University of South Carolina Libraries
THE HWEBSflN INTELLIGENCER Founded August 14, 1800. 1K0 North Malu Street ANDERSON, 8. C. WILLIAM BANKS,.Editor W. W. HMO AK, - - KUBIUCBB Manager Entered as second-class matter Ap ril 28, 1914, at the post ofllce at An derson, South Carolina, under tho Act ; of March 3,1879. \ * Semi - Weekly Edition - fl.60 per J fear. ' - Daily Edition - ?5.00 per annum; ?!.60 for 8lx Months; ?i,2& for Three on the. IN ADVANCE. , I A larger circulation than any other i newspaper In this Congressional Dls yct. u _ """" ~ t^?l?110NESt Bdltorlef*--'*' W -; w .... 327 Business Office ------- 321 Job Printing. 693-L. Local-wars-''*-- - ------ 327 Society -N?w# - - - - - - - - 821 The Intelligencer ls delivered by carriers In tbe city. If you fail to get your paper regularly please notify ua." Opposite your name on label of your paper is printed date to which your paper is paid. All checks and drafts should be drawn to The Ander son Intelligencer. The Weather. ' Washington, June 24.-Forecast: Sooth Carolina-Generally fair and continued warm Thursday and . Fri day. Ia an oculist a visionary person al ways. - o Any one wbo lives long enough can be the oldest inhabitant. Our assets aro schools, churches, homes, haman lives, not finances. Now that we have a baseball league season, look out for falling wea ther.' 11 "r In :'n" Baptist church in Atlanta, men will be allowed to demove their coats.' lM ? Georgin. ls afflicted by the legisla ture In the summer, why not South Carolina also? Birmingham claims to have a mil lion . dollars for the new Methodist university. i *] jj "i (J ? i -O Make happy comfortable hornea the laboring people and make people contented. Mr. Bryan's middle n*^'J?jf|<&-:{j[! nings". No relation however, to our '* senatorial candidate. for iW ?. ' |t. ls, aa Importent to keep labor busy at lt ls to stabilise credit with " the regional reserve bank. -o- b Whenever Teddy wants to start c< something real fussy, let him chart a 8 river in 4h?.^aburah-desert. j tl V? . 't m ' . *' Some folks are so stiff necked that bl they can observe but one point of ct view-hence they are knockers. The future will prove the great nes of a state not by Its magnificent capitol, but by Its laborers' homes. -?>-T% "Show me," ls what the people de- c< maud. They insist on knowing and * seing, and will not believe candidates' ,n yarns. gtHf. 111 N|tV-ln Heorglft prohibition state, ? thal V%tjlVtart agr?ai beer brewery, il? Thttt IkmomiiBO th.? !.>"> "*^jd? cn- tl t?ra&6i&? ' di Mr. Sam Jackson ot Iva,' says that thia Mar moon that canto Tuesday ic night ' ls' a; wet moon. It mi^ht he pi whe'r it ia raining. 'ti In cVbssfng the pel a ware; Washing ton'did 'not take aa mhny chances as ttttWri?thn-croaatng th? road, io theae attotoobllWus days. -bdlv '.ritSn?!.1 ? ' ..Since .old Doc -Gook took so many UJtaftfeg iwlth the Artic region, we don't aeeni te get as many cool brt?ezeta "as we us ter.' lhHilii-'jil? lt . h <i Mat <,-.-? y -b-i- "-^ rr ? . The war In Mexico would ceaso If th^W?SMr?tent wbuld*glv?" euch man '.^?BMW?liOiCQuIre 8*11 Ule piece ot vhfeh to BtaTt life. r*i ator Smith la making farmer and his three lawyer opponents xuaaltg excellent; legal argument? ta totf h. trial-?r a campaign? t?tpl^iilA f&rroll - N aturedly ' Wnen Blesse Jumped on the aristocrats Sims is ohe, If^ever^there was one N bjtTP jiover ^heaal e rdton mill t&e |fould aui> aaVe heard some declare that they would not vote [Smith. ^ will buy 18 hin man maker and hydroaeroplanes from tl hi fr c< b< si Si ol u st ai li ai 04 H JUSTICE TU POOR MAN This paper hus heretofore uttered its appeal for u compulsory attend ance law. Especially for a local op tion from which can he given u trial It would harm no one ami might get into the public schools hundreds of unfortunate little fellows who other wise would be denied the privileges of having their minds expanded. Mr. K. H. Blake, of Greenwood, who hus made a close study of this prop osition, writes The Intelligencer that those who, through honest conviction, have opposed compulsory school at tendance in South Carolina, have ov erlooked the injustice that is done the working man and especially the colton mill worker by the absence of such ii law. "Nearly all the states," writes Mr. Blake, - "including North Carolina, Tennessee und other southern states, have seen the need and passed com pulsory attendance laws. Time will not walt on children in South Caro lina growing up in ignorance. How long must these helpless children wait on South Carolina?" A man who describes himself as a .Mitton mill operative pleads for com pulsory education as follows, In a letter to The Belton Journal recent ly: "lt seems to the average man work ng to better his condition, that the .ompulsory education bill would have icen a great help. Had ll been pass id, lt would then force the parent to rive his child ut least au elementary iducation. It seems inconsistent tu lay to the cotton mill parent, you nuBt not work your boys or girls un ll a certain age and then fall to eo :ourage him to Bend the boy or girl o school a stipulated time. "Give us compulsory education and n a very short while yon will per elve our condition greatly Improv d from an educational standpoint. Ve realize education ts the basia for letter conditions in our community, nd the foundation of a more stuhle overnment, or one more constructive t least. Compulsory education will Dree better school facilities, thereby tvlng more advantages for having nd making batter citizenship. "The cheap politician says we are ot ready for It and stops right there, fonder why we are not ready for bet ?r citizenship? Will some of those ppoaed to the bill explain the view hey entertain, < and .tell bow long it ?AWuhfll we aro ready for lt? Al BO all us how to prepare for Its pas Ko ? . Some ar,e using .the poor ne *t?'?nHrgum?n?. ' *They fall to now that we read and are keeping pa with .the conditions aa they really ind,* .of felsP they are not keeping a with the conditions of the present ny. Statistics, as they are compiled y .our state superintendent of edu ction., say that there ar? more he ro children in school tn our state ian whites. . So lt .the negro goes ?lead of ?B along these lines we can lame ho one but ourselves for our indltion." JUDGE EMORY SPEER The report of the congressional jmmlttee that investigated the con not of Judge Speer ls one of the lost amusing things we have ever seq. It proves more nearly than any ilng else In recent months that there lottld be pome*?k?uf- of . retailV *pf tdges.^Somp rpc&itl ?l?jctojott? > itt state phuw pieany?^i?pt\tn? j?l letary of SoUth Carolina should have >rue. string to iL. - . . . - As to Judge Speer, tho committee, i stating th at < he could ' not be lm~ cached, made this amusing declara on: "An examination .0? the record. shows the ntct that'Judge Speer ascertained the limit to which he go before liability to impeach- . ent or official misconduct would accrue and went aa close to the line as safety would permit," says the report. "The committee finds that the record presents a series of legal oppressions and an abuse of ju dicial discretion, which demand criticism and condemnation. These bang aa a pretentious cloud over bis court, impairing his useful ness, Impeding tbe admlnii *u tlon of Justice and endangering * the integrity of American Institu tion?.** lt seems to us that the very fact itt Judge Speer with intent used ls' office arbitrarily right up to the tint of impeachment la the mast mvinclng argument? that' he should i impeached. GEORGIA; TEXTILES, The rsport ot tho:Georgia comm'a. oner of commerce and labor, H. Mr: tanley, ls very Interesting. Among lier things lt shows that there are 16 cotton mille In Georgia, using i8,ioo,i88 poonda of cotton a year ld turning out products valued at 12,678,000. In. the cotton, woolen ad knitting milla the operatives num it 34,777. There aro 66 operatives nder If years old; 8,074 from 14 to d orar 18 years, 16.?02. h v a P a sj o p fl n tl fi o: Bl W O d ti tl di h m tt tr tl T w b( la flt ll th H et tt th sc ai hi at bi Bl tt. BE WAKE THE MEDDLERS Then* is HO much of hysteria and of perversion iii these dayH thai it la difficult lo arrive ut whut is the truth. For instance, lu the matter of child labor in iho colton mills. The editor of the The Intelligencer was fortune to he permitted to assist in getting the first hill through the South Carolina legislature. It waa Introduced Col. J. Q. Marshall, and championed hy the late N. O. Gon zales. These two men did more for the laboring classes of the State than any ot .her dozen men in the last 25 years. Doth have passed to their re ward. A law to protect children from heartless parents who would force Hiern to work in the mills was a ne cessity and ls yet. But there should be Burne common sense displayed in the matter. When the child labor law was first passed, it came in response .o the appeal from the laboring peo ple themselves, and thc mill man lgers offered uo objection except to state that along with this law there should be a comr ory education iaw to keep Idle children off the streets and out of mischief. And .ight there ia wherein rose the ob ection to the compulsory attendance aw-coming from politicians who did lot want it merely because the mill nunagers did. At the time of the enacting of the aw, there wus a widespread public entiment in its favor and public de naud for it, but there is no great dis satisfaction at present, that we can tear of. Occasionally we hear that he law' ls' not being enforced, and hat there has been some criticism of he governor of the state. We wish o t ay that this in unfair to him as he enforcement of this law ls not laced in his hauds, although if viola Ions were brought to his attention, a might get in behind the loafers -ho are letting it go on. We believe that the mill managers re the best friends of the mill peo le. Even if they were not sn from humanitarian standpoint, they hould be from a staudnolnt of ccon my-and they are from both stand oints. There are men in the manu tcturing business whose minds are o greater than their great hearts, and i :ieir sympathies are broad as the ' eld of their endeavors. * We do not believe rhil tlie mills ( f the state are employing any con- , Iderablo number of children. And ; e have visited some of the. mills and 1 ar observation la that what chit- 1 ren are to be seen, have light em- 1 loymeni, get pretty fair Vages, bro , .eated nicely, 'have iota of fun lb : ie mill'and outside, and are a great I sal lees driven with labor than, are ? undreds of chore boys on the farms.' j Te believe that the mill managers do , ore charity voluntarily. than all of ? ie charitable societies of :he coun- i y, outside of that grand Institution, 1 ie Salvation Army. .' , ' And this leads to the conclusion he great and admirable movement 1th reference to preventing the la-' >r of children in mines and factories being ridden by high salaried of fals whose business is tc agitate. re have read statements and pub cations and even books from them at aro grossly and grotesquely false, ow much of this agitation ir, caus I by the mills of New England and ie enemies of the contented labor of ie South we do not know. We know >me of the workers in this held id belifiv? them to be sincere, thoueu ghly theoretical and slightly fan ica!. We believe in remedial laws it we do not believe that legislation lould be foi ned npos industries when ls 'not needed. . What would the South be today ir were not for our textile Industries? 'How roany of today can remember 'fore the day of creation of. intor it in the building ot manu fae tur les? II such know that but for the mills id their payrolls the South would day be but little better off than waa at the close of the war, ex ipt agriculturally. The mills are it entirely patriotic or benevolent or milicent, but they do more for their aployes than the aame number of npioyes in any other class of la ir get. The mill people are becoming an edu ited, proud and ambitious people, hey are among our jest citizenship, hey are not In need of paternalistic ' rather patronising Jaws to the ex-, nt that politicians ant: paid agita ra would cause the people Jo thlukv ccasionally-there"-ls nk?&tor legist tlon in the case of frome trifling pa int, but auch c?sea may be found i-the farina as well aa In tim, milla. Finally,''we suggest, beware Wot etsi be jfeoinfed^oufi an^'cofreoted. at let the mill managers and their dp alone, and we believe' that they Ul get together work out the aolutlon alt vexing questions. Otherwise, ?me day adverse and fool legislation ay stop the spindles and the con imer will feel the effect of the high ?st of idleness One of the new ist uses of aluminum in the manufacture ot soles for socs for mon who work in wat placts. COMMITTEE UNDECIDED Tlie Keimte Judiciary Trio Worried For Import On ('layton Bili. Wallington, June 24.-After ten dnya consideration of the ('layton anti trust hill, passed hy 'they house, the senate judiciary committee tonight ap parently was no nearer a conclusion as to what it shall report to the sen ate than it was the day it took Its first look at the measure. Membera, of the committee have found little common ground for pro-', hlbitlon of Interlocking directorates and holding companies, and they have not finally agreed on how. to prevent price fixing. The so-called?-labor sec tions have lcd to endless 'Jfrguments. The prospects for an early agreement, some members of the committee Bay, is not encouraging and sentiment against reporting any such measure at this time ls growing. A new complication in the situation came tonight when Senator Cummins offered five propositions which he asked the judiciary committee to ap prove i d report as amendments to the fed' tl trade com mission bill. These amendements would "make In terlocking directorates and holding companies among railroads or other corporations unlawful whore tb??y re strain commerce, and would ^ive the trade commission or thc interstate commerce commission potter to deter mine when they restrain commerce. There was talk again today about un effort to have the president agree to limit the amount of anti-trust leg islation at'this session. PITCHER JOHNSON M A Ititi ES Takert ns lils ) BrMe \Congi essniUuN Daughter. ' Washington June 24.-Walter John son, pitcujer, of.the Washington. ?mer lcah'League and Miss Hazel Lee Roberts,1' daughter of ' K?bt?Beht?tlve B. E. Roberts, of Nevada,- were mar ried here tonight. Only members of the Roberts family witnessed the cere, mony. The pitcher and hlB bride will not have their honeymoon until after the end of the baseball season. Miss Roberts und her mother Baw Johnson pitch his way to victory against the world's champion Athlet ics this afternoon.. Johnson, although a veteran in tho baseball world, ls only 26 years old. HIB home ls in' Coffeyville, Kansas, where he owns a ranch. HUGE LAND PURCHASES Government Will Acquire Preserves In Several Southern States. .Wtashlngoth, June 24.-*Th? Nation ul forest reservation commission - to ?lay oppr?ved for purchase by the.gov-11 Brnment a hhmber of tracts In Virgin-1 < la, West Virginia, Tennessee, *Jorth Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia, totalling mote than 27,000 acres About 13,500 acres are in North Caro line, principally In the Mount Mitobel 1 region, about 7t000 acres in Tennessee ?nd 6,000 actfes In West Virginia. 1 This 'wiiyjA?bttctude the- pprcbases rdr??the!lRi*?^y?aH'cl0sh?n? Jun* 30. 1914; durW which th?f areas "approved for purct?ag? have {totaled "?n n?arty 100.000 acres'.1 The lands selected for icqulsitlon by the; government for latlonal forest purposed Iii the .east ilnce the -purchase policy was'inau gurated in 1910 now total i,tor.,ooo icres, having a purchase price-of $5, ?6O.O00. , - One of the best tracts, from a lim ier standpoint, that the commission ner lias concluded to buy, contains nore than 7,000 acres and Is In the Mount Mitchell region, ! North Caro lina. Its purchase wea decided on :oday. It averaged mor? than 6,000 'eet of Baw Umber and other products per acre. All the tracts adjoin or Ile near lands previously acquired, inder the general policy, ty which latlonal forests of good sf?e are bo ng built op in the eastern mountains brough successive purchases. ORGANIZATION 'DELATED, iVIil Take One Month Longer Than Exnaetad togt-j-t Esserre Ststs. WcLshlngt?W Jqhe. ~ 24.-Although VUgust 1 it? tho'date originally set by reasury department officials for or (anlzation of the Federal . reserve lanks. If how':ae?foa' likely" that the irganlzation will be "not earlier than September' li'" Th? 'senate's delay In he confirmation of members of the federal reservo board and delay in he choice of directors for tba r?serve lanka will,defeat tho plan to open on tagast i. - < 7"" ' ' The organisation committee now ls melly engaged In compiling lists <f nominations fer ?inwiuraMrs fa he twelve reserve banka* 'After the ?mplete list has been'eofuplled it rill be submitted to electors ' named >y all member banka.. These electors nuat cast their ballot? f?r directora vithln fifteen days after' receipt by hem of the list or nominees. Many it tiie member banka are situated PO emotely that it will take more than a n on th to complete Um electt on of the 1st that hm been malled. * Char&cd With Fraud. Philadelphia, June * 24.-Charging rith uslngjh? malls^ tp_ defraud, Cbt? fompa iounpel est ed t _ ty a United States commissioner. It s alleged that the comnany exploited iprlng >city, Tenn,, using the malls 0 induce pu h?^ve-** onda an? o Militia Camp Cha?ad. Richmond June 24.-Boco use ot l?chmondfa failure to install aowerage nd proper sanitary equipment at Ute 1 te Belected for the annual encamp ment ot the Virginia National Guard, bia city nas ioat ?ho ??c?=:p*"=C?i. kronor Stuart today orwlerd the tate troop? to encamp at Gordons lllc, from July 21 tc? SO,. The <wder Q cl udfa all troops except ft old arti! ? ry, which will encamp at T^byhanna, .a. - .?V^^ijBp^ REICHSTAG CLOSED IS FOREIGN ?IDDLl German Political Expert? Havi So Far Been Unable To An swer Conundrum (By AB8cclateShp^8o)^ ^ Berlin, June 4.- The action ot th government in closing the Reichstai instead ot adjourning lt, has furnish ed a conundrum which the pol?tica experts have not yet been able to.an swer. The government's object is no known, and its action is wondered a the more because it meant the extlnc tion of numerous pending ^measure desired by th? government/ most o which were certain to be passed, 01 all which must bard work had beei done. Equally mysterous was tb* government's covert tbreat to dlssolvi the Reichstag, making new election! necessary ,if it adopted, as it scemet for a time likely to do, a Social Is measure providing an increase in pa: of $24 yearly for certain postofne? .. nployees. Even the newspaper! friendly to the government ridlculec the idea of going to the people on ai issue so trivial. Foremost among the measurei thrown into the waste-basket by tb? closing of the Reichstag was the jpe troICum. Others, to suffer the sam? fate were thc measures to regulaU bookkeeping, to define the rights ant duties, of aviators, to establish a, ju venile Court, ' to ^sharpen- * the' iaWi against "filth in word and picture,' to regulate Sunday employment, to es tablish a colonial eourt. to umenii'tbc business law? the new excise bil),: and many others. Against this, Bat of un completed work the accomplishment of the late Reichstag are very small So long as lt had to deal with broad national questions, such as the arr mament and taxation bills, where the non-Socialist parties were- united against the Socialists, the work went ahead smoothly, but as soon as these were out of the way, shifting allian ces of factions prevented any real work from being accomplished. Not all the blame for the little dode during the long session rests upon the Reicbstag. So monarchical a paper as the TAEGLICHE RUNDSCHAU sharply criticises the government's "doctrlnariahlsm, passing the bounds of the permissible," and its "stubborn ness." It declares also that from the first there was a lack of intelligent direction of affairs on the side of the government. It ls also a fact that the ministers of : various departments on many occasions failed to-show the fact necessary for dealing with - the representatives of the people, and on more than one occasion made unfortu nate blunders. Another source of the Reichstag's weakness was the presidency; Herr Kaempf, the Chief presiding 'officer, Ia an estimable and at?o "man, but sven his own party--the P<?greM|ves jr Radicals-were not sati ned with ila conduct of the affairs of the house. Hie exhibited a lack of ?esoiuUoa and leclslvehcse fatal for the presiding i flic er of a legislative body. It.' la nost unlikely that he will be mention ;d as a candidate for the. office when he nowRcichstag, which will convene n the autumn, elects . ita president ind two vice presidents. Conjecture las lt that the next aesalon'a prest lent ls likely to be a member of the Clerical, or Center party. NEGROES GET SCHOOLING ' That Io No Benson Against Compul sory Education BUL Sditor The Intelligencer: Sixteen negroes appeared before the State Board of Medical ??caminero of ?outh Carolina la Columbia, June li lith, 1914, for license to practice medl ilne in this state. For the same ex :minat??? G3 whiten apia ered. ' if, alter a few deanes i>f meagre op mrtunlty for education hf South'Carol ina, one ' negro seok? to enter this nost learned and skilled profession to inly four and oae-fourth whites who ?pply. what Is to be thc fiaul outcome? Here ls part of what ty Southerner, Shay N. White, now suy,erintendent pf > u bl ic instruction of the state of New .toxico, says favoring compulsory edur latlon: ' ''" 'I havfl t's ted the law thoroughly, list, as it. county bu perin ton dent for tlx yeats and .i-ow aa state supertn emlout for two and one-half years, ind I am f nil com meed that any stste elli nicks gre?>?r;?'re?:tAS through luch a taw. It ought not to be neces sary, but tlif-re ls always a need for t for a certain pei ce::tage bf the peo ple. Wo want to have our law amend d. ito thal tho ct-tn?ii>!tcry ago wlU bo to lb years. ic.*ttnd ** "i to 14 y oars, s the law now "tunda. As a Southern r myself, - i-think 4bevlh?rw0nld WP louhieJiy help the CMIEC of education' a your state." v Yours very truly, ;Vi E. H. BLAKE, ?reenwood, S.C., Jujio 2?, 1914.^ igeres w that Crop 'Waa 'test r Valable Ever Produced. c Washington, Juno p4.-Final figures f--the ?$913 crop xxa^annoucced today rown^Wlth t^?Sc^lton^?haVof Ml. At the same time tie estimate f the total, value ot he crop shows . waa the most valuable ever.-produc fl, lt being worth $1,043,760.000. . The quantity of cotton finned from ie 1918 crop counting round as halt alias and excluding[linters, was lt sa,SI I luuuiag wai OB or ?i,l?i,??) ales of 600 pounds gross weight/ otton aced. reported waa G,S05,O?? ms. Tha value of the cotton la estimated t 1887,180.000 and of the seed $l5e>. ?BK hy m J ? B -! 8 -* . v . ?| ; The oxford you heve in t mind is here-r-ready to I put on. \ White canvas oxfords, ? the better kind, $3.50. i Howard 8c Foster's trade ! winning oxfords, in tan, 3 j vici, gun metal and pat j j The new English custom.last f . \ in tan and black, $5. j ! i > \ Hanan's bench made oxfords . .j ? ! bo ti in-glaze kid,'tan; gun metal - ' ' j j , , and patent kid, $5.?0 and $6. . \ j I ' ri, We are making quite a hit i \ with the silk plaited socks \ ; ' we are selling at 25c, limit six p a i r s to a customer. Actual value 35c. AU colors. We prepay all charges. Order by Parcels Post. \ ; ..... ? ....... , . ? - . ? i > - ? ."??..'r,? ........... j. . s "' ' - ; . . . ! . ' : i-. i ' J ...... . ' - V.r. :.. ri. .' . I ' .??. ,i'/ioi?'?tt V?IMI?I) qt .-?....y .??-.' . i:1'. \ ".?-r .? ' "' .' 4 '-??. . OLYMPIC CONfl?fcESS ENDS . . ' / Ilelefst?? GallHsre? tn Paris i? "t?*. . ... else ea'-ffciM??. Paris. June 23.-'Delegates to ttlB International Oly sn p 1 c Con gre s's. in session here since Jone 15, virtually have finished their' labors, although' several minor decisions are toi- be reached. American delegates declare they will return here thoroughly sat isfied .with the results attained.. James' ?. Sullivan, head pf the American delegation'.today said, the Work of the congress would halve a tar reaching effect, especially in the United States. In all the large Amer ican eltlea preliminary gamest will be held and the .winners will meet In New York' the first Sunday in June 1916, for the grand elimination trials to decide the entries for the Olympic gamea, to be held that year at Berlin. The American Olympie team will com prise the men takln? the first ?ix places In big events and. the flrat three places In small events. ' Rules govern ing all sports will be published Sep tember 1. --' ? .-' ? jr- ? ' .. '..?.i'VV Capturad Durais ol . Parts, June 28.-Accordingto, a re port', received here tonight by the Al banian Insurgents today captured Durazzo by storm. ' OOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOQ ? ?IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE* e. o o 0 o 6 o o o *> .?? o o o ?;o o o o o The following -la from a weekly magazine published by the Huyler I Candy Co., called "Huyler^ Health j Hinte".* "It has.paid Evans' Pharmacy, An derson; a. C., In mora ways than ono to advertise, their Huyler's sales ag ency. ; ->-la??B!ent months the Fvana Phar macy mn s won the Hon's share ot the prise money tn the Hints' contest and thia succoss hn rarousci the interest Ot the Anderson newsp/.pers In Which theo rig tn al ailjerttneir : advertising manager,. ?nd to HuyleV The tote? "^'e experience ot Evans" Pharmacy shows what a s?ea* agent can dd by cc-cpcratlng with the newspaper pub* ??ftTt??soSe??^ them?rtismg" Mr Dickwn aleo rtoelVed * vsry commea?atory personals letter ' front tj^s Xlsj?er Cusipiuiy,- in connection with the last prise contest, . ? ? '-- y _1 ' -?, i if The addition of ? fe* drona of par affin to the powder used te cleaning BANDITRY MUST CE?&K g; torm?n, 'ty&i??.".A's ' TP5*? ? KotjSu?lshi?fe?prj.:.: New 6rlean?. June 24.-What ;pre t?nd?d 'to be details of the demands made bf the.-UnUed Staten. pppn VbnuBtln.no Carranza, through which Carranza1^ repr?sentatives would be admitted, to the m?dlatton -conference at Niagara Falls, were given out here today by Fernando Iglesias. Cal deron, ohiet of the Liberal party in Mexico, enroute to Washington in connection with the Mexican problem. ABide from the armistice feature .which Carranza refused to consider, 'Calderon said it was demanded con- . cern lng disposal of rellgbus questions and the time when elections, should take place which greatly interested the constitutionalists./. According to the ?talement ot the Liberal party leader, today "the United ?Btatee dcrr.ar;i?4 ' that. adi,. propejty . of the Catholic Church confiscated by ? the constitutionalists should be re turned to the church, that buildings destroyed should be paid for, that pr\jstB should- be protected and that I vries ts driven from the country : should be allowed to return.*' ' ' To thia Carranca replied, according I to Calderon's statement, that the con' atitutlonuUs.t laws of reform provided that all church property, should j go to the atate when heeded and also, that the priests moist go.. . U .. , ; .' . < Calderon also stated that Carranca refused to^accede to, the demand .tor elections as .Boon afl the revojotlop ls ended. His reply to that, according to .the statement. ,was that elections could not take place until banditry has ceased, therefore, he would :ob/t agree to the plan of holding election until several tedders now classed aa I bandits hs* been crushed. Another demand, according to th ) statement, was that Huerta should he . protected*, to- %hlcb Carranza is- re ported to have replied that according to.the aztec law Huerta must die dipt, the constitutionalist chief rerus?d \ tb acquiesce In the demand. '? That Carranza also refused to ot insUtulfcmaHBt* Ww ?fifi8ttt*?Tf * imeciissjfnwrlnclud? Bv^ Tn?? ARE BUSY At lt convention of the South ankara Apsotls'ton. Cent Imao Carter .01|aaa.ft^j/he the prli ; , ^Ulamson, ot Feajarsed \\A Federal reserve act, ^^ended the establishment of : ? $%'W?d .th4t.-.tb5;.-, . ?, .w*??a^>*t?r . pri?es i Jr;,??ttw msmbarshlp of im