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That ?amo in a HAT is a positive guar antee of auperiorty. it is accepted that way the world ever, because no Kat has . .{ . over left th? Stetson factories that did not deserve the mark? Hew Styles In both SOFT ?N? $3.SO to $5.00. ??11 'PRiCe.:TO> "?LL ! - Jr J. a??jroR, ?, p; V?I?HVEB. . -?- I>SA.5jE38 IN -- - Rabi?les an^Harness! AS?DE?f???^ S. C., SEPT. 6, 1905, YOTTB PE0MPT: settlement of amounts due UH on Baggies' ia earnestly solicited aad will be gmtly>ppiwi&te& If you need a- * . Ne^Ba^ mraesfif See ITs. . WE Lava i?JOFiH? o???Sbo?> a^^ Bank, lui front: of lar. J* Fretwoll'? ?tables. We.regpeotfu??y ask all oaVfn?nds that noorl ^?^S 0^ ^d.o?'Pl^ir work, Engine Shacks. Evaporator cr any kmd of T or Orsval Bo^Sag io call oa ?JB, aa sro preiw^d tb ilo it ?roB)p% ?^V^ "The ffaraera' Educational and j Co-Operative Union of America. CONDUOTEO BY J. O. 8TR1QUN?. jffiSr- Comniaiea tiona intended for thia department should ba addressed (o J. C. StribUng, Pendleton, 8. O. ? Money Talks to Some Folks louder Than ?ospel Truths, You need not loose any sleepover the fallowa -that bioko the faith last season and lost from $10 to $10 per bale on their cotton. These fellows have p,ild the debt they owed to faith, in dollara'and they Uo not need any more talk thiB time. Bnt, there ie atlU ? large per cent of farmers who rushed their cotton on the market last season that got fair pri?es then, that, ate going to get left this time. Their fortune last season is going to bo thoir misfortune thia season. Union men can do good for the whole country just now by keeping up with these fellows that aro now dumping their cotton on the market. Tako notes of tho amount they get now and compare j preaeut prices with prices later on. This money talk will strike in deep er than tongue talk. I know of a cot ton mill that baa been shut down for ste days for want of cotton. Wagone are eoTr hauling cotton from townB nearby through tue country to this Two Premiums Offered; We will give one year's subscription to The Intelligencer to any farmer that does not already . belong to the Far mers' Union, for the best letter telling us why tho farmers that aro not already in the Union do not come oui; and join tho Union? We will give another year'a Sub scription to The Intelligencer to any member of the Union for the best let ter to us telling tho plain facts in the case why he broke the faith and sold bis Cotton for leas than ten couts? i, Now, boys, come right up and tell us what ia' wrong with us, or your selves, nnd we. will try our best to get right with you- We are in thia thing to help each other and to learn the bess way to gee farmers to unite for their ?heir own good. We will treat you j jnat right. Corno along. Eemenibor the name is Farmers* Educational and Co-operative Union. We aro to try our beat to live'.un to, our name by ieaisiss- from each other ail we eau about the business aid? bf our occupation' and how to work to gether -tor our mutual benefit. We cannot -accomplish much without a cloao organisation. - ~'i II-i-?-.*)??? M? - The Farmers' Educational and Co-operative Union is purely a far mers* organisation, to aid farmers' interest. Thia: Union is confined mainly to tho cotton belt of the South. But,; it is the ??riv?i?g?inf fermera anywhere to join the Union whether they bo cotton growers or not. Tho Farmers' Union now numbera in its ranks over two-thirds of all the whit? cotton growers of the cotton belt and is growing in ?trongth and numbers " and popularity every doy. Tho Far l mers' Union was in vogue at it, ^aching cotton growers tho' i in po r ince ot controlling prices of cotton irongh an organisation of cotton /growers, iwo: yeura before'-- tho South-, ern Cotton Association waa formed at New CrleaiiB. Anderson County Far-, mera* Union eent two delegates there and paid their expenses. - Whilt. the Union i? willing to unite with any or ganisation in an effort to obtain pro bable pricea lor cotton, we do not propose to atand Quietly and allpw any other Association to claim all the honor for demanding and obtaining botter prices for cotton. Tho Southern Cot ton Asaociatien agreed to act with Tho Faroiera' Union ia thia matter. Our union men every where joJuin With tho cotton Aagpciation in a grand concert of action to maintain juicea for cotton. Even before the Cotton ?Association Was formed, the Farmers' Union contained two hundred and eighty thousand cotton growers with in Us ranks, aad has uo to dato spent over fout? hundred and forty thousand dollars to organizo coitos producers. But, Union men who held un to their cotton this year have been paid many times the amount it cost them to or ganise cotton growers/and Union men that stood firm have no kick to make against anybody,.. They are feeling good- and klndiysr^wards .ov?rybody I and aro standing P?t and ready to uni?o ogaiu with all factors in this mutter lot. good to all. - As a gregation or component of the varied industries of our nation, vre may compare the whole struoture to a great oak tree of tho forest. Agricul ture and mining may represent tho roota and trunk, while tho various branches represent tho various branch es of our industries, and the leaves ot this tree represent tho literature of our age. The agriculturists and min era go dow ti iiuo the bowels of the earth and gather therefrom the struc tural material that supports the whole system. Lot's comparo the importance and strength of those factors that KO to build up oar great nation. The last census showed that the fixed oap? ital of American agriculture, compris ing the value of land, buildings, and improvements, of implements and ma chinery and live stock amounted in 1000 to about twenty billion dollars, or four times the fixed capital invested in.manufactures. Farmers, what man quer of men are you, anyway? Shall a clue* of people that hold in their hands all the material, food and raiment that supply the world, ask their dependente for aid to do that which they can do for themselves? Is it not true that it takes hay seed to grow gross, and that that all ?esh is grass? Is it not also true that if the plow stops that all the wheels of our commerce also stop, aud our ships will rot at their wharf sf Farmers, wake up, and show your manhood by. coming;, together in one powerful body, and lay claim toyour share of this world's goods. Don't stand aben!? whining about what othero ; are- doing-like spoilt children-be mes, ye sons of the soii, be men. :,r^M Unprofitable prices for cotton is like a loathsome contagious disease to the So?th; it contaminates and drags down every , business and industry of the South. Profitable prices for cotton is to tho South like the philosopher's stone-it turns everything into gold that it touches. AH this kimi of talk is called rot by the gang that has got rich at tho expense of the, cotton far mer, but the'farmer, the cotton farmer, can now see that this is pure gold in stead of rot, aud that the farmer dug it out of tho ground, and furthermore he is going to keep on digging it for tris own packet. Workday fof the Orphans, y A recent movement seton foot by Howard I?. Crumly of the Decatur (Qa.) Orphans Home, ia likely to be of very considerable service is the sear future to our orphan "children; The proposition is that every man in the State, every woman, every child should set apart Sept. 28 (Saturday) of this year, tho proceeds of bia labor on that dav. or whatever hs csu ausfco, if he bo not in business, to the support of the orphans in the Institution he loves best. In this State Presbyterians will work for the Thorn well Orphanage, Clinton; the Methodists for the Ep worth Orphanage, Columbia; tho Baptist? for the Connie Maxwell, greenwood, Send promptly on the .Monday following, the:sum made or raised, to the institution of your choice. Tho help coming in at that time will tide over these Institutions till the Thanksgiving and Christmas days. Send it, ne it little or much. There is about six hundred orphans in theso In stitutions, 'and there are, others be sides. Tho Lutheran Orphanage is at Solem, Va., the Hebrew Orphanage is at Atlanta, ? Ga," Draw your check or money order in favor of tho Institu tion you prefer and mail it to the ad dress given above. ' .1^^^^ - The ypung man who wants to know what excessive .drink will do for him has.but to look afc ex Congress man Morgan Fitzpatrick, who is charg ed, in tho dispatches with havinij nt. tated to?rr?i|?ss vrhe?k? ?=d ?r?iis;; Ten years ago there was not a more promising young man in Tennessee than Morgan 0. Fitzpatrick, Re was able, alert, handsome and considered entirely trustworthy. Hard drinking; however, got him. 'From yc?pgr?ss man te has dropped to an object of pity, and all because of his love for strong'drink. Morgan Fitzpatrick ia not at heart a bad man; If he has committed, a crime it was dono under tho influenae of liquor, aud instead of condemning; him he 'should be pitied. He IB merely ono more brilliant. Tent nesseeau Who has fallon a victim.io the.: drink habit, and several more .are traveling his road.-Chattanooga News. ^^^r^lu;.i.Wll....n,n.lln^l^.,.l..l.l^ STATE NEW?. Charleston has received new crop rice and it brought good prices. - Tho tileries of polioemen in Greenville have been increased from $40 to $50 a month. -r- All tho Laer dispensaries in Charleston have been closed through thc resignations of the dispensers. - The farmers of Chesterfield have agreed got to pay over 40 cents per hundred pounds for ootton pioking. - II. B. Carlisle has been elected Senator from Spartanburg County to fill tho unexpired term of Judge D. E. Ilydriok. - Some negroes near Charleston in a crap game got in a row over two couts and one was killed and another Seriously injured. '- During a heavy thunder storm at Lancaster, Frank Stewart, a ootton mill operative, struck and in stantly killed by lightning. - Mr. David Outz, cashier of ft bank in Johnson, Edgeiiold County, is dead aa a results of burns received in a large Uro at that place recently. - F.II. Hyatt has purchased tho old Methodist Female College iu Co lumbia, paying therefor $30,000. The lot cou taino more than two acres, .- Comm?B8?oper E. J. Watson baa completed arrangements ."to plant" a colony of Kassian a on a three thous and aore tract of land noar Summer ville. - J. A. Sohworin, Jr., rural mail carrier of Sumter, is the only carrier in \ the United States who uses an automobile. South Carlina leads the world! W?? .-James MoBride, a small boy of Florence, was bitten by a mad dog recently ?nd has been taken to the Pasteur Hospital, Baltimore, for treatment. - A oar of cotton containing 24 bales waa slightly damaged by fire, at Greenville. The ootton was .fully covered by insurance. The cause of the fire is unknown. - Three n?gre.-ajan had a fight si the grave of their mother, during the funeral, nt Ciues?n, Flornuco County, in which ooo was badly cut and an other was wounded with a pistol. .Tho trouble arose beoauso one brother reprimanded the other two for driving a horse too hard. , - M auk Kennedy, a mill, man of Greenville, was found dead under a trestle at Shelton, on thov Southern road/ He either foll through tl ./ trestle or was knocked off by a train. He had ft wife in Greenville, is?iih whom he is said to have quarreled before leaving homo. - At a pablio meeting of the Pick ano County farmers a resolution was adopted saying, "we are willing to mako.tho price of middling ootton 12 cent per pound as the minimum price and to co operate awi th other farmer organizations in maintaining the price they may fix as a minimum." -- Last Friday night at Saluda Senator Eugene S. Blease shot and killed Joe Ben Coleman, his brother in-law. Four or five shots took eftect in Coleman's body, and as a result he died Saturday morning. The fatal affair was the result of a family trou ble. Blosse surrendered tn the sheriff. : ??-A few tights ago the barn of Lewis Barn ay, noar Abbeville* waa struok by lightning and' the bara was completely destroyed. Two cows were burned with tho barn. It ie not known whether the cows were struck' by lightning or burned alive. Twp ^aggies were also burned. There waa ^.tfiinsurftnee. - Ex-Supervisor Spoeglo, of Green ville County, who in charged with embezzling money while in office and who i 8 ill at, Hen der son ville, N. C., :;?vo bond on Saturday. He .waa; taken on a mattress and accompanied by physician and nurse, into Green ville County. After the bond had been fixed, he was taken back to Hen? doraonvillo. V^W^'.. V-Y"',; ri--- -: - Not far from tho Sandy Springs r Bapt?3t Church, some 12 or 13 miles i below Greenville city, the mineral f known as Mouazite seems to be pienti* ( ful. The work of gathering it is going I on in placeo a^d it is said that high i priocs are being offered for land that ia known to oootain it. Who oan tell , what amount of riches will yet "turo j up" in the Piedmont billa and moun- ' tains? ? - Judge Geo. W. Ward, who had j been holding court at Durham, N. C., wa9 knocked down by former Mayor ? M. E. MoCown, of Durham, because ' he imposed what MoCown considered i a light sentenoe on a negro oonvioted [ of killing MoCowtt's nephew. Mo Cown waa imro ?dutely ruled for con tempt and i#?i to jail for 30 days and fined $200. The evidence showed that tho negro had great provocation for I killing MoCown'a nephew. - Mr. W. J. Kimbrell, mail carrier of route No. 2, reports a huge gourd at the home of Mr. W. T. Slaglo, in the Belair section. Mr. Kimbrell a few daya ago measured the gourd which wa; found to bo 4 feet 6} ioohes in oircumference and 23 feet long. It ia . believed that when the seed have been removed the gourd will have a capacity of at least nine gallons.-Fort Mill Times. - There was a joint debate in Yorkville County on Thursday be* tween Tillman and Br?oe. Two thous* and peoplo were presont, but wore very inattentive The most striking statement was made by Senator Till man, viz: That tho mombers of the State Board of Liquor Control aro all thieves and that Governor Hoyward should bounoe them all and put honest men in their places. [ - A looal freight on the Greenville and Laurees railroad was wreokod a few days ago near Bark sd alo, four miles from Laurens. It is thought that the accident occurred on acoount bf an iron, bolt on tho track. The negro fireman was killed and Engi* ; cor J. L. Dearden was badly injured. Three wrecks have occurred near thia point within the past six months and a misoreant is suspected. ?EXEB&L HEWS* - In the United States there are 5,319,912 women and girls employed outside their own homes. -- The negro Baptist Church at Carlisle, Ind., has been destroyed by dynamite? as a result of a raoo war ic that town. - Tho Atlanta chamber of com* meroe has congratulated Roosevelt for peace, and calls him "The first ellison of the world." - Chris Olivor, who plead guilty to whipping his mother-in-law, in Montgomery, Ala., was flood by the court one cont and costs. - A mob of 50 men at Newborn, N. C., hung to a bridge John Moore, a negro, who attacked Mrs. Kubanks, postmistress at Clark, N. C. - T. W. Davis is/the champion bioyolis.t of his age in the world. He is seventy-seven years old. and has ridden 107,781 miles on his bicycle. - E. B, Sherman, for nineteen years a trusted employe at the Lynch burg, Va., postoffice, bbs been ar ro a ted, charged with robbing the mails. - A government bulletin shows, that tho number of school teachers in the country exceeds^ the total of Swachere, doctors and lawyers com* ined. - According to a bulletin just is sued by the census bureau, the aver age number of pupils to a teacher throughout tho United States is sovon ty-oao. . \: - Neill Wolfe ?ad Miss Marie Harnell, both of Philadelphia, were killed by their automdbilo plunging from a bridge into a 30 foot railroad out near Atoo, If.' J. - After %m years *of aervipe in the Philippines, the Seventeenth United States Infantry is now at Fort Mc Pherson, hear Atlanta. They will re main at this fort two years. irV'"T V"" I II i - The industrial dividends payable o Nor? York in the opening days of September amounted to over $14,000, )00, whioh is $3,500,000 in exoess of those tit the beginning of thia month, in 1904. ?-.The Alabama oonviots, during the year ending August 31st, earned for the State the sum of $305,562.26. The convicts are said to be iu the best shape ever known and tho death rato is lees than 3 per oent. - The Georgia Branch of tho Southern Cotton Growers' Association has adopted resolutions urging the farmers to fix 30 couts per bushel as the minimum prioe of cotton seed? and to nell no cotton below 10 cents. --The next meeting of the South ern Educational AIJ??-;4iiou la to be^ hold jointly with the Association of Colleges iu Nashville, Tenn., Nov. X 22 25. A full attendance is expected and an interesting program has boen arranged. j ?-Too Japanese government iff printing a complete record of the pres ent var, and has kept it up to; dato sinoe the trouble began. The record? will be made public at the olose of hostilities, and will be printed in English and French as well as in Ja panese. - The Australians are the greatest tea drinkers in the world, annually consuming seven and three-fourtha pounds a head. In England tho con sumption is about six and throe fourths pounds a head and in the United States only one pound two ounces, - John E. Baldwin,?an aeronaut, of Losan ti vi He. Ind., was blown to shreds with his balloon at a height) of 1,500 feet at Greenville, Ohio. He was giving an exhibition of tho use of dynamite from a balloon for war purposes and had six sticks of the ex plosive with him. When he was 1,500 . feet in the air by some accident the dynamite exploded and the balloon and man were literally torn to frag ments. - A newspaper published at Ber lin, Germany, is authority for the statement that M.' Witte has arranged for an American loan of 400,000,000 roubles to the KusBian government. The money will be advanoed by Jew ish bankers on condition that tho Jews io Russia bo accorded tho right j of residing in any part of Kassia and ! that the restrictions as to Certain i "sones" be lifted. -.The Cincinnati, Hamilton and Dayton Railroad system has perfected ;?/;> pious for a through line from Chicago to Charleston, S. C. < It will cross tho Ohio river at Ashland and extend 125 miles sb rough Kentucky where the .railroad has acquired 350,000 sores of coal lands. President Zimmerman Says that the Output from these mines will be from 2,600,000 to 3,000,000 tons a year. - By order of Mrs. Mildred Dewey, wife of Admiral Dowey, the Smith sonian Institution has returned the flag of the 28th Alabama regiment? Confederate army. It : has been in the institution sinoe the death of;?|| Mrs. Dewey's former husband, Genk W. B. Hazen, iu 1887. The flag waa captured by the command' of General Hazen at Orchard Knob. In a letter Mrs. Dewey-; says: Vi. feel nothing but kindoeas to the South, which has--v-"' shown only good will and friendship , ;. to Adanul De wey and me.' ' -r-A resident of Great Falls, Mon tana, has either made one of the great est discoveries of the age in agrioaI?jfe||p tura or ho io ono of ? tho biggest fakirs of tho times, who claims to have dis covered and perfeated a proaesa by which an aore of ground will produce thirty thousand bushels of potatooa every sixty days whioh means six crops per year, Thisman claims pota toes oan be. raised entirely under ground one layer on top of another to . : the depth of fifteen foot, not even tho "vines appearing above ground with the process he has patented', which ia a composition that takes tho plaoo of soil. ; . ' - Frozoufaith ?8 effective only itt , freezing the faithful. m?ii_ - ? _:_._:_? f.; ft ^ -?eurea ;an order, a, few days ago for.-over 29,000 pahs of Shoes io competition with fifteen of the largest Shoe firms, represent- . Ita ^? '^ade the assertion'in oae o? our advertisements that oar pri?es wem' hoi fixed fey- competitors. We set the pace,' others follow, ^ j||fo?boreig sufficief, fjwsme te convince any^ ooe that the statement is true. We must say .something afoot oar ? |^^^A^ ^?#?1^" kL?;-'-'-^ $18,000 worth of these '?^?^VW " "Jf and we wiU cheerfully '