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THE AHDERS0NINTELLI6ENCER ! FoBidftd im _ IM Worth Mala Street '_ANDERSON, g, 0. WILLIAM BAUES, . Miter W. W. SMOAK, - Bnnlneai M?nager ?.Entered According to Act e! Cea freai as Second Clan Mall Matter fit FestoMee at Anderson, 8. C FiMlfhei Every Morales Izeeft Monday Sontf.Weekly Edition ob Taetday aad Friday Mornings Dally Edition?S&OG per ana am} \ ffc&e for Six Months j 9L26 Tor Three Month*. Semi*Weekiy Kdiiioa ? $iM per| A ax a m I 7& e*sta for Six Meathei M| eeata fer Four Months, _III ADVANCE Member of the Associated Press a*o MecelTlag Complete Daily T?l?graphie A larger Circnlstloa Thaa Any Oth. er Nenapaper le This to agr?ante aal District. The Intelligencer la delivered by earriers In the city. If yon fall to get your paper regularly please notify ae. Ospoelte your name on label el your paper Is printed date to which fan pager le paid. All ckecks and drafts should he drawa to The An Intelligencer. The Weather Washington, Msroh 7.-rForecast: South Carolina?Cloudy Sunday; Mon day fair, moderate to brisk west winds. | Anderson College will make Ander son grester. But will Benton's skeleton show any | wound marks? For State president of the T. P. A. B. Ban Allen. The world Is too partial to men of j sc idea. V,'a need broad sauee men. Colored wigs will be tolerated until I the complexion is built up to mstch. Income tax will raise fifty million dollars. And thai Is not all that it. | will raise. Curly-head try to shov "come back" line. June was once a month of ldv?. Now I it Is the horrid time when-the Income | taxes must be paid. Extra sessions of the legislature] hardly expected after that fare-thee well from the governor. Alf Bailey is waiting the psycholo-j gleal moment to launch a boom for] Dr. Furman Dlwer for governor. The Newberry Observer says "down | with the oorsfc?" and ihey might add) "down with the bottoms of the skirts F. .V. Trlbble la a hustler. The re-l suits prove IL He has added many | good men to the rolls of the T. P. A. Weather forecast for today is one of tlie hopeful signs of the times, j Those snowy Sundsys are getting tire some. . A man is being tried In Nev^ York for breaking into a church by force. This is better than?-: forcijiR men into thc church- u After borrowing a United States ar may officer's book bn ethics and eti quette Villa went about his butchery more tenderly. After sojourning pleasantly with the] wild beasts or South ?nier?ca. Col. Roosevelt is coming home for the per ils of diner parties. If they keep on washing linen in New York city, some of the politiciens will have to go to bed for want of ?O?uStuirifi to wear Rural mall carriers have to be men of discretion. It Isn't every man who can match samples for all the good people on the route. Candidates for postmaster should ] be required to {stand civil service ex amlnations. Question 1; Who can] read postal earde most rapidly? I Liberal culture comes high. Cut| down the salaries of the math teach ers If you will, Jbut be euro to sea that j tbe baseball cdschea get a plenty. 1- \t ': I >l The State Press Association Is noti fied Um?. It mhjht as well remain in Anderson a whole week, rather than to go from here to the Isle of Palma Thet Anderson spirit Is being talked of every where. Thero are men In An derson who will keep on being pro-1 gresaive, despite the few that groan | aad complain. Clemson college in sending out ad vertising matter telling of the won derful exhibit from this etate neg lected to state (hat Anderson county bulter scored *woJp&TntsJhtgSer* than that of any othefsUte, and was ' reV* TIIOIUHT.S ON I.M'F.MPKK.tM'E A few days ago our w*>ii known cor respondent, "Uncle Dave", wrote a very Interesting article on the piti able ondl'.ion of ihe man who Im downed by drink. This is a Hubject which is uppcrmoBl In many mindB these days. What shall ?we do with ?lu- drink question? Our observation has hern that harm has been done the cause of true tem perance by the movement known us the anti-saloon league, for there Is a certain amount of cussedness in men that would make them refuse to quit drinking when force Is applied or threatened. Just as there are many men who would refuse to drink under circumstances of that kind?and yet mlnht bi> beenil?d Into it Many u man feels that be is "stand-! ing up for the oxercbie of persona', liberties" and bis "rights" to take a drink "whenever tu? feel* like it" just! because of some intemperate speech on the part of h perfervfd und siack talking prohibition worker, when the same fellow with a few kinds words could be induced to do almost any thing. That Is human nature. The greatest sermon on temperance that has been preuched in this country was the product of the heart of that groat Journalist, Sam* O. tflythe. He gave an account of; his own experi ences. It was a lesson that went honte for it was full or common Vcnsn olid humanity and heart. Men of warm hearts and big Impulses, feel a thing of that kipd, an appeal ,ftjdm a man who is big and lovable and sensible. Men . do not like to be criticised for what they deem Innocent; diversions in the home town, when their very critics"got away from home and splurge and sow their wild oats and play the "good fellow", as is sometimes done. What Is debasing In others is with 'thenise!ves just a little flurry of over vivacity. There can be no double standard. When n man measures others he must stand by his own Vardstick. On tne other hand there are true temperance reformers who have never tasted strong drink. Their hearts re ally and sincerely bleed when they see a lovable personallity yielding to strong drink. They are not publicly obtrusive In their views, they are truly solicitous about their fellow man. We elieve that toey.}f?y* Walter tjaing codtmon aehae*il. f.., * We believe the sermon of Sam O. Blyteh in The Saturday Evening Dost of about toutvjycaks ago wa.a th?| finejj^ thing of Hb kind ever written. He does not preach or scold. He does not even nlcad. He^teUa^wbat liquor did for him and winds up with the statement that he knows that it harmed him and he ts done with it. ' Oh, I! there were only a little more charity on the part of the nondrink ing people of a community. They scorn the man who takes a drink, and he in turn scorns them for their sel fb.hnes.u, for there have come to his ears some faint echo of past scandal in the life of the pharir.oe. These things should not be. If a man is a man and worth saving, as all men are, is there any sense in abusing him like a ptck-poket? He needs help, not a shove downward. Sometime his soul aches for a friendly word. The basis of Christian religion is love. The baals of churchhun Is self Importance. Men, who are deeply im pressed with their own righteousness rarely, have tb^( genuineness of heart to try to save averring brother! T>.*y' put tho church above Christianity. If a man will come to church they may become interested in blm. They will not invite him to church,..perhaps,.be cause he drinks. There are two things that can save this country from evils attendant upon too much Indulgence in atrbpg drink. One Is common sense. The other Is prayer. Common sense must be ex ercised by the reformer and by the object of his efforts. Prayer from people who really love thier fellow man and have faith in God will - work ?olrade?, even in these days. i ??????? FAITH IN PREACHERS . The church is not religion. But the church is an outward expression of the religion of the hearts. The preach er of the gospel of Jesus Christ i3 not always the most devout ami moat pious person in the community, but generally speaking the preachers of this country are good, pure men. What Is the proof? The very fact that when one falls tne yellow press Will aefte Upon it as in the case of the preacher Riejieson, ahd other cases that may be retailed. These men were, guilty? Admitted. YeV their very guilt and the great stench the cases created prove that they were the exceptions to the rule. Our faith in preachers of the country is confirmed by the.few cases of crimi nality that have been proved. We are proud In our inner-con sciousness that thla paper' has not struck a certain preacherv when all seemed "Mack again af hlm?j As in the past, from this day for ward we propose to keep this paper clean for the homes jvhere ym little children may read it and be. unmovad 'by atories of a horrid lite. This Is not **)ni 4rtT nil prudery but u conviction that some' llf<> might be soiled by a 100 free ex ploitation of coar. j and common und bestial tilings. Ol K STIK h RISKS Tin- confidence of the people of (lie state in the future of Anderson Col l?ge wan advanced about 500 per ? ont. Saturday. When men who are lead ers in the educational world came here and saw wltat Anderson College] Is and wlial its fieid of effort is, tbuy were amazed. The people of Ander son themselves are so accustomed tu j that beautiful beacon light on the hilt thai ' y do not appreciate what they! have. Patterson Wurdlaw, head of the college of pedagogy of tlir University of South Carolina and for many years a trustee of Winthrop College, was ac tually bubbling over in his enthusiasm over the college which the people of Anderson have bullt. "I must con to?*," said he "that by my visit to An dereon today, my udtniratlon for the college and for the people of this pro gressive city has increased manifold, and I now have five times as much tait h in the future of the institution { us I bad before." Prof. Wnrdlaw. Hon. J. E. Swearln-, gen, bead of the state department of education, Mr. VV. H. T?te, supervisor, , or rural schools and personal repre-. I'scntatiyo of the general education I board, had come here on a mission1 somewhat hostile'to the interests, and decidedly hostile to the hopes and in spratlons of Anderson college. They expected a row. "We expected to go away with a feeling of soreness left on one side or the other," said Prof. Wardlaw, "and we were amazed at the presentation mudo by your splendid board of trus tees. We parted in friendship and ' with a mutual understanding of the case, and we from other parts of the stuto learned a valuable lesson in com ing here today. We learned that An derson college has a mission, we learn ed that its ideals arc high, that its' hopes are strong and that It has taken I r<>r its president to accomplish this work a man who is the peer of any in the work. We had hop d to get him back. We cannot say ?iat we have I failed, hut that Anderson College has presented the stronge claim. All hon or, to Anderson college and to the petopl'? ?f Anderson.*'" Supt. Swearingen and Mr. T?te ech oed. the sentiments of Prof, i Wardlaw j and declared that they had never seen faudra spiritJamong inch as was evinc ed at the meeting of \hc trustees of Anderson College Sautrday afternoon. They were swept off of their feet by:i the eloquence and manliness of the] appeal of Capt. H. H. Wa?klns, presl debt of the board.' His arguments were irrefutable, and the determination of the board to make this a great college so Impressed the visitors that they left Anderson firm in the conviction that this college will come to pass. AIT of the visitors were impressed with the fact that the trustees of tho col lege are men who will make the prop osition a success. When they learned tho Inner detals of theorganizatlon they had little more to say, and in the future when ever the name of Anderson college is mentioned, those gentlemen ?. ho visit ed Anderson Saturday v,ill he among the friends to say what a splendid in* ittufongltiits as, built by a plucky people, and sustained and supported at home. h?tfhow reaching out' through the oleotlo? of a man of statewide rep utation to draw to us many young ladles front all parts of the south. ' Reports from all around are to the effect that the prospects for a good crop year were never brighter. There ?e?Yna; to bf some cbanco for fruit this year. One of the things that Anderson is proudest of Is her neighbors. Helton, lionoa Path, et al. _ The report' was curront several days ago that air.) Harris himself might be a candidate for governor of Georgia in the event Oov. Slaton resigns to run for the senate, but Mr. Harris has made no 'statement on tho subject. During the past few days be has re ceived nunferous letters from Geor gians, however., suggesting that he offer for the gubernatorial nomination. ?-1?. Every Day 12:00 to 3:00 P. M. SPECIAL DINNER Send u* your, orier. VWia tend it out *c you Everything Clean and Neat. iBUSY SEE CAFE >3<Ju??. :^V.U'. Cigarettes and Written fur Tue Intelligencer by Rev.J den Two notable deatroyvrs of physical t vigor and producer* of premature i dratii are cigarettes and utroug drink. Tbc work of these death traps often '. continue long after the victim has i paid the death penalty for self-grati- r lication. i'hysicians t !! us that tili? < is one application of the Visitation of 1 the iniquities of the fathers upon the < children unto the third and fourth i general ion oX those who disobey God < by the use of HbbBtahe?s which Injure < and frequently kill the body, intended by tlie Creator to b<3 a temple edifl- i eated to Hi? service. * Youth, the formative pnricd, is very ' Important to the boy, an It often de- ' terminus what he will be when be j reaches manhood. This' 1b the rccep- ' live period, the period when the will 1 Is most flexible. Hence the need of 1 liiu being taught in youth the effects < of alcohol, nicotine and other poisons ' upon the body. Most drunkards took their first drink , either in boyhood or young manhood; j and the same is true with regard to , the cigarette slave, lie begins early j in life. Pitiful, indeed, is the sight of ^ a hoy or young man puffing away at ^ a cigarette, not because Just one is ^ so harmful, but because one calls for j another, and so on, until the victim . becomes a nervous wreck, and hls'j lungs are destroyed. A noted physicien gays that there is ' in the boys of this country marked , signs of weakness and inefficiency, t from which the girls are free.. 1 i ThlB. he attributes to the growing ( popularity of smoking. Another spec- t ialist has termed cheap cigarettes , "rank poison." - ! What u Minister saw. Speaking of , the cigarette habit, a friend of mine, , a minister, said he saw in a large to- , I bacco warehouse a sight that would ! surely make any man abhor a ciga- ( rette. He would not eat food that i lias been trampled under foot or spit upon, and yet that.is exactly the treat-j1 ment this minister saw being admin-j istered to the stems and the lower . grades-of tobacco. Asked, as to' what disposition would be made of the stuff, the emplc/css said that it would be made into cigarettes. Whether this particular warehouse is a fair sample, I do not know; but such a cordial in- ! vitatlon to disease germs on the part , of men is enough to make cigarette smokers pause' and decide that they have smoked if.hefr.last. But, do men and boys who. smoke ever pause to consider that,jt*ey are possibly and ev [en probably <,|nhailng disease germs along With rtber'jpofsonoiue substan ces? Do t h consider that the 'Stuff they are* smoking. i -may "have been trampled au^'dvpit l uponffi' This' fa plain English?.:bU0t;?e?n??ld to deal plainly withnauch> Ihin^that are so harmful. ; linm wdaflw <vjdisease is spreading - ' eq,. unaccountably, when there is so much! alteration '' and criminal caraVeaanesB obetog. permit- ' Strong Drink . T. Mann, Seal's Creek t'orrespon. ed! Human life is going too cheaply, t ind it is time to call a halt. The Cigarette an a Mathametlciau The following striking story explains tself: "I am not much of a mathe natician," said the 'cigarette, "but I an add to .man"a nervous trouoies; I can subtract from bis physical en ergy; I can multiply his aches a/.d >ains and divide his mental forces. I an take interest from his work, and liscount his chances for success." Adulterated Liquors. Strong drink s called a .Serpent in Scripture, be* ;ause of ftB .power to entice. If that a proper' designation of it at jest, what name shall we give the idulterated stuff .being, generally of '?red to consumers today? Experts iave found that much of It contains wood alcohol and other dangerous irug8, and they are warning people igainst its use. Alcoholism and Narcotics. An en nent surgeon, who has given the sub-* iect special study, speaking of condit ions in tliis country. Bays that a wave if degeneracy is sweeping the whole l?nd" and if this continues, he fears 'oy/.ih'o future of the nation. It has been, estimated that during GO years the increase In Insanity In this conn-. try was nearly three times greater < than the increase of population during the same period. These two unde lirable Conditions have been attributed largeiy to the cxcessiye anu cnronic use or alcohol in various forms, and also to the, use of narcotics. What has been said concerning cigarettes and alcohol may be applied to every day life in one word, the key note of our next Sunday School les ion?"Watch." Let us watch oursel ves,, to see whether our lives are dally telling for social, political, education al and religious improvement. Let. us watch our appetite; for it is a deceiv er; it would make us believe that to indulge in certain things will prove a blessing, whereas the opposite is true. Indulged appetite will destroy usefulluess, and finally lire Itself. Let us watch our law-makers, to see whether they are restraining or en couraging evil, whether thoy win dare listen to the calasses, oi* to the voice of justice and a fair play to all alike. And last, but not least, let us watch the tempter. He presents himself in many forms, sometimes in the guise of a human being, and tells us that cer tain things are harmless because they are apparently trivial. Many a soul has thus been lead to destruction. So let us always watch. Lectures on fftly Fither" ; Detroit, Mich.? March 7.?Comman der Evangeline C. Booth, leader of th? SaJvRtl?n.'army irt the United, States, itfil give her famous lecture/"htr Fri-tii thbr,"- in this, city tomorrow -after noOn. "ft Spring styles in men's clothes follow the lines of the natural figure, kthlciic young men are giud of it; Fut others needn't worry. Our buyer knows how to select models? t(k every build. Some . frffj . new. jjrjfJtfg suits just in $15, $20, $25. Holeproof?that's the name of the guaranteed hose we sell so man^ of. $1.5o for six pairs?guaranteed for six months. Tango?the newest novelty m neckwear. Solid yellow and solid green in four-in-hands. 5oc. See Window,display. What The Want Columns Reveal i- 'rlt ,,t.j Jill ?*.' jKiob if.li !)1 -; HOUSEKEEPER?Young widow With baby 1 1-2 years old, wishes situa tion working housekeeper; refer ences. Nelson, 727 E. at. ' ? v 1 HOUSEKEEPER?Widow, with boy 2 years ' bid',' as housekeeper. Mrs. ? ?-, "SI W.'et i; HOUSEKEEPER-^ Widow. f child. yflars; reference', care of HOUSEKEEPER?Refined. American widow, with child of 6, capable, economical; no objection to coun try; no trlficra. Mrs. Smith, care ? Ixmox av. HOUSEKEEPER?Neat, respoctable ; young widow desires position, housekeeper or work out by day. Address only, -?jilt W. ? gL HOUSEKEEPE t?Widow, with, girl aged 9. cabable toklng eiHf?ffin%ge. Housekeper, ? Stebblns av., Bronx HOUSEKEEPER?Woman with boy of ; ,<>, as working housekeeper. C H., W. 46th it. ' HOUSEKEEPER?Refined ' wants situation as .\housekeeper; . willing to use own furniture, 92? st., Flatbush, Brooklyn. El VERY true man aims to provide adequately For the material needs of those dependent upon him. To this end he toils diti , I gently and will ngly denies himself many of the ordinary pleas ures of life for the greater pleasure of ministering to the welfa/e of others. In supplying current necessities, however, he tob often forgets or defers provision for future needs. Especial]}' is the breadwinner prone to close his eves.to calamities that befall when the breadwinner? is suddenly taken away. That is a misfortune .rarely counted 'uporj-fe or his family; but the Want columns of .the. daily papers want frequent witness to the tragedy of the bereaved wife mother left suddenly to fight alone the battle for bread. The above "w^nts," taken it - fedom from hun dreds of similar appeals in recent issues of New. Ycrft ?ity papers* elo quently tell the story : M. M. MATf lSON, Grfl. Agir CHAS. W. WEBB, District Agent JOE J. TROWBjRIDGE, Spedel Agent