The intelligencer. (Anderson, S.C.) 1915-1917, October 19, 1915, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3
GRAINS OF SAND!
?
M ?
m
s
1% $500,000,000X0
An gl? .Fren ch Loan rc
cently negotiated iva?
broken np end offered
JO stuns of $100.00
Moralt Small savings
are tko basis o? tho
country!! wealth.
Deposit yonr Having*]
la the
The Saving? Depart*
ment off
The
Bank of Anderson
The Strongest Bank |
in the County.
We have add
to
our business
and will carry a full line
of Heavy and Fancy
Groceries-Have just re
ceived a Car Load of the
Finest Flour a Car Lo?d
of the Best Salt and a
full line of Canned
,Goods, ! Sugaty Coff ees,
:. etc." - ' ' .
. % r ; :You will find anything
in Grocery line "here and
our Mr. A. .E. Mull will
be glad to sefve you at
?nyhour pf the day and
! at prices to let you *
Come I in. and see us-We
save you money and give you
-
v Freshest Goods in town.
******************* * ? * I
**********************
Afternoon Bcceprion to Bride.
MT. and MJ:S1 Thomas !J. Pearce,j
?ho '.vci o mhrrled- a fortnight ago In
Anderson, have reached Columbia
after a wedding trip to New York,
and afc at tho Colonia for the win
ter/. Mrs. C. C, Pcarco will Introduce j
fc*?r daughtei-iu-law to lier friends at
an afternoon reception to Wilek she
has issued invtttatlon at ber liomo on I
Elmwood avenue Tuesday from 5 to j
7. O'clock..-Columbia State.
Palmetto Chapter.
The Palmetto Chapter^ U. D. C.
will meet tiiis afternoon at four I
o'clock witlt Miss Annie Cooley at her j
homo on -West Whltnor street.
Mrs. S. C. Fuge of Greenwood and
Mrs. E. M. Jordan or Greenville arc
tho guests of Mrs. J. W. Qunttlehaum
and ofcber frleuds for a tow days.
'Mrs. Ed Marshall has hcen visiting
Mrs. Henry Criglor ta Wtlllumston for
several day?. <
Mrs. C. P. Ross ami Master lilllie
Ross have returnod from a months
visit in F.'lchmoud, Va. .
Mrs. George Towhscnd lias return
ed from a visit to Seneca.
Mr. and Mrs* C A. Forest have
returned to their homo in Atlanta af
ter a visit to friends-kore.
At Hie Belton Fair.
T.:o Civic association of Belton will
serve dinner in tho old Baptist eh.ireh
on Wednesday, which is' fair day . at I
l.jlton. Thc followiug elegant menu]
will he .served: Pressed chicken, boii
cd ham, rice, giblet sauce, pickle, can-"
died yams, macaroni, potato salad, ap
ple pic, coffee.
Ii A J. lit.-? -fc Juli t fi li f Hutu! iii* -?-??.?-.?--.-?? 1
? " Y W'S
?0erson?l
- ? *. ? ff ifnf if * ? il * * ? ? ? - itifl J iii f iTiilni
. " * T ^"^^T^ 1 ll 'ITT ll I mm ~ * #
Dr. John E. While will go toi
Spartanburg this morning-where tlUa*
evening he will mako an address ot
a banquet given by ' tho Baraca and
Bible, classes of that city.
;Mf. E. G.' Evans of Pendleton was |
a-vjsjtor.-inthe city yesterday.
'.Mr. and MnJ. J: Cohen and Miss I
Minnie Cohen of Elberton, Ga., ?pent |
Sunday hi thc city with Mr. ami Mrs.
Harry Gelsberg.
Mrs. Harry: Hawes, of Elberton, ]
Ga., was th? week-end visitor of Mrs.
Harleston Barton.
Mr. WI. H. Simmons ot Westinlnis-1
ter . waa-a business: visitor yes'terday .
I 'Me3Brs. I?? s: Prescott' and Daw- '
SOU H ml th of Pc ni le ton were busi
ness visitors ,yoBterday.
Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Deo of Pied
mont.'woro among tho visitors "lu An* |
doreou -yesterday.
Mejsra. T. C. Jackson, Jr., and
Leroy Sadler of Ive, were visitors in
Anderson yesterday afternoon.
Mr. EY G. Wilson of Pendleton .waa;
a' business visitor yostorday.
i-' ?^;>?^Ili JJujrt?n ot iva was among l
the business visitors yesterday. ' '
/For Indigestion.
Never take -pepsin and pr?par?t lout:
containing* pepsin or other digestive
Cum?enla fer Indigestion, BB tho moro
you tako tho moro you will have(vttf
take. What is ncodo -is a tonic like
Chamberlain's Tablets that will en
abler tho. stomach to perform its tune*
tiona naturally. ? Eor Eaie by nil deal
ers. .'. :-. .,- ' ' ' "
afifflCjffiHB? mSGi fee
?yS? m ilea ??il uow mmmAVy
il????, tealttl ?llh liluo RilJxm.V/
?H?SoND UK \NJ? Vit.UH, for 85
yc^?irfraitfau>0*?Bt,Alvt3ytUeIUUo
SOLD UV DRU?Q?STS tl?Rll?'HER?
Dow* te m& Vm^to ~
my' ifgto<^;':?du^'t?fe4*
mam L?IS???
wsmmm
Lonfloti,, Sept. 28.-(Associated
Press Correadondout.)-Strangest
looking of ali tko ships with' the"
Drlit?u Grand Fleet is thc Atlantic
Huer which has hecu transformed into
a uiother-8hip for, tho tscapianca.
Tlicro aro,platforms iu placo of Uto,
promenades where passenger? used lo
lounge, bomba in place ordoek-quoUsY
and tho dluing-saloona havto beep Wm
ted up as workshops. t-'H2vurytU$pg
t..at a seaplane needs in tho w?y?'ot
repairs can bo supplied. &
"Here is our assortment of bombst
said aa-.officer, allowing an -exhibit of
dig?rent sises on a Hliolf. "That.'onq
weighs a hundred pounds, thc sumo"
as a six-Inch shell." ' ' .
"What do you use them on?" ho waa
! asked.
i " "Anything from a German cruiser,'
if we got a daonco at one, to a Kub
in ari ne. That big bomb would finish
a Zeppelin, too."
A crane that once had taken pas
Hongers' trunks oui ot the hold lifted
a seaplane off u platform and deposit
ed lt on the water, where it bonnet a
on .tho waves before thc motor was
started and lt skhuuiied across tho
surface for a hundred yards ur more,
rose, circled around thc fleet two or
.ir.;rca times, aud then disappeared out
at sea. . With its floats it looked
clumsy beside un aeroplane-tho Vlif
foreuce between a duck und a hawk.
'Most of the romaneo und the a e. ii o ii
of Bea-warfare wbilo t]w^ british
Grand Fleet'Waite for : tim" Merman
licet lo como out are the ({enplanes
and tho destroyers. The drc&u
uoughts remain in harbor, except for
occasional cruises into tho North Sea.
but thc planes and the destroyers aro
.ilwayB on tho movo. They work toi
?jether in hunting "Fritz" OB British
officers aud. men universally refer to
submarines.
A submarine Is visible to an avia
tor when lt ls cruising below tho sur
face. It never travels deeper Mian
thirty or forty feet and leaves achar
acterJoti? ripple and air-bubbles' and
streaks of oil. When a plano hat
located a submarino it signals tho
hunters whoro to go. Hut before thoy
arrive a squall may have hidden thc
track. A submarine may be known
to bc in a certain regiou and bo lost
and seen and lost and seen again.
Submarino hunting is a tirolean game
of hide and seek. Naval Ingenuity hat
invented no end of method's of loca
tion and or destruction. Experiment
bas proved some to bo effectual nui
aomc useless. Strictest kept of nava
acer et i; these.
Very thin the skin of a submarin?
and very fragile and complicated it
machinery, lt does not take much o
a shock to put lt out of order br i
largo cargo of explosives to dent, tba
skin beyond repair.
? :-<: "Tho' dlKicu^ty; ls \ tb know" .w&o? yoi
get them." an o (il cur explained; fo
-*t .Is^in^the nature of'tho 'eubmarln
io sink', whether # vitally injured o
hot. It may have gone to ibo bot tor
to. stay ir., fifty fathoms ot water, o
iL may hate submerged under i :
choppy sea and made Its escape, -W
have been hunting ti'acm' for a yea;
now, and ho doubt we are geting th
better of them. . We have n#t .Cal
learned h?w to kecp.th?m off itrpm Titi
great, ships, but. how. . .to destrc
.them.1*.
' If'fill and brtbblba como up for: a lon
'?tj(nio in. ouojpiacvpr If .they como , ?
[*iivijUi ? rush, ~t*.Tac ls considered fair1
'good evjueuco pf success.. There
no escape for the crow. They cantu
-make the' submarino rise or got out ?
.it. lt becomes, a stool , casket lu
watery - gravo'*, .No nautical 'mind
;?rccjnircd to realizo that by .'?astil
about von. 'tho bottont with a.' gra'
nel you .will:learn if an-object-wi!
tho bulk',and aire er' a : subti&rihe -
liiere; and;the."deat1a, of submarin,
is established tn this way.
.VThe admiralty will not accept ai
guesswork about "it,"- said an omeo
"Wo may Have put an explosive-rig
'into'one-or rammed' it in .a way th
must have broken its back; but th
is not proof enough. Tho?reco
goos down on tho c;::art ns 'suppos
destroyed..,"' . - v
'WUth Admiral "Crawford tho cc
rcspohdciit oT Tho Associated^ Prc
v. (Mi t ' to-, see tho submarine db.fene
or'a'lharbor. - Cruisors and deetroye
and auxiliaries v.-er o ! going. and coi
lng, but tho narrow- openings11 h rou
which they gassed wore' closedN1
stantly they -wore by.- .'PJCTO' W
more than ono ob." tract lon. 'if a si
marine got- past, tho first or the si
ohd, it was in a pocket. Sc-n
havo been caught in.this way.
?'"Take''care! ?liero.Is a tide hen
tho coxswain of; tho-.ndTnlral'a bai
?was .warhw'i. "We dont xyant" to <
.caught in a trap meant fori-i^Titi
> At one naval rbaso the. corrosp<
dont saw a-number of destroyora;
lug -moored t?- Aj onay as tiloso "toge
er i aa fish inc a hariet.7 y. They i
Just como In from, a iou^at iea.
"Herb today and goiio -toulorjo;
&8W < an-.?tfc?r..' ySWtiat a Uti? "U
had last ^winter t ? And 'they aro in
another winter of it. You know fa
cold the. North Sea ,is^h?>.>you!Ci
not :unless yon have been* ont: ir
torpedobbat.dancing ?ae tango ir.
'i??th. .ot' :thttt blftcr wind, with ^
spray; whipping ?p A? i tho top- or
smokestacks. : In-tho dead ot ni
^P^i would comainto this pUtch^d
SH^bT. : How they lound their \
ti^pasimoY. lt's ;? trick ci'those yoi
fellows who. wmjiBt\ahd.
-' -lt : a-destroy^'-?eta en tie tr
%V:ftitti^H??^V-Ksa thirty \?
ag?loet the ^submarine's alx or cif
fl?t?re'! itr>h? .dlfflcnlty t?:?i?(a?m
^'?j&r*??iii*',?'^
..??tHat?c?/.rTh?'iaW
tf'f?iTtAir. Tbbttoras'were 'biiedv - ^sl
ijt?*r or '-th? ' crew.,?re exn???d w
siawors of f reexibg. spray,-West
|pk*. and alt arelad in thick-ul
coals of llama wooli,; whk^awpiti
bodieswarm and; leave -t^o < IWgs ;
gp
ii-*lr- . ""' JW :Y
-\:*-V> ? ? . . . > .? "
"V.
J&f.; , :: ll?
SIE&S.':
?-' .? .. ?'?,'?1 . ".'i^* .*',.,#.:!'.!4l?*''w^*F.
. . ifeMP . -'m '4:,
' .':*?;;?5?P'
aye
you to
o
e st
eV???
est styles, of the new Fall
S?ason for
?.?rv i
lt >,
m
Ml thc new fabrics, ir.
bpth tlie Conservative
and Ultr?-fashi?ii?l??c
styles, for men bl all
ages, are shown.
Every suit is hand tailored, hand felt
collars, and the button holes are hand
Come in and make your se
lection (rom bur enormous stock of
stvies.
Osborne & Pearson's
We Save Yon 20 to 40 Per
U5s Cent on All Your P?rctia??s
,.!$r o\oveTri^t : iq kcoplixg .'footing', BR
tj?o>': destroyers ropl and plunge in a
heavy sea ,
^?yory s1itpron"tho blooknde froth
leeland to.the-British-Channel la al
so a pari ? of -the "syst?m of. auburn-':
.i^oy- huntings ' Tliey nbow .. ho
lights; thcro are ho lights>?l?ng lho:
coast at nhtht.. , , %>
--"ll gives cse an ides if': England's
ntartirne .resugrceV,' sa??'.- otu ofllcor,
^Mien ypu( coAstdor tljoi-\v? have 2,
?3g# trawlers and other auxiliary sblpa
dh. service.'/ . ,
v?Tho trawlers plod* avor plotted son-'
.squares with. tho.- regularity of - m?w-v
ihg-?uachtnos cutting a harvest,.- on
their way back and forth'sweeping np
??nes. Thoy woro fishermen before
jtho war and aro fls-hermon. still. Tlicy
como into harbors- sitfP with cold,
.thaw .out, have U rest, and return ,to
.their .vigUos?ad their, hardships. BG-<
y?nd thom, tito cruisers "and the de
stroyers aro pat roll in;; on. tito; watt?a
for any sign of a; Gorman ship com
ing .out Past -Heligoland.
Men who^inoan. rio harm aro riot
neccasarlly harmleaa.
.LEAVES JAIL FOtt ?IINI8TISY
ran!ene;l XurdciTd.llUHrllccoino Edu
cated .During 20 Yenni in l'rl?on. '.
'(New York World.) i
. Georg? Jones, wno w*ls serving, e
lifo ?entenco in i'.ie state penitentiary
for murder, has walked forth'a freo
jnnn, paroled fey.Govi. Hatfield, says'a ^
Mouudsvilio?/ W. " Va'.,,'dispatch,At <
once ho loft for Kentucky,7*herofbo: J
will enter a college and prepare uj'fh> ( j
self for tho ministry. Anxious thM ?
hi? past ^should be forgotten, he ro-'j
fflsed'tdoamo Me cOllogoV. but Jt ;ls'
in thc southerr. nari of tlio Bluegrass j
state. " ,.,J ' .' v ' ' 1
Tho re?ase or Jones,' waa secured
through thc?" tnicrcosaibn ' of .?? Miss!
I' i m n a : Davis, sister bf ? United SUitcs ;
Solicitor " John VV.' .' Davis,' 'who ' has ;
been engaged tn prison relief , work'
ol ice Jones' was'received In'tho 'pont-f
toUtiary ho wa M an illiterate boy of ;
20, who could'3 neither .read ' nor
write.' Today ho ls n woH-etVtcatofl j
man of 40J Ho killed Gordon uolchftr/f
a noighb?r and pmym?'to'in ah nrgu
nient about money. Ho has been a j
model pr ho nor. .
V-"!"" ' '?" " " ' ' "*"~
Capital and Surplus ?iinj?wM
t'/ollv'ctions ?JI?CU i'm ni j* Ai tentloa
?lib?n AVStottn. : '. *W. E.-'titter,
: Pr?HideuV * Yf P-'nrfd Cashier*
li, IL Campbell, Ai;td. Cashier, : ; -
CaplUl ana Sarpias m&MM-\ v
CoHcetlenfi (iiw-u Careful AUenUoa
:U?*on A. Smyth, jue. A. Hungens,
THE CROPS
The ft i* tbillion bushel wheat crop, and a little moro?
Also ike throe billion bushel corn crop, for thc cccond
hms .
onoat ^\at .ffnn. Al L? ' !?l-t-> K?orgflAt. .
hay crop. But why .proceed? This b?,tfes biggest
' crop year,,,. ? Even the S ou th has raised grain crops
inore valuable "than the most valuable cotton crop ever
picked; something never before imagtn?d^^^^^^|
".' \,rfh& South is blessed v/ith a short cotton crop this
year, anti prices aro booming. -?' Tire short crop with
the .surplus ol the "calamitous" crop of last year is
now about the average ot the Inst three years, and the
.prices are now better for sellers Jthan f?W huyera. On.
Ute other hand, the grain crops of flus year,?re' super-.
abundant, to the extent tba prices are lower than pro
ducers like, .v.?..Hie. contrary movements. ore; consistent
with ?veil other. Coi ton 13 short because it was nbunv
dont before. Grain is abundant because it -was scarce
and dsar last year. Both movements. ar*!natural and :
economic, and make preposterous thc proposals of in
terference wiih the natural course ot events,:
Tf^'treasury, which is cn the veffi? of exhaustion it
self, meide offers of assistance whHH neither bankers
nor. producars welcomed or used. The ^proposals to
"eom"^ cottony or turn, ii ?n?o^wr>rencyfA|and th? laws
to make cotton culture criminal ought to maJte their
,au th ore blush now.- . There was no such tt?jri?^?se re-'-.
gi*.rd?Rs grain, and the sanie result ha's\l?4erii peached
: f/Sthout hysterics. Whets thc proposal is mat the treks
' ur>*: or the l^latui^sShould gild the roseate ;pr?s^Bei|
(ot thoso who are rolling in urrb*agmed wealth,' it is
^jt?wssihle not to reflect upon the littlendss. j>f mari, the
. greatness of Nature, svhd'Uie w^
tin,$ things alone.-N. Y. Timas Editorial . ., :
The Man Who Advertises
? ?
jero-V^-but-two -^I^ssoa of "merclu?it?^^a?: *v/ho
. /tiso and those whodo nut. The man who a'^ver
r^t^'^^jtiaft Of tfc deal. ' He keeps himself before
?; the pubiic-f-aud he tef^'&W-^ttai^ .??.:
- - fi sne4t in mo';ip^e:'?#dt'-v Fc^pi^ talk about ' W'b% ; ? ..
worth; aoW?*&g~r-or he wotduo't odv?rt?^.Fort
NvvVtfj^$^