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THE ANDERSON INTELLIGENCER FOUNDED AUGUST 1, 1860. 140 West Whitner Street. ANDERSON. S. C. W. W. S.MOAK. BflJtor und litis Mgr. K. AHAMS.Managing Editor !.. M. GLENN.Vllv Editor IMIELI'S SASSKEN.Advertising Manager T. u. (jOUI'MIBY. .. .j_..^^^('irculatlon Manager. Entcrdc according to Act of Congress as Second Class Mail Matter at the I'ostolHce at Anderson, s. c._ TELEPHONES Editorial and nimbions Olhee.:i21 \ Job 1'rlntlng.OUII-L j SUBSCRIPTION RATES IN ADVANCE. Dully. NemMVeokly. One Year.$5.00 One year.ll.r.O Six Months.2.50 Eight Months. .. 1.00 Three Months. .. 1.2.? Pour Months.50 i Tho Intelligencer is delivered by carriers in the city. If you fall, to get your paper regularly please notify us. Opposite your name on the label of your paper is printed date to which our paper is paid. All checks and drafts should ho druwn to The Anderson Intelligencer. o 0 o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o u o o o o o o o o O o o on; daily roi M. O o C O O O 0 O 0 (I I) II o II ? tl o II II O II II II II II U U II II II A Smil.c of a .Man. Somebody poisoned my dog today, Though he never did any one 111. And do he Is through with his canine play And hin waggle! v tail is still. No more shall 1 walk In the fields with him Alohg at my side to Jog And?I don't care if my eyes are dim? Somebody poisoned my dog! Ho was homely, I huow. us a dog could he. And only a mongrel, too; But I loved tho old follow and he loved me As people and dogs may do. Nothing on earth could disturb his trnsi Or his love nnd his faith befog. And now he lies at my feet. In tho dust? .i Somebody poisoned my dog! He crawled to my side and licked my hnnd, And then with a ga3p ho died; And?though oorne people can't understand? ( patted hl3 head?and cried! F]pr;it isn't funny to lose alfietjd .. . .. ' ' - 'From 'ofr df thw earthly cog,; 1 ' jj ; " !' \ And ho was loyal unto the end Somebody poisoned my d03>! ; ? ? < ' I wonder how any -one could '.b'p.vt dona This poor j title fellow haxu; But here he"lrea-<-his race la run? tflfough hfVbody's -ut Ul tooft and wnrtq.. j| i*? My life is lived on a peaceful pian, My pace li a quiet Jog, . '"Bttt^r wlsn i could find tho onnko of a man ; > 'Who poisoned my. little dog. . Think you will be at the launching of your wire's battleship hat? . y Congress doesn't appoar to bo able to railroad that shipping bill. Tho newest thii-.B In luulca millinery iu th'j battle ship hat. Groat guns!' Porous celebrated the exit or Jup. Pluvlus yes terday with a blow out. Our idea of a financier Is tho man who can buy a barrel of flour nowadays. -o Tlllly Sunday .Is rurhlahlng the newspapers with a lot of Sunday feature stuff. The latost horror resulting from iho war Is that plos are boing out in six pieces. Tho merchaht-mah with the battleship hat will find it a bank account destroyer. Wonder If the battleship hat will become obsolete any quicker than u battleship does. A womau who would wear one of thoso battle ship hats must be a drcadnaught. -o The battleship hat Is the newest piece of mil linery. Maybe it's tho old time sailor sailing back. A dispatch sayn tho Czar Is at the front spurring hU troops on. What did Nick ever do to win him spurs! -o A thrifty housewlfo these days Is one that can ninka two biscuits out of what It took to make one bofora \ Dr. Lon O. Drougbton ought to lie moro of a flshter than ever, since he has been ao close to the Teal thing. The latest thing in millinery Is tho battloBhlr hat. Will It have a fighting top or Is It a fighting top per so? ' ' ' -o?? ' While the ?pri?e of food Ib going higher has. li ever occured to you that eonio of ua will go hlghei . if it continues What has Christendom got to say about the sink Ing of merchantmen^ regardless of whether tlu cro* ' avo time to get out of the way? -o The nore we read of German soldiers dropplni ' bombs from' Zeppelins upon the head of defense les; women and children tho more regard we have.fo the Indian savages who tomahawked tho womei and children of our forefathers two hundred yean ago. .t. . . . ' SHAM, AMiKltSON HU NT*' LA? Iii: II IND.* | Til greatest m <l Audi r-?m ('utility ha? Juki n ?v. j Is rt system <<r good roads. A. I; any citizen of the county who rtally lins the welfuro of Un; county at j vhm ami In- will t il you ihn: lint greatest draw back tin' county has in > < , rv rospVcl ii Ihe mis-; trahie roads. The winter rains have lasted lunger! than is usual. ati'J irlny rund? will nul stand wet ; weather. \i.imcqimnco, tho roads In many] parts of Hi country ar? nlmo t impassable, and people art kepi h: home because ih< r.mnot got j anywhere. The mud lax the peuple nf Andursoii | County have been called upon tu pay Ihe past full | ami winter would pay Interest un u mighty 1 g . hond i: mu . Tin time lost. Ihe vehicle.* worn -.sut. j the harness broken, tlm wi?ar end t.nr on man und beast hat proven a burden nut easily calculated. Now this condition of a IT? 1rs hut a repetition of v/hat has been the case lor do-atles, and if no more permanent road work is clone i'i the future than bas hern ilum* in Ihr past. Hie rame thing will I be repeated tor ilio nexi generation. We do not j mean iiy this ?tat 'men! 10 re Heel on the work done j by any ottieiul ot till! euunty. The;, have done the best I hoy could with the nu ans ?t their command, hut what wi ivls'.i t.) do is to tall' Ihe attention nf I he people to a fact they realize exists, and to en deavor to direct their nlieniinn to the only avail able means for it-; correction, and to prevent the "nloF.su! waste and loss sustained by every citizen of the county. The remedy is Just wlia* Ore -avilie ami Kichlaml legislators have done in IIk* present session of the legislature, Greenville bit. secured the passage of a law requiring the county supervisor of Green ville County to Issue bonds up to $1.000.000; ftlch laml County has done the pnnio thing up to $1.250. 000. What these counties have done we cull upon the Anderson delegation to do. Tack a rider ''.into the bill for Greenville County, or for Rlehland County und malte their provisions apply to Ander son County, Oh. yes, it will take nerve to do it. but If the Anderson delegation has not enough of that necessary article, let them visit a drug store and secure a nervine. Or better let them return to their home ami attempt to dr ve over sonic of the rural routes of the county, it vou please. They will return to Columbia ami their servos \.lll stand the strain of introducing thlj progressive legisla tion. Wo relieve that the delegation will do It if their mention is called to it in th.? proper way. There fore, we coll upon all citizens of the county who wish to see this county take a "front line" stand on this important qUC3tlon, ;o write, wire or 'phone tho members of tho delegation at once urging them to get busy on this proposition anil put it through at oiice. It is important that It be done NOW, as (liere .-cumins but a few days of the :teBslon. and ac tion must be taken Rt once. We would urge the An derson Chamber of Commerce to call a meeting i>f jlts>VoaHj?^ take steps to bring this matte* to.'(lia- attention"of the delegation In a force ; ful manner. Let the directors s?nd n delegation of progressive citizens to Columbia from all sections tof the county to urgo thi.j uction. ? iVnders.in County.must keep up with hor progres sive neighboro, and IhJs.-ctcp is. n. jst important'. fi t % Orllt/iJHESHIVF I>KI.K?AT!<?. The Orcenvllla County delegation does not know exactly %1(fncr?' ft Is ?V'Just now, so for as the opinion* .'ihn-.votoro is concerned Tho delega tion Jpy taken nteps which surprised the entire county. It is the most active and radical represen tation which Greenville has had lni some time. The money appropriated exceeds the appropriations of other del?galions; and this, too, is u time when economy is urged. Cut let us consider all eldcj of this question. The ch.legation has done nothing which will bank rupt the county. On tho contrary* Ilm gr-.id roads will bring actunl dollars and cents to the majority of citizens. The farinera will suffer less wear mid tear upon their stock und vehicles. They will lind It quicker, easier and much moire pleasant to come to the city when there Is occasion for such a trip. They will find that tho social life of the communi ties Is improved, burnure it will be ea3ier to get front one place to another. Good minis are necessary to prosperity. They arc necessary for Iho development of the social j side of rural life. How were we to get thoso toads if tho delegation did not take the Initiative? There wao but one expeditious way: appropriate th? money and hove tho roads built. IT Tho News be lieved that citizen.-? would be burdened Voyond their, means. Ihe bend Issue would have been opposed. Dut there will bo no unreasonable- burden. The levy, in fact, will not bo Increased, possibly; and if Increased. It will be but slightly so. The money which tli'a county has been spending for patch work anil temporary road const ruction In years past, will ho saved. Wo shall have our roads for all time, assuming that a reasonable sum will be laid aside each year for maintenance. The delegation, because ot Its action in regard to tnc road matter. Is being criticised now. Hut a year hence, or two years hence, this delegation will bo vastly popular. The News predicts. It Is one of tho few delegations which has done anything of much importance. It had the nerve to do. and tho wisdom to know what should bo done. The roads will make Urconvtllo County a very different place. They will place us on a parity with Mecklenburg County. North Carolina, and with other counties which have been taken out of the mud, and made prosperous by excellent highways. !? There was no need to do a little work now, and some more at a future t'.mc. Do It all at once. Give every section of tho county creditable highways, and glvo these highway ; at once. That Is the Idea of the delegation, and it Is the correct idea, as thla paper sees the case. From time to time, as the situation, develops, The News hopes to give figures which will show that tho country people will hot be burdened with taxation, and that they will be the chief beneficiaries of tho roads.?Tho Greenville News/''' ' A man. has to pay war revenuo tax when he geti a license to bag a dear. . What about a license- te bag the other kind. Our mothers wore sailor hats, our wives are wear Ing battleship hats, and. heaven knows what oui daughters will bo wearing. CltEEM VILLE DELEGATION'S I'ltOVKESNlYE LEGISLATION. It is refreshing to watch ttic* progr: sslvc antl fearless course being taken in the legislature by l?. Greenville dclegation. Those gentlemen went io Columbia with a program of progressive legis lation mapped out. ami planned for I he upbuilding of Greenville County, and with a determination to remove the business affairs of the county as far as possible fipin i lie maelstrom of po'i .< ;. They have nut given a thought to the effe> >. hucIi regu lation would have on their future political aspira tions, which is a new and novel experience for a ?olugatlon In this State. They have broken all rec ords ahd smashed traditions right and h Tl. While they have ,dIrr?el up a veritable hornet's nest in hat old i .unity, their audacity and fearlessness can but command respect and inspire confidence. Fu ture g?n?rations will rise up and call them blessed lor having the courage of their convictions, and ?lo in).', what the county needed to have done. Wo take of oiii' hats to them, and iruvl thai their tribe may increase. ? < |^ 'OT ft .lilt. IIA .MMFTPS GOOD WORK. The Intelligencer does net know whether or not Mr. .las. I . Ilatniuett. who for the pant two yearn has been chairman of the executive committee and In ice the head of the chamber of commerce, will consent to be re-elected for a third term to that oltlco at the meeting of the new board of director.; which Is to be held Wednesday evening. If he wili consent, th city and the organization are both to be congratulated. I'm'.cr his administration great progress has been made In Anderson, and no one conversant with existing facts doubt;! the very large part the chani ber of commerce hu3 played in that prpgrcjs. It is ft) be continued, and while The lutclllgenccr hopes Mr. liammett will consider and accept ie-olet: tioa. still If ho will not, any member of the board would Bplcndhily fill the ollice. and the u33o.-iaticm and the city generally may he assured thai u con tinuation of effort will be secured, carrying out the policies of the organization, and making it as in the I par.? a powerful weapon for the good of Anderson and her trade territory. The Intelligencer takes this opportunity to thank Mr. liammett in the name of our whole citizenship lor what he liar, done and for what he has stood for; and feels that no one in Anderson will appre ciate continued good results more so than he. The/work of a commercial organisation in difli cult. intricate, complicated and' trying, and yet no word of criticism of a destructive natura is ever heard in Anderson against the organisation whicli honored Mr. liammett with Its chief office. It 13 a tribute of which ho and the city may both fool proud. CONCERNING CORN BREAD. Ono of the reasons why the price of bread has not advanced in the South, notwithstanding the distressing advances uotud In many oitlos of the East and the North, la because Southern'people particularly tho people, of this Immediate' section-^ consume so much corn l-rcad. . , , In the larger cities of tho East; corn bread is al most unknown./ Such a thing ns eggbroad is an un heard of luxury in millions of homes beyond the South. . . " ,( ' ' In Georgia, it is entirely -probable) t'nnt one.half if not more, of the broad consumed'-in the average family each year is mudc of corn meal. Tho very best quality or corn mcaX Is to bo had In tho South. Much of It is v.atcr-gi>ound. In the rniallor Pr?lls scattered throughout' the rural 6cc tiono. This me^l Is the finest, the most wholcsomo, ane the most toothsome produced In C o world. It Ib true that corn broad Is more of a plebeim. article. In theory* than wheat bread. Wheat flour it the accredited aristocrat in the kingdom of bread. When ono gets right clown to tho truth of tin matter, however, wheat bread is no bottor thai com bread, and it is extremely doubtful whethei it ia as nourishing and desirable as an article o food. Anyway, whatever the truth of that may be, thi cornpone. : tho corncake, and ths oggbread of thi South are standing us in a-mighty good stead to day, ., They are holding down the price of. wheat bread at'loast.?Atlanta Georgian.- ' ' A WELCOME VISITOR TO TiJ^S OFFICE. Tho-Ihtelligenocr was honored yesterday by. \ vUlt to its new home on West Whltner street b; one of tho old time printers cf Anderson; in fac this visitor was employed for u matter of two year or mor2 as n type setter on The: Intelllgencor o> far back aa 1874. Ho stated yesterday that tho im prove ment in the method of printing, and makin; up a daily newspaper such as the Dally Intelligen ccr Is today. Is truly great; that when ho hclpei got out Tho Intelligencer ?av back In tho seven ties, all the type was set by band, and the pr?s wos run by hand, and as ho stated it: ''By 'mail strength and awarkedness," whereas- today almoe all tho type Is set on these wonderful lypesettin machines?the Linotype, which sots as much typ as five -or six men can sot by hand, the advertise roents ciin \ -s Illustrated with illustrations at, a :t?\ moments notice- with tho very latest styles In- al lines of business; that tho news Is not only give the public in story form, hut in illustrated picturei meaning the illustrated news seryico 'Which Th I ??ltlllgoneer conducts at this tlnie.-giving lis tete" ers all the worlds,news In picture form aVttpll'.a , in cold typo; and then tho paper is printed* on*, ! proas which prints the* entire paper, etbn?^op?ria , tlon, folds h, counts It. and delivers it. ready fo i the carrier boy-^all by electric power. . ! i This interested visitor to The" Intelligencer ol j flee yesterday'Aras'n'odo'other than Mr. R. 8? Ligoi . hotter known a* "Dick" Li g on. .'Few people here abouts know tha? ho used to be a "Printers Deyll, served his time with tho "stick" at the ;^*e" an i could set standard measure of type, by hand; in th > "old days," with the best of them. The '/battleship bat" is promised for women I . tho spring. Wo suppose "submarine shoes" wl r como next.?Greenville Piedmont And then "di stroyer" corsets. men who have w?5n Evans Fifteens can bet ter appreciate the magniture oi this sale when you think of it that now you can.buy those greatest of all $\ 5 suits for $ 10.95. . For a little less than fifteen"U?l lars you get a B O-E Twenty. Look over these prices, you'll find them all inter esting if you appreciate an opportunity to buy'?t a saving. Men's Suits and Overcoats. $10.00 Men's Suits and Overcoats now.S 6-95 12.50 Men's Suits and Overcoats now. 8.95 15.00 Men's Suits and Overcoats now.10.05 18.00 Men's Suits and Overcoats now.12.95 20.00 Men's Suits and Overcoats now.14.95 22.50 Men's Suits and Overcoats now. .. 16.95 25.00 Men's Suits and Overcoats now.17-95 Men's Odd Trousers. $2.50 and $2.oo Men's Trousers Now 3.50 and 3.00 Men's Trousers now 4.50 and 4.00 Men's Trousers now 5.oo Men's Trousers now 0.5o and 6.00 Men's Trousers now 7.50 and .7,00 Men's Trousers now 9.on and >'8.5o Men's Trousers now $1.75 2.45 2.95 . 3.75 . 4.45 . 4.95 . 5.95 Saine reductions'on Boys' Suits and Overcoats as on Men's Trousers. Most unusual reductions.here now on all: Men's Shoes. Fall and Winter Underwear. Sweaters. Gloves.., Manhattan Shirts. Wool Shirts. Automobile Last Week of Manhattan Shirt Sale. ' Next Saturday,. l3tfi!'wH| end this ^reat Shirt Clearance. 31.50 Manhattan 'and Adjust? Shirt? now.$1.15 2.00 Manhattan, Arrow and Adjusto Shirts.ItAO; 3.5o Manhattan Shirts, mostly silks. . 2:25 "order, nt tab .'U.'ir .tost?we'prepay. .1.; M.I . i >|| ,. - IL ?. i !>?i yiii/fj ; "The Store with ? Conscience" From Scpius. ''p Wo &> not know how the farmers of other sections of the county (eel about the weather, but one thing sure we have heard from the Scntui 'farm ers and they are absolutely opposed to being taxed to pay a* man to come around to teach them how to make more farm produce and then,, when they have made it our government steps out of the game with, folded arms and let a set of Wall Street thieves take it away from us and. leave us with nothing to do but "root hog or die." and as for us we would rath er have only one bale of cotton,lor a bunch of rogues as to havo two. No use to say. that they are; mot robbing us when we are selling cot ton today at from"3 to 8 cents and Germany is paying from 16 to Id cents for tho same cotton. If that's not robbery then there's not a' iwan in. the asylum in Columbia but what-'has ] the' knowledge of a' Solomon ?a com with us. to turn criminals loose among good, decent white pooplc our courts and Jurys have gone at it and dear reader, until men are found guilty and are made to suffer for their crimes, regardless of their financial, political, religious'or social standing there's no use to be turning up your nose at lynch law. - It's an everlasting disgrace the way some people and some newspapers aro slobbering over that low, dirty,1 degenerate, Leo Frank, of Atlanta, Ga., aud if he had been without money and without big, rich influential friends, long ago he would have, reaped his reward by swinging to the end of a hemp rope. Trilling wltn justice a* is being done in< this Frank case is one .of the things that helps .to breed lynch law. When the liberty of a criminal can be bought with money it's time to close up shop and .quit.' V. L. CASEY/,. pared to ours! And now to he plain, GIVES AIDS the Scp'tus farmers havo absolutely . ^**T **V ^zf??' ?tiS?ri*'??. nothing for a farm demonstrator to] TO MLMORY do and they are not going to be any, .* ; . : ways ''mealy mouth" in letting'him ' " "".^ !l. wJ!eno he comes a? ' \ i How *? Remember Important Let the V. S. government send out r men to teach us how to price as well | as how to make and we will then | have Borne faith in the inteve?t ' that ! it seems to have in ue and until 'it I does the farmers arj going to 1 give 1 farm demonstrator.* the cold'shoul-' Eventa in the Reigns of Some English Rulers der" In this section: Here's Pr?sident Wilson telling us that we must -Work harder this year than eve- before and now If Mr. "Wilson will glvo;u's rural credits as promised in the Baltimore Editor of The Intelligencer: Acting upon the supposition that young people like and easily learn! rimes, the author composed the fol lowing verses. If you think they will ! pro |s of service to any students of platform wey/Hl Jiave. more faith in, Anderson county, who aro struggling what he says': You may' not know it, over English, history, kindly, publish Mr,,Editor, the labo?'i/jg classes them on the "Educational Pago." of .this/country IJi-rfa. abioTutefy do -, faith in anything that 't'ae ' feraient William conquered England In ICCC; National Democratic administration He found it 1c wood but left it In has done or orondse's to do t so far as bricks. it affects labov and as a conseqaeaee His' soldiers-they,camo from a sea there's more Socialistic Ilt?rature'be- rovers'den/ Ing taken and read by. the people of And England was divided among these our. section than ?ras ?ver kntfwd her i ' men. ; . i. : fore..;,., .,: 'r-*>-.+i:rivwfmtMm?nu ..With big corporations getting1 every William peculiarly divided estates!/^ thing at the . hands of. our present into many little shires and three National, administration'.th'at-they''ask palatinates.'<h<iu>'?-r-.'. for and with labor gettlrig^'ndthing */Miam a ehpt at tain Injustice tookl but a raw. deal at every stage or the j By getting together, tho "Doomsday game our people are" becoming rest-1 Book." less, they arj reading, they are think- ]. ing and they are talking and unless ; William Ruf us?a red-haired man?' our present National repr?sentatives. Meroly kept the barous from dividing! from this State do more .for labor j tho land. v than tboy have already done then} they had Just as well pick out the Henry, thirty-five,'years as a king did political cemetery to whJcnT' they : live, . want their political dend bodies, con- { And a great many charters to the peo slgned for thoy are euro to g6' there, j pie did give. And now that Blease is. no longer : Henry, who thus long did stay on the throne ?I * > By* the name, Lion of' Justice, qui to often 1b knowoiom '. fi? .'m?.'S'? Stephen was a king,','Wim with Ma tilda fought, And thus to poor England, much havoc was wrought. . Matilda, seeking aid. fyr sorveral years wandered,. But at last lost her caus?,in the "Bat tle ef the Standard," Henry II, who was a nian not of wa ter? ; nil Had his former friend'Dccketlod to the slaughter. About taxes and trials^ (iney quarrela had had, / And for both of them their disputes ended bad. (This Henry, also, 'Ihlrty-flve years did live ' ' And, like his grandfather, ruany char ters did gi ?e.V " :'" To the coinage and castles hi? Atten tion he turned' ';" M And made the coinage "full value, but the castles' he hurtled. Richard the first, in the crusades did his part, m- j . . And thus for-himself won. the name "Lion Heart*' . :/ To light the cr??pdea; .there wbb re quired u gold;. I , Therefore, to sich many ofQces were sola. i?,, lMC. WLLDEB. "TU" FOR TIRED SORE, ACHiHE FEET .U?I what relieL'^o \fi?*W tired feett no more burning feet, m oh* n, bad smell ing, sweaty feet. No mHtti pain in corns callouses or bunion*,,*] Np, matter what , ails your feet or what under the. sun you've tried without getting rellet Jurt use "TIZ.": "TIZ". draws Out.all the pol?. SOnous exnda' Hons which puff up tbc feet; "TIZ" U mag ical; "TIZ" is grand: "TIZ" will, cure your foot troubles so , rouir never llrep qr.tj/rawup your face m rain. Mgpp wem tight and your feet will never, never hurt or get sore, iwollen qr'JurM, ?et a 25 cent IW aVahv drug of Icpartmcnt^torc. aJrWt'Tciicf.