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If You Ate Within hailing distance of this advertisement you are near enough for us to serve you as to give satisfaction from every point, f?t, quality and price. If you like to look round . before vou buv this is the store where looking is made easy and it costs nothing to try on. Regal Shoes, Men's Hats, and Haberdashery of all kinds at "right prices," too. R. W. Tfll? THE UP-TO-DATE CLOTHIER ? ??j- ?A. -... .-? -- - - 0)000 6 op 0000006006 former characters of Manhattan ff _o ayenue, now cleaned by Chief i ATLANTA LETTER o Beavers' order. 6 0 Mayor Woodward was called 00000000000000000 before the grand Jury yesterday _ to explain his charges that the po * lice were grafting and protecting . ATLANTA, GA., Oct. 17.-- v-ce# jne mayor said he did not Chief of Police Beavers has|mive any pro?f of but had sprung a new sensation in the vice, merely been expressing his opin bVusade which has culminated in??orh jt ?s not considered prob* ?grand jury investigation. The.abie that any indictments will chief declares that a certain np- ; grow bul of the investigation, fjown saloon just off Peachtree though Foreman Woods White street and one of the most popu-' says he intends going to the bol lar resorts in the city has a rear tom of the situation. entrance leading to a house on - Houston street which has been fit- The movement, which has been ted up as a resort worthy of At- growing recently in Georgia, to la's new banished restricted dis-'provide a system of free school trict. . The chief declares that an ? books for all pupils or at ??ast a elaborate system of electric bells low priced renting system, is like and signals has been fitted up and j ly greatly to increase the Wopor connected with the saloon which j tion of attendance, according to so far has effectively prevented a many experts. It is also believed successful raid by the police. j that the passage cf chijd labor .'< The chief declares that some : laws will be followed by laws pro time ago Mayor Woodward asked ! viding compulsory education. " KS.? *~ H?A 'an..>? nnJ ?A.*? I "Tho rVilI Sit iUa. Cn.rft. >> jinn ivy ?\j -wA%.jr ?nu ni/? pi-1 jt. - i . ..w ww., v.. iuy, UVUIMJ %IIW natte the- woman running the bright Atianta monthly edited and rwaiiiiiii^ HUMAI ci ?.an, iiumi-i, ,-?...-.....?wv? . uviiatuaii i-'. 1 lust and who is going under-an as- has a strong editorial this month sumed name, while really she is on compulsory education. one of the most notorious of the "There are only six States lt's So Easy to Find Some Eat /?v .A Tiii? AT Tiffi . 5 mm #ew 'Norway Mackerel-if at and juicy.. .... .. .. .MOo ?ach? 'I rffresh Starr; Hams. . . . .." ... 24* lb jj] Jmothci shipment of Fat Juicy Prunes. .I8clt> i ?cw Ferndell Oat Mi. ... .. .10c package , fresh l|??n!azoo Celcry.fc the best for table use..10c stalk. ; Jresh Lettuce.; ; '). .. .10c Head. ?rcmicr Crcam Cheese, the best sold in town.. '.J . .26cit New Imported* Macearon... ... . .4 2 fof 25c Don't bother about baking cakes,, we1 sell them at'..;. ... .10c cake Special assorted Chocalotc in pound boxes for:. ?Sc Wc sell best candy on earth for tHe price. 10c H> \ Specials for thc cash $1.00: to pound Ducke? Flaked White Lard for.$1.00 7 pounds- Roasted Coffee for. '. ... .. . .$1.00 ? pounds Green Cbff?c for ....$1.00 48 pounds Snow f>Hft Flout. . ..$1.50 New Crop Musca vado Molasses, good to eat , 365 days in year, at. . ........50c gaL Why don't you order your groceries before 9. o'clock in morn ing and 3 o'clcck in afternoon for prompt delivery. / * . ivliich have no compulsory educa tion law," writes Mr. Frost," and they are all Southern--South karolina, Georgia, Alabama, Florida, Mississippi and Texas, rhese States are in the rear of the procession as to compulsory edu ction. They are J the van of :he procession of ii...crate States. "Compulsory education is only a little way off in Georgia, One rould wish that parents could sec their duty so plainly that no law squiring them to place their chil iren in school might be necessary. \s a matter of fact many fathers md mothers do not recognize their paramount obligation in the pro raises.'1 _ Winter received its regular of ficiai recognition in Atlanta yester iay, citizens "seeing their breath" sarly in the frosty morning andi jigging 1h?ir overcoats out of the :edar chests. Clothing dealers filled their windows with heavy garments and the Georgia rail way and Power Company turned sn the strap heat. Atlanta has a central heating ?ystem not enjoyed by many Southon cities. Steam from the big-city plant of the electric com pany is piped all over the busi ness section of the city and sup plied to customers by motor, jus? like gas or water. Comparative ly few business houses bother with tiaving their own furnaces, prefer ng to purchase steam heat by thc pound. The turning of the cen tral steam every fall is consider ed official recognition of the ar rival of cold weather. A farmer named Scruggs from 5outh,Georgia reports the killing rf a queer spotted snake as bip ?round as his leg and twenty-two Feet long. A rope was thrown iround the reptile's rieck and if ?vas choked to death. None bf the neighbors could tell what kind rf snake the monstor was but H nay have escaped from a circus. Being "attorney on both sides of j i case and hardly being able to ell whether he'won or lost it is he queer experience of Charles I. Graham an Atlanta lawyer this veek. Mr. Graham was defend ng Will Leroy, charged with s?s ;ault and batterv, in the court of Fudge Andy Calhoun, and Solid-j or Lowry Arnold was prosecut ng the case. Mr. Graham had made his elo luent address in behalf of the )risoner and then his partner, At orney Winchester, rose to add his eloquence ^to the defense. Mr. Winchester spoke at length, and a ittle bit more. Judge Calhoun etired to his private chambers and ?till the lawyers spoke. Finally! Solicitor Arnold looked at his yatch and remembered an erigage nent. .'Tv? got io go,:; he said. <Cnma r\t' Inmirar? ?Tilt?* Mr? ls??, uuiiiv. VT? .vu luit^kin om.. \?y lui ne? Say, Graham, you do lt." "Why, I'm for the defense," aid Graham. "That doesn't matter," return id Arnold. "Say something, any /ay." So when Mr. Winchester ran ?ut of words and'breath Mr. Gra iam ?ot up, this time acting for he State, and said: ."May it please your absent hon >r. speaking for the State, I ad nit that the State hasn't proved^ ts case and therefore, on behalf ?f the State, 1 ask that you let the Iefendant go." Then the jury went out and ame back with a verdict of ??ilty." Dalton, Ga., has two hunters? t. H. Sapp and Sam Berry, who rag that their hound is .the wise st and most vaWabtc hunting dog v Georgia. His name is Caesar, nd hts specialty consists in round? ig up all the game In a patch bf roods arid running it up one tree, lerehy saving his owners the trou ve of climbing or cutting several leees of timber. Caesar was given a try-out sev rai nights agS by skeptical per ons, and he chased four coons up ne" free. When these had be?fi Hied the hunters beat th& wood? ioToughly, but Caesar had left ary a possum .at large. The. question of permitting ?eorgia convicts pick cotton in ie present Crists te being cin dered by several counties. At rst glance it looks like an ex ellent idea, but the plan might ring ort some animated discus on as to whose cotton would be np scaraca ? aa-wer mt?bt .VovtwHtpBtsf picked first, and a pull with tht f powers that be, might prove o? value. in Toombs county, the Lyom Progress says : "The people must have theil cotton picked before they can pa\ laxes and they h'ave thousands of bales ruining in the fields. The ronvicts^can help the people fight now, and we can't s;'e why t'?e> should not' be paid to pick cottor when the county can -get thous inds of dollars for the work." Possum hungry Georgians must wait until the first frost before tht ?ame attains its full flavor, bu' ;o far as game laws are concern .:d the lid went off on Octobei I, and so the season is well undc way. Already possum parties are ir vogue in "Atlanta. They consist o' , oum? men. ?irls and a supper a< 'he club. The' party goes to the .voods, where several possum' have carefully been tied in certair 'rees the afternoon before, catch lhe game amid great excitement md return ot the club for supper. >he animals being cooped up un il the next hunt. But the girb think they were in at the real ?hing. Last year the "hunting set" ?ave a nutting party and fount? nany bushels of fine hickox nub .mder a big tree. It happened that \ real country bred girl was in the narty and discovered that even *ree in a hundred yards was either oak or pine. WAS VERY INSPIRING ANDERSON MAN REPRESENT ED CITY LARGE GATHERING Annual Meeting of Charleston Chamber of Commerce and Abo National Body. Porter A. Whaler; secretary of the Vnderson Chamber of Commerce, re urncd last night from Charleston, .where ho attended the Annual Meet nt; ot the Charleston Chamber o' . Commerce and also the meeting of the Directors of the Chamber of Commerce if the United States. Mr. Whaley rep *esented Anderson at both meetings. Twenty-five other South Carolina cit es were represented. 1 Ho stated the meeting of the direc tors of the United States Chamber of Commerce was the most inspiring j meeting he ever attended, such men as dbas. K. Ferguson, .'resident of the Newport News Dry Dock and Ship building Co., A. H. Fahey of Wash burn g Crosby, flour manufacturers, Min ti fijir.ni ie ; Judson Fairfield "reel len t. York Machinery Co., York,'Pa.; inri ?vii.oj- JnorJJn. bUSlneSS mnt fdr United States being present. These di rectors are on a special tour of the South, and after leaving Charleston went to Savannah, Jacksonville. Pen sacola 'and Mobile, 'having previously visited Richmond, Baltimore and Nor folk, lrglnla end Raleigh and Wil mington in North Carolina. From Flor ida the party will visit New Orleans, Lake Charles, Heall mont. Houston, Dallas, Fort Worth, Shreveport, Little Rock, Pirie Bluff, Memphis, Green ville, Miss.. Nashville, Louisville Rome, Atlanta. Chattanooga and Knox villq in the order named. When the party arrives in Atlanta, about three weeks hence, lt is pro posed to takq n party of Anderson burl iness men there, to meet these di rectors, and take part ia such -exer cises thore to be held. ?An, O'er' glories gone, the Invaders march. Weeps triumph o'er each, level ed arch; .Freedom, such aa Oed bath given Unto all beneath bia beaven. With their breath and from their birth. Tbo?ch Guilt would ?weep li from the earth Wtth a fierce and lavish bund. Scattering nations* wealth like . saud, . . ? Pouring nations' blood Uko wa ter In Imperial seas of ala tighter! fiat UM heart and the mind. And tue voice of mankind Shall arise In communion And who shall rest?t that proud union? The time is past when swords enbdned Mnn may die. tba soul's re newed; ' * W?f^?n (WM low world of ear? Freedom ne'er snail want an heir: ns breathe, but te Inherit tier forever bounding spirit When once .more ber bosta as ? winnie ?ymnw sha!? bMleve and trem ble. -Lord Byron. ^UUL-, . J > ooooooooooooo > SIX AND TWENTY o o o 30000000000000 , WILLIAMSTON, Oct. -17. The recent heavy rains has inter-! rered somewhat with grain sow-j ng, but it is hoped not for long. \s soon as weather conditions viii permit everything will be busy igain, and our" farmers will be iatisfied with nothing short of a ?ufficient crop of wheat and oats o fi il their every want with some to spare. B. F. Whittaker states that unless their is a great change in :hange in the price of foodstuff ind cotton that he will plant no :otton at all in 1915. The many friends of Mrs. Ida Dickens, who has been sick for some days wish for her a speedy restoration to health. Several of the farmers of this section are going to try to ar rang? with the dairy department if Clemson for the sale of their surplus cream. There are a num ber of fine milk cows in this sec ion and with the fine pastures on! Three and Twenty and Six andi Twenty creeks, it could be made a paying proposition. We understand that the promo lers of the automobile truck here from Anderson to Liberty have iecided to build an electric rail oad instead. We hope this last .reposition will go through as it .viii give the. children of the Leba ion and McElinoyle sections a chance to take in the excellent advantages that are to be offered 'iy the coming session of Milton school. The trustees of this school Propose to make it second to none 'n the county. James Addison, of Pelzer, was a visitor here this week. Theflargest crop of rabbits and cartridges has been raised this | vear that has been known in sev eral years. Doves are also plenti-1 ful. - Ed. Kay and family spent one lay this week with the family of his father near McElinoyle. J. N. Evatt has requested us] >o announce that he will certain ly be a candidate for supervisor in i 91 G., He says this section has lot beert getting the work on our roads that we are entitle i to, and is soon as he gets into the office lie proposes to move eveivthinjr nto this section and keep it here intil every road is worked tb his entire satisfaction. He says he ?viii tell on every stump in the :ounty just how- this section has aeen treated for thc last ten years n the way of road working. A large number of'our people viii go to Belton next Tuesday for he Fair. A. W. Pickens says that it is his ntention to take in the State Fair it Columbia. G. B. Cobb will go to Har? vell, Ga., early in November on! i visit to relatives and also to ake in the Hart county fair. Pro ridence permitting he will be ac ompa?ad by the writer. Chas. Murphy and George Aullikln wtere business visitors to Anderson Friday. So far we know'only five bales >f cotton has been sold from this ?om m un i ty this fall ,and very little rill be sold as long as thc price emains down. W. C B. HOUSEHOLD HELPS. A three minute glass Hbo kind used n the kitchen when cooking) will bo 'ound nn excellent timepiece when do ne long distance telephoning, ns it al ow* three minutes only. Vinegar placed In a bottle of dried ip glue will moisten and make lt liquid ignln. Ulan ko ts which are not In nee sLonld tare small pieces of thoroughly dried ?How soap scattered In the folds when bey are put ?way. This knap* (ootha ut Stale breadcrumbs mixed with rifle of washing bine can be need for leaning embossed rel vet. A. piece of rhtte flannel should be used for apply ag the breadcrumbs, which will finally equlrc brush lug off with a etea*, soft rblsk. \ , To store slicer place In a cardboard ?s a layer ot ordinary flour, theo lay be forks and spoons upon lt sod corer blckly r.Jtb flour. They win remain ??Ito bright for any length of time. Alway? rab leather chairs over from Ima to time with a very little fresh nJUr applied with a soft, clean linen ag. rubbing the milk off lightly at ora. Till* prevent* ?he surface from tying and ?racking. Should tba sur uco he rubbed off apply a food leather .storer. 9 KressYtke Meeting Place "Meet mc at Kress' " are now thc parting words of those who part to meet again. Can it bc otherwise;, with such a store in which to meet? Thc modern store is more than a trading piece-arid ought to be. ' Buying and selling has helped to make the American Nation what it is, and the development of the modern store methods has been of great assistance. The rew Kress store, with broad aisles, roomy departments, high ceiling with special adjustment of ventilators and a sys tem of fans makes the new Kress store a cool delightful meet ing place even cn warmest days,, while on the coldest days of Winter, Kress store, with ita perfect hcatrcg plant, and scien tific arrangement of heat distribution, will make it possible for the temperature to be just right at all times. VWATCH KRESS' WINDOWS** ?ooo oo oooooooooooo o , Washington Letter. o lo ? oooooooooopo oo ooo (Special to The Intelligencer.) WASHINGTON, Oct. 17. Pennsylvania, New York, and Ohio are among the interesting political sections of the United States just now, and the most in jteresting of these is Ohio. lt looks as if the Democratic candidate for governor, Mr. Cox, had everything in his favor, and his election is confidently expect i ed. But there are side issues that are interesting-rather, there is a chief issue which lends most in terest to the campaign, and that issue is liquor. Mr. Garfield, the Progressive candidate for gover nor, has come out flatly fo/ pro hibition, and hundreds of "tem perance Republicans" have indi cated that they will support him for this reason. The Republican candidate for governor, Mr. Wil Hs, has come out personally for prohibition, hut declares that he does not speak for hts party. The Democratic candidate, Mr. Cox, has not espoused the temperance cause, and is therefore classed as anti-prohibition. The fact that Garfield and Wil lis will divide, to some extent, the prohibition vote and the Republi can vote would indicate that Mn Cox should win easily; and while this is confidently expected by thc Democratic leaders, it is by no means certain. * National Prohibition? Mr. Garfield puts the question squarely up to the audiences that he addresses. He tells them that if thev want bp drink liquor, they should vote for Mr. Cox; if they don't want to drink liquor, - they should vote for him (Garfield) ; if they dont' know what they want, they should vote for Mr., Willis, the Republican candidate. Many experienced observers de clare that the Ohio campaign this year is one of the most impor tant in the history of the prohibi tion, may win, it is quite proba ble that the combined vote of the two prohibition candidates, Gar field and Willis, will be considera bly lareer than the vote of Mr. Cox. If Oh>\ say impartial judges, with ?is big cities of Cin cinnati, Columbus, Cleveland, Toledo, etc., shall cast a majori ty vote against liquor, it will mean the greatest impetus ever given to the already strong movement to have a national prohibition amendment to the Constinition of the United States submitted and raiified. "Store-News" In The Intelligencer Sells at. TKE LA ll(? HST IN EXISTENCE-THE FIN AL.SHOW OP TUE SEASON SH Octotrer 27 That bully, woolly real Wild West 801 R#?CM EST SHOW REAL ROUGH RIDERS and HORSES nnPHUSBNTlNO Tilt POLIO WING F BATURBS COWBOYS i^f^^S COSSACKS S^??? P~ t?&sf-'"*-. YACQUEROS. HFYIP.?fft *?.?. R*W Bider* Kr* Coolna ' RIIRil 1RS. ?TCCI? THRHIM1 HQ Jompfr.g from Beck of Gsiopfa? Horsf ?J I LUI liJUUW.MO to ClccP? Horns, thea wrestling combat ???Sf" Mall oo HoiS3&2flk BnnMnfvUAMi<0L,.MR*ftn~ Acrudl W!=-crs o' Wyoming ead tfb&iiignuidouua^ CHIEF IRONTAIL The Sioux lud?an chief vt hose pro* fl!e ls OB thc new nickle. THE f?IRL WHO THROWS ?THE BULL." First Hmo here of thc new HOES?? Hon. THEY'RE REAL INDIANS, MORE BRONCHO-BUSTING COW BOTS; KO? E BIDERS AN!? ROPERS* MORE PRETTY COW OTBLS THAN EYER BEFORE ASSEMBLED. A SEBIE8 OF SENSATIONS PRESENT ER BY REAL WESTERN FOLKS, FRESH FROM THE PRAIRIE. Down town reserved seat sale at EVANS' PHARMACY, Main Store. Prices exactly.