feaster re fused to allow the facts to bo pub lished to tbo world, and this ls done now only .because tho-one .who com municated tho facts feels It is due to Feaster and lils friends that V..o 'pub lic should know. I do not deem ; it proper or necessary- to S say., moro now." ? ' o :\*J Mr. It. E. Burrisss'j bf thc. -Barr?as Milling company stales that ho'will 5 ff cr prises for tho bes$ yield ot wheat i ext season. Ile will offer a prize of 1100 for the best yield on. five acres md second prize of $50 and $25 re jpectlvely. "f 'v' Mr. Burrlss is to bo complimented >n making this offer and he will loubtless stimulate tho crowing of .vb eat In Anderson county by o ff cr ag these three cash] "pirlses, M Ho >tated yesterday that !..the. judging vould be done by disinterested par lee and. tho money would ' certainly >e awarded to those making the best .iel da. Recently Mr. Ilurriaa baa Installed a deaning machine at hts place of buol loss which cleans seed .S-hcut. This l kind ot grading' machine and is a rreat thing for the farmers ot thia Congressman Lcverwosintho city Yesterday afternoon and last night ns he guest of Mr. B. jfjossetr - Mr. !?evor made an address,.text evening it the opening exercisesvof. the ebm nunlty work at the > .JRrverslde aad roxaway Mills. "I bav?, enjoyed my' trip to this lection cf the state verbraucht" stat !d Mr, Lever to a representative of Tho Intelligencer yesterday afternoon. "I wi-s glad to be at Pendleton Wed nesday and to mix with the people That waH a great treat up there and I believe there ougnt to bo more meet ings of such hind. It' gives the peo plo a chano to get together, touch elbows, get acquainted and talk Over their problems. We had an interest ing day at Clemson College today and I enjoyed tho stay thero also.. My entire trip through thia section has been a pleasant one. I see good crops, interesting people - and lt looks Uko conditions aro very much improved, nt least 'here in Anderson lt seems I that there Is no effect of tho hard I times we have heard so much talk [about This seems Co be a progressive little etty and I Uko It" * ' Mrs. Annie B. Russell .has been Selected as housekeeper for tho An derson County Hospital and will enter upon her duties on November 1. Mm. Bussell comes to Anderson from .the Thornweil Orphanage ' at' ' Clinton whore she has been matron, for tho past few years. Mrs. Bussell : will supervise the preparation o' diets for the patients. . -o- : ? ? ? Mr/th p. Phillips; doy operator at the local 'Western Union, Telegraph company's omeo, ha ? accepted a posi tion -with the company at Charlotte, and wi? report there within a:few days to go to wor?c air. Phillipa has been at the local office ''for.the?p^rt' three years' iadv has given; completo satisfaction. He ls an expert opera tor, a man ot good judgment and has a bright futuro befor? h)n>. . While.'In Inri city he has ma^e many friends sim will bate to see him leave. Mr. C. li. Townsend, who has been ia the 0 nice for tho past-few months, will take Mr. Phillips' placo OB day opera tor. Mr, Townsend will bo succeeded as night operator by Mr. Li. C. Brown of this city. Mr. and Mrs. Phillips and family leave today for Seneca whore they will spend a few days with "tho for mer's parents before going to Char lotte. I -O: A petition was circulated yesterday morning to-tho effect that nil of the Btor?s and buslnosB houses in the city close from. 4 to 4:80 o'clock yester day afternoon in respect to the.late Chas 8. Sullivan, and it met with th* general approval of all tho .merchant. AU of them closed. This showed that Mr. Sullivan was greatly loved and 'admired in this city and the-fact that tho-''stores closed for'one-half hour waa- a ' splendid tribute to the man and what ho has done. -, ? . ! Cotton Men Uneasy. 1 .'New York, Oct. 14.-Owing to the fco?ing"of uncertainty among. cotton traders in the New York cotton ex change because of the'announced de cision - ot Federal Judge Hough,.- that the cotton future act was unconstitu tional, tho hoard of mxoag?rtj has not contemplated any chan.?ci: In tho by-laws or- rules of the exchange .wirich w o:\ld effect exchange con tract?. There is no confirmation of Ute report that the government means to appeal tho case. :V'rv?%?Ms8^ WU AM In Balkans, London, Oct. 14.r-Sir ?award Grey, the foreign secretary, announced in thc Oiouso of commons today that co op?rations with the Russians troopu In tho Balkans bas been promised as Loon aa troops are available. LOOS HID soucie SCENE OF HOT FIGHT French Repulsed By Bavarian Troops After Desperate Fighting. Berlin, Get. l-l. -norlin newspaper correspondents-report, the fighting Monday around Loos and Bouches tte. most bitter. An lntehso bombard ment of 20 hourn preceded tho French attack... Tho attack began Monday morning .and was directed against tho bill near Vimy os well, as the German positiors between Lops and. niven oby. Tho particular object was the eleva tion west of. .Vimy whi?fo . comniauda the Lens flats. Tho nr Mil er y battle was of !' such. Intensiv that tho-iguns could riot' be touched with the bare," hand. The '"French penetrated ibo", German trenches at only One . small section, where the defenders and guns Wore burled hy tue;French .artillery iire; The Bavarian troops 111raw tho French out,' Using baud grenades und knives. .Tho; French losses' are u'/de scribed lui'.r?ry severa,, r, ?._. . . ., , n , ? , ? E AILW A Y 'SCES CONSTABLE JfOB WU I SK E YS -V''* ..?...: t .' ' " . " ? Greenville, I Oct'. tvtt .-The t&?' ?Charleston. & : Western < Ca raliway versus Reubor- Connell, was begun. this attorning lb , tho of common pleas. . Tills ls an brought- by the railway through counsel to recover >M quantity oit beor, and whiskey;' Chief Gosnell, ot '"Uhe 1 rural ;. fores, .conflscatt'it^irom a car ii CAW. C. railway yards on M avenue . The voicer, in company. H. T. Bell ?.nd A. Ooclasy, t>ro local. seal and entered- th* ear \ _ tho protest of II. C, ''H?rtl)s>/.s)|j|j^