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for our Announcement in Tuesdays Intelligencer lt will piy YOU B Fleishman & Bros. on the square ooooooooooooooooc o 0 o TALKING ABOUT US c o' , > ~" c OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Col. "Billy" Banks. Who was it said that '"The world is better for his having lived in jt?" Well there is one sure thing. Anderson is better for Col. "Billy" Banks having lived Jiere, and (here is great regret that he could not have lived here forever, He made Anderson his town in every sense of the wofd, and did everything possible for the ad vancement of his adopted cit? He has left a lasting monument in the brilliant lights bearing the worlds, "Anderson is. My. Town," whicti was erected by his enterprise, and is the first thing seen on entering the city, the sentiment all loyal Andersonians are proud to an nounce to. the world. We hop* ?ai Coi. Banks may bewith u; again at some future day. The so ciety of Anderson is also sus taining a great loss in the removal of the Banks family to Columbia; We ate glad that they have Uvec with us, and sorry that they, are to leave' us. Wherever they maj go fhev will have the eood wisher and love of the Anderson people -Society editor of The Andersor Daily Mail. / ? .... o ? ' . ' "*** COLLETON T FRIENDS AM ' PLEASED. Mr. W. W. Smoak has beer promoted on the staff of the An derson Daily Intelligencer. Hi was formerly business managei now he ls editor ?nd b?sinesi to many of Mr. Smoak's friend; *for though it was known, thit h< wa% making good a* busines: manager it was not expected tha he would be given the work oi both positions, it is nevertheles ;i pleasure for the people of Col leton to know that one of he manager. This comes asa surpris* sons is making such rapid stride along the path of success, lt is ex pected and hoped th?tMr.Smoal will like his new work and fin( himself successf?ii in. it, He ha: the best wishes of the people o Colleton.-The Walterboro Pres : .d Standard? JCjzin?mM.z Famous Old Belgian Seaport Al Seen by Miss Louise Mack, an English Writer. TRAVELING WITH REFUGEES Fiebing In Terror, They Honor Theil Wounded Soldiers-Sannor-Clad City ls Prepared to Repel the Teuton Poe. (International Newa Service.) Antwerp, Belgium. An Engllst woman. Miss Lor iso Mack, a well known writer of Jetton, has wrlttei a vivid description ot this ancient soa port in wartime, which the Germant an? attacking. The town has become the haven of thousands of refugees Belgians, British and Am orleans. Th? capital of Belgium was transferred here from Brussels, and German Zep peltns brought the city into promi nonce by bombarding lt from the sklei at night Miss Mack writes: "81owly, painfully, through the blas lng summer day, our long, brown train goes creeping towards Anvers. An vers! The name has grown In'o ai emblem of hbpe In these sad v ays when the Belgians are fleeing for theil lives from their little homes amoni the flat, green pastures, fleeing towards their own fortified city thal we English know as Antwerp, or els? directing their desperate, maddened flights to the Ineffable peace and se curlty of the far-off and mysterlout 'Angleterre.' "Soe them at every station crowdlni in! In they crowd, herding like dumb driven cattle, and always the poor white-faced women with their wide innocent eyes have babies in theil armB and children tugging at theil skirts. Wherever we stop we And thc platforms lined ten deep, and by th? 1 wildness with which they fight theil way Into the already crowded carriage or.e knows the pent-up terror In thea? poor, simple hearts. They must gel In, they mnst Whatever happent they must get Inside that train. And soon every compartment ia packed and on we go through the stifling blinding Auguat day inwards toward Anvers. Room for Soldier Heroes. "Ah, but when a soldier comet along how easer everyone Is to fini place for hun. Not one of ns bul would gladly give our seat or oui standing room up to a 'Soldat,' and when our^wonnded soldiers from Ma lines appear at the doora we perfora miracles In that, long, brown train We squeeze ourselves to nothing. "A soldier ls talking. . . . Hon we listen! Never did divine or states man get such a hearlcg as that blue worn-out, wounded mau, white witt duEt, dogged with mad, hie yellow beard weeks old on his young face with his poor feet )n their broken ravaged boots, and his red and blue cap blackened with smoke and hard enod with earth where he has siepi among the beets and potatoes. " 'At Malines/ he ls telling us In i faint; voice, 'at Intervale I often wi the king. He waa there. He wat fighting. I saw. him several times. 1 was quite near hint He had a braven magnificent, our king. I saw a can non .exploding Just a hare yard fron where he waa Over and over aguie I saw his face, always calm, resolute I hopo aU ls well with aim.' he ende forlornly, 'but In battle one knowi nothing.' "'All ls well,' cry a dotan oaga voices. The Ung te back at Antwort > BOW. He te safe In bis palace.' ; In the Ghent Cathedral. "Hour niter nour ?00? by., Twc . hours' walt at Ghent, and we rush li ? a 'volturo* round the beautify " old city, finding everything quite cali ' here, and not a sign of the Germant 1 anywhere. We enter the cathedral ? It la Saturday morning, but crowds ? r people are thero telling their rosaries j Then a priest begins a seimon, and 1 hear words that ? am. destined to hew j again later on at An twerp-words timi have already begun to form* the nobb keynote to the Belgian character.! Re member this, my children, eays .h< ' little priest, seal le silence est grand; la rerte est faiblesse. (Only silenci te great; the rest te weakness.) 1 "Aniwerp at tart, ind the first wi see of lt te a bewildering mass ? ? taxicabs arrayed In the middle of wide r green fields at tho city's outsk! ts, fo: . all taxis and motor cars have heal ' commandeered by the government a s Antwerp. Near the taxis te a field o - flying machines, biplanes, monoplanes ? airships, a magnificent vsrray, of al t craft, with the sunlight glittering OT? f them like silver. The Zeppelin eau g h 5 them unawares ino other night iL'hm: m will n?~er be caught Uko that again ' In the field there goes on a cease!ea 1 activity-?hey ara alway? ready nov f and always getting still more ready 5 Not Essy to Bitter Antwerp. * "Antwerp station te the second, lan J ?et tn the world and in these days 1 1 has need to be .big. .The crowds thc 5 pour out of the? trams hera are ks ? palling. All the wofid seems to b S coming to Antwerp. Soldiers are ?1 errwbcTV, armed to Ute hilt, end stan and implacable. It fe a terrible affair to set into Antwerp. You watt and wait and wait, and at last you cot to a soldier. You show your passport and he reads lt slowly, oh, so slowly, while two soldiers stand on each side ot yon, their bayonets horribly near. What are you coming to Antwerp fort Where are you going? Where do you come from? Explain your presence. And explain you must, or never will you get In to that inner line of bayo* nets that yet awaits you. "Out of the station at last, safe through it all, famished, worn out, but happy at having really arrived at one's goal. Into the restaurant a crowd of priests come hurrying, their long, black robes flapping heavily, and soon they are begging for my Dally Mall, that I bought at Ostend. They hang over the pictures of the British troops ! arriving !n Ostend, and presently, looking up, I discover a curious sight One by one all that restaurant-wait ers, customers, managers and all hsve crept towards the priests' table and are craning their heads to catch a glimpse of what mean more to them than anything else - pictures - for they never have pictures in their pa pers, nover any pictures at all, and as many ot them cannot read, these pho tographs are life to them. Ready fer the Siege. "Antwerp ls crowded. Her streets are full wherever you'go. Walled tn all around with magnificent fortifica tions, oho stands ready for siege. Sol diers and gendarmes are everywhere. At every third step you oro called on to halt at the point of a bayonet. "How beautiful Antwerp ls. She has a glorious beauty all her own. In the golden, blazing sunlight thousands of banners are floating In the wind, enormous banners, hanging out of those great, white houses that stand in the magnificent avenuos lined with acacias, hanging out of all the shops and bouses along the Chaussee de Ma* lines, hanging even from the cathe dral-banners, banners, they ere ev erywhere. Hour after hour ono drives about and there are bannen alway gold, red and black, floating every where. That black gives a curiously majestic If somber look to th? city I confess I don't quite like It, and If I were a Belgian I would raise heaven and earth to have the black taken out of cy national flag. "Night falls-a sott, warm, summer night, and in semldarkneee we dine at our hotel, with the walters moving about like specters. Then we go eut Into the streets again. It ls eight o'clock. The city has drawn down all its blinds, all its shutters. No lights burn in the streets. No lights show In the houses. All the cafes and res taurants are in darkness. Through tho darkness, filled always with a shiver ing dread, people mov? about, too res less to remain within doors in this stifling August heat. And over all ls ? silence. In silence the guardB stand I before the big. white royal palace t where faint lights are dim behind the r heavily curtained windows on the I ground floor. Soon the silence and the darkness, so poignant and significant, grow too much for one's nerves, and the streets empty, and wa will go home tb our haunted homes, too ex hausted by our emotion to care much if the Zeppelin ?"oes como tonight. "Early next norning, while the dew waa fresh. I went to the outskirts of the city to look at the mined waters nd armed trenches, but I was prompt ly held up by two solders. They leaned from each side Into my carriage and demanded what I was doing there. i ? Th? younger one-he was oniy a boy looked very fierce and tried a ruse. He spoke to me in German. I was Just in time'to save myself from replying , i In that fatal language. Then he polnt [ j ed to the top of his bayonet. The older soldier frowned at him and said, 'No, no. Elle est Anglaise.' But the. boy looked very fierce. He was very . i young-I hope the Germans will never get him." i i i: l< ROUTED BY DON COSSACKS Defeat of the Showy Hungarian Cav airy at Lemberg Described by Russian Officer. Leaden. A 'Petrograd dispatch quotes a Cossack officer who describes the Russian entry Into Lemberg: "Cur tura came/' says the officer, "when the Austrians, began to give way before our infantry. Then we were let loose on the raemy'a broken roar. Wa soon converted the retreat of soma detachments late a root. We heard men cry out lu terror: The Cossacks! the Cossacks!* The Hungarian cavalry tried to stop ns, but we ?wept them saide like straw. They had red breeches and beautiful Jackets like those worn by our Cos sack women, and .fine horses. They were good riders, but did not know bow to use spears. "When we, the Don Cossacks, charge we throw ta- btu* blows not only our own weight, but tho whola weight ot our horses. Tba Austrians fled te a pente. The same morning Ute Cossacks rode toto Ule conquered town. Nobody fired oh us. We were received aa friends end brothers. Church bolls . tang and priests ?ame out and blessed r+tw.. "A young Cossack officer, fresh from tbs cavalry school, ssw a German ar mored train try to penetrate into Rus sian Poland, ft bristled with machine guns. He divided his small force, sent ona half back behind the train and de stroyed part nf the track.; He met .bahrain with tba other ; half. Th? Germans thought Urge forces of Rus sians were neaf>snd suunted tho train backward. It na off the rails and captured." ooooooobooooooooo .- o AT THE CHURCHES o V o looooooooodoooooo Midway Presbyterian Church. Tho interesting s?ries of services rhdch have been conducted at Midway resbyterian church during the past .eek will .'.-onie to a .close tomorrow fternoon at 4 o'clock. Rev. Dr. W. H. "razer, of the First Presbyterian burch, Anderson, has been couducl )g the services. AU domoninations ave been attending the meeting and ?uch good ha* been realized. Tho ul cers wish to extend a cordial Invita ion to the public for the Anal service jmorrow. Thc First Presbyterian Church. The service at the First Presbyterian hurch tomorrow will follow the regu ir calendar. The Sabbath school will onvene at 10 o'clock,-under the inan gement of the superintendent, Mr. !. W. Brown., The pastor will preach t 11:30 and .7:30. A very cordial in itation is extendend to the public to .orship here. Ushers will meet'stran era, show them to a seat and hand liem a hymn book. "Come-thou with s and we will do theo good." Grace Church. Rev. J. H. GlbBoney. rector. Phone 35. Services for the Eighteenth Sun ay after Trinity, October 11th. 8:00 . m.. The Holy Eucharist. 10:15 a. m. unday school. 11:30 a. m. Morning rayer and sermon. 8:00 p. m., eveu >B prayer and sermon. There will be o service ca Wednesday afternoon as io rector expects to be in Atlanta for iio meeting of the National Conven, ion of the Brotherhood of St. Andrew. A. H. P. Church, I The pastor, Rev. J." M. Garrison, }ft Friday morning for Chester to aa lst Dr. D, G. Phillips in a meeting, abbath school at 10:30 a. m. This is ru last Sabbath before our annual eport. Let every teacher and pupil o prc3ent. Preaching at 11:30 a. L and at 7:30 p. m. by Rev. G. G. arklnson, D. D., of Erskine Semin ry. It la a distinguished privilege to ear Dr. Parkinson. The public is enr ially invited to hear bim.. , Orville Baptist Church. Herman W. Stone, pastor, 10 a. m. unday school, J. A. Hays, Bupcrlntcn ent. ll a. m. Sermon. 3:30 p. m. Dca ons meeting at tho home of Mr Chas, /alker. 3:30 p. m. Ladles' Mlsslon ry Society. "7 p. m. Sermon. Pastor reaching at both hours. Prayer and raise service Thursday evening at 7 'clock. Visitors and strangers cordi Uy invited and welcome to all the enrices. Westley Ph ibm then Class. The Westley Philaothea clasB of St. 1 olin's Methodist cbUTt^l will meet I STuesday afternoon at 4 o'clock, th Mrs.,.Remus Henderson on Mar hall avenue. First Bani Ut Church. tcachqrs'raeetlng.at 9:45. Sabbath [.hool at 1:00. A. L. Smethers, supt. ubllc worship at 11:30. Sermon by ie pastor. Rev. Jno F. Vines. S|b ?ct: "Thou Art the Man." Baptist uung Peoples Union at 6:00. Mr. C. ! L Earle, pr?sident. T. C. LaFoy, lcad r Public worship at 7:30. Sermon by So. pastor. Subject : "Be ye Serarate.'' 'he public is cordially invited io at jnd and worship with us at all these srvlces. - Sf. John's Methodist Church. St. John's Methodist church. Rev. ohn W. Speake, pastor. Sunday school t 10 o'clock. O. M. Heard, supt. Sun ay Is "Deacon Day" and will be" ob erved In all the classes and at all be church services. We believe that lie Sunday services will bc of special it?rent and benefit to all our mum ers and friends and they are in all IndneBS urged to be present. The pro racted meeting has beeo of lucaicu iblo good to oar church aad will bo uutiuued for some days. A- *?ordiul reeting will be given all visitors. Central Presbyterian Church. D. Witherspoon Dodge, minister, unday school ct IQ O'C?J.M? Morning er vice at it>. at'which hour the Whether y< -if y.ou dea them most Night ftftei minds of ui It doubles i reminding For fui Hw wi other i Buy Cotton Goods this Week ! This, as you know, is "National Cotton Goods Week" and anything you buy, whether for dresses or household necessities, will be helping right -here at li?me. jil THE FARM?R AND THE J?NIOR PHILATHEAS Helping them will help you, help us, help everybody. You'll find trjis a mighty good store for all your Cotton Goods wants, we've a splendid stock, selected $\fith as much care as,the higher priced v/ool goods. We've sold this ^season many dresses and all of themmade up wonderfully pretty. -"Also many cleverly made garments fromour Ready-to-wear department in Ginghams, Etc. The piece goods are here in quite a variety. I il vii} I "' * ' .. ? . ' ? Ginghams, Percales, Calateas, Cal ico, Crepes, Curtain Scrims. Draper ies, Outings, Flannelettes, Canton Flannels. White Goods of every de scription, Sheets, Pillow Cases, Quilts, Towels : And hundreds of other things made from Cotton-Just as thegpods are right in quality, they are right in price. So come Monday and this week and make our store your shopping place. Moore-Wilson I I ounrierly c^mnmlna of tho Loni'* I supper will bo observed. Subject of scrman: "The Cross Bearer," Kven 'ing service at 7:30 o'clock. Please not}> thc change of hour. Subject of orr Tribblo nt night We issue serinon: "Tho Conversion of a* Doubt- a coraiai invitation to you to .wor frdM1m s?rMathan of Anderson Col- bM |th legis, will, nins in tho morning and Mr. <9EHHB33K*V PUBLICITY CHING THE MASSES mr business be retail or wholesale-store or shop i in merchandise used by the masses, you can reach effectively with an electric sign. v night your name and wares are "burned" into the itold numbers of people. the effectiveness of your newspaper ads by always peopie ?f them. rther particulars telephone No. 223- L. A representa ill call on request and furnish estimates of cost and any nformation desired. ERN PUBLIC UTILITIES COMPANY i I S