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Classified Want Advert? Twenty-fire words or lett, One Tl Bis Times 5100. All advertisement over twenty-five word. Rates on 1,000 words to 1 ison. No advertisement taken Cor less t It yon? name appears in the tele j yoe* want ad to 921 and a bill willi payment. ?TANTS WARTED--By Lady, position as clerk in Dry Goods or General Bids, store. Must be nice place for Lady to work. If Interested, write Cleric NO. 162, Iva, S. C. WANTED-A man who owns a Ford car, to bandle ''The New . <?nver Ford Starter." in Anderson county. Apply to J. G. Wham, Laurens, S. c. ri*3 . ' WAKTfcp^At once 100 mules 0 to ?0 y?ars old. Must be fat and sound. Th* Fretwell Company. W??TT?D--PoB?tion in Clothing or G eu eral Merchandise store. Can give bert reference. Salesman, care of In telligencer. . WANTED POSITION-As Stenogra pher by ope .with experience. Can ?ve best of reference. Address onographer care of Intelligencer. 1-6-tt - i III , . .. . WANTED-A place ' as tenant on a farm for a white man with a fam ily. Is familiar with farm work and needs the job badly. Can work ono horse farm. If you need such a man write 344,708, care Intelligen cer. WANTED-To give away several leeds of earth to be moved at once. Apply T. K. Rorer, Pepper Bulld lag.--l.7-2t. PttlTIOX WANTEL-As. Clerk In General Merchandising or in Gro cery or Hardware 'Jtore. Reference furnished. Exporieuced. Write Box 143, Iva, 8. C.-Vtltf. SEWING WANT7/D at 223 West Ben son St. Plain and fancy dresses, and childrens' clothes a speciality. LQST LOST-Cuff button, gold, with In? ' S^mS *J*ug??o? \ to/ WWf ^?!Wa* !># Finder return' to Intelligencer omeo. , ?. ..;".' ?? -, riv-,,;." ? r ; . i-J., MISCELLANEOUS %??$?KS imhtf ^oue garden' ' ^^fthe^anelly^' progtebleainnsf ten ndnntss'hf active dully light work will meka ssohr ??plot however) pro state to ysa/Phcsa *?4?f Forman ? Smith, Beadsman. 55*. Dtt WHBN ?NEXPECTL? detained down town Cor luncheon* yon cannot do better than drop Ia hore. A light IMA. or. a substantial meal. Cuisine and service a K. end prices just ss attreative es our food. The Lunch eonette.-dtf. POLES-Wagon end Buggy poles nsw and second hand. Paul E. Stephens. FINE FRUITS-We carry the largest ' most complete assortment tn city-keep 'em moving. Fresh oranges, grape fruit, ap bananss, wholesale and re J. K. Manoa. Phone S23.-dtf. I HAVE FOB SALE several dosen cans prime tomatoes et $1.00 per - string heans at $1.10 per dessert peaches without at $1.16 per dosen, desert saes rsevfty Sugared d-4 pound sugar io dani #2.25 per dosen. E. C. McCants. MM GRAY HI I se tie OteStlme Sage and Tea ead Seither aaa Nobody wIU >w. ?riy hair, 'however, hsadsome, de notes Adttujcisg age.. We all know the tages of a youthful eppearsnc*. Yfljwh?lr Ia your charm. It makes or marey^-jtee^ ^When it fades. J scragsR^S^a'^ew5 application n* ol | J Bage^ae^^ tts get "from any drug storo a 60 cent betty* ot Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Cc^psnad^ JTjfojsatteht ojMfetjta- ree ly da? remover eWtdroff, stops scalp ttefiftf SJ?? ?s?HmghaIr; besides, ho -ran pcesthry teH; as lt darkens a ejfctege or soft fcrosh wtth ft, drawing tills through the hair, taking one small strand at a time, ffy morn lag th? gray hair disappears; after another application or two, tts natural eefirfe restored and it becomes thick, glossy and lustrous, and you appear years younger. (CRACKS MONEYS ASO SUOOKB I Columns ising Rates me 26 eenie, Three Times 69 cents, > words prorate for each additional t>o used In a month made on appll ban 25 cents, cash In tdvsnce. mone directory yon csa tolephone >e mailed siter Its lnaertlon for HEAVY MEAT EATERS HAVE SLOW KIDNEYS Eat leas meat If yon feel Barkacby or j IfttTe Bladder trouble. No man or woman who eats meat regular can make a mistake by flush ing the kidneys occasionally, says a well-known authority. Meat forms uric acid which excites the kidneys, they becomo overworked from the strain, get sluggish and fail to filter the waste and poisons from the blood, then we get sick. Nearly all rheumatism, headaches, liver trouble, nervousness, dizlneBs, sleeplessness And urinary disorders come from sluggish kidneys. The moment you feel u dull ache In the kidneys or- your back hurts or If the urine Is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, trreg liar of passage or at tended by a sensation of scalding, stop I eating meat and get about four ounces j ot Jad Salts from any pharmacy; tako a tablespoonful in a glass of water be fore breakfast and in a few days your kidneys will act fine. This famous Balta ls made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with llthta, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate the kidneys, also to neutralise the acids in urine so it no longer causes irritation, thus end ing bladder weakness. Jsd Salts ls inexpensive and cannot Injure; makes a delightful effervescent Itthla-water drink which everyone should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and active and the blood pure, thereby avoldng serious kidney complications. LEGAL NOTICES BeUUqdent Kesd Tax Notice, .Ail dlplopQuent. road tax collectors ?SeTprotlSbipiffle!al receipt book with uumbes, and stub numbaa attached. Fay- so money to collectors -itM V (!"ifi-w4. MACK KINO, tf bounty Supervisor. . i . . : .. t. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA. Anderson county, ? Court of Common Pleas. George Barton, Kansas Arnold and j Lawson Johnson. Plaintiffs. against Rosa Breateale, Lewis Talley, j Lioorge Tolley, Mary Fuller, Bartley Sherman, Aleck Sherman, Daniel 3hermnn, Emanuel Foster, Ell? Pow ers, Alonzo Barton, Mary Coker, 0as ile Johnson, Florence Owens,, Scud ly Johnson, Willie Johnson, Wil liam Barton, Jerry Barton and ?ll and singular the heirs at law >f I som Barton and Elisa Barton, it i iny other than the above whose names tra unknown. Defendants. . (teflon for FarUtioa of Beal Estate. To the defendants above ntmcd. You j ire hereby summoned and required j o answer the complaint in this ac ion a copy Which ia ou Ale *U the ifflce of the Clerk ot Court ut Ander son, S. C.. and to serve a copy of j roar answer to the said complaint ou | he subscriber at his office 201 Bleck ey Building, Anderson, S. C., within | IO days after the service hereof, ex clusive of the day of Buch service sud I f you fall to answer the complaint ) within the 'time aforesaid, the plain :iffs In this action will apply to mel :ourt for the relief demanded la the] complaint. \ Leon L. Rice, fittest: Plaintiffs Attorney. Clarence W. Beaty, (Seal) , Dept Clerk ot Court. Stole Hides Two Negroes Before the Record-1 er for Staolfcs Two Cv* Hides. ie first time in several days i tirder's court yesterday had nia ll for grinding Four eases were ' Hsposed or. convictions being/hand Id down in three and a dlamlssel In he fooNh. Of tho cases in which ! :onvlctlone were returned, ons was) er-drunkenness and the others fori >et!t larceny. Noak Clark waa brought before the ??rt on charges of drunkenuess. for irhlch he paid into the city treasury he sum of 15. - Roy Watson and Henry rondergrsst1 vers brought before the bar of jos ice on charges of petit larceny, it bo ng alleged that they stds two hide? rom the abattoir. Bach waa sen sneed to pay a fine of 125 or servp to days on the chaingang. Charges ef obtaining goods under else pretenses against Claude Tucker vere dismissed by th? court Yeo can get the news while tts sew n The Morning Dally Intelligencer. IMMIGRATION BILL SENT TO CONFERENCE HOUSE REGISTERS DISAP PROVAL OF EXEMPTIONS FROM LITERACY TEST Some Southern Representatives Took Opposite Sides on Ne gro Amendment. (By AiwocUUd Prew.) WASHINGTON, Jan. 7.-The immi gration bill was sent to conference late today by the house after it had registered Its disapproval of the sen ate amendments barring 'members of the African or black race" and ex empting agricultural immigrants from f?elgldm from the literacy test and the contract provisions. ??otb of these amendments caused protracted debate. Most southern members favored restriction of the negro amendment, but others sug gested that to press lt might mean final defeat of the entire bill. Northern representatives generally opposed the provision. After an extended debate a ml] call showed a vote of 252 to 75 against it. The Belgian exception was defeat ed without division after several or fort? to alter Its provisions had been voted down. The senate amendment to exclude all persons of "constitutions! psycho path: Inferiority, and persons with chronic alcoholism.' was accepted. Much of today's debate was against the literacy test, opposed by Presi dent Wilson despite the fact that lt already had been agreed on by both houses. Representative Gallivan made an effort to secure .another vote on tho test provision, but was ruled out of order. Some of the southern representa tives took opposite sides on thc negro amendment. While Representatives Burnett, of Alabama, and Slayden and Dies, of Texas, urged against, press ing it, contending it would jeopardize other features of the bill. Representa tivo Small, of North Carolina; Aswll, of Louisiana; Quinn, of Mississippi, and Eagle of Texas, favored its adop tion. ' Representative Eagle declared the South already had more millions of negroes than the'north had thousands of them. "We do not want the negroes to come Into our country," he Bald. "It haa taken us a century to educate the southern negro and we don't want any more of them down our way." Representative Small Bald that while, the negroes now in the United States should be treated fairly, he be lieved that further influx should he B to pp ed. Represetatlve Aswell declared the only arguaient used by those opposed to the amendment was that lt might endanger the bill, which, he contend ed, was no argument at all. Representative Burnett, In char ge of the bill answering Eagle's contention that the south was most favored by aegro immlsrratlon, declared that last year 8,000 or the African race came Into the United Staion. Of that num ber, he said, only 39 went to Louisia na, not one to Texas, a few to Ala bama and some to other southern states, while more than 3,000 went to New York. FIRE VISITS GAFFNEY Establishment of John Fabiaanl ls Damaged by Flames. GAFFNEY, Jan. C.-Fire at 7 o'clock lost night destroyed a portion of the stock of John Fabiaaal, who conudcts ? tailoring and woman's furnishing roods establishment on Limestone >trcet. The fire department wrns promptly on the scene and soon ex inguished the flames. The goods were lamaged by water more than by Ure. Ihe building ls owned by 8. M. Llttle lohn. thc damage to which will prob ably be about $200. Fablannt's damage will bo atout $500. The loss ls fully covered by insurance. It is thought (hst the tire start ed from an over heated electric iron which had been left in the hack pert of the store. The town council of Gaffney was engaged several hours yesterday in investigating charges against two ot he police officers, M. C. Green end Thomas Webb. These officers were charged with having given warning to Frank Hayes to the effect that his place was going to be searched. After i most thorough Investigation the council decided that there waa no 'oundation foi the charges and the officers were exonerated. R. A. Dobson of the Gaffney bar ap ioared before Judge Thomas 8. Seas:: it Spartan burg yesterday and obtain ed an order for ball in the sum of E.000 for James Norman, who is iu ll st Gaffney on the charge of shoot ng and killing his fainer at ' rung? 2reok, in Cherokee county ,on D?cern er 96, 1914. Young Norman's case will ie for trial at the next term of th* wurt ot general sessions, which will ronvene at Gaffney on the . second donday in March. DROPS DEAD Hedy of Wilalntrton Telegraph Oner? atc r Found ea Streets. WILMINGTON, N. C., Jan. 7 -At a ?oct mcrtem examination held tonight ?var the body of J. A. Fountain, who sae found dead on the street here at laybreak this morning, no evidence >f foul play waa found ar d the exami ning physicians reported death due o valvular heart disease. Mr. Foun aln waa a telegraph operator col lected with the Atlantic Coast Lise -atlroad here end at one time wes list riet au per Intendent here and at lien mond for the same road and :hlef dispatcher st Crewe. Va., for the Norfolk and Westers. Early reporta vere to the effect that Mr. Fountain net death at the- hands of an ass as ?n. Personal i fttHHOMI tOSieset Mil Dock Craig of tho Sandy Springs section was in the city yesterday. Wiil Adams of Starr was among the visitors in the etty yesterday. Frank Axman of the county was in tho city yesterday for a short while. Mrs. Minnie Hall of WlUiamston was shopping in the city yesterday. H. J. Neall of 8partanburg waa in thc city yesterday on business. W. F. Strickland of Spartanburg was among those visiting in tho city yesterday. H.. Hippelmcyer of Raleigh spent yesterday in thc city. W. W. Boykln of Charlotte was anions the visitors in thc city yester day. Frank Sharpe of Pendleton spent yesterday In the city. Hud Simpson of Brushy Creel- was in thc city yesterday for a short wbile. Ansel Hall o fthe county was in the city yesterday on business. li. Hamilton of New York. Charles Kohl? of New Orleans and E. M. Iv ey. of Atlanta, all Jewelry drummers, went to Greenville yesterday after calling ou local dealer?. II. I. Do Pas of Columbia was in the city on busincsr,. robert J. Cartledge. Jr., of Green wood is among the visitors In the city. J. Lindsay ROBS of Shelby, N. C., ia visiting in the city. Joseph Leisch of Tryon, N. C., is in the city on business. S. J. Newton of Liberty was in thOv| city yesterday on business. Dr. and Mrs. J. M. Hobson of Town ville were among the visitors in the city yesterday. S. G. Pettigrew of Edgefleld was lu the city yesterday for a short while. L. E. Martin of the Hopewell sec tion, spent yesterday In the city Miss Nettle McPhail o fthe Hope, well f-oct ion was visiting in the city yesterday. A. McPhail pf thc Hopewell section was among the visitors in the city yesterday. : '. " , : il UP . Claude Martin of Neals Cf eek was in the etty yesterday for a abort while. W. O. Kay of Belton was tn the city yesterday for a abort while. John C. Pruitt of Starr was among j tho visitors In the city yesterday. i John Finley of the Mountain Creek section spent a short while in the city yesterday. J. B. Leverett of Starr waa in tho j city yesterday on business. Mrs. Mary Clark of Monea Path was visiting yesterday In the city. Bert .Valley of the High Shoals sec tion was in the city ? yesterday for a j short while. \V. B. King of the county was in thc city yesterday for a short while. James R. Anderson of Verennees j waa among the visitors In the city yes terday. E. M. Duckworth of the Lebanon section was in the etty yesterday. Walter Chamblee of the Mountain j Creek section, was a visitor in the city yesterday. John Cox of the county ?pent 'yes terday in the city. YOURSiCK CHILD IB CONSTIPATED! LOOK AT TONGUE If cross, feverish br b?tot? ?'CaHfornk Syrup of Figs." No matter what.aita your child, a] gentle, thorough lexattv e should al ways be tho .drat treatment given. If your little one ts out-of-eorU, j halt sick. Isn't reaUngy eating and act ing naturally-look. Mother! see lt j tongue ls coated. This te a sore *tgn thst lt's little stomach; liver and bowels ere clogged with waste. When prosa, irritable., feverish, stomach ?oar, breath bud or hhs viomach-ache, Marrhose, sore throat, foll - of cold, sive a teaspoonful *f "California Sy rup of FLjs," and in a- few boors all Lbs constipated pottos, undigested rood and tour bile gently moves ont o? | lu little bowels without griping, and rod have a well, playful child again. Mothers can rest ?say after giving] this harmless "fruit laxativo" because lt never feils to cleanse the little ! ane's liver and bowels.and sweeten! the stomach and they ?early love fla J pleasant taste. Full directions for' tabfes, children of all ages and for irown-ups printed on each bottle. Beware of counterfeit hg syrups, ask your druggist for a W-cent bot tle of "California Syrup ot ?Iga; then see that lt la made by the ?Cali fornia Fig Syrwp Company." Damage? Done Best Htel IP W**m *?Vimwinje " ?? ww' Photographs showing thc damage done to thc buildings in Scarborough and the east coast of England by thc rad of the German warships on Dec. 16 have Just reached the United States. ANOTHER YEGGMAN HELD FOR TRIAL! "Texas Dutch" Wanted For' Prosperity Postoffice Rob? bery. CAR ?ER IS LURID ONE I Cracksmen Whose Penitentiary j Term Governor Ends, to Be Tried in Greenville. I Special to Th? Intelligencer. COLUMBIA. Jan.-7.rrCharles How-i lard, alias Charles Herne, nliaB Tex a:-, I Dutch was sent up by United States ' Commissioner R. Beverley Sloan to the United States court to answer to tho charge of burglarising the post office at Prosperity on May 5, 1902. In default of a 95,000 bond be was re manded to the Richland County. Jail. He will be tried si the Federal court in Greenville beginning the third Tuesday in April. Howard, wno was paroled from the penitentiary on Saturd. j by Gover nor Blease after serving part - of a ten year sentence - for burglary in Spartanburg County, was brought the city Jail to Commissioner Sloan's office, handcuffed, In the. cus tpdy of Deputy United States Mar shall, William Cooper and Chief ot Police J. W. Richardson. He acted as his own counsel. District Attorney F. H. Weston appearing for the gov ernment. Postofflce ?h*pector H. T. Gregory Identified the copy of the indictment which waa returned in the United States court, by the grand Jury, in April, 1905. against "Dutch" Howard charging hire with the Prosperity postofflce robbery. Mr. Gregory having been ono of the witnesses before the grand Jury which returned the indict ment. Tho yegg asked the inspector why he hadn't served the warrant against him on his release from tho Federal prison in Atlanta borne years ago after serving out seither sentence instead of walting until his trial in the State courts. Mr. Gregory told htm lt was a matter of discretion which tho officers .exercised as to what charges they would first try them on. Howard's monaker 4s "Texas I Dutch," Texas being his nat i Vd State, it the time of h?.i indictment in >reen?il!e two other Indictments were returned against him, ono charg lng bim with the robbery ot the post Office at Port Mill in York County Jane 9. 1902; and the other with the robbery ot the postoffice at Clemson College, september Xii-1902. Hi* as sistants on the Prosperity "job" were "Portland Ned" and Ola DeFord, this same trio doing the robbery at Fort Mill in York County. The Clemson robbery was pul lsd off by "Portland Ned" and Howard. The first time Howard appears to hSve run into the tolls of the law was 1898 when be along with Portland Ned, John F. McCarthy, th* reformt d then going tinder the allas of John O. Dan drei?, were arrested In Norton*, va., in connection wtih tho irreal of John W. Kennedy alias John I. mere then ieawer, at uynch-j borg. All tour were tried st Charles ton. West Virginia, on the charge of burglarizing the postofflce at Barn well ta that state. Kennedy. Fort land Ned or James Johnson aa he was then known, and Howard then ahder the ellas of Charles Herne, were convicted ead sentenced to five. three gnd three rear? resrectireiy la in Scarb?rugh In the Daring Raidi This one shows the result or the bom bardment or the Hotel Royal, thc summer house at Scarborough. This was the finest hotel In Scarborough, which is one ot the best known water ing places in England. The German the Federal penitentiary. The jury I disagreed as to McCarthy, who .wasI subsequently taken to raleigh, N. G.,| convicted and sentenced to the peni tentiary. Howard and Portland Ned or John son served out their sentences and on their release in October, 1901, re sumed criminal operations. In this career ot crime they reached South Carolina and began "working" this State in 1902. In conjunction with Gus DeFord and Noland they blew tho safe In a bank ut Mullina In 1902 and secured around $6,500 and some jew-? clry. On Thanksgiving night In 1902 the sare di the Bnoree Cotton Manu facturing Company waa dynamited and about $10,000 taken. The gang's operations' in this Stute coyered some months and a great deal of "swag" both in money and jewels were obtained aa a result of their sato blowing expe lirions. They "worked" systematically. One ot them would visit a town and "locate'- a "Job" and coming back to headquarters would go back some night with his "pals," and'While one watched the others would biow the sate and get away be t?re the inhabitants knew of their presence. They made Colombia head quarters for a while and Howard hung around ? restaurant on Gervais street where he. was nominally employed. His career waa brought to an end when he. Noland, Duggin abd McKin ley were, rounded np and arrested in Columbia in the first part of January, 1903. In'April ot that year, they were convicted in Charleston und sentenced to five years each in the Federal pen itentiary in Atlanta. On serging out this sentence Howard and Noland were taken In charge by South Caro lina officers, and carried to Marion ind tried for the Mullins bank rob bery,'but owing 'to certain circum stances wore acquitted. They were immediately remanded to jail on an other warrant and the sheriff of Spar tanburg noticed. The now Sheriff W. J. White of Spartanbttrg came tb1 Marion and within twenty-four hours I he took'Howard and Noland back to I ipartanburg; where in April 1907 they were tried for tho Enorce rob bery, convicted, and sentenced to ten ? years each at hard labor tn the St?tel penitentiary. There they remained-B until being taken to the Spartanburg | county chrdngang from which they-] were returned to the penitentiary un? 1er orders from the governor in the I Ifall of 1914. On January 2 they were| paroled and Immediately taken Into custody to answer to other charges, Howard, as has been told, and Noland answer to the charge of bank rob-] ttty at Fort Ml? In 1902. Noland was taken back to York rllie thu a?ernocm by a deputy sheriff j ihd placed In Jail to await trial. Ot thc other members of the gang j iggan died m prison. McKinley, et? Bcrvihg his term in Atlanta was sent to the State penitentiary and was | paroled by the governor last year. Within a few days he was rearrested charged withVjJ?*#| ,*o Spartanburg and sentenced, ob ?envletlon. to a tenn on the Spartanburg county chalngang sere ho still ts* according to the lat P1EDMONT INSU! See Ni Any a INSUR C. E. TRIBE Brown ?nar of the German Warthip? battleships stood off in the open sea some miles out and hrcw shell after shell into the buildings of the town. Several of them struck the hotel and the hole here shown was through the rooms of a guest I TUf m-vi-r i! "IVirttau'l tiki" M i; m: - -i- i ' hi*.. j .i,, r ' r;.Mil>>rs lu .v.ii.'i i .m. III? I n i.-? nri.iwi? I lu (tU'l.'iture .h?> hill nt i:n?r ?ir his scr\i:iK ? i'iiu m A 1.11,(11 II I in iii? South Carolina State penitentiary, his i figuring in the dictagraph records in ? 1912, his parole by Governor Bleaso and his escape from the governor's office while a United States deputy marshall whs walting in the oater of fice with a warrant for him, and hts finally landing in jail in North Caro lina, all are tod recent events ahd have been told too often to justify more than a bare mention. DeFord escaped while being taken to Charles ton for trial and has nev*ar been re captured. . McKinley's monak?r was ' "Dayton Scotty" and Dnggan's "Los Angeles Star." "Dutch Howard" took his fate with that pldgmatic 1 manner - apparently possessed by the celebrated yeggman. He is rather short and stout in ap pearance and although said to have been a teador of his gaog does not present a very Intelligent appearance. John F. McCarthy, the- former "West Philadelphia Johnny", the reformed yegg, will go back to his work of lecturing with bis moving picture "sentenced for life." APPLY SULPHUR Use it like a cold cream Mal dry Eczema eruptioxk. right up. The moment you 'apply bold-sulphur to sn itching or broken 'cut skin, Ike. itching stops and healing begins, says a renowned' dermatologist ??' Thia remarkable sulphur made into a thick cream effects such prompt relief, even in aggravated Ecr?ma, that it Is a never-ending source of amazement to physicians. For many yeats bold-sulphur bas oc cupied a secure position in the treat ment of cutaneous eruptions by reason of its cooling.-p?ras-to-deatroying prop erties and nothing has ever fen found to take ito place in relieving iititobto and inflammatory affection* of the Skia. While cotolwajre establishing a perma nent cure, yet in. every m?tame* lt immediately subdues the itching irrita tion and heals the ?c?ma right up and it * citen 7?*rs H?*r b?felas*.'erup tion again manifesto itsjlf. > T Any good 2.U*wlst will supplv an o-.mce of b-^d-sulpVur, which'should he aprlied tr the affevted part* like the orditfwy ?->ld creams lt Isn't naples*-: im^!T?fe.t.T?,l., ^ar*TaT vety-vek-oik), particularly xtheft tfc*-Jfe ' atrnk U fdr.ttnpanied with torturous iteh - - ? ? ??.^??^ , ,, , N i ?ANCE AGENCY Ie FOB* ind All ANCE. ?LE, Mfftifif^f BuUding. ,