The intelligencer. (Anderson, S.C.) 1915-1917, May 16, 1916, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6
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gill jffi f jTfflWjt} ? .^'or Ufante and Chilton.
?^^^^B Mothers Know That
pSrSoT.-srariT^ Always t
[fil _^!T-Sl^jiidif?r^ *"ea?S T? //?'*u
Kf?: TicSsand?csi.(k,utato?g| Qf g U |J*
W?; . Oniu?ii.WorpiruiRiioriiiBfic?. i Ul fiL\laJr
NOT NARCOTIC. H ? AV
:Kli I f^^fe?. I 1 lok Jr $ sa
? '^??k^nlV^ Cor livor
lip jac5^i???0^ I "??I
ll ^slSeJ Thirty Years
j Exact Copy of Wrapper.
THC et ?TAU? couran*, mw YOHO err?,
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-4 'A 4- ? 'S
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Second-hand Ford
Touring Car.
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o< >f I?>.). '.
TODD AUTO SHOP.
North Main Street.
?i?
Aile? Four Years of EHfSOurag?ag 1 had gotten so weak ! could hot steno,
cidiHofis Mrs BoHnrlc Cava and I gave up In despair.
. ^^^.^^..^w^ . . Atisst,<my*husband got m* a botte oS
? Up IQ Despair* Husb?tlJ . Cardul the woman's tonic, asd I com?
I Cast tflt paTTTti minced toking lt. From the very first
^ -T- ^ ?g,, B0W waUt two otiles wttbout iii
?Calron, Ky.-In anMatereWIng letter thing mevaad sw doing tU my wot*.?
from this ; place?, .ildrs. v Bettie. Bullock M *w ?re. all run down from womanly
writes as follows j "I sunefed tor lour trouble*! don't give up to d&ia!?. Tty
years*, with womanly troubles, ?nd during Cardul, the woman's tonic. It has helped
??lsimcj ? eo^d om> sit up for a Utile more th? a iiuTlion women, la ita 50
wliSIe.-and could-pot walk anywhere, ot years o? ?onHduous success, and should
-rjl. At times, I'would have severe palus surely help youV too. Your drugglot has
?nnry^eftside> sold Cardul foi years. He knows what
{ Tr*doctor1^ ? wW do. Ask him. He will nice?-'
tnem; relieved we for aAwhile, butions mend ll. Begin toking CiuMuI today. '
Iv^^^te?mylWd again.-:After
?HpUag seemed to do meany good. KtwRi.^!S '^Si
;-ggf ?!? ti m?<l3? .' ?"??.. f_ '* ' 'V JIL'.".' ''.W?"ii??"M..'?'? "'Iii.'."''.'! ' ?>'!?!'.minin.
MI D D E N T R ? ? BLE
Bec?uae youri Itooth are faultiesii lo AP13BARA.NCI3, tt does not
h?c?ssartiy fonowftnat they are' ?BOUND. HIDDEN TKOllBIda ,may .
be commencing in unseen placeer. Decay ls often present 'for -weeka
BEFORE it becomes apparent. The skilfull dentist caa vletect thoaa
places and PilEVENT discoloration and disease. Go at least twice a
fear to ypur^df?|Jst, and have.y?ur;^tb:?^s^)ned^7\^ ix'. J> x?
^J^^^^ **. Anderson, 8. ?. OfBee f hone SS?.
POWDERLESS GUN
HAS NO BARREL
Hurls Balls Accurately Dis
tance of Seven Miles.
RICH WOMAN AIDS INVENTOR
Device Han Been Tested With Good
Resulte hy Generals. !n United
States Army-Cnn Wreck Tenches,
Vessels or Aeroplanos, and One Wo
man Can Operate lt.
Mrs. Kathrjrn M. Stanton, whoso hus
band, V. McMillan Stanton, ls treasurer
of the Wolverene Copper M in in j: Com
pany ami other Michigan corporation.!
capitalized at millions of dollars, said
the other afternoon In her summer
homo nt Whitestone, N. Y.. she hng
aided perxonolly und financially lu the
perfection of a war gun which
Has bren tested in model form with
marvelous results by generals In the
United States army.
Uses no powder, chemicals or springs
for its discharge.
.Hus nn effective range of seven or
eight miles.
Shoots out eggs or glnss balls without j
breading them tu Hie discharge.
, Shoots out tifty balls iusiuutly or one
hall every hour. '
C?n wreck trendies, vessels or aero
planes.
Has no barrel.
Cnn l)e operated by one womntt.
Cnn plant Ufty bails within n radius
of six feet nt a range of n mlle and a
half, os was actually done with a
?-maller model at Fort Hamilton and
Sandy Hook.
Cnn be placed on thc graBs and fired
without recoil.
Weighs about 300 pounds,
oin bc duplicated simply, quickly
and' comparatively inexpensively.
Hurls missiles from a fiat surface
May drive other sorts of guns out'of
existence.
rt nt-.med by ifs inventor "tho Beauti
ful' Kathryn."
"Some one brought an old liivento'r'to
me/', said Mrs- Stanton. "He. ' had
known mor? pV?Wpc'rous days, but be
cause since tho war Lils royalties from
lu veut lons bo sold In Germany had
been cut off ho was unable to ti nance
lil-: idea of thc gnu. He ls a well known
inventor, ti naturalized citizen who
hates notoriety. lils first stipulation
was that the Hulled States should have
j the refusal of the Invention, which ls
pa tent oil.
. Rented Small Machins Shop.
"Without saying uuytblng to Mr.
Stanton, 1 rented u small machine shop
in Kew York and hired a few mechan
ics. I watched the gun grow from .day
to doy. 1 asked Mr. Stanton whether
the'principle wns practicable. He said.
'It can't bo done.'
"When the model was finished I suld.
'It has been done.' Mr. Stanton became
convinced and Interested army officers
Testa were mudo at Snr.'Jy Hook and
elsewhere. Wo expect to have the new
gun ready shortly.''.
Mr. stanton gavo the key to tho prin
ciple of tho Invention.
V?rho gun-they call lt a.gan';'r'call
lt .a thing-is really the harnessing of
centrifugal motion,'' said' Mr. "Stanton,
"lite I pbwer cW b'e generated? by any
Kort of onslne. About SO per cent of
th? power generated is used. Wo tried
a .small model, at .Fort Hamilton and
Sandy Hook, using an electric motor of
lesa than one horsepower. At a range
of roo yards -two ounce balls were
burled into n circle about the size of
the; top of that table. (Ho indicated a
tabie havfnir a radius of-about'two*
fe?t.) The^gun la,exactly accurate, ex
cent aa the batt ls subject to external
Influences, nu (mon na the range ls de
termined. Tho velocity of the ball be
fore it ls released governs Its range.
This velocity ts determined automatic
ally. The release Isa part of the gun.
.'Wo hopo for a range of seven or
eight mlle's, hut tt will not pierce armor
plato at thr.t distance: Its principal
use. I think, v.-ili bc with h'high tra
jectory, but it ctn bc- used with a flat
trajectory. .? '
"The principia pf the gan is not new:
lt -was trka 'ty l?usa?n some time ago.
But tho exp?rimentera used a barrel,
and this a polled the weapon's accuracy.
"It is the most'practical thing in the
world because lt is so simple.- Alg?4 it
ia fool proof. It wesra longer and ts
tar leas expensive than tho- powder
Using guns. It does not require special
machinery for Ita manufacture."
1?^^|^||^^? ED?bAtlON.
Man lo Sand Two,Girt* te Collona ta
..-fi?a.tfvtt.Pays.
Louls A. Hoffmann, a bachelor not
yet, thirty-five years.old, a newspaper
publisher of Kew Orleans and New
York. ( announced. that; ho' would alvo
coll?ge education-, to two giris, one
from New York end on?.from bis nome
town, Kew Orleans. Ho wanta to
learn tfrom obsertation whether a cob
logo education forja woman pay?.
"Pcrsoually. I ant ot tba opinion that
every, girl abopld have a college ed non
?ben toma.ono arises to announce that
t peinan doesn't nead^,>t. _l abaR
waVfn the progress of these girls and
their after lives and make up my own
?ind. lt will cost mo about $6.000 to
Educate tba two; abd 1 hara placed
thia ifo?tta^trX :
CLEMSON BRINGS
ATHLETIC SEASON
OF 1916 TO END
Work Accomplished In That Line
Extremely Favorable-Other
College News
Clemson '"oiloge, May l.">.~ Thc
Clemson community observed Mem
orial Day on Wednesday afternoon In
the form of very interesting exercises
hold at the Old Stone cemetery,
where a large number of Confederate
soldiers He hurled. The exercises
were uuder the supervision of the.
John C. Calhoun Chapter. I'. D. C.
Patriotic music by the Clemson cadet
hand and a special choir, a patriotic
recitation by Master Wright Bryan,
an essay on John C. Calhoun and the
war by Cadet W. T. White, the dec
oration of Confederate graves hy tho
members of tho local . chapter ol
tho. Confederacy, tho firing of a sa
lute to the dead hy a picked company
of cadets, and tho blowing of tapa
over tho graves constituted the exer
cises.
A goo? crowd of people from
Clemson and from the surrounding
country at tended tho services. The
csBay read by Cadet White was thc
prize essay written by him In compe
tition with other students of tho col
lege for tho medal offered hy the
John C. Calhoun chapter.
Prof. Guy F. Lipscomb returned
last week from Vale, university
where he went to i.celve his- Pli. P.,
degree In chemistry, for . work done
partly at that Institution und partly
In Germany, where ho studied for
somo time a year or sd ago. Prof!
Lipscomb ls now assistant professor
of chemistry. .
Clemson's spring athletics wero
brought to a close this week. The
Tiger baseball team closed ?ts- season
with games Friday and' Saturday
against the University of South Car
olina in Anderson; and the Tiger
track team went to Davidson for a
contest with that collage'. Tho sea
son In both lines ot athletics has
been a good one, though in baseball
there were a number of surprises and
unexpected turns so far as the win
ning and losing of gantes* IB concern
ed.
Tho ono-year agricultural class has
about completed Its work and will
have final examinations and closing
exercises next week. . These young
men, forty or fifty in number, have
spent one year at the college in pur
suing a special course ?in,?agrlculture
chiefly practical, end will'go back to
their farms better farmers and better
citizens. In a preliminary contest
held Tocently, W. H. Shaw and D.
F. Wilson were selected as tho mem
bers ot this class to talco part in the
public -closing exorcises as represen
tativo speakers. .?'*'.
SEVERE PUNISHMENT
Of Mrs. Chappell, of FIT? Tear?
Standing, Relieved by CurioL
Mt. Airy, K. C.-airs. SarafoM; Chap
pell ot this town, says: "I t. ti/fe red tor
five years with womanly troubles, also
Et omach troubles, and my p^lshtnent
was more than any one could Wt.
:1 tried most every kind ol medicine,
but none did me any good. . c
Tread one day about Cardul, the wo
man's tonic, and 1 decided to try iL I
had not taken but about sire bottles until
i was almost cured, lt did mo mote
oed than all the other medicines 1 had
led, pv* together.
My friends began asking me why I
looked so well, and 1 tom them about
Cardul. Several are now taking it." ;
D6 you, lady reader, suffer, from any
of the ailments due to wOiiidii?y trouble,
auch as.headache, backache, aldeache,
sleeplessness, and that everlastingly tired
feeling?
I! JO, let us urge you to giv? Cardul a
trial, we feel confident it will Help you,
lust as it has a million other women in
Ute past half century.
Begin taking Carduf to-day. You
won't regret it* All druggists.
... .-CZ
To cook with is the most
?^ta fuel t?o **
han: ^ -: . 1 ? ?>.? ? j J ?
to? whe^t?* leas? bit of taught
mid ftt?ention is given ?? >>
.;? ': '. - : - , .'. \
; :Try il lot* awhile, and
satisfied usera rf W^||iH?ir.;
toni' ' 'r-1 ."
ti's just the thifitg to
bea* the bath room witfa*
Anderson Gai Co.
???pr . ? . ..?.-?-."??^?.?:Sv---.
Hon. \V. A. Wright, comptrollor
general of Georgia, ami Mrs. Wright
aro at Clemson ou a visit to Mr. und
Mrs. A. 1). H ryan.
.Mist; Virginia Huller, of Madison.
CcorRla, has returned to lier home
after a ten day?' visit to President
and Mr?. W. M. biggs, While hore
MIKH Butler, who luis traveled much
in clio old world, matte an address on
Tho Holy Land before tho Woman's
.club and another to the pupils of thc
graded school.
Prof. and .Mrs. I). H. Henry arc
spending tho week-end with relatives
lu Greenville, S. C.
To .Nominate Wilson.
Washington, May 15.-Judge .lohn
W. PrcsBcott, of Camdon. ,N. J.,
will nominate President Wildon at
tho St. IX)U1B convention*. .
Use Stonecypher'a
IRISH POTATO
BUG KILLER
On Your Irish Potatoes
lt villi kill the hugs and not injure
the petalo vines.
Hold on an absolute guarantee or
.Money back proposition by relia?
hie grocers and druggists.
.Manufactured and guarautecd by
Stonccyph?r Drug and Chemical Co., Westminster, S. C.
Sold by Fant's Drug Store.
eua? cr sotvtca
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TEU?RAM:; IRS
NCV/COMO CAH1.TOH. rRZS?^?HT j V^rr^T M'/t-rriiTWCTODtWJJ
OEOnOt Vt V. ATKINS vicenwisincwT nrtVIDr.nc BROOKS vice>?HtStOtWf I 'T"**** rnsmtot ?"g t.*?a rtirtV.
RECEIVED AT
ANDERSON
New York, May 15, 1916.
J. R. Maxwell,
Anderson, S. C.
Arrived all O. K. Feeling fine. Rush carpenters and painters
with the remodeling of store. Get ready for a beautiful assortment
of Ready-to-Wear. Styles the best 1 have ever seen. Have
bought five hundred Silk Waists. Write me care Broadway Cen
tral Hotel. .'. i
PHIL ROSENBERG.
Open sluices of system each morning and?
wash away the poisonous, stagnant
matter, says authority.
A glass of hot water with a teaspoonful of
limestone phosphate in ..it, drank each
morning before breakfast, keeps
1 . us looking and feeling? fit. *
rm.
Lifo is not merely to . live, but
to live Well j: eat well j > digest -well,,
work well, sleep well, loojk weil.
iWhat a glorious ?oncution to
attain, arid yet how very easy it is
if One Will qnly.adopt the morning .
.V|iii|?aebath!< - ??
JFolks who arCv-accustomed to
feel dull and heavy when tiley
$^^^|^^^|^)m-?^ stuffy
from a colcl* foti! %^e/ nasty
breath, acid stomach, cap, insttjfca*
/ fet ?$s; fresh as a daisy by open
ing the sluicesiof the sy^tein eaiph'
, morning and flushing . out the
whole of theinternal ;poisonous
stagnant matter.-. -b7- *
Everyone, whether ailing, sick
or well, should, each i morning,
. before broak&t, . clriiik a gpss
of real hot water^thalt?aapoon^
i\? y>? j limestone ?iio^f?ha^e in. it
to wash from the storoach, livery
kidneys and bowels the; previous
day Vi indigestible -lwast$, sour
bile7 and poisottoiis toxins ; \ thus
cleansing, sweetening and puri
fy i nf the entire alimentary canal
before 'putting more food into
the1' stoiriachir The action, pf hot::
water and limestone phosphate
: Jim, an empty stomach is wonder*
, fullyinvigorating...It cleans.out
dil'th? sour feiniehjations, gases,
waste and?cidily. ahd?fcny?s one
a^splendid appetite for breakfast.
While , you ; are enjoying youri
breakfast the water and phos
phate is qui?tly extracting ? l?i*fc?;
v?l?iine of waterfrom- the blooH
and, getting ready for a thorough
fitiSmng of all the insid? organs;'
'The millions, - of peone ' wie
are ; bothered with constipation,
bilious. s|i?lK* stontefch . trouble,
rhe?mati&h; others who nave
sallow
sickly complexions at? 3ur^id tbv
get a quarier ponnd of limestone
phosphate from the drug storey
; which will cost; |>ut little, but-fe
Bdnlciont to makei anyon* a pro
nennced crank oh the subject; e?
:MwmS^ sanitation.
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