The Anderson daily intelligencer. (Anderson, S.C.) 1914-1915, January 24, 1914, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4
IKE ANDERSON INTELLIGENCER
Founded 1860
19? North Main Street
ANDEBSON, H. C.
WILLIAM BANKS, - - Editor
W. W. 6M6AK, - Business Manager ?
. .Entered According to Act of Con
crete as Second Clsss Mail Matter at
Ike Festoffice at Anderson, S. C.
faklifhcd ETery Morning Except
MnmAn*
.ami-Weekly Edition on TueHday and
h rid?y Mornlnga
Bolly Edition-$5.00 per annum:
jgt^for Six Mooth?; $!.&> for Titre*
.aa?-WeeaJy Edition - 8L>">0 per
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peats fer Fear Months.
IN ADVANCE
Member of the'Asaoclated Fresa uni?
Sseeivlag Complete Dally Telegraph!?
Service.
A burger Circulation Than Any Oih
Sr Newspaper ia This Congressional
ttrict*
Ses Intelligencer la delivered bj
aatfters in the city. If yon fail u
gmt four paper regularly please notify
Itt. Oapecita your name on labe
?f year pap?r is printed date townie)
Fear paper is paid. AU checks anc
?traft? oitould be drawn to The An
lateUbjencer.
4% ty -fy * * * * * * >}l 4c sic :fr
* THE WEATHER *
******* ^ ?. * * * -v
. -
, Washington. Jan. 23.-Forecast :
. SepiA Carolins-Rain Saturday.
tooday colder and generally fair;
?aVederats (o brisk aoutt?weet and weal
wnw
TMtfCftllT FOB Tilt: DAY
# ?anrsii Solitorte, otvine i etreat
?Jlraich ot the prnnetit. envy of tiif
S raaf
Mj the jonie Itream or in the wntiug
We court ilia- wit-dotu, tltat celestial
Tie genuine offspring of the loved
..Strangers on Earth) are Inui>
cen.ee and peace.
-Young
Good government has flaws for the j
bal aaa.
' An infernal machine-thc neigh
bor's graphophoe. n
The man who does need credit Ia the
saan who gets it.
Rag time has at lsst succumbed
ts tbs Ungo, a worse evil.
Get oat your spilt log drags. After
thia'rain they will do. good.
Fron> what Villa says, wo believe
that be doesn't Uko that fellow, Huer
ta.
- _ -
Haven't we hud Une weather for
breaking up the ground for the new
crop.
. The old time school teacher wltl
bia "Hicory wythe" is a thing of rem
iniscence only.
? > ' _
The big intcrcstu were so impressed
with Prest. Wilson's golf that tbo>
est but of his hand now.
Anderson lias the privilege of pay
bis ? plenty for tts Ulumlnating ga.
.-tua we cant do without it.
Anderson will get a lot of advert!.'
tag>^(totJtfi?r bad-out of.thc conven
tions this year. Let it be good.
Another rearoa why we sro glad j
tWy-tagi?S?uturo !.. In Columbia and
riot herc-thone mtrfrageite bills.
> ?^S$CTSi>r.'Is sud in the news which
Ctf?ies 'rom tlic bedside of that spler,
Clivh-tiaii man-Heury Claude]
OF/rOsend.
Anderson IA my town.
If the asylum ls tn lie Investikatcd
let lt be don?? decently and in ofd?r
atm cut out tho politics.
Anderson should at once take st?Min j
? or ?rt on>? of thoHO textile schools
ut hr crested hy the State-If the
tftffaf? ttasses the bill.
We believe that humanitarian mill
presidents have more heart for their j
.n?ployes than the hired'workers of j
the child labor organisation. i
The Darlington man who commit
teal suicide certainly had an Idea of
the eternal YUaess Of things. Ka j
committed the act tn the cemetery.
Tie euffa are now demanding that!
they be given the position of street i
cleaners. That ia one job that will!
not, be denied them by even Ute moat
ardent "astin,"
"We can't understand why the inter
urban took off the night trains. Are
It??y ?A* gawa **? ? ?it?i Tri th
Ufa chance ot creatlhg business some
time?
a*
Jl'S'l I'JtlNTEKS.
The St. Louis Qlohe Democrat Coiu
meotH on u DCWH Kom fr<nn the llli
notH penitentiary at Jollet, to the ef
fect that oojionK thc 1200 inmates,
there is not one printer. Til?' news
paper produced by the prisoners has
therefore to Le net up outside the in
stitution. Tiie Globe Democrat re
:a?;rks: "The priming craft is not sup-j
plying its quota to the penitentiaries
of theconntr}."
The Globe Dem oe ntl notes that it
r.Ot ClV/SyS tb'.io il? thc ?lujo be
fore linotypes, when the tramp print
er infested th? land.
Printern as a wliole do seem fln
i.ulari> free from tin- criminal taint.
They arv ?pretentious simple miuded,
living in modest houses in hide
streets. Pow of them own "dress
suits" and their naines rarely appear
in the .".elect oolumus of high society.
A prin'.er on newspaper work
apanda hin time putting imo type the
' iston of the world. Al. foruik o In
man activity pas^ through his brain
and hands before tho record is spread
oefore tho world. Hi? mind is a
? torehouse of human cxprlcnccs, 'and
l>e looks ut life with the maturity
that grows out of tills background of
iatelligence.
A man before whom thin daily pic
tare of crime and punishment is
j-:>read must be a fool, indeed, If he
lld not acqulry a pretty just esti
mate of the real values or life. From
thousands of humnn stories that
come to his attention the valueof law
abiding conduct is to him axiomatic
All callings have their faults. Tho
printer st>c8 too much human futili
ty. Tho joy, the achievement, arc
commonly not dramatic enough to
make, trood now? stories. It ?H not
strange that tho average printer be
comes somewhat cynical in this men
tal 'atmosphere Hut is lt the peasi
mjfiii t?f a ciear eyed, thinking man,
who in a quiet way puts much fullly
out-oX-thc way by his perfecpt|on of
Ita iwelespnesH
A MA?hKT HOI SE
Tho Daily Intelligencer has heard
rgVoYdble comment on tito proposi
on Lo make lt easier for Anderson
County people to deliver moat in the
cit> either to butchers or to the pub
lie. THO people of Columbia ara work
ing on the same line. In that city a
new market house is to be built in the
rfttddle of Assembly street, which ls
l?'l feet wide.
"Critter V.'C?tO?i ww ???? in ih? ?t*K
?Mlutortr? a bill to permit th? city to
build in the street-as the streets are
iii" property, of the- State.
Columbia will spend $40.000 for her
-narkct house Ono to ault Ander
Mifi'B needs could be built for much
less. . .
lt ls to bc hoped that Anderson peo
ple will remember how long those hot
summer afternoons will be next sum
mer before the proposed now base
ball lekgue.
We ate willing to back up Prest,
v.';!; tin in everything ?except In letting
a negro police court judge hold on
in Washington. No negro should pre
side over the trial of a white man.
The "compulsory education" bill
has no great fault but its name.
Washington, D. ,C. Jan. 23-Many
people have an idea that there some
tiling mysterious and occult about
the work of the Weather Bureau in
iortcasting the coating of storms,
frosts and floods. Not a few think
? that the observera must necessarily
got their Idea by reading the planets,
th. stare and tho moon. As a matter
' of fact the forecaster of the Bureau
fort?}!:, lite coming cf disturbances in
a businesslike way, very similar to
that? la which a man who has ordered
a Khirmcpt of goods would estimate
the dato'of its arrival.
^.Suppose a business man had order
ed a carload of pineapples from the
Hitwailyn Island. He would know
the average lime lt would take Ute
stfcrjtnef'Tto make tho trip to the Pa
otifln port, the average tUne for 'un?
1 owing und loading-into refrig?ralo*
ears?, njul tho average- number ot d tja
to bc a??owcd those ears for their tri >
r. cress-, the, continent to New York.
His estimate, would-be subject to
j erro?? because the steamship might
however bo dolayetf by fog, or the
cars might meet with an accident,
i .Storms. like pineapples, as a rulo
do not orglnate ,in,tho United States.
! They-come to us, some from the Phll
ippnes, Japan, Siberia, Alaska, Canada
or the Gulf nf Mexico. Tho Weall r
Bureau gets table telegraphic or
wireless notice of a foroign storm.
Station after station, or vessel after
vessey j reports the storm's arrival,
in tts neighborhood, so that the
general direction and rate of progress
can be determined very early. In foot
the arrival of some storms can be
foretold ten daya In advance.
The forecasters watch for the re
?r* JUST AS EASY.
gion of low barometer which ?B thc
storm center around which thc
winda blow. This whirl or eddy
moven bodily forward with the gene
ral eastward drift of about 650 miles
a day in our latitudes. As tile lines ol
equal pressure (is?bara) around the
low center crowd closer together,
thc winds attending thc storm iu
crease In force, The forecaster de
termines the direction of movement
of th storm und its volOCity.
When weather disturbances are re
ported, thc forecasters know fi oin
experience about how lons it takes
them to reach our Pacific Coast, and
then how long after they wil reach
the Atlantic Coast. For example, if
a storm cumin? from Siberia drifts
oatsward around the North Pole and
reappears II. Ajanan, lt should appear
in Washington and Oregon in about
two days; should g.'t to th?' Great
LakCB ia six days and to the Atlantic
Coast in seven or eight days.
Unexpected conditions may delny
storms or drive them from the
straight track just as a refrigerator
oar may be thrown off Its schedule or
be shipped by accident on a wrong
road. Some of these deplete them
selves hy running to regions of high
barometer which are of greater mag
nitude aud extent than the storm It
self. .Some of them, however, travel
completely mound the world.
To keep tab on cold waves that
come Into the United States from
Canada and Alaska, the weather Bur
eau studies the Canadian Weather
reports. Kngland sends reports from
Iceland, the British Islands and Con
tinental Europe, and dally reports
come Crom St. Petersburg on the con
^ii'c;; ; in Russia and Siberia.
Thc same businesslike system u?od
In tracing the trnck of a .storm is
applied n determine the arrival of
frostB.
Floods forecasts are amde in much
t'.ie sarae?O/ay. Information as to thc
amount bf rainfall at the head waters
of streams that cause floods are
covered by telegraphic retorts sent
b> local observers. As this rain
reaches the main channel, the height
of the waters in the channel is deter
sa?n?u by successive gauging tfation
PaBt records establish how much a
height, say 20 feet at Dubuque, Iowa,
will produce at Davenport , another
.station 80 miles down the Mississippi.
Ths pinn is followed all the way
down tho Mississippi, and at each
point full allowance is made for the"
ofects of water from trebutares, ana
?rcsv ?dditio??> and local r.-.?-.r>??,.j.t
a roslult ot these observations in thc
recent flood, the people of Cairo .had
warning a week or ten days in .ad*
vance. The Pittsburg district can ,po
given only 12 to 24 hours' notice be
cause a flood ts upon thom within 24
hours after a .heavy rain storm.
"HONOR BOLL
Those whose names appear on this
roll have made an average of 90 or
more on examination and have not
fallen below 98 on reports.
Tenth grade-Davis Glenn, Gilman
Thompson.
Ninth grade-Frank Marett, Marion
Compton.
Eighth grade-John A. Johnson, De
witt. Gleen.
Seventh grade-Catha Davis, R. M.
Davis.
Sixth grade-Mildred Holler, Lucile
King.
Fifth grade-Haskell Marett, Hoyt
Wooten, Wilton ruvls, John Will
Grubbs, Janie Rae Isbell. Julia Davis,
Marte Grubbs.
Fourth grado-(Roderick , Heller,
Landruim Hanvcy, Elma Brock, Iris
Lovinghood.
Third- grade-Fred Isbolt, Prue
!>avis. Mariner Thompson, . Lester
Glenn, Claire Heller, Gladys Loving
good.
Second grade -Lucile tallaban,
Wyatt Orubb?, Cecil labell. Lush Pat
rick. Kjtte Pullen. 1
First grade-J. C. .Brock, Janette
Brown. Viola Calaban. Roble Cobb.
Hubert apvts, Wilie Glenn. Jimmie
llanvey. Mittle Nixon. Leland Wil
gin*, narine Wooten. Dermis Warle*.
Ilster Worlcy.
G. 9, Ryder. Prlnicpal
Jame* !M. Muss of Walhalla wai;
among tho business visitors to the
city yesterday. ? >
ABOUT FOLKl
E. It. Horton, o? Kelton. \vas In!
Anderten yesterday for a few hours.
J. B. Spearnian of Piedmont, spent '
yesterday in Anderson on business.
J. E. M. Hall of Iva was among
tho business bisitors to Anderson
i yesterday.
-
A. W. Pickeus, of Pendleton, route
i, was in tbi
few hourh.
Mr. and M r.s. L ?. Robinson of
Level Land were si.ojiplng in Ander
son yetkerday.
Mrs. K. A. Lews, of Helton, spent
. a few hours lu Anderson yesterday ?
j with friends.
Li. P. Sullivan of the Fork section j
.wari among the Anderson farmers I
to spend yesterday in the city.
J. N. Gambrell of the Hopewell
section was In Anderson yesterday
for a few hours.
Starr Whitlock, a Pendleton con
stable, wasn the city yesterday on
official business.
W. Jj. Howley was among the bush
iness visitors from Anderson in Bel
ton Friday.
D. A. Pottom of Greenville, spent I
yesterday in the city, a gueJt at i
the Chiquola hotel.
W. R. Taber, the well known'
Southern passenger agent of Green-j
ville, was among the visitors In An
derson yesterday.
W. E. Pinson, wno once made his:
home in Anderson but is now a1
merchant of Central, was In the1
city yesterday.
A shopping party from Pendleton,!
consisting of MTS. J. J. Sitton, Miss
Lizzie McPhail and Mrs. F. Q, Sit-!
ton trpent yesterday in the city.
R. H. McFadden of Blacksburg
spent yesterday in the city. "Mac"
is becoming more and more adept
in tho art of prevaricating every
day.
J. B. Felton has returned from I
I Columbia, where he extended thsmc-et-J
|'ingi"0f''thej*iuperintende?ts of educa-!'
1 tl?n of'?^S?uth Carolina. Mr. Felton]
iaarj??alatr?|itm Aeting 'was interesting*
TTMRT very%**fnsfructlve.
. Miss Marys Utarby of Polzer and
Miss Claudia Kftenzeale of And er tim !
?R. F. D. ure thce: guests of Miss Lot
tie MioCoy on Brock street.
Lacy Moore of tho Southern Rail
road, was aonong the guests at the j
Chiquola last night.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Owens of Pen-1
ijawss<ii?i?'/<^ '"
Condensed statement of the finan
cial condition of the BANK OF AN
DERSON, Anderson, S. C., at the
close of business January 13, 1914 as
shown by the regular report made
to thc State Bank Examiner.
RESOURCES
Loans and Discounts . .% 990,287.46
Overdrafts.".. ..25.912.09
'Bor.:** and Stocks. 6,850.00
t Real Estate .'_ 35,640.00
! ( ash and due ' from Banks l?i,395JL3
Total .1,219,984.03
?LIABILITIES
I Cnptfal Stock -1 $ 150.000.00|
Surplus..". 150.000.00]
.Undivided Frof Ita' (Net).. 63,475.41
1 Dividends .Unpaid -... 1,786.00
I Deposits, Individual f764.871.62
'.;. ; ..slts.BanU ' G4.Siil.G5
829,723.27
Bills Payable . 25,000.00
Total._% 1,219.984.68 j
? Interest roinponaded ' quarterly on
; Sating* Account*.
: Hie Bunk for the Corporation-the
! Eb nt- the Individual-In fact for ev
"3 bod)* Come in and pay lt s visit.
THE BANK OF ANDERSON,
Anderson, S. C.
The;Strongest Baak. In .the .County
SAFE SOIS? PB0GBESS1V2
SUBSCRIPTIONBLANK
THE ANDERSON DAILY 1NTELLI(?EN'CBiL
Anderson. O. C.
Gentlemen:--- Please enter my name UH a subscriber to The Dally Intel?
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Name .?.
' ? t
Address.
IL P. or SL No.
S YOU KNOW
dleton ?petit yesterday iu Anderson.
.Mr. Owens is one of the farmers
who "lives at home."*
S. lt. Kelly of Central was amone
the visitors to the city yesterday.
J. F. Powers of Charlotte spent a
few hour? in Anderdon yesterday.
J. <". Collins of the Varennes
victors to the city yesterday.
Miss Maggie Carlington, super
ed frcm a trip of inspection to the
visor of rural schools has return
A. F. McCurry, a well known i
planter of Savannah township,? was
in the city yesterday.
James Wakefield of Elborton, Go.,
la in the city, the guest of his broth
er, J. A. Wakefield.
Marley Pegues of Greenville, was
acnongllie business viii ors to An
ti?: ..on yesterday.
Mrs. M. H. ClinkEcales of Honea
Path is in the city, the guest of her
sister, Mrs. J. A. Wakefield.
(Mrs. J. O. Hearon and Miss Mol
lie Whittaker of Flat Rock were
shopping in thecity yesterday.
^^^^^^^^ 1
/
.p. H. MCMASTER"
Reelected Insurance Commissioner
Ot thc outl?
Put your feet ia our
hands.
We've the proper treatment in
the way of shoes.
Our prescriptions are recom
mended by thousands of men who
have ceased to flirt with fooc
troubles.
Right now you have an opportu
nity you'll long remember if you
take advantage of it. Every
pair shoes in this great stock re
duced, but large as this stock is, it
von't stand this onslaught of
buyers long.
Hanan Shoes now $4.7 5
$5 Howard & Foster's 83.75
Howard & Foster's 5
*3:5t) Snow Shoes tl 75
The Store with a Conscience.
I
YOU ARE INVITED
You'vejn? doubt read about our, $m?rt off erin ^flisfoes.
have you rollowe.Vthe lead ot Vi?. Cooddrcsser and bou^hl a.Vfc?R
'?Iii: ls an invitation jo. call and purcahse a pair of high grade
shoes at a very lbw price? You'll find them "some shoes."
$6.00 Men's Shoes $4.95 $5.00 ladies shoes $4.09
$5.00 Men's Shoes $4.00 $4.00 ladies shoes $2.95
$4.00 Men's Shoes $3.25 $3.50 ladies Shoes $2.75
$3.50 Men'e Shoes $2.75 $3.00 ladies shoes $2.65
None Charged or sent on Approval