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i LOW ROUND-TRIP RATES FOR EVERYBODY OFFERED BY THE SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY "The Progressive Railway pf the South." Atlantic Cifv N I ?.d* F?I,0W? 0- 0- R? *w mionac wily, IM. JJ(Pfgn Grand Lodi? and Patriarch? Militant, September 21*2?, 1914. . Atlanta. Ga. National Woman's Christian Tem p?rance Union, November . 11-18, 1914. Atlanta, Ga. S^^H/SH1"0 Carterville, Ga. g^^0T*7 Falr' 0clober **' Bimungham, Ala.}?S? 8,?TE FALR' "* 28'0CT p. II AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF BANIi Uallas, J es:. ING, sept. 22.24, ?u. ?-i, ?.? . -, .'Hill annnal meeting Farmer? Ne rt. Worth, TeX. tlonal Congress October 14.17, 1014. NBU, I ? International Assoc eW UrleanS, La. Engineers, October Youkon, Fla. 20-23, 1914. Nntlsnal Division Kifle Matches. Oct. 9-22, 1914. t~>~ .Woodruff North Georgia Fair, 0c Winder, C?a. l0ber e-io, 1914. For specific rate, schedules or oilier information, call on SEABOARD Agents, or write, , C. S. COMPTON, T. P. A.. S. A. L. Rwy. Atlanta, Ga. FRED GEISSLER, Asst. Gen. Poss. Agt. A tl; tn ta, Ga. "The Trey O' Hearts" -AND "MILLION DOLLAR MYSTERY" AT THE BIJOU TODAY Matinee.5c Night . . . 5 and 10c .e. e. ... .t..rn . a ?. > * t . * .? ? a. _a .?_ . ?. s ?_ .fTTTTV rTTTTTTTT* TTTTTVVTTT Personal . T r* ? 4 -i -? ^1 T Til T 1 "fT T TTTTH TTT CONDENSED PASSENGER SCHED ULES PIEDMONT AND NORTH ERN RAILWAY COMPANY, Effective Amjust 1?, 1914. Anderson, S. C. W. O. Bowie of Starr was among the visitors to spend yesterday ic the city. L. O. Benton of Belton spent a few hours in the city yesterday on business. D. A. Recd of the Aturro section, was in Anderson yesterday for a few houre. Robert Erskine of Union GroM) was In Anderson yesterday for a few hours. Lehman Johnson of Pendleton spent part of yesterday in tho city on bus iness. Edgar S. Wilson of Macon, Ga., tc spending a few days in tho city with friends. . Arrivals Departures No. 31 7.45 a. m.No. 30 6.20 a. m. No. 33 9.40 a. mJio ?2 8.20 a. m. No x35 11.35 a. in.No. 34 10.26 a m. Np. 37 1.3 G p. m.No. W ll BO a. m. No. 39 3 SO p. tn.No. 88 2.10 p. m. No. *1 . 4 45 P- "Ns 40 3.30 p. ss. No 43 6.56 p. roNo.x42 4.46 p. m. No. 45 7.16 p. m.No. 44 5 45 p. m. No. 47 ll 16 p. m.N0. 46 10.00 p. m. (x-Limited train ) C. V. PALMER, General Passenger Agent E. C. Daniel of SpartanMrg spent yesterday in the city ai Hu Ohitjuola hotel. J. N. Hudgens of Laurens was in tUd city yesterday for a few hours on business. John A. Horton of Belton Was om of the visitors to spend yesterday in the city. CHARLESTON * WESTERN CARO LINA RAILWAY . -The August Short Line- , Arrives: No. 5.M ?w ? m No. 21 . ?.? P- m Leavesi No. 22.".?.00 a m No. 6.< . . P; Information, schedules, rates, etc, promptly given. R WILLIAMS, O. P. A. Augusta, Ga. T. T?. Tu??!?, ?3: A? Anderson. S. C. L. C. Edison ot Trenton s pc nt a fog horn's tn tho city a guest at tho Ohic quola hotel. * H. H. Palier of Columbia spent part of yesterday in the ci'.y on business. E. It. Wardlaw of Abbeville waa in Anderson yesterday for a few hours. I. E. Foreman ot Orangeburg was among the guestas registered at thc ChiquolA hotel - yesterday. J. A. Bolt of Belton spent yesterday In the city on business. Austin Thompson of Starr was one ot the visitors to spend yesterday In the city. Could You-. Use a little extra money to good advantage jost now? Haven't yon something to sell? Do yon own something yon no longer use, bot winch if offered at a bargain price would ap peal at once to some one wno does need it? -, An ?NTEUJG?r^CER Waat Ad will tara tao frick. PHONE 321 Mr. and Mrs. Claude Jones of Starr, were shopping in tho city yesterday Mrs. Henry Moseley ot Lovndcs vlllo has arrived in the city for a visit to relatives. CO. Klimier of Pendleton spent a 1 few hours .in the city yesterday on business. * Dr. and Mrs. Morrison of Adel, Ga., ho?; ??n??? ii, ni" vtiy Un a ?BK11 IO relatives. BRYAN GOES TO ASHEVILLE ?j .| Accompanied by vWife, Secretary Goes To Inspect Saaneer Home ta Laad of the Sky. Washington, Sept 16.-Secretary Bryan arid Mvs. Bryan left tonight for Asheville, N. C., to speed several days it? tuen ?Umtiiur uu?ie, wiiiOn unvii I now Secretary Bryan has not had tim? I . * even inspect. They will st?y nn # tit Wednesday unless something hap pens to recall Mr. Bryan. NOTICB~OF FINAL SETTLEMENT All person holding claims against the estate of Peter G, Acker, deceased, ure hornby notified to p*e**nt them at once, duly attested, and also all person indebted to ?aid estate will alao place settle saine immediately with the undersigned. Notlc* la also given that we will on October 1st. 1914 at ll o'clock a. m., apply to tho probate Judge of An derson county tor a final settlement of said estate and a discharge from our erne? as executors. Edna ?ano Ack*r, . W. B. Acker, and E. II. Acker. I kl Seora. SCT.NE PROM -THE THE Identity ot an athlete who covers bis face during his cou test forms the plot of "The Mnsk ed Wrestler." Margery Winters sees lilin best an oppouent and through a suitor plans to meet him. She In vitos him to o reception and he accepts, but does not remove his inns!:. A rival plans to hove his mask torn off In un Mtier wrestling bout, but tbe plot fulls, and Margery ls later overjoyed. fcJ leam that ber favored suitor ls the wearer or the mask. in the days of yore when the Vikings bold dulled tbe sens of Norway, reign ed Queen ilelgn of Drontbelm, loved by all but Rugnurr and bis followers. One night they seize their queen and keep'ber prisoner on a lonely Island. After the death of Rs gnarr the queen rot urns to ber native lana, where her mlventtires are many, sa shown in "The viking Queen." MASKED WRESTU&R." Rathlyn Williams continues to feel the back Ore from the "Adventures or Kuthiyu." Letters from.admirers who have observed, or whom' still are ob serving Rathlyn dodging wild animals and the cruel "heavy," atill pour in. A girl lu Glasgow queries,**'Do you hyi> notlze 'Jie leopard before you fondle it or'merely chloroform rt*" If the youug lady in question had seen this same leopard endeavor to take a large bite out of Miss Williams' head, she would alter ber viewpoint. Through his absentmindedness Mr. Bookley was continually in trouble. Ernest agreed 'to take Gwendolyn to dinner one evening, und on the way he discovered a hole In his trousers' poek et, so transferred all bis money to bis overcoat Mr. Bookley In leaving the restaurant took Ernest's overcoat by mistake. The resulting trouble ls shown In "An Absentminded Cupid" MARKET REPORT New York Cotton L "They pillaged t?o whole town. The j - 'followMg morning thay took one man New York. Sept, lC.-It was announ- f c tR whom th ,m(, ar_ ced today by the conf?rence committee , ., , , ., in charge of the liquidation of thc :cfitcd t?c Previous evening, and lead straddle interest on the New York ins them outside of tho city, shot Cotton Exchange that the pr?ce would thom. Among these were thc hurg? lo reduced to 5.50 for January-Seb- niaster of thc town, tils'15 year old ruary In LUerpool and 9.50 for De- ... . ,4. -ember in New York tomorrow. Some son_fnd }]lH bro^erlV . _. such action had been more or less , Thcn they Tm?? led ,thVfT'" * generally expected and a hope was ex- Wfig** 10 d,g uoIe8 to bury tnoir Dressed in local circles that the cut- ' ..v,ms-.. . , ting down of the price yould lead to /4"r th,nee days Aey contin raoreNictlvo liquidation in Liverpool. ??g to, D and aet ?ro to cverjr" Thcre was no balloting for orders AU.?Z ,n, in^r ." < , ."""",,". here today, notwithstanding the salen , "AJ*U??5? ,?K??fa^r? recently reported from tnt Liverpool ^^^^^^J^fi^an stock(/ and so far onlv 1,000 baier0f , The, large^, PBr* ?? **. ,s de" Mk? it.V".???"1,0^ \tL..t 3troycd. Five tUnea the Germans the Now ?ork interest nave been lipul- ._,".; ,"_. ," _"..._". ,_, lated, under the plans of tho interna- ?SS^S ?Luf nf ?AJnl?* tloual conference The slow progr?s ^?^^d^^^^LJ^S^? if tho liquidation ls offset to some ox- ?Vr-"^-^ destroyed or *Z?t??Ztl*TTl rZQT ?S?i?^8yn~ mu8t b?T la mind thc neate plan now seems likely to gu ",",, _"? . "_"",.". ,,"., ,.""" thn-uah and hy reoorts of further ad- : v '_poP. ?' Aer8cb?t fi**}*T vance in tba Songera spei market?. g gjtr burgo on un. oi,.ini ~L~7J~* t. meister not to offer any resistance or all the crucial quotations received to- ""_,."?< """ ?.".*it" ".,. <""._i" . i." i" > .J?., K?I?? ..i"", -i ? \.t~L_ ,-,"..," commit any. ho.-tile act cowards the In- 1 day being about 1-4 higher, t.antin- .i"_" n*un n"m?. ? "v.", ", " 1 ued eood weather was reoorted in tho vadors- 7ho Germans Bhot at the ? Soutli weatner was reported in uno fleolng citizens, set fire to private | * ____________ houses and aacked them. They want _ ed to make '.ho victimized citizens de LilVerpOOl Cotton claro thee moy, themselves, had set _ lire to their homes. T I.?-"""I A"", ,_ r*~U_The Des tr ucl ?on of Louvnin t.600 including 3.400 American on tho ^rrT?Ht ""^?S^ l? bails of 600d for middling. Import* su"?r"ndi"? n " J SSt^i r. KR7 i,?i"" (""i",ii"" o ooo n",",i""n From, tho moment of their entrance 5'567 balen 1ncludlng 2>098 American. lnto tbo cky tuey roQuU}Itlonccl loug. . ? . ' ing and food for their troops. They Ct\Hf\n fs&/*r\ Osl cntorcd every private bank and looted i^npn?cea van itg reBOrve They entere4 prIvate rcg. _ , _ -"T~ _, . idoncea and sacked and pillaged them New ?ork. Sept 10.-Cotton seed oil and indulgetl in orgies of every de idyancod early on short covering and geri pt ion. tho lard strength.- but .later eased ou "They tqok hostages; all thc prom ngaln, under hedge pressure and lack, inont men of tho c lty were detained, of bu)l support. September closed 8" Women and children woro outraged points lower and tho later months 2 and ?1 treated by thc soldiers, point-lower to 2 points higher. Sales "Previous .lo tho German invasion 11,700. Tenders 1.700 barrels. . tho whole city had boen warned rc The market closed barely steady, peatedly not to ofTor ao^ resistance to Spot 681 a 690; September 580 a 583. tho German troops, or to-Oppose hos - .. tlio acts. Moro than that, all arms "v PKiraiTrt ClifA?n belonging to the civilians, down to VtlllcagO Wain fencing foils, had been ordered de ~- ported several days previously In the Chicago, Sept. IC-Wheat went so?r- cjty hall, and there was ?ot a weapon lng today largely because of reports round on any Civilian, of Austrian-German advantages that ?on August 25, an engagement took made tho end of tho war appear re- piaCc In the neighborhood of Louvain, mote. After a rise of much as 5 cents between the German and the British H bushel, the market cloded nervous troops. The Germana, repulsed and with gains of 4 1-8 to 4 5-8 net Corn pursued by tho Belgian troops, re bound up 1-2 to 1 3-4 higher and oats justed towards Louvain In full panic, at an advance of 1 3-4 to 1 7-8. -Di Many witnesses testify that at that nrovlslons the OU??TWS* ranged frcm i*laioiomu tt*o Gornau garrison In Lou cents decline to 20 cents of extral vain was erroneously informed that ?bat;_! Selstens w?rc coriss ?h?- div. ?m ~TZ I mediately the Gannan garrison, sta MntfAV On ^Sl'i Itioned at Louvain, withdraw toward? j ^ -. I tho station where they clashed with "~* . ?H their own troops, which were being New York, Sept. 16.-Closing: mer- pursued by the Belgians. Everything ca"u?a .paper 7. seems to point to the fact that a con Starling exchange easier; cables 498 tact took place, for demand 497.E0. "From that moment, protending that Bar Bilver 63 3-8. tho itelgian civilian* had fired on the * ~~" ~~ " *. German troops, the Germans began Dry CaOOnS bombarding the city. At the place _ where the affray started, not a single New York. Sept 16.-<3otton goods Itt ^.^i^.S2**& markets waco steady today. Worsted p^?n^^shootlng * P yarna were firm and moro active; cot- P^ho pr^eSS?f S't'he Germans-now nnw ? ??V? *** ?lrBK of ttH t?ioy requl?!twn food and ?Btet?- allk markets oaalcr.. drJnk of whlch th?y p^ta^ to toe ' ^ ' point of drnnkennecs. Then they be Cofit Kept B?wn-Qsslttj Kent Up. gin to ?'hoot wildly from the windows - o? Uio abandoned houses, declaring the No bfiUer medicine eonid be madft inhabitants have Hrcd r^ ih^t?. Then for coughs, colds, croup, hoarseoee?, t?.<o firing and shooting scene begins, tickling throat, bronchitis, etc., than and murder and especially pillage and Foley's Doney hnd Tsr Compounu. acta of bold cruelty ^re witnessed, and That's why they cant Improve the neither age nor sex ls respected. Even quality and war or no wat, the price whore they claim to know the perpe rora ai ns tho name. E. J. Sargent Dal- trator fo the. deed they allege, the las, Tex., says: "I .believe Foley's German* do not content themselves Honey and Tar hat no ?rjual for lt with executing sammarity the culprit - completelr relieved me of all symp- they, wreak their vengeance on wo toms of tuberculosis and my cough whole town. After 0 massacre, some has entirely disappeared." Dont ac. what st random, they shut the men capt 11 y substitute, for Foley's Honey into the churches md order the wo und Tar ls the best Evans' Pharmacy men tn go bach to tbc^ bornes and agents, 1 lr ave the door opea/' ETBF.ME CB?ELTT Continued From Page One.) i VICTORIA FORDE Victoria Forde is s'M] a girl, though she occupies a high ?.lace in the Ulm world. As a child actress she played with Johu Drew, Margaret llllngton Chauncey Olcott aud Maxine Elliott She says she would not return to thc legitimate, as her present work give? her "more open life, more personal Uh erty and more money." In order to mnkc a screen production of "The Rosary" Editor Lanier Bart .ett was forced to write a prologue of an entire reel to establish the hirth place and youthful Influences of the leading character, as well ns to intro duce the girl, his plnymute. Bartlett ls using both the original stage pro ductlon and the book in putting tbe story into photo ploy sbn|te. The Day io Congress Washington, Sept. 16.-House met at noon. Debate resumed on bill to codify thc printing lawB. Representative Mitchell of Massa chusetts, elected member of the waye and means committee. Banking and currency committee heard Senator Hoke Smith's bill in fa vor of permitting state banks to issue emergency currency. Adjourned at 5:35 until noon Thurs day. Senate met at 31 a. m. Filibuster against river and hnrbor bill continued. Recessed at 5:35 p. m.. until noon Thursday. Dizzy Head, Fluttering Heart, Floating 8 peck?. These are signs of kidney and blad der trouble. You'll -have headaches, too, backaches and be tired all over. Don't walt longer, but begin taking }Ailay ?C^dary Pill?, at once, lt vrrm'J be long before your mlserablo Bick feeling will bo gone. You will sleep well, eat well and grow strong and active again. They are ? a tonic and your entire system as well as your kidneys and bladder will be bencfltted by their uso. Try them. Evans' Phar macy, agents. NOT GOING OUT OF BUSINESS Well Known Piano Firm Still In Business At the OM Stand A news story crept Into the col umns of the pally-Intelligencer yester day, which, while seemingly authentic, was ret confirmed and as tho story is a matt, r of some concern effecting the career of one ot the oldest and best known firms in the state, wo desire tb Btate> thnt the item came to a reporter from ono of the oldert employes of the C.' A. R?od Plano and Organ company, and was therefore believed to be an au thentic st a tem on t. We.therfore, desire to give public ity to tbo following statement ''from the company: Please allow ns to request that you publish notice to the effect that news item in this mornings's Intelligencer was.not confirmed by ms. W?i!? it lo .ruo that we sra with drawing from the state-wide territory sr." ??o. .Ti ?j?r3,,tson con fit... . ?, -~ remainder of the item. We .have renewed our lease at 117 N. Main street and expect to bo. at tho service of our patrons next year, with the same agencie** as heretofore. Very respectfully, C. A. Reed Plano ft Organ Co; Opposed to KeutralKy Rome, Sept. 16.-Despite tho most enoro-otle mensuro.? taken hy tho gov ernment, demonstrations in opposi tion to Italy's attitude of neutrality continued today in.the larger towns. Thc police being insufficient, troops are being employed extensively to re press the . demonstrations, reo?tal? lishlng order and protect foreign .em bassies and consolata. Chamberlain's Liniment ir you arc ever troubled with aches, paina or soreness of the muscles, yon will appreciate the good qualities ot Chamber Ir Ui'a Liniment. Many suf ferers from rheumatism and sciatica have used lt with the best results, It is especially valuable tor lumbago, and lams back. For sale by all deal ers. FOLEY KIDNEY PIUS TOS B?wKACMt KIONtTS ANO SLABOS? "LIVE AT HOME" Raise Truck, Pigs and Cattle 10 ACRES are enough, but we also have another of 30 acres. Both within one mile of the City lim its, well improved and in fine condition for truck ing. . Both within the Anderson school district and are just the places for the farmer who wishes to quit cotton and school his children; or for the town man wish ing to supplement his other business. You can't beat them. Frank & DeCamps Realty Co. THONE 246 Listen for the Bel] Monday, September 14th GET YOUR SLIPS, THEN GET YOUR Pant's Book Store ANDERSON, S. C, * HABCOURT&CO^ THE ANDERSON INTELLIGENCER JOB PRINTING DEPARTMENT - BXGI/US?V& I/OCAX, AG?a*l\S ? ? FOR. THIS j&XCI/USIVB, frlNE,. I Anderson City Is "My Town"" . Anderson County is "My County" . What Ab?ut Anderson College:? 43 Palmetto detective Agency Criming) and ?ivil Work a corps ?I Irniit?d Specialists wkese ?sr?tees nay te secured le strict, ry toftitiatate werk. Address P. O. Box 402 -J_,_?_ ? . ? -_;_,_-L