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FOUNDED AUGUST I, 18CO. IrS North Mi Stree*. ANpEBSON, 8. C. W. W. 8M0AK, Editor *?a Bus.lfgrl L. ll. GLENN.....City Editor! PHELPS 8A88EBN. Advertising Mgr! T. D. GODFREY,....Circulation MgrJ M. ADAMS. Telegraph Salter andi Foreman. Entered ap second-class matter Ap-I til 28? 1914. at the pott ornee at Aa-1 dersnn. South Carolina, under th? Actl of MStrch 3,1879. S Member of Associated Press andi Receiving; Complete Dally Telegraphic! Earrie*, TELEPHONES Editorial and Business OOc?.Mil Job Printing .C33-L| fWBScairrioN KATI i Semi-weekly. One Tsar....*1.60| Slr Months . .7l| DaRy One Tear ..ts.OO Six Months ....2.60 Three Months..?.. lt* The Intelligencer ls delivered by carriers la the city. If you fall to get your paper regularly please notify as. Opposite ' your jame. od the label of your paper ls printed gate to which our paper is paid. Alt checks and drafts should be drawn to The Anderson Intelligencer. The Weather. South Carolina: Fair Thursday and| Friday. Ain't long 'til ground hog day. -.o- -- Regular swine; slaughtering weather. l-et us hope there will be no nuts| In tim now crop of colonels. Elimination ts the watchword in| Mexican affairs Just now. -o . It's great fun watching your paper I every morning to see who is Mexico's | latest president. -o Didn't hear of anyone being de nounced as ailar or a,scoundrel from' Columbia yesterday. Caption of Sparitisburg Herald edi torial: "Waich SpartaJtburg grow."| -Smaller? Greenville's new master lu equity named Inman. Yes, In-man youl \t ore. -o "Daughters Keep Birthday ot Lee"| reads a headline. Keeping (to them? / selves) birthdays comos natural. -o a?iould you hear of our new goyer-l nor out nutting. Just put it down he's| t: -nt looking tor colonels. ? - -o And Une. Andy Carnegie Insists that] ; he wishes to die poor. 'Pears to us] taking lt out lu wishing. j . A howl has been raised in Chicago| account of cruelty to heps. Chlck ;i cn hearted folk. Col. Ebbte Watson probably figures| ;.L.. At-*.J-- "* - n T ft* miltie iittfl B ?nab ?u?s Run??jl ul n>"'u mu ??.} him a benediction of grain. Now that Cd. Bbbl? Watson has] undergone successfully tho atra?a of j his inauguration, wc shall expect to r moro of the "Gospel of Grain.?, Tho fellow who skye' "I had mtherl be right than president" ia thinking of this job in Mexico. I And tho Whtto House baby has been I named after ila own father. Now wei shall always know tho name of thc president's ?on-in-law. -o Volo for the rorid issue, regardless of your likes or dislikes tor tb0 city ad ?ii tn la trallon. The snow king wanted U?ftt|jl ' deraon with a mantle of whlto ml hast, but when he sew how much teriat lt would take to hide this mud he throw u?? the Job. -o- , <*| . t A ' movement has - been started th I Mexico to eliminate both Carraa?I and Ville. r;hat proceas ot elimina tion bids fair to continue ttntll eV?ry L^Hpc ot thb republic has been baa? imo wc thought t&'aMH here comes a report at has been started io both Car ran &a and Villa, ting around cont|uucth. rhes state a movement is ty tn eliminate both Carran** a. That word elim?nate: 'he? ?oings la Mexico. FoV in Green ville voters ? for onurte botts tile Itnprov <sm*nt in ??Kl not he ga had cgainst that ofBee heron ft o H THE I'AYIXJ t?JLMIHHION In tin- ncwH columns of The Intel-1 llgcuccr this morning !? printed an Interview with a taxpayer who con tends that tho paving commissioners hould he elected hy popular vote and not appointed ty city council . Ile speaks of them, or rather of those Coun cil member* on the commission, as j self-appointed authorities." The per* son interviewed seca defeat of the pro posed bond issue unless tue matter of selecting the paving commissioners ls placed In the hands of the people. Tho interview ls printed for what lt ls worth, and* not as any indication of trow The Intelligencer feels on that H cor e. Of our own position on this matter we will speak at some later' day. lhere are two sides of th questionJ of the wisdom of naming the paving commissioner? by popular vote. For the sake of argument, taking the aide of tho man who is opposed to the com. missioners being dioses by popular vote, let us ask the one who would hive these committeemen chosen by ballot of the people what assurance have you that In selecting a commis sion by popular vote you would elect I men more competent to discharge the ? duties of paving commissioners and inch any more acceptable to the free holders at large than a majority of] those constituting the board recently! appointed? You might say that tho majority, of I tho peoplo chose the commissioners so elected, and that the voice of the majority should rule. Well enough In principle, but we know of Instances | wh'ere the majority, makes bad choices. There are some.questions which have to be decided by popular vote, beca?so 11 ..?!S.(?BL*??-?PP??* of them otherwise. It a paving commission has been I selected which ia not acceptable in j its entirety to the people, we believe j that it Is not too late for changes to j ] bo made; and that objectionable mem < I ors of the commission can be Induced j ?to withdraw and their places filled by men who will be acceptable to all the 1 [people. AD of which bringa us to make the ?point that If you are B?t pleased with i alt the members ot the paving com [ mission, do not sit silent and then re cord your disapproval of tho person nel of the committee by voting against ! tho bond issue. If you do that, then you arv shooting at one object but hlt j ting mother; or you ate firing at th? i j mouther of the commission whom you don't like but killing the bond issue. _-;-j-? y THE OHAIN ELEVATOR lo %hie morning's i?sue of Tho ln liigtncer ls printed ea extract rrmn a bulletin issued by Prof. W- W. Lon,*, Btu'.?- agent of the Fanners' Cooper ative Demonstration Work, In wh'ch he voices the opinion that grain ele vators are, not needed tn this section of the country just at thia time. On the other hand, h0 advises the erection of mills for the manufacturing of our wheat into flour andi thc establishment of corn shelters tor putting our corn into marketable shape. Tho Intelligencer does not care at this time to espouse the cause of thc elevator, nor say anything that would tend to binder the movement which seems to have beeb fairly well start ed here looking toward" the erection ot such a plant. Tho committee of the Chamber of Commerce which ia in vestigating the advisability ot this ven?oro in all probability,knowe what] ills about. Hut, we cannot tCRtst the tempta tion to call the committee's attention to tho words of Prof. Long, and ask that they bb given earnest etmsidor atlon. Did we not know tho ataio agefot to be the intensely piftetietl, that ho is, we would probably > so ready lo ask the committee e his Views their most careful :^ShS the past two or three do .dades Anderson has had numerous enterprises that were Wtf*M less along the line ot an IfcaWfctton when ??cy started. Wj> haye in mind a shoo fti:tory. hosiery mills, suspender inc? tortes, handkerchief.and shirt factor gad iathers that have lobe' since to esist New enterprises are. ce?irse, always good for a town, or least so long ns they keep going. m^lMHBOpV^b see a grain < tor erected here, but wa? i vast d?al mote to see ons J&BOM been started its career. In starting any new enterprise.in a community ty? should look far ahead, sad far to either side and. in fact In all directions, including both MEntd down, and give a great deal ot ?tody to the ' enterprise he 'would inaug?rete, to determine if he can make change* in conditions that ara likely t? be brought about that w\>uld have a bf arina: on the success of that ?m?tes, he undertakes. We trust thc oommitiee .?ul give deep thought te #?|'o elevator preposition before ibby decide finally io ere?t;..*ncV niant h Ti 'go under" later on In TU(W, ROHAN ROAOS n Tho reporta of the Italian earth quake hx lude Ute hewe that road? built 2,000 years ago by ?he Homans of the empire were badly damaged by Un- upheaval. A considerable part o{ tito whsdou of the HomaiiH was their recognition of the imoorlance of roods tn thc scheme of military strategy. The transportation' of troops by other means was then unknown on land. Nowadays roads are still of great Im portance as a means of moving troops, but evs?i more necessary as a means af moving freight Modern Europe baa saved' millions of dollars hauling farm producta to market over roads made twenty cen turies ago by Rome. The example baa been a sufficient hint to the wise and modern Europ?en nations have spent Immense sums for systems of public roads which compare favorably with the roman roads and are built ai less expense beear/e of Improved meth ods. Nowhere hag a county unit system of road building, or Its equivalent, re sulted in a solution of the road prob lem. The Roman empire, tho BritiHh empire, ii.o German empire and the French republic provf.de good . ex amples of the reduction of the farm er's freight bills, the increase of the business of railroads and the increase of pleasure travel by vehicle through the agency of funds laid out for mak ing smooth highways. The British have put down first-rate macadam highways as far away as Ceylon. In dia, and the Straits Settlements.'and the Singhalese peasant can haul twice as much with bis ox cart ond go twice as far in a day as he could In the days when hhs country waa an in dependent kingdom. The Roman roads were made expen sively at a time when it was consider ed necessary to put down a. large amount of stone as a foundation be fore laving tho crushed stone aa a sur face. The discovery of macadam, that crushed stone. laid upon the earth would "bind" under the wear of traf ile and form a compact mass, put a new aspect upon roadraahlng, bat graft and incompetency in Ameri ca, especially where counties have been the roadbullding units, have of ten combined to make roads aa ex pensive as those of the Romans with out giving them the wearing quali ties. Roman road builders would, In ail probability, have been banged hy .their .thumbs, bolled in oil, or per forated with white-hot Iron bars If they had wasted money KS It is wasted In this, county. Local self-govern ment ls, g great thing, but there are times when lt frits to get results that would be easily accomplished by an untrammeled tyrant. THE EARTHQUAKE J* ITALY As the evidence accumulates ot the widespread destruction wrought by the earthquake in Italy, it is seen to be easily the worst seismic disaster except Messina that modern Europe has known. Extending from below Naples to Ferrara, it has rocked the kingdom irvin ?ts '"heci1" tc thc Fa. and as respects the range of its de structiveness it has apparently ex ceeded any earthquake in Italy of which there is record. The convulsion of nature of which the ancient Ro mans stood in dread has : now curious ly ooma to pass, to tho>terror of their descendants, and. ominously enough, from the point ot view of the super stitious, at the very time of tho World's greatest cataclysm of war. Whether 60.000 persons have been killed and injured or double or half that number, the total loss of life is destined to attain proportions that would be staggering if it were not for the confusion of- mind caused by ob vious comparisons with the loss of Hie through human passion on Europe's battlefields. As it ls, lt occurs under conditions that accentuate man's greater destructiveness than, nature's both in th? taking bf human life, and I the levelling ot historio monuments. For against the havoc in Italy there is the devastation in Belgium. Thc civilised world, while regret ting thc dead in the earthquake, may rejoice that Home waa spared a worse visitation than by Goth v>r Vandal. Italy herself will have cause for Batis faction it this "act or God" Hps tho scale of indecision and keep? the na tion from going to needless wa?. Mer calamity at home, with Ms havoc com parable to that v>t war. is enough to j cngago all her. attention.--New York 1 World. ,t , V'. ... ?.?no ?a,a e.* aa,*.*.?,? a ? * ! ? ?W* JMBfcY. WUK y a l*'> . The Thing* Weih?. (By Margaret E. Bangster.) It Isn't the thing you do, dear; It's the thing poa leave, undone Which gives you a bit of heartache. -\ At the Betting v>f the ana. . " ,JT The tender word forgotten, Ike flowe?yo???^ dear. 1 Are pttr- haunting ghosts to-night. The stone you might have lifted Out of a brothers woy. The hit ot heartaomc counsel ^You werc hurjrted too much to say, TO* Roving iou+h of the baud, dear, ^Thatgeniu and winsome That sm had no time nor thought (er. With troubles enough of your own. The little acte ot kindness. Those; chencas ta, ha angels ThT^t^TlTffiiaS s&ce ?ac?S5ll? reproachful wraith-? When hope ls faint gad flagging \ad a bllgfet has dropper on faith. For life is ali too short, dear, And sorrow is ?ll too great: Se sager ?a* great compassion That torrie? until roo late; And it's not tho thing yo? de. dear ? It's the thing yon leave undone. Which ?ivor you the hit of bsaitaen* Ac tho settler, of the san. ' TO ESCAPE TERRIBLE DAYS IN TRENCHES Practice Said to Be Particularly Prevalent Ansons E**t Indiana. ARMEXTIEKS. France, Jan, ia. bee of the .American ambulance work rs who hae been with the British in b? neighborhood of thia town for a [?oath, ?aye the attitude of the British Dodler is uncomp.'ehenBlble to the henchman who is fighting beside him. "To the French," he says, "the Brit ta seem to take the way as a sport, Lad talk of their losses like scores at (ricket or football. "? bear you lo?t two guns the other ay," I heard one young Engltsn |aptain say to another, he continued, yes rotttn luck," waa the reply "but ceil lost ten you know." I have even met officers who eemed to take pride in their- lack of nowledge of military matters. In in uired of ope such how matty guns lhere are in a battery. "I really .ouldn't say, you know," he replied, I'm of tho Lancers." He says the many cases af bad feet re due not so much to the cold as standing about is ino water, which auses the foot to awe;!. I first visited the trenches" he cou Bnqed. ''beyond Laventis, 16 kilo peters south of Armentieres. La entis is now a mass of tulnS, having teen ?helled by the Germans in the rat week in December. The popu ice left in a mad rush, leaving bed lothes hanging out the windows and air-eaten meals on the tables . For rly a mile from the trenches there I a? hardly a sign of life. lt con tained many dead anima? of all kinds, 'oks. sheep, horses and ejren cata. ?early every farm house was a wreck nd tho farm lands were marked by normous shell-holes, , "I remember seeing one grave of a loldler wno, was killed on December ocond. The name could not) ko de iphered. but I. made out a little tag hat be belonged to the East Lanca hlres. The crosses becanke more and lore frequent, then we came to bandoned trenches full of caps,' can eens, and the coats' of men who had leen hastily* burled. Finally we came to the mud plas tered fellows in the trenches and tor l?verai weeks I have lived with them.. Niere is an average of one man to \vry ten feet of trench. The nearest elnforcementn are at La Gorgue. and ?stalr?. The first day I wAlkodvftbout bur. miles along the trenches'and be ;an to realise the Hignlficaiuce'jof a emar- that I'had heard msJev that a nan from the English ChanuW'UtaSL if Fr en ce to Switzerland without oowing his head above the 'grSund. ."Anybody who is hit in the trenches lowadays ls usually hit in the head a bullet coming taronga a loop ole and that means hui death. Pur December in thia part of the Imo ?here bave been very few wounded, lost ot the hospital eases are the ceded bad feet. When a man's kit s taken away, as lt ia when they *re rought to the hospital, it ls pathettc ? see what little souvenirs they savr? ut of them. In some instances, it will .e a photograph, or some, old letters; pe fellow clutched a half loaf - ot tread for which he had paid a franc ind he would not give it up. "A major Of the medical corps told oe It was scandalous how many men lad snot themselves through the hand n order to get out of the trenches. ? ?ersonally saw some ot the se casca at 3cthuue among the Indian troops. I aa told, though do not know thatJl true; that several men'guilty of this been taken out and shpt before fellows. On.th? main road from taire to La Basse wo met O - not ier wtv^se hand was swathed in a kicod stained bandage., He said* his 'We had gone off accidentally and the Millet had pierced his hand, but 'he sss-under arrest end escorted by a .ompanion with fixed bayonet. **I was in the trenches when news ?as< received ot (lie singing of tho Jermun ablas of the Falklands. A aegaphone was made ol wt*appla? ?aper and the report' shouted to the >nemy whose trenches were not over gritty yards away. I am afraid ttlfaa' tot believed..oven it the Englisa was indcwtood; for the night bet?r? tim Jarmans had announced in simtrar MPlon a great victory for their finer - the North Sea. There is a fratenral trlt here when in a shooting bax, ks one target at rifle practico." Supper aa Luncheonette. ^9t of The Intelligencer: ' IW* vkfttfn* the pity of Anderdon, vhjrh l consider .oas of tko ppftjSr prae south, ,snd whian I cnn boat* of to,Oeor?ian?s, > had tbs nleas ele ot having a delightful supper at tho Leach annette cate. |jJn ?fact*, the proneleto* invite* *M the Bijou, after the peetornmac? ku*1 night to supper with him. Those-So an Joyed, this repast were: Mrs. Faat Ine Wilson of Manoa} Mr: Burt Wilsou ? Of Atlanta; Mise Som Hamilton ot Massachusetts; Miss Alice Gentry of ft E. Huchlngson of Augusta. We will be glad to return to your! etty next fall. Yourg. trply. n. E. Huchingson. 130 Era street. Augusts i+a--->... .. ._ii.- ? Vf ant Faasengrsr Fares lacreasen DEiWafe Col., Jan. 30.-Hafr Hold en, j^o^nt of th? Chicago* ?iog$on ead Quincy r>?lroad, douaesd, ?odey that th* we? r wonld ask the interstate eo?m>rce I ?of?Mulssion about February I tn crease lutarstate pasaeoger rarefaga*'j of rfc Missiasippl to two. and ofte-haW i cents a rall? in State? which now nave iwo-tfer.t rares. Letters Fron EDITOR THE INTELLIGENCER: Through letters from friends and | by reading The Intel l igen cor, I learn of conditions j in my native State. I am very glad, to see the interest I being taken In trying to relieve tito suffering among the poor. Truly "the ! poor ye have always with you, and. when ye wHl ye may do them good.'* It is no time to inquire into the rea? sons for such.poverty until it has been relieved. It is also no time 'to raise the race question. "\Ve all regret to J find others In such dire need, but, "It is more blessed to give than to re ceive." More blessed, possibly, to be able to give rather to be so poor as tp have to accept the gift The present crisis affords an opportunity for tear ing down the wall of strife that han 1 been raised. between the rich and tho j poor, labor and capital: by tbose who have accumulated, aiding their less fortunate neighbors with hearty good cheer and right liberally, thus showing friendship-Christian friend ship. By this means the poor may find. their friends among those they had learned to envy and possibly .bato. And the givfer may find among Jh?jwTwlo receive the gift some far superior to their preconceived iducs. Krery gift from <h? heart in ? doii-' ble bles'slng-blesr .ng the recipient by relieving hunger, or shutting out cold, j and blessing the glv?r hy his growth la grace and his Inward joy thai is'in describable. Let every one improve this opportunity: I regret beyond the power bf words j to expresB, that horrible affair at Fair Play., I yet hope that the truth, if it IB ever told, will not leave the picture in such dark colors. Lot' Justice he | dono-even though it hurt our best; friends. Tho best thins I've soen in -tho pa-^ WILL ISSUE WAR RISK INSURANCE Virtually Decided After Confer ence Between Director Delnnoy and Sec. McAdoo. (Br AxaodaW Press.) , WASHINGTON, Jan. 20.-After! conferences between Director De- j tanoy, of tho federal war risk burean, and Secretary McAdoo, it was virtual ly decided tonight to issue, a war risk insurance policy on tho cargo-pf cotton which the steamship .-. Dacia will undertake, to carry from .Texas to German, ports in the face of warn ing that the British ?vexent will regard .tho ship as a lair prize. It waa indicated that no poRey would that^tter^eter of ?uV} WArd1rV?Br?tung wa* bifide. TJjjg I Sirl^n ^ahien U.ia?i8Prcompluted to-1 morrow. The rate la. expected to be Oficiala reiterate their hcUef^ttjg iiie ship wi? have a jrocd cake ..fcef?rV a jprlze court, as the department has been convinced of the genuine?*csa of the pu rebane. Another shipping case in which ,ip ?eresv centers just no*;,b'that of Wi firRish cruiser aadTomsm?d, ?hrce. days. The UnlteA^^?i^, ;?K$s explanation, particularly of thc ttnenbrier's captain's complaint that 'wJMWtW flag ca nb'vessel wac hauled down and replaced , by the Bri?B? ensign. ? The Greenhrier yes boarded ?De namher so, fear' ?aH^?MB^E?MS^f I Stare* i had . daJpatcSbd a - strong pro test against just auch deaawMev?gw faadttiea* Slowly JmprevJag. - /aehtngton, zo.~r>osa.eathw ineas and railroad conduit today to President WiVton as proving by Frank Trumbull, ?s beards ?t the ewin? 1 ?ad Ohio and. tho Missp^rtJ 1 ead. Texrailroads. . r4r. i said he did "rt. itaTryjjl great business bootu, hut tha? s gras- j aol improvement' Of conditions van] noticeable throughout the country. t takes courage <xn? n uch perfect suits-all tl st styles-but it's bettej he goods over. fou are offered unrest?, choice of our $25.00 sui Order br parcels ? ! ^_llt>nip??MillmjJLL ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ?? - "The Sic e pera lately was a headline in a daifcy papfr thal .read thus:' "Governor or South Carolin? Resigned. Resignation Promptly Accepted-" And that head line referred to my own State. Cole. L. Please has heaped upon the State all the odium he could think ot, and more than one. would have thought was possible from a native son. Let the ? gt Jd citizen forget the name of such a man. If I were permitted to dictate the future record it would be something like this: "Cole. L. III ease ts dead." Though he might live to a ripe old age, I do not think another line of public notice should be given him. ti The. Intelligencer's suggestion for the Immediate enactment of a strong Statewide prohibition law without re ferring it to a vote strikes me as the best possible thing to bc done by the present legislature and I hope they will do that very thing. iain glad, to see so much interest Og shown in the cause of educa tion in Anderson County. I waa especially glad to see such a clean-up in the city. In which The In telligencer took such a noblo ctand. ?*p man has had a better oppo-t'jnl tippap talla .Jo the lot of Governor Richard I. Manning. He frill n?ake good, to the delight of Ila many friends and adorers I look for wonderful progress throughout the South during the next few]years. No section has greater poBHibllltlcs. Here's wishing the State a long era of prosperity and the .county and city of Anderson a place Jn the front ranks along ever, line bf progress. Very truly, C. WARD LAW. Powell. Wyo., Jan. 15. 1915. YILLA FORCES ABE 3USAY?X6 MJEXIt'O CITY (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE.) out the previous consent ol the - cabi net. Tho Carranza agency hero tonight issued .the following: "El Paso reports that advices from tho south statu that Villa ls concen trating his forces on Torre?n, ana that the Zapata troops are concen trating at Cuerna vaca, Morelos, aouth of Mexico etty. General Benavtdes, with i.ooo men at 8a;? Luis Potosi )ibr-.declared for Carrtnza. Alberto do Tuent es, former treasurer of thc. convcatlbniats, has boen shot by Vil la's order. "juere?o reports that .Genera} Fort unato ?uasua with a strong Constitu tionalist looe le .advancing on Sal tillo. General Germino AlTlvrez. YU TO? governor of San Late Potosi, |r|U? S??farce oT4,o?O men. bas em braced the Constitutionalist A-auSo/' The !<f?te department summarised d' &toTl^*n*tog there appear to - ' ,..^.^L-^-~ ?? ... 3Je?4g||4d .'to combine great durabl vertaten powers. ticalty iadcs^Ctlbk). No ?eating? -I-.. . . ll . . $25 Suits rat $17.95 erve to cut prices on ie tip top of the new r for us than to carry icted ts at [tost; wo prepay. ve-with a Conscience TODAY "Exploits of Elaine9' delayed and wHI not be exhibited ont?l Saturday. Four good reels including: the Hsarst-Selig Weekly will be .bown. _ COMING FRIDAY Theodore Roberto "THE CIRCUS MAN*' bo a general belief that tue forces of General Villa soon would occupy th? territory surrounding Piedras Negras. Tim. statement continued : "The denartment la in receipt ot a telegram from Tampico stating that there ls no chango ip the situation, lt ls stated that in compliance with the recent oii decree prtfolvusi coiapaii?ss have closed down field operations. .The department interprets thia 'to mean construction work begun *ttd hot completed, such as the drilling of new wells,. as it would appear from previous advice,, that wells already under production will not bo Interfer ed with. The number bf Americans out of employment in Tampico ls said ( to be increasing daily," CAUCUS FEBRUARY 14. Big Fight Over 'Selection of Ways and Mean" Committee. \- Washington, Jap. 20 -House Demo crats who will be members of the next Congress will,organise the houao at a caucus February 4. ChamPiClsrk alli be relect?d speak er; Claude Kitchin, of t?crtk Caro line, win he presented for Democratic floor leader without apparent oppo sition i Rpbort B. Gordon; of Ohio, for mer, representative in Congress, will be chosen sergeant-at-an??; 8qut? Trimble, pf Kentucky, clerk ot tao : {house, and Jantes J. Sinnett, of tho District of Columbia, doorkeeper of thc house, without opposition, it go-, pea red today. The big fight will bo over! tho selec tion of members pt the ways ' a*d means committee. Half a doscn mem bers of .the cpjnmUtce will not be nJ6m? :be^>fr thinest house. Thc South has' a number" of caadMates,. t&oiudiua, Oldftfkk of Arkansas;' Park.Tjlff$?P ?laiH?rtSjp, of ?Obrale, and Barkley, Kentucky. 7 IKE HARROWS Itty with light draft and complete pul possible number of parts, po cuffs or