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J^^^LL HOME O ow,iJ-?. ESL The Follow May Op Eye? to IN Qy^L derron's Pi .^*=~. I j^.i^ Recently When it a certain Anderson rent SE parties ? house al ly. We Are Cor That we twenty the housi vertised. Il li Banquet Judge Memminger Was Enter tained as Guest of Honor by Anderson Attorneys. Probably tho moat delightful ban quet yet given by the Bar Associa tion of Anderson took place laat nigh? when Judge Robert W. Mem minger, who has feces presiding ove: court in Anderson for the last few weeks, waa tho guest of honor. Tho banquet took placo in the Hotel Chlquola and began at 8 o'clock. . While thc a'falr was enjoyable in every way, yet lt was informal throughout and all the addresses of the evening were in the nature of after dinner speeches and were ex temporaneous efforts, Some really able and witty remarks were made by the learned attorneyn during the evening and the number ot speakers Included practically every attorney present. The banquet proper waa a delight Indeed sod reflected gr' . vim nnnn tn? iwvt-.l mnnatrnmnnl The festivities lasted until a lute hour and Judge Memminger said that he had never enjoyed an even ing more in his life than, he did this one. The local Bar Association has about three of the affairs each year hut none could surpass the event of I last night for real pleasure and en joyment Russians Defeat Austrians. PRTUOGRAD. Oct 15.-Tho Russian general staff Issued the following Statement today: "There ls no change to report on tho east Prussian and central Vistula fronts. . "South of Przcmvsl a Russian col umn engaged and defeated the Aus trians, taking * ven officers and S99 r.uldlers prisoners and capturing manv rapid-fire guns." Reliable emedies For every ache and pain ls a relia hie remedy. You can cure the dlffi cully lt you only act In time and act with wisdom. A lazy, torpid, sluggish liver ls,.without a doubt responsible tor more aches adn pains than any other thins;, for to lt we trace consti pation, biliousness, Indigestion, head ache, eta. Ro L? To knocks al Rhese ont by going right to the bottom of the difficulty-the liver r*tt&?|pa there strengthens tao sst' tirs s y ?t?m. A trial, proves tt . fl} cents and $1.90 par botte at your druggists. Manufactured and Guaranteed by 'ans' Pharmacy Three Stares. was thought that house in Nortli i would be for ;VEN different applied for the most immediate ifideitt would have had applications for ; had it been ad I B it Killed When He Stepped on a Live . On Murray Avenue Late Yesterday Afternoon. Aa W- A. Power & Companys dray was going up Murray avenue yes terday afternorli shortly beloit: G o'clodk the horse hitched to the and fnstatftfj] fc'iad. jtnvesUg? tlon revealed the fact that he had been electrocuted The driver noticed, some 20 feet away, that thorc was a large bundle of electric light wire, some 40 or BC feet, but it did not occur tn him quat there could be aV/y danger since the distance was so great Haweverv the ground was charged and when the horse stepped in the water he was electrocuted. Mr. Power said last night that thc horse ?ras a good animal and was worth about $300. UH!! CliRWT BFPflRT ??ILL ?U?S?I?8 ?lu um fir AAAA um nu nnitj ur buuu wuni\ HOSPITAL ASSOCIATION TO HAVE MEETING A SPLENDID YEAR President Will Show In His Re port That Institution Has Ably Met Needs of the City. Tho President of the Anderson bounty Hospital Association, It S. Li r?n, gave notice yesterday that the tnnual meeting of the association will aka place on October 27 at-4 p. m. n the rooms of the Anderson Chamber >f Commerce. Anderson people are proud ot this splendid institution and the work thst t has done and is doing for the city md .ney feel a keen Interest In all he plsns made for the hospital. They lay that there is no other single in ititutlon in the city worth as much to Anderson as ls the county hospital. Tho meeting to he held on the 27th. viii be decidedly Inter?sting by res ton of the fact that a large amount >f business ls to be transacted and lt s important that every member ot the issociation be present The board of directors ls now com i? ?ed of M ra. Swain Qllmor, Mrs. U. C. Seybt Mrs. M. L. Bonham, -Mrs. Mortimer Beaty. Mrs. R. C. Webb, R. I. Ligon, Oeorgo E. Prince, W. lt Os .orne. George W. Svans. D, P. Mc Irayer, W. F. Fox, J. A. Brock. H. C. Townsend. C. S. Sullivan, H. H. Wat Ins and J. H. Godfrey, as mayor. The ?rms of office of some of these ex Ire this year. The books of the association are now ?lpg audited and when that import ?t work is completed the president of be association will start on his report or the year and will explain in detail ust what the hospital has been able, a do and what ls planned for the oming year. Attending* fatten Conference. COLUMBIA. Oct IS-Tba Governor, ohn L. Mc turn-in from the senate nd C N. Sapn from the house left hts afternoon for Memphis to at end the cotton conference. ?rpHEKB IS NOTHING OP GREATER IMPORTANCE TO US THAN THE Ml PROSPERITY OF OUR COMMUNITY. *> PROSPERITY AT HOME IS DABED ON LOCAL BUSINESS CONDITIONS. If our local merchants and storekeepers transact a large volume of busi ness their prosperity ls communicated to every person In tho entire com munity. The values of our real estate Increase. Wages are Increased. There Is more money In circulation and it la moro readily obtained for purposes of expansion, paying for improvements, buying luxuries, etc. In every way we can discover better conditions on all sides when our business men are busy. There la every reason In tho world why we should spend our cash at home Instead of sending lt to tho big cities. By keeping it In circulation in our home community we profit In many ways. Rut If wo send our money to the mail order houses, that ls the last wo hear of it. If enough money ls sent to the mail order bouses from our com munity we may easily put our local merchants out of business. By diverting our trado from our local storekeepers wo can make lt Impossible for them to maintain their stores. Every dollar sent out of our town to the ma'l order houses detracts just so much from our own Individual prosperity, a-j well aa from the prosperity of the storekeepers and from the community in g?rerai. Think cf the consequences if wo should nil cer.d to tho mall order houses for our necessities and our luxuries. How long would it be before our local merchants would have tho "closing out sal?" signs on their doora, to be followed by tho "for sale" signs on the stores themselves? AND WHEN THE BUSINESS HOUSES ARE ALL ADVERTISED FOR SALE V/HAT WILL BE THE VALUE OF OUR OWN HOUSES AND LOTS? Such conditions havo actually prevailed In somo communities. It has happened that tho citizens becamo "mall-order-mad" and ce^t to the big cit ies for the greater part of their merchandise. The local merchants aban doned the field, because there was no business there for them. The burden of taxation foll on tho various property owners, because there wero no busi ness concerns to bear the big proportion which generally falls to their share. Property values decreased until there were no bidders for undesirable real estate. The town became dead. In the meantime the head of a big mall order house In Chicago was drawing an Income of over a million and a quarter dollars, made possible by the business received by hie concern, by mail, from such communities as the one above described and from our own community, 'as well es from others! all ever the United States. Every dollar of this enormous Income was diverted from storekeepers In small communities. Every dollar sent In to that great mall order concern, amounting to hundreds of millions of dollars annually, detracted from the prosperity of some community, struggling to bicorne a center of population, but retarded by the short-sightedness of the citizens who sent their money out of town in preference to helping'towards the prosperity of their own community. Of course, lt was all done unthinkingly. Those who sent their dollars to the mall order boura did not stop to consider that these same dollars would add to the prosperity of the home community if expended at home. They did not stop to reason that by helping thoso In their own community they would be best advancing their own interests. THIS COMMUNITY NEEDS YOUR HEI.P. YOU NEED THE HELP OF EVERY DOLLAR IN ORDER TO MAKE A BETTER COMMUNITY IN WHICH TO LIVE. YOU NEED THE PROSPERITY OF THIS COMMUNITY TO MAKE YOVR PROPERTY OF GREATER VALUE AND TO GIVE YOU THE BENEFITS OF A BETTER COMMUNITY IN WHICH TO MAKE YOUR HOME BRIGHTER, MORE DESIRABLE AND WORTH MORE IN DOLLARS AND CENTS. We must nil consider these matten. Wo must stop and think, before sending our dollars to the mail order houses, that our co-operation ls neces sary to the upbuilding ot our community and, that, for our own Belflsh ad vantages, even with no other motive, we must patronize -home Institutions and keep our dollars at home so that they can work fdr the advancement of our own prosperity. * We w*H ?Il S?d thct it ie a fact, whan we consider the question from every view point, that wa can buy as cheaply qrd as profitably from our local merchants a? from a mell order house, and wa then know what we are buy? lng, instead of buying a "pig in a poke." , " ( RURAL .SCHOOLS ARE BEGINNING SESSION SEVERAL WILL OPEN DOORS MONDAY WELL QUIPPED WUiiford, Roberts and Green Pond Schools Begin Year With Splendid Corps of Teachers Noxt Moiflay willi witness the opening or three ot the best rural rcbools In Anderson county, or tor that matter in SouUfe Carolina, when Roberts, Oreen Pond and Willlford begin the school session. The Rot en?! High School, ten miles west of Andorson, will har? & formal opening Monday morning it IO o'clock. Rev. Dr. W. H. Fia ser, headmaster of tho Fra?or \cadcmy. and Dr. James P. Klnard. president of Anderson College, will Jelivcv choift addresses On e*'uca-t .ion. J. B. Felton, county superin tendent of education, and Miss &Tagg!o Carlington, supervisor ot rural echoohr. ?will also be in at endance and will make short talks. AU patrons of the school and ?very child of school age in the dis rief, are expected to be present for he opening exercises. Prof. Rv A, Abrams ts the prin dpal of the school and he will be issisted bv Miss Maud Da rr! cot and tftss Myra Anderdon, both of An lerson county. Prof. Abrams la one ?I the best known educator* tn An lerson county and it ls believed hat this splendid section of Ander en county will make notable pro tresa under hla direction. The Willlford school, which ls ilso to op?rv Monday? begins tate ossion in a handsome new building ad .with a corp? of teachers sec nd to* none in the county. The pros iscta for good work on the part of hla school year are fin? The Oreen Pond reboot, which ls Iso to open Monday. wtM have Miss elisabeth I. Bronson, of Barnwell., s principal, and she will have aa ssiatants Mine Carrie Da ?by. of tandy Springs, and Miss Marie Far rier, of Townville.% All of these ailles' havo had experience \n\ chool teaching *?**d the Oreen Pond chan! nuder their le/idershl? viii o well. Within the next few week* ?very ural school in the county wilt he pen and doing a good huslaese. BmB?/f*xh?x TO HASTEN OPENING OF RESERVE BANKS - al *- _ federal Reserve Board W?l Call ' at Once First Installment of Subscriptions. (By Associated Press.) . WASCHINGTON. Oct. 15.-The Fed eral Reserve Board took decisive ac tion tonight to hasten the opening of the twelve federal reserve banks by announcing its determination to call st once the first installments of sub scriptions to the capital ot those banks. The payments will be due No vember 2. ' The Board also decided that all of the tanks shall be. opened simultan eously. No date has been set for the opening but in view of today's action lt was believed they will be in opera Lion by November 15. After tho meeting of the board Sec retary M?Adoo issued thia statement: "At the meeting ot the Federal Re serve Board today it was determined o call the first installment of the -apltal stock 'of the federal reserve jan ks, the'same to be payable on the second of November. The directors ot sach of thc twelve federal reserve janka have .been called to meet the Federal Reserve Board In Washing on on the twentieth of October for s te?era! discussion of the final details if the organization of tbe several fed eral reserve banks. After that confer ece the definite date when the feder al banka will be established for bust iest! will be announced. It is the pur pose of the board to have all of the ederal reserve banks open shnultan ?ousty." The first payment of each hank will .mount to ons per cent o' Ita combin ai capital and Surplus. The total vhlch may . he required of each bank tinier ?he low is six per cent of Its apltal and surplus. Ono. hslt of this imount ls to be called by the reserve loard at stated intervals and the re asinine three per cent is subject to ai: if needed. ?|g? V?ISS LETTER :omrae*ks?R* off Making 'Town Affair" of "Cotton Goods Week." Tho Intelligencer !.? in receipt ot a it ter from Mis* Genevieve Clark, hairman of the "National Cotton Fa nion* 9bow,"' relative to ths "Nat mal Cotton Goc de" week now in foll last ia Anderson, which we reproduce ore wit*, together mitti t?te cltptdng to which she refers (n her letter: Washington, D. C.. Oct. 9, 1914. The Anderson Intelligencer. Your "National Cotton Gooodsl \\\ek" in very interesting and the idea' of ;;;ui;irig it a "Town Affair" should make it very popular. The combination of aiding charit ies und the merchants should prove attractive to thc women of your oom-1 munity when in addition they stock up their supplies of cotton goods. I enclose some literature and dip pings which I hopo will be useful lo you. Sincerely yours, GENEVIEVE CHAMP CLARK. From the reports of the different merchants featuring cotton goods this week, tlie '"National Cotton Goods" week, in Anderson has been a big suc cess. Those ladies who have not availed themselves of this opportunity of ald Ing the South in her hour of need, and at the same time profiting hy the reduced prices of staple cotton goods, will have to hustle for there are only two more days left in which to parti cipate in this great movement. Tiie clipping referred to by Miss' Clark follows: The suggestion of Miss Genevieve Champ Clark, daughter of Speaker Champ Clark, that there be held dur ing October special "sales of sotton poods by all the stores of the United States hus been adopted in many cities, i All stores are urged to adopt this suggestion, some time during October. Hy holding these sales throughout the entire country at about the same time, the stores will get tho henefit of the wide-spread publicity thc proposition lms attracted, and their advertising will therefore be more effective. The movement wi!! stimulate general bu siness and put millions of money into circulation that is now inactive. It will also str'.ke directly at the root of the present cotton problem by increasing the consumption of cotton goods and enabling manufacturers more freely to convert the raw product Into finished material. Permanent good will result by ed ucating the public In the many uses to which cotton can bc put with mu tual benefit to consumer manufactur er and planter. Miss (Mark was pointed In her si _ gestion by I\Uss Collie Hoke Smith daughter of Senator Hoke Smith, of ] Georgia, and Miss Lucy Burleson, dau ghter of the Postmaster General. As a feature of the Cotton Sales Week, a National Co'.tr.n Fashions Show was held at th* New Willard Hjtet in Washington, the afternoon of October 7 arnd 8. This show was under the pat ronage of Mrs. William G. McAdoo, youngest daughter of the President; Mrs* Thomas R. Marshall, wife of the Vice President; Mrs. Champ Clark, wife of the Speaker; Mrs. Josephus Daniels, Mrs. Franklin K. Lane, Mrs. William C. Redfield, wives of Cabinet ' members; Mrs. James R. Mann, wife of the minority leader of the House; Mrs. William Cumming Story, presl-1 dent general, N. S. D. A. il..; M va. Percy V. Pennybacker, president Gen- j oral Federation of Women's Clubs; Mrs. Duncan R. Fletcher, president Congressional Club ; Mrs. Joseph Folk, wife of the interstate Commerce Com- ! mission councillor. LANDSLIDE Of Serious Nature Occurs on Panama Canal Wednesday Night {Bf Associated Press.) PANAMA, Oct. IR.-A serious land-1 ilido on the east sido of tho Panama | Janal north of Gold Hill occurred last night. Trafile has been of neces sity stopped and Colonel Goethals I :euld not say today when the canal ' .?gain would be navigable It is ex- j lortcd that a few days will prove sufficient time in which to reopen .he waterway. A preliminary survey today showed ho slido extended for a distance cf ibout 1,500 feet north of Gold Hill md started on a linc about 100 feet 'rom tho edge of the canal. It Is not possible as yet to estimate the imocnt ot rock and dirt that cn ercd the channel but lt ls declared I t must havo been many thousand j :ublc yards. It wa?, first reported that thert j lad been movements from both' side*, j >f tho canal but this proved to oe intrue. Steamer Sank. LONDON, Oct 16.-The admlrality ti nnouncea that the British cruiser.tl barmouth haa sunk thc German Ham- tl urg-Anerlcan line steamer Marko-. nan?ls, in the vicinity of Sumatra and JP' as captured and is taking into a har- . s< or the Greek steamer Pontport*. lt PALME! TOD. WHEN ' i V ; "THE "SLIPPERY SLI1 Essanay-Or?? GARFIELD'S" ??Tile Gi An a Highly FashionaMe Dresses Newly Arrival ! Atnactively Priced? At Boyd's TODAY will bring a ship ment of ATTRACTIVE LY PRICED Dresses, in the very newest k ??liions -at Boyd's! ment of AT eACTTVE PRICED," we mean that OUR prices are distinctly and invariably lower than other good stores ask for garments of equally high grades. During the past few days, hundreds of Dresses for Street and Evening Wear, and Dancing Frocks, have (come to us from the East an immense variety-em bodying every desirable, NEW style feature. In the better grades of dresses, we have only ONE of a kind-a fact that is very gratifying to the woman who buys here! The LATEST model: -re **" ( of various materials / Silks, Serges, Satins, Vel vets-wholly of these ma terials or in combinations of them.. . Some of the dresses are fur trimmed-All are very sonar* and stunning! Our ATrRAC TIVE prices are from $6.7? to $45.00. Won't you spend a half-hour or more--at Boyd's TOMORROW? Mrs. B. Graves Boyd We Do Not Charge For Alterations. Miss Clark Daughter of Champ Clark, Writes To Ander-, :i About Cotton Goods Show. You can get tue news willie Its new in! Tbc Morning Daily Intelligencer. - DIJOU JU . . . THEA TRE A very interesting letter was receiv id In Anderson yesterday by B. B. lossett, president of tbe Brogon Mill, rom Miss Genevieve Champ Clark in { cgard to the exhibit sent to The Vashington Cotton Fashions Show, told on October 7-8. In her letter Miss ?lark says: "The various samples you so kindly ent mc were objects of much int?r ?t at the recent National Cotton Fa nions Show. "I think they aided in teaching val able lessons in the use to which cot on can be put to the 10,000 visitors rho attended the show. "The show itself was pronounced a rest success. I suppose you have read f how the "Uso More Cotton' m o vo ient hes spread over the country. As n example of this I have received muy requests from other cities.which lan similar shows, bazaars, etc. for le loan of our exhibit to demonstrate ie uses of cotton. "If you do not wish these goods re ined I shell be very glad to send lem on further missionary work in ils manner." * Mr. Gossett has written that he ls erfectly willing for Miss Clark to md the exhibit wherever st?'thinks may do any good._ TODAY'S PKOtiK?M. The Shooting Match. . . .Sterling 2 reel comedy with Ford Sterling himself in it. . *V*ou will laugh from start to* finish at this plc-" ture. ^ ; \ Be Neutral. (Drama) . Powers Natures Vengeance.Nestor Western drama. Don't forget this is ''Country' Store Night" 25 dandy prizes giv en away to the lucky number holders. We have a big surprise tonight so don't fail io be here. Coming tomorrow a special sen sational . feature, watch for those big lobby posters, don't miss sce VS it. _ TO THEATRE" AY'S PROGRAM- I 1 . i . ? THE BEACON FAILED" Sv of lov?, i?mlomy mst? a d&rkened lighthouse; ? story of the sea. I STORM AT SEA* Kale m-- D rrmi e A AND THE CLAIM AGENT" i cf those clover Easamty Comedies. CANDY GIRLS presents ri and tine Man*' wfu? clever Farce Comedy e of Program Nightly