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"VETERANS FIRST" IS OFFICIAL SLOGAN CONFEDERATE REUNION IN BIRMINGHAM Vtevv<of a few Birmingham Skyscrapars. where the Confederate Veterans ! ? ' meet May ts, 17 and 18. "Veterans flrst." | nlficent buildings at the Btate fall This ls tho slogan that has beon ; Grounds for tho veterans who will ac ...... . .. ,"._", "_ : cept the care and complete hospitality adopted, by the entertainment cora-. Qf the (,,ty Qf BlrlIllnBnam. The vet mittee of Birmingham. Alabama, erang wl" bo provjde(. w)tn evory con. for the forthcoming reunion of the ventanee. A commissary in charge of Confederate Veterans to bo held In exports In the several- necesEary de Birmingham May 16-17-18. The vet- partinents will be maintained. Thc erane that bared their breasts to the camp grounds are accessible by cannons' merciless fire during the late several car lines from the center of unpleasantness will bo cared for above | the city. It Is contemplated that the of all other consid?rations. Everything ac\al camp grounds will be thi has been planned and all other propo- rendezvous Tor a majority of the vet sltionB Bet aside in order that tho Blr- crans visiting Birmingham, mingham reunion, which may be tho That every detail looking to theil last 3ver held here, will go down In comiort and care will be exercised history as ono wherein everyone ea- was indicated by Morris W. BuBb blblted the keenest interest and care president of tho Chamber of Commerce of the herooB of 1860-65. Tvho announced that the cool, airy The committees in charge of the re- buildings will be arranged so OB to bo union Mve. progressed, admirably with perfectly comfortable for the heroes their w?rk. Only tb? barest detnllB that are expected. The food will ht remulff-tb" be Unod'otit to make the the host and ever" function exercised Birmingham gathering memorable' in to provide every necessity, the'history of Confederate reunions. Aside from the magnificent caro The hospitality ot 190?, when Blrming- which will be showered upon the vet ham welcomed the Confederate hosts, eran s at. the camp grounds extensivo will' be greatly excelled' by the char- plans b?ve been arranged for their on acter of the hospitality and ..?be tort ni nm ont. The parade will be com warmth of greetings to be offered Ibo porni of automobiles and automobile veterans , in May:. ' '':* tracks so that every veteran that cares Through the kindness of the'gov?rn? :tb/-'#iay-' ride during tte parade. Thin, nient of th? Uhltcd States the .ccrmndL w|Hj relieve tho veterans, many1 ot tee has secured Uiei?atTaf ovfer'?OOO' thent feeble, o? the cruel necessity ot cots, which will be pl??ed in the m?g-gaiting .during the long parade. Have j??ft Unpacked L??ther Sliipftient of Pr? tty New Spring Smart Styles Wanted Colors Favored Materials Serviceable Quality Excellent Tailoring and the Best Value Obtainable Any Where IIP $LH) and $22.50 ?r''^i: I? Not picked overs, or ;]feovers, but direct :'^:-i4f0ffir*,,tlie "iiia?cers.' . .M*' '..r.,.. '*'*.' ' . . . , ..: ..' ' . -- ?(? *< , '\ \-.; \\%Vi ' ' : *f . . . V.Y' .?' .. V ;. v-."./Vs'i'-;-v:. <?.'.?; : . \>. , - ' -' ? '? <? 1 ? ,- .vlv* ' ;--'?'.., -s-??'r'?-:..> O'V ..; .?-- ? v *.. J ^ .. --y .-. Hi?t i? Bewilchingly Pretty . . jv. ...V. ; '. L : ' ? >.:. li I?? ^^^^^roiiife^^?? trimmer! hats in every new and - pre?ty/styje; ; Reaity cfever styles that you W}? not find in any other stoneball'new ifesh and fjainty-|.he quality product of ll SOCIETY jj Hearts Delight Hub. The Hearts Delight club will meet cn Thursday afternoon a: :! o'clock with Airs. Monham O'Neal, just north o:' town. Rummage Sale. Tho Wesley Philathea class of St. John Methodist church will have a Rummage (Sule on Saturday in the ?.toro room formerly occupied by M. U. Nimmons, in ?.tir- Kress block on South Main street. Mrs. S. I). Williams and two chil dren Miriam and Woodrow, of Wynne wood, Okla., aro visiting Mrs. Wil liams' mother. Mrs. Mary E. Burris.;, six mlle? north of town. Miss Patrick Sponsor. A charming compliment to ai very attractive young woman, is the ap pointment of Miss Vina Norwood Pat rick as sponsor to represent the Sons of Veterans by Col. \V. Rothrock oi_ Aiken, commander of the Sons of Vet" crans of South Carolina. Miss Pat rick will go lo tho ?tnte reunion In Hock Hill, and also to the general re union in Birmingham. iShe will ap point Miss Rothrock of Aiken as her maid of honor. Mrs. M. ly. Marchant of Greenville, is visiting her sinter. Mrs. Calhoun Harris. .Mrs. Edith Fort Sullivan lins gone to California to visit her sister ii Los Angeles. Mrs. A. Ti. Fret wei I and Miss Cur rie Fretwcll are visiting friends ii Spnrtnnburg. . Mrs. Ralph Templeton arrived in the city yesterday to ho thc guest ot Mrs. O. F. Taylor on North Main street. Mrs. Templeton will Join Mr. Templeton In a few days in Columbia there now home, to the regret of their many friends. Married. Married on Sunday morning hy Magistrate C. L. Martin at his hourn Mr. B. F. Wellborn to Miss Bessie Moore all of Anderson county. DR. W O. CARTED, The man who will address the larg est audiences during the Training School for Sunday School Teachers, which convenes,' in Anderson April 23, is Dr. W. O. Carver. Dr. Carver has a national reputation as a teacher in tho largest Theological seminary In the world at Louisville, Ky., and as a lecturer in demand at Chautauqua and religious assemblages. Dr. Carver will preach Sunday night, April 23rd, In the First Baptist churcli on "Thc Gospel of the Holy Spirit." He will r*?eak every morning at eleven o'clock to tito preachers and deacons of An derson county and ?*cry night to the general public. He will deliver a series of lectures; GIRLS! GIRLS! TRY III STOP D?NDR8FF MD BEK??IFV V??R ?? Hair s^ps falling out and ?.;t .thick, wavy, strong and. beautiful. your bait- becomes ifgbt, wavy, I tiffy, abundant and-appears as soft, lustrous and beautiful ? as . a young crin's af ter a ."Dandqrin?. bair cleadoe,'.' fusi 'try this-moisten a cloth with 'a tittle HanderIne and caTofally draw it through your hair, taking ono small strand at a time. This will cleanse ?bo half . of dust, dirt and excessive Oil and In1 Just a few moments ydtr have' doubled tho,beauty of your hair. Besides beautifying the hair at oner*' Danderlne dissolves every particle of dandruff; cleanses, purifies and invig orates'the scald, fornW-V stopping* itching and falling hair. ; But wit at will please yon most will bo after a few weeks' ute when you will actually see new nair-fine and downy at first-yes-but really ce1*' hal f growing al', over ; the scalp. It you carat for pretty,soft hair ah? lot* ot it surely get a 25-cent bottle of Knowl ton's Dander Ino fronv any drag* gist or toilet counter, and just try if. . .- . . v,i t.. i ?? i ? ; . . We have Stfa*berrt and ia Ice Cream today-Moho. Dr6g C?V-V - ? ? ???.?Win'1* ^??-.iy??MH.i?i'? ?fff? . * WEATHER UNUSUALLY s.e. Columbia, April li.-March. 1916,1 wau unusually windy and very dry. The sustained cold of the Hitit two j decades, with three marked changes I to low temperatures, was not offset { hy the suscced'ng warmth, and ther mal conditions were somewhat below '.ho seasonal average for the month aa a whole. Sharp freezes during the early part of the month caused con sid?rable damage to early track on tho coastal plain, necessitating much replanting, but fruits suffered no ma terial frost injury. While tho sen son was backward, winter gmlns con :lnucd in wholesome condition. Tl)o weather has been favorable for out door work, and much plowing and planting has been dont. Warm rain? were needed at the close of the month Cori winter grs'n CC;J? to Improve! pastures and to germinate seed in <*rrnfields and gardens. Temperature. The monthly mean for the section determined from reports- of ll, sta tions, was 33.6 degrees, or 1.0 degree below the est?bil .lied normal K.4 de nr?es below the moan of the warm March of 1907 and 7.3 degrees abovfc he average of the colg March Inst year. Fourteen previous Ma:chc? were colder, and 16 warmer. The. highest temperature was 87 degree?, it Aiken, Aiken county, on the 22nd. This- la 12 degrees lower than thc "t'ghest March maximum tempera ture, which occurred in 1007. Six teen previous Marches havo had , maximum temperatures of S7 degrees] of above. The war mei'- period was generally (between the 2l?t sand 25th. The lowe?'L . temp?rature wai 15 de grees at Mountain Rest, Oponofc county, on the-'.Uh. Tills ls 5 degrec3 above Uie lowest March minimum temperature, which wcz recorded In 1901. Tho coldest periods of tb* month wcro on tho 3rd and 4th, ?th and 10th und lCu.li to 17th, and dur ing the first two decades dolly mean temperatures above normal were an. exceptllon. - (. .-. . "". >.; , .' . ; PrecCpitatlon. The average for the- section, M sta tions reporting/waa 2.04 inches or 1.82 inches'Vhelcnv tho etuibllshed normal, O.Cti hich above the average of the dry March o? 1?10 and 8.3-1 j indu'., below tile average ot the wet .March of 11*81. By far tho larger ' portion of tim iainfull occurred on the 2nd and'3rd, 17th and Stli, 21st, but copious showers occurred ovci the- western portion on tho 20Ui and ?7111. Though greatly deficient in quantity as a whole, the amounts were fairly welt distributed; over the upper cpasta^'yi?tu, the greater part of the Piedmont, and thc extreme southern 'coast''districts the measure ments woro less than 2 Inches, and at only a few scattered stations were the ir. cal monthly amount'.; above 3 inches. The greatest local monthly amount wp.s 3:50 inches at Liberty, I'ickens county; least amount, 0.82 inch at 'Meriwether. The greatest 24-hour lalnful at any station was 2.09 inches at Lnndrnm. Spartanburg county, on the 27th. Tue average n?mber of rain days was 38 per cent below normal. Snow flurries occurred at S elations ol tho* upper Piedmont on thc 3rd and Stli . ? * ; ^TTuV^VInd; The .prevailing wiridB. \wero from tho southwest.:**The*: jaVeruge hourly velocity, determined'froni ? anemom eter records, was 11.8 miles,, or about 3 inlier per hours higher 'than any previous March record duiirlng tho ; past IS years. Tho highest average velocity In tho region covered by re ports was 15.0 .miles .per hour ot Sa-, vannah. Ga., lowest ?.average, 9.01 miles per hour' ut Augusjia. Ga. ?h the sccti'on proper the average veloc ities wore 12.3 miles .per hour at Charleston and 1Q,7" miles per hour at Columbia.. . The highest velocity fer any 15 minute period was' ?4 miles per hour from the southwell at Charlotte, N. ,C., on the 22nd, and In the* section proper, 46 miels per hour from thc southwest at Columbia on tho sumo date. Sunshine and Cloudiness. "" Tho average monthly sunshine, de termined from 7 automatic records, wan 281.1 hours, or 76 iper cent of tho 'possible amount. The average number of clear day? was 10; .?arMj cloudy, 9;. and cloudy, 3, au u??lnst normals .of 14, 8. and 9 days, respec tively. Richard H. Sullivan, . Section Director. ATLANTIAN IS PROUD ?F A MASONIC APRON tHVEN iMCL?E BY NOBLE * 'mi .<. . . ' . Atienta, April 11.--A Maoonic ap ron, which was presented to his great-great . unclet:/^Colonel Eobort ^ecmsa/Wths?^r^u^B. do LaFay .ctte, French Nobleman oh ? .general on tho ?taff of george Washington, , ls the/, proud 'possessloil ? of George Bi Preemaii, a, chartcr'.ihembor o? Pales tins Lodge ctf.~Atis^aiL.'. r.. ,'.'.. The apron, which contains, all the emblems Wf thc- Master Mason wa* presented by General I-aFayctto* when a guest of Colonel Freeman in Hal eigh, N, C./ la 18JHw~ " . .una apron, wn|cftVfiS404! ^kSllibTlc; was made in 1B15, before ?io invention of spool t^*b\$kmAp, :'?0n*: retuark ahle. ?ast? of ipreM -?> The La Fayette .Society of Cato?ff?, sevorol^y?ars ff?Suro.tho relia at; sW;tlB^^lisPB^M^e^-Vto-' - them tor inspection under ffcOOSi Insurance against losaV -Mf ;??fffiNmaifc. prises the ho'rloom very highly. M / ' t ? ?: =' ttRH. ANNIE M. SHARPE DK AH Molh-r of Mr. A. .M. Sharpe of Thin I'll). Mrs. Anulo McDavid Sharpe, died at Gurnett. S. C.. at tiie iionie ol lior daughter. Mrs. Eugene Wiggins. Monday morning. Funeral service? were held at Garnett yesterday after noon. Mrs. Sharpe was born in Greenville cmnty, Mardi 12th, 1834. She was the daughter of Allen and Teresa Mr David, who reared a large family of worthy chi? iren. Mrs. Sharpe Joined tlie Hcthc-sdnlc Methodist church and through her long life, this and other .Methodist churches found a devoted and faith ful member lu her. She mnrrled Rev. Van Duren Al bright Sharpe, who was at that time a member of the .South Carolina con ference. Later Rev. .Mr. Sharpe WHS transferred to the Western North, Carolina conference. He labored loni? j nnd faithfully glvliiR his life to lil* church. He died twenty-two yours ngo and after lils death Mrs. Sharp? moved to Wllllamston, S. C.. where sho lived until three years ago with two daughters. At the time of Vier death she war living with her dnughter. Jessie lr Hampton county. H^r's was a consecrated life. Her homo life was beautiful, lier gentle [sweet disposition won for her frlenib among the young and old us well She was a good woman who "served her generation hy the will of Cod." I She ls survived by throe sisters Mrs. li. P. Guy. Mrs. Rus Recd and Mrs. L -j Kenton, all of Anderson, S C., nnd two brothers, Mr. P. A. Mc David of Greenville, S. C., and Mr Paddy McDavid of Texas. Four dauKhters, Mrs: John Turner, of Fair Bluff. N. C.: Mrs. Preston Fora lick o' Carthago. X. C.'; Mrs. Eugene Wig gins und Miss Mary ,Slmrpe of Gar nott, S. C., and two sons, Mr. A. M Shqrp6 or this city ami Mr. J. A Sharpe of Lumeiton, N. C., Hurvlvc her. Her children rise up and call bei blessed for they "Sorrow not. even as others which have no hope." WM MAN TELLS QF WONDERFUL RESULT T. F. DARBY GAINS 20 POUNDS ON SIX BOTTLES ? OF TANLAC J A G O N\ WAS AWFUL Says Milk Nor Water Would Stay on Stomach Long Enough to ? Get Warm. "I have gained twenty (20) poundr in weight and have relieved an ail ment with which I suffered for almost a year and which had baffled the leiu :::? physicians in a number of cities. That is what Just six" bottles of Tan lac, the medicine you call tho master medicine, has done for me." The speaker pf this more than re markable' statement was T. F. Darby, on automobile mechanic employed by Tho' Central Garage, Anderson, who resides at 127 North McDufflo St. . Mr. Darby was. for a year foreman of the Gi bb ca Machinery Co., of Columbia, ono of -the largest Arms of the kind in the South, but, lio explained, ill health forced his removal from Columbia in search Of a satisfactory change in cli mate But. it was not the climate, he found, that caused-his Buffering. Regarding his suffering and tho re lief Tahlac quickly gave him, Mr. Darby said: "I suffered with nervous indigestion for almost a year. I lost a great deal of weight, my stomach left me, and I got to where 1 could not work. 1 would suffer awful agony after eat ing, and neither sweet milk nor water would stay on my stomach long enough to get warm. I would get so nervous I could not control myself. PH'tell you tho truth, I was tn an awful condition. "Cac time at Atkin ta, where I had been to consult a specialist, I got on a' train' and when I realized where I Was I was at Gainesville. I had been suffering so I had lost Interest in ev erything. My wife got *.o where she was afraid for me to come up town by myself, for fear I could not get home if one of those attacks hit me, ! which cami every time I ate anything. "My heart began to go bad tinder the strain. One night it felt as if It would* burst and I perspired so I felt SS if I had been rained on. 5 tried every: Way and everything r knew of or waa told of to get relief, hut foil ed. BuL. down ut Columbia one day a friend of mino told me to take Tari ?We. I bought'a boRl?. ''". ?/t?Uxv bottles .banished every Mt* bf that, nervous .indigestion. I , gained twe#l? poprfds while taking itv arid sra in fino shape now. I cari cat > hearty meat' without .suffering after* Nfards.v I ami !t^r; aa^^a^y, end* my nerves <are in. fine condition. '.My' kidneys., which gave, me .a.groat ideat-df .tSpptthfe. pre ia good condition nowy thanks uv Tdul?c. I o?aV get enough to cat, and have to < fight against eating ' too 'much, I sura can recommend Tonlac. lt is a wonderful m^icms.,? i Tani??. the master medic-Irie, ls cold exeieeltelylld,-Anderson hy\ Erana" Phairmacy.--Adir. . . DidY ou GetYour Suit Lots of others took advantage of our Pre?Easter Sale And if you luve a suit need you'll \>c wise to come over to our place early. We still have a splendid stock as lo sizes, colors1 and materials The Prices Sj 2..SO Suits at.$ 9.40 15.00 Suits al. 11.25, 20.00 Suits at. 15.00 ! 22..So Suits al. 16.90 2.S.OO Suits at. .. 18.7IT~; ~ ' 2 7.50 Suits af.. 20.60| J ?fj ?O.00 Suits jit. 22.BO . 12.So Suits "at. 24.40*: . l.S.oo Suits at.; . . . 26.25 38.50 Suits at. 28.90 40.00 Suits at. 30.00 45.(?0 Suits at. 33.75 So.no Snits at... 37.50 5$.00 Suits at. 41.50 Of course, you don't expect us to charge them. We make all aterations. "\C7E HAVE several thousand dol lars to place on good farm ?_i lauus. . Peoples Bank of Anderson iiil/iii iso-, . In Cminrriion With BLUE RIDGE RAI??X? . Account South Carolina Bar Association ? Tickets on sale April 12tn and lith; final return.ililli- April 17th, ; me. ?. . : .:\ ' -^u'^^' P ./^'cetleui opportunity, to vfsU tho far-famed;^^Jt?^o??v;Q.ardena on ' the-Ashtey now at th? z?nith dt their u?surpt?wl tKjauty.' I>or information ??ail on TickedjAgents or.address: .