University of South Carolina Libraries
Kl We have & few < There are fif ty-seven ' (57) different substi tutes for Each one owes its being to che fond hope of some inventor to profit by appropriating part] of the popularity of the genuine. ? ??s taken twenty years to make What It Is? It is in a, class by itself. Bottled m the clean est plant m Ander son. You are invited to see it done. CONVENTION TO frlEETATNOON Peace end Harmony Expected To Be ?he Spirit of Couoty Dem *yry ^Sos^Say & county convention will be called Iber atdftoon Monday. Gen. M. u. named ibis hour b*cauao of the arrival of tho train from the Savanuah valloy way and b?causo several other tra?na com-? in nh?nt that Mtn? Redact pom t of the BARGAIN F TT MUCH INTEREST IN FINE STOC1 Anderson Fermer? Pleased With Idea of Bringing Grade Of Stock Up It is understood that the majority of Anderson's farmers are much pleased over the progress made along the lines of raising finer stock in the County and that, they are taking a great deal of interest in the fine cattle, rece-ay brought to the local markets fr^m the West. Toby are convinced that the. secret of success'in farming lies in the breeding of the finest type Gf stock and Cattle. The following; resolutions.adopted Jbj the Farmers*1 Union'at a recent meeting, show what that organisation thinks .of the move ment; "Resolved, That the Fermera' Union of Anderson county endorse the move ment of our State and National Farm Demonstrative Werkers ht getting the farmers of each county or commuityj to agree in -urec?^s oss spe.'.al v?? of stock and poultry, as we are sure that snch a move is-jhe primary foun dation of. a successful j cooperative work by tbe?- farmers. We appreciate the valus o? iacr owsd- prices bh>> ia j cllities In marketing one grade of j stock, poultry and eggs Over the non cooperative rnongre'fc scrub breeding idea of each farmer, by himself, where the market shark'e*oYhave a first pttll on each lot of product that has no uniform grade or value. II- We thank the Chamber of Com merce of Anderson, ?. C, for their valuable aid In the general coopera \ tl7? uplift of tha farming Interests of ouf County. Fanners' Union of Anderson Co." PROUD OF ANDERSON General Bonhaat Returns From a ?I?H Te rnmen UntveWWr' ] Cen. M. L. Bonham has returned {from Greenville where he acted as one j of the judges in the Joint debate be I tween the two speakrs from Mercer J Unverelty and the two from Fu<roan University, "vve??, B?r," sain tne General, "I felt very much at home, n'?c? Tfc Went into the audHoriuiu there Btepped up three handsome, young fv uovid, uiarBiianj /or the even ing, and olesa my heart if they were not all Anderson > boys?Gambrell, Hutchinson and Ballentine. I telt proud of old Anderson whea I looked at iiice* bacdsimic young fellows. Dr. Frazer was one of the jddgee and Mr. J. J. McSwain was the other. "Of course judges, can't < tell tales out of school, .but there was something else that made me proud of old An ?creen, and that was tue debate by young Chas, S. Sullivan, Jr.. of this City. He made a splendid talk and.? marked impression, -rue query vaa Resolved, that the Labor Union? or the United States are Justified in Demanding a' Closed Shop'. FurttriW had the affirmativ?. ? *s? net alone, jl feel eure, when T any that Mr. Sul-j Ryan's argument made a splendid in pression, and 1' vrss ' proud of aU the j j Anderson boys," BAtTTAK<|IJA PROGRAM I: !- gfcBdajV' r, - Afternoon Sacred Concert?Farin ii Company. Lecture?"Tdie ; Modern Mormon K<nsdo!*?.H?Hon. FreBk J. Cs????c??. -Jv/esper Service. y ftreaing 0acred Concert-MfraWneili Company. >tA3lure Sermon?-"The "Greater Am erican?A study In American roan hood.?Rev. George R, Wallace,, D. D. j Meadey, / Morning?An ounce of Prevent!: ?Mr. Long. Admi3slcQ 25 ceptSr children 15 cents,; ArtciuOOU vvS?fevTTl?O jvenogg Haincs Shtgipg party. Lcctnne?"*Oolor Guard and Picket wne."--(HontavHie now era. hlm&sslon 26 *ent-s. children25_ce?t? Children's ^ottr?Mis* Fik*. iEJventag-^OUi^ht. Opera^The. KeBpgg, Daines Singing Party. j Admission 60 cents, children ?^e?wa;] {Admission to Chil 1 JACKSON Vll ion in F o $3=00 for INS left. XO BEFKESHXENTS Were Henei n the (baatauqua Grevai 1er Goad Beason. It was stated last night by Ruf us Pant, chairman of the civic committee of the Chamber of Commerce, who had charge Of the arrangements for the Chautauqua, that the reason no re freshments were served during the Chautauqua was due to the fact that the committee deemed ft best no? to in any way detract' from the effect of the splendid attractions. The committee though that if per* sons were allowed to conduct a booth utand with cold drinks, .etc., as had been contemplated, it would have caused inconvenience to some of the audience, even if light. Therefor* Capt. R. J. Ramer, who bad purchased the exclusive refresh ment privileges vas g?nerons enough to waive his contract as soon as sug gested to, tha committee. This meant X loss, financially to, Capt Ramer. READY TO WHIP THE GREASERS Fanaous Shirt Brigade Says That It Is Raw?y T=?e War Path At Once Cant. J TL niiahoA o* Red Shirt fame spent yesterday in Anderson and while bore talked very intestingly to a reporter for The Intelligencer con cerning the rit nation in Mexico; Capt. Budbee says that he and the complete Red Shirt Brigade*of this section will start for the. Mexican border ,at the slightest.intimation from President WilRon that he desires volunteers and Capt. Buebee says that if the Red Shi rte get there they will make an impression upon the Mexicans. Ho rays that .elK-hla men are still active enough to do splendid, service in the field and that they can all givo a good account of themselves. Capt. Busbee recently .returned from a trip to.Florida and b'V ears that aa^MfpUiPph'd looked across the blae waters of the Qnlf of Mexico the thought occurred to him that the Red Shirt Brigade could dean up all of Mexico if the President would but Klve them the authority. Every mem 1__? , 1-?.-!_-.-1- J? ???I- -. wvi v* vuu ,r, jfjuuv ' vkw Min m ivrw o .w v a chance at the Mexicans, according B??LE3 BOUGHT H^iNTER?ST Says He Has Not For ? Moment Regretted Baying Ren! Estate : In Anderson?Wants More Qvot^c t\: S?jlr? has bought the interest or John W. Linioy in the mid dle store room prthe C. A, Fised music house prbperiy. i he other part owner is T. 8, Cray ton. Mr. Balles said last night that he had never regretted *hc 'ifurchase Of any piece of property in the city, and h? un? ?vQ???o? qu>l? ? lot in the last y?ar. Ho says he wish, es he had twice as much. He paid Mr. Idnley a pretty -good margin on the holdings in the Reed property. Mr. Llnley and Mr. Crayton had paid a good margin to Messrs. !.. R. Horton and W. F. Marshall. "It we peoplo in Anderson do hot have faith in <tur real estate how cart wo. induce others' to come in," is the way Mr. Balles puts it. HENP?BSON TO PRESIDE Over Blue MJilge tte*aedl*ts, Leete, Seath Carolina. : Philadelphia, May 2.?Tlu, board of brsbopa of ttte. Methodist Episcopal Church today announced the assiga to^nts of bishops to preside over the annual conferences o? the onurchea next/-all in.ths; VYest &r*i South - ; The assignments Idclude: Blue Ridge, Atlantic, Hendencn. Central Tennessee. Henderson . Bast Tenncstee, Henderson. a. B. Hammett ' returned yes from "*few York where ho attes annual meeting of the Amer] >s manuIactur&r&V association. *rice of PO HISTORIC HOUSE 75 YEARS OLDl Long History Could Be Written j About OU Imperial Hotel Being Torn Away j A long history could be written j about the Imperial bouse, now being] removed from Main street. This | building baa been standing in Ander son ever since even the oldeBl inhabi tant can remember and no one can be found to give the etact date when the building was erected. It is commonly believed that the building has been standing Just where it now is for the last 75 years or more and every el derly person in Anderson passing the location has been turning to one side and stopping to gase at the workmen busily engaged fkt tearing the struc ture down. It has many memories for Anderson people and there Is a feeling of regret occasioned with the older generation Jover the building beina remoiaMHBHBHBI^^B As far back as history can be ob tained in Anderson concerning this building is 1859. at which Urne Fleet wood Rice sold the property and mov ed to a western slate...Mr. Rice inar >? Miss I4zsle Dean, a daughter of] >?toj Dean and for a number of years] they conducted a boarding house for] the young ladles attending the John son. Fema?e University. They had probably .40 or 50 girl students there and in those daya the place was quite lively, the center or the social life of the community and almost, every night witnesaed a dance cr some similar gathering. Mr. Rice at that time was railroad agenj-.a; .this jyoint, the first thaX Anderson eVer had. Get 3? More B*d!eg. . Eccles, W. Va-, May 2.?The task of recovering the bodies of the 172 min ers entombed in mine number G of the New River Collieries Company Tuerday> by an explosion' went on more rapidly today and late tonight j 86 bodies had been removed, All but] four hate been identified.t i Nogal?s, ArSs . May 2.-?n informa- j M;?? br?fesht here by ref??e?i that! James B?lugton, an American Imprls-j one'1, nWfe mphtha at Cuthpaa. Sonoro.j [Mexico, irt'tbou't a trial, is slowly dy-1 lng of. noglect. Another pretest was j sent today to constitutionalists dc-| riiiiiuiing hi? Immediate release. j Stiffs Parade at Boston. j VBoetoitf' May 2.?Woman suffra gettes here to the number of 9.00q marched, today through crowded Btreets. d?t' was the greatest parada of wdm?? Jn the history of N6w En-1 gland. Wh?' route was tined by apsc-j tatore estimated to number 200,000. The paradera were received by Govcr-| nor Wal lb. i .. ' ?'-- -? I Tolls Track i? Ope?. I Waohtftgtoh, Mar 2.?The decks I were cleared today 'or tue Panama ttolle re?l ??fet^hen t*ni*vwT OOor * man go?Saa 'approval of thu sbnate ?? ! a mo?fc&V'm#*e the toils bills un flnishedTbusiness. Unless the senate decides 3*Jhert*ise the bill will re main th? unfinished business until it Is voted- on. Heat* ?f Bead Ba??e& . H A.^KuBsell of Toccoav ?a., was in the cfty yesterday ,on ht? way to Portme? ?aoaie, his nrotw w*eu RusreU having died of P* lf?l* had been ill two weeks. The passed lived twoimlies northwest of the TOrt jman dam. ' The funeral at As bury church. ye? f onatUfiMBBv D. 8. tiobron orJ?Tapylugs was In the city yeatc?Ky and stated that be expects to make the race this summer' for township coinaBlssIlaer. Ho la a son of the well known eitisen, Thee. P. Hebses. _ A New Enterprise, i Walter Fant ?as Introduced a new i i?.">?jl dells er T?Je Daily j lotelllRenoer -i'flv the latest magaalnea I and paper* .'vom a nohby Wtle ckrt land will jfo into ell psrts of ihe ?Hy. S A WOSTH FOR A AB <* ikdetpbia, IJ?sy" 2.?^Nearly o ma of milk, tee esjnivalaut o ata than 1.240 oonads cf, o Electri und types SOUTHERN PARKER AND THE EXCHANGE Grievances Stated by the GreentMe Manufacturer. . (From the New York Journal of Cora- ] merco.) The New York Cotton Evchange was criticised yesterday for its dilltory tactics in bringing about needed re forma Zu a report presented to the American Cotton Manufacturer's as sociation at the closing session of its eighteenth annual convention held at the Woldorf-Astoria. Lewis W. Par ker of Greenville, 8. C. chairman of the committee making the report, de claring that an exchange which re flects the true value of the commodity it deals In is an advantage to thje public, but that the exchange which arbitratly states the value of the com modity without. relation to the Idw ] of supply and demand, and whose qu& tatlons are merely the result of ma-1 ntputatlve effect of large operators upon it, U* a curse to both spinner, and j producer. He ?aifl that such an ex change ohouid and must be so regu lated as to campel its quotations to correctly state the price of the com modity on which it quotes, or falling jn ?.?h e'crt, z~zt, un excnange should be abolished. It was in this light. Mr. Parker said, that the com mittee viewed the New York exchange, and unless its rules were so regulated PT Congress SS to COIimp.l Uta pprfnrm. ance of its proper functions" it thenf ought to be abolished. ''The New York Cotton Exchange," said Mr. Parker, "hss either put into execution or assured the execution of some of the reform? previously requested. It is to be regretted, how ever that the Exchange has ?ot gone further : than it has gone In this di rection, and it is to be further regret ted that Its progress In reform has been so slow and the reform yielded by. It spread out through so great a length of time as to not be of the full I result they should be. As often pre-1 viouBly expressed by this association, we believe that it would have been much biter if needed reforms could] hawe beta accomplished by the volun tary action of the New York cotton ex. change. After a delay of many yiars however, appeal has been made for Congressional action, and there, Is now j assurances that ?jeul?*W ; had through Congressional aetiot. "We recommend effort-tn' w-n?de for a minimum length o| staple which can bp delivered upon contract and it was with suij?rhv? Ui=t \rs learned at a hearing in Washington the admis sion of repr?sentatives <>f the New Vnrfc cotton exchange as t? the extent to wh?sh rcitor. c? r,-S inc;^ iengtn in staple or even at timer ?-? Inch lengths id fetaple had been delivered oa contracts on the exchange, there by depreciating to a great degree the whoift h?uiis of the contract and caus ing Injury to both producer and spin ner and a benefit only to the maalpu i lator, who was using this distribution for a personal gain at the sacrifice , of I the legitimate business Interests ofj the country. "We believo such use of the New months. There, has been pre?"??*** York exchange has been Within recent within the last three, months the pub lication on the ijart of the Ne* York cotton oachange of it* quotations ox its contracts for delivery indicating the price of the raw material at times at, much 4* two cents below the price that the producer was obtain ing therefor in the South and Jully two cents below the price being paid by the spinner for delivery ot^w^Wf him. Necessarily this h?* w* : injurious to both spinner and pro-| ducer and has, had the effect of mis leading buyers of cloths and giving! them an erroneous impression of the] price of raw material being used In the consumption. None of us like to j be Imposed upon and u is most natar,. at that the buyer of cotton cloth r'no conceives from quotations of t! .a York cotton exchange that ihb ?rice of the raw material is two cents less than it really is. should fight most earnestly the payment of rices oc njgaftii to be secured b- the spinner in order to make any profit in pro duction." "Tr?s* low prices on the New York j cotton' exchange we believe to be the rcstiH of manipulation on the part of large operators wito src. ztls to tS^s the Ne* York cotton exchange as t, [means of depressing prices on account -? tt2 f-rt t t i?? 7~l ?ri w ^Imy b? change permit arbitrary differences, the delivery of undesirable cotton,, and thus depressing the w?eta basts of quotations: we deplore conditions under which iarae operators *an, tbvough manipulation and improper u>? of the exchange, depress cotton S ft* nn?' Mai* #???l iijnnrn !? *t ?her whan the actual pi ny during the interval? We cite in its ronnet-tton the aoilon of !ar?e peratore on the New York exchans*. v iJcally uuiKlnr ? corner In the iarch contracta to ?v notnta over the ratrscts when the natural U'v tonics would Justify a price of 0 points, or certainly 30 points on the art of May contracts over the March." c Irons PUBLIC UTILITIES CO Mowers The Fast and Easy Cutting Kind COLD WELL LAWN MOWERS have been continuously on the markets ?? the world for the past forty years. Nothing but the best of materials and workmanship enter into their construction. If ?ou want the BEST buy a GOLD WELL from Anderson, S. C. fmmu Belton, S. coming sn almost every*'day the latest shipment being a oar of ?dC o lumr tr vvis* ? _, ??s""us snow rocm. They ??re 19M Models, We have a nice line of Pony DUggtSS. 20 Tons Baled Burmuda Hay Per Ton Jay, S. C VOIT? BE MIOHTT WELL FLEA one left you a fortun '^j'niy ?soch? ?ire of it 1 r think your eye? ai le than any asno Tfasy are. *>o ?ont hi-ip >cu preserve yt could restore if cone, -?- - mm out *c nil