University of South Carolina Libraries
Coaesasea' Passenger Schedule PEEDMONT * NORTHERN BAIL WAI COMPANY. EffcctJre January 17th, lilt. ANDEB80N Arrirels. Ut* fl.8:25 c. ! No. 88.10:00 a. m. Ko, tt.11:40 a. BL Ko. 87.1:15 p. m. Ko. fi?.8:40 p. m, Nc, 41.8.00 p. ru. Wo. 88. 9:20 p. m. Departures. Ko, ft..7.15 a. m. Ke. 88. 9:00 a. m. Ne. 84.10:80 a. i K?. 88 .12,05 p. m. Ko. 88 . 8:80 r> m Ko. #8.4:45 p. aa He. if. .. 8:10 p. hm. .C. 8. ALLEN, Trafile Manager. Charleston & Western! Carolina Railway To and From the NORTH, SOUTH, EAST, WEST Lc&vcs i No. 22 . . . .6:08 A.M. No. 6 . . . .3:37P.M. Arrives: No. 21 . . .11:15 A. M. No. S.3:07 P. M. Information, Schedules, rates, etc., promptly given. E. WILLIAMS, G. P. A.. Augusta, Ga. T. B. CARTIS, C. A., Anderson. S. C. ^ Greatly Reduced Hound Trip Ticket? \ vie Southern Railway Premier Carrier of tho South la Con? neetlon With Blue Bldg? Fra? Anderson, 8. C. 888.70 .Houston, Tex. and return account or Southern Bap tist Convention. Tickets on sale May 8th to llth. with return limit May 81st. 1915. ttfclt.Memphis Tenn. and return account of Cotton Manu facturera Association. Tickets on sale April 10, ll and 12th with return limit April 2ith. ?18.23.Washington, D. C. end return account of Daughters ol the American Revolution. Tioketa on sale April 15, 10 and 17th with return t limit May 8th. 1915. 8140.Atlanta, fla and return account of Atlanta Music Festival. Tickets on sale April 26th to 30th, with return limit May 4th IBIS. 8&ft&.Chattanooga, Tenn. and return account of Southern Con ference. Tickets on sale April 25. 24) and 87th with return limit May 8th, 1916... For complete information. Pullman reservation, and tickets call on any ?gent, or write to, W. BL M*GEE, A. O. P. A., . Columbia, s. C. W. R. TABER, T. P. A., Greenville, S. C. CMABUSSTOW-CKICAGO SLEEPER I Threeth Pullman Bleeping Car Service | ?v SOCTUEBN*BAILWAY ^"Spreader Carrier of lae South sWJtttlve Sunday, November 22nd. X 1914. Sleeper handle? aa M3AROLIN A SPACIAL v*oe. 87 end 88. v Schedule. S ar ea. Lv. Charleston Ar. 9:40 o. ML iii'Z p. m. Lv Columbia Ar 4:45 p, ta. 4:80 p. m. Lv Sportnnburg Ar 1:46 jin T:89 > m. Lv. AsheviUe Ar 8:80 a m. 18:08 e. m. Uv Knoxville Lv 8:10 e. m. 10:65 a. m. ar Cincinnati Lv 8:88 a m. OiOO ?. m. Ar Chicago Lv 8:88 a. m. Passenger..; from Anderson and Greenville terrJlpvy wW auk* coonec Uon? by ioavtn* on trains Noe. 18 to OresfetiHe and 18 to ?pertanburg anfi connecting there with the Calca go sleeper. ta addition to the threeth sleeper to ?hscago, Drawing Room- Bleeper. Standard Pullman Sleeper, Dining car ead through coach, For fall and complete information, ticket* and pullman iseeiUtloa call ca any ticket agent, or ?rite W- B. Taber. T. P. A., Greenville, 8 C.. er W. i?. KeGec, A. G. P. A" Col iivim. S O. Outclassed. ,** said the proud tether, indorstond your objection] r. Prudely ?s a suttor f ?r | I am nure that he te no question about hlr be-1 f,'1 relied tb? bewitching-! Personal TTTTT T1 T W TT I I Tl TT I ? I ? % V ?# . Miss Lula Evans and her friend, Miss Alexina Atina, both of whom are attending Winthrop College, are epcndlng a few days at Miss Evans' home at Pendleton. They were in the city yesterday shopping. E. C. and Mrs. Evana of Pendleton were among the visitors in the city yesterday. Mlas Claudia Herron of Starr waa In the city yesterday. M. H. Sexton of Starr was in the city yesterday on business. W. M. O lymph of Fair Play spent a short while In the city yesterday. T. L. Wooten of Fair Play was among the visitors in the city yes terday. Mrs. Ernest Dugan has gone to Charleston where ahe .viii visit rela tiva for a few daya. FYank Pearson, an old Anderson boy, who has been making lila home in Greenville for the past several years, was a visitor In the city yes terday. Bailey Breazeale waa among the vis itors In the city yesterday. For sev eral years he waa a resident cV Greenville but lately baa been mak ing his. home in the Eureka section of the county. J. E. Wakefield, formerly a resi dent of this city and connected with the Farmers and Merchants Bank, who ia now enabler of ihe bank at Piedmont, was in the city yesterday. W. T. A. Sherard of Iva waa among tho visitors in the city yeaterday. T. C. and Mrs. Jackson and Mlaa Lois Jaekaon of Iva were vlaltora In the city yeaterday. I. E. McGee of Starr waa in the city yeaterday for g abort while. Z. C. Reeves of Charleston was among the business vlaltora in tba city yesterday. Charlea Rose. Jr., of Charleaton. waa a xfaitor in' the city yeaterday. G; A. Reese of Spartanburg waa in the city yesterday on business. Thou. H. Pope/a-wt'R known trav eling roan of Grenville, ?as in the city yesterday*/ _?.?? J? Z? J..D. Gunn of Augusta waa among the hnalneaa visitors tn tho1 eity yea terday. D. P. Dehon of Charleston waa in the etty yeaterday on business. Miss Mary Haynie of Belton Ia visiting Mrs. D. 8. Vandlver. Mrs. W. W. White and Miss Helen White are visiting relatives In Pick ens, for a few daya. Mrs. John C. Watkins and son, Wil latin will go to Augusta today to visit Mr. Ernest Watkins. THE CALL FOR PURE FOOD The Work of Ailyn of Westfield and McCain of New York. The whole world owes a high trib ute to the' effects of such men as Prof. Lewis B. Allyn who started the Westfield Puro Food movement, and baa carried the good work to the re mote corners of the land. Alfred W. McCann ot. New York, who baffled the food takers ia their efforts to can McCann baa accom pllah the seemingly Impossible task of making New York an unprofitable market for impure, unwholesome, mis branded food. While the government food regula tions are strict, both of these men have advanced the standards still higher and closed op the loopholes that so often enabled deception to creep tn disguised by evasion or pre text. And yet, they both welcome and en courage the promotion of any new product ii? i?t ls wholesome and jiu re. While neither Prof. Allya or Mr. Mocatta are aa effusive in their praise of a good product as they ere deter mined in condemning a bad one, they j have both recently paid a very high ' tribute to the Excellence and Purity ot the sew southern product. Print Icc Pore Phosphate Baking Powder. At the end of a most searching an alysis. Prof. Allyh add? the one word "Excellent," while Mr. McCann also Bums up his research with the hearty nedrcsement "Pure!" Not verr lenghty, bet nevertheless tributes that convey - volumes - of meaning to all who know these mea. A Good Ridsaaee. Little Willie,had been permitted to enter the aick rooU to view the email stranger who had arrived a few days before. He looked the little one over with the disapproval natural to a deposed monarch. The ourse brought the baby's bath tab and filled lt with water. Then she started unwinding the habys outer shelf, preparatory to bathing, while Willi? stood hy watch ing the procedure with interest. Sud denly thel Ight of understanding tl Ituniced his face and he rushed to th? door. "Hey. sta!"'he abrtlled down thc* ?taire, "eftf?e on' np] Quick; they're Reta? to drown lt." . ?y... Intelligencef NEW SERIES, VOL. 1, NO. ?. W??kly. l?tobU??e* 18?; Dal?* Jan. 18, !'./.<. _'_ ?_._ _ ANDERSON, S. C., MORNING, MA\32, 1914. PRICE $1.50 THE YEAR, A Simple Trap F< WASHINGTON, April 20.-A mag got trap which will practically pre vent the breeding of tho house fly ls described In a new bulletin of thc United States department of agricul ture, No. 200. "A* Maggot Trap in Practical Use; An Experiment in House Fly Control." The Investiga tors who carried on this experiment at the Maryland Agricultural college declare h tat during August and Sep tember at least 98 per cent, of thc larvae .breeding in the manure were destroyed, and although the trap was not so efficient when the weather' be came colder, even then it greatly re duced the number of flies. - The principle of the trap is .simple, lt Is easy to const-act, and the ex pense ls said to be probably less in the long run then the Investment which many farmers now make. In screens for their dwellings, and sprays and fly nets for their live stock. In ' Its roughest outlines thc trap consists ot a concrete basin with a latticed wooden platform erected upon it to hold the manure. The basin ls connected hy a drain pipe with a small concrete cistern. The bottom of the basin is Ailed with wster into which the maggots breeding in the manure drosJL aa they are about to turn In tho pupa or chrysalis stage, and are drowned. At frequent inter rale the water is run off into Use de lora and ie then pumped hack on the manure pile. In this way all th? liquid manure is saved. The successful operation of this trap rests upon several fact? con nected with the , habit? of the houso fly 'which haro-been .thorouchly es bxbllahed by observation. The adult i fly lay? ltg eggs in fresh manure. Thara they - remain until Ot? Lvva ?tagw is 'airport ever abd th* insect? ?re- ?bdot to enter tho pupa or BhirtrsaliB kt?j**."" In consequence if [h?imfcmjre is placed upon a platform with a? latticework bottom the larvae, while mlerattng,^ will fall through these openings Into tho.water in the basin below. Ia the case ot tho ex periments at the Maryland -Agricul tural college a careful count showed that between Jal/ 24 and October 1 ?hont 119,000 larvae were killed In Hil* way. This, however, does not Include the number that were picked ira from the basia by sparrows or poultry. Altogether lt ls estimated that during the warm weather th? efficiency of the trap vre? probably 99 per cent. Later, when the tempera tare wes lower, tit? trap's success eras not so marked. This was ac counted for by Ot? fact that when lita: air ia mach colder than the ma sure heap the larvae will not attempt o l?av* the h*sp and therefore will lot fall tata the basin. )r the House-Fly Another difficulty experienced arose from mosquitoes using the wat er in the basin and the cistern to j breed in. This was overcome by , cleaning out the basin at regular In- ( tervala and by sprinkling a little oil ( over thc surface of the water in tho , cistern. Projfrly constructed, such a trap ] offers no obstacles to thc convenient < and economical handling of manure. : It is essential, however, that each day';; addition to the heap should be sprinkled with sufficient water to keep the manure moist but not < nought to cause leaching. The de tails of the construction of the trnp'l are contained In tho bulletins already mentioned. Thia particular trap was deaigned to hold tho manure produc ed by three horses for three months, but there ls no reason why larger quantities should not be treated in the same way, by building larger traps or by building several of small er size. ooooooooooosooo . e o BABIES NEWS o O o OOoOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Editor Intelligencer, please say to Iva correspondent, that Union c\urch and cemetery ls at-Barnes. Some men wheo they start on a sim pie journey to Barnes, they travel with auch energy that they can't stop when they get there, and go on to Dook Eldrige's in Abbeville county. You can't get anything doae uniese you do lt yourself, and usually you can't do it yourself very well. \ EvUry man thinks there ia some thing "fumy" about those who do .not agrec with them. All of us love applause whether lt ls deserved or no*. Tho quiet home ot Mrs. Catherine Hall Was filled with marry laughing Voices, on the eleventh instant, when 14 of her descendants gathered there to celebrate her S6th birthday. It aras' a surprise for Mrs. Hall and the secret waa guarded do well that sev eral of thc party had gathered be fore ahe realized the pleasure that was in store t??r her, A Sumptuous dinner was apread In th* grove at the spring., an Ideal place for a din ner party. The day was spent very pleasantly indeed, the young folks laughing and talking and Ute older ones recounting the things ot days feone by. Age alta lightly cn the shoulders of Mrs. Hall sud she Ihlv nothing of walking to visit hornea a mild and a hatf from homo. . ; W. E. R. ONLY ONE "BEST" Anderson People Give Credit Where Credit is Doe. People of AndorBon who suffer with weak kidneys and bad backs want a kidney remedy that can be depended .?pon. Donn's Kidney Pills is a medi cine for the kidneys only, and one that ls bicked by willing testimony )f Anderson people. Here's a case: J. M. Carlisle, transfer mon, loo V. Pant SC, Anderson, says: "\ caught a heavy cold on my kidneyH ind it brought on backache. I could lardly got off the wagon on account >f the sharp pains In the small dt my jack. I had to pass the kidney secre tlonsjoo often nnr*. the flow waa acao y. 1 noticed a lot of sediment In the WcrotioiiB, too. When. I read ' how [Joan's ^Kidney Pills had helped oth :rs, I got a. box at Evans' Pharmacy. [ improved after using one box and wo boxes completely cured me." Price 50.?. at air dealers. Don't limply ask for a kidney remedy -get Joan's Kidney Pills-the samo that Vir. Carlisle had. Foster Milburn :o., Props., Buffalo. N. Y. JOOOOOOOOOOOO?OOOOOO ? o > BASEBALL RESULTS. o J o lOOOOOOOOOOO.OOOOOOOO National League, At New York 3; Philadelphia 5. At Clnclnncti 2; St. Louis 0. At Chicago C; Pittsburgh 8. At Boston 4; Brooklyn J, toa ln tlngs. Federal League. At St. XjtM?B S;'Chicago 5. ??? ?? At Pittsburgh .4;-Kahsal?'CC*/ ? At Buffalo J?; D.oqklyfi -. " Newark'Ba?tlii Snntii Atlahtlc League. At Columbia 2 < Savannah* O.1 ? At Charleston*? AoAdaCaWlvvvtnl i*k At Columbus* *0; 'Jacksonville 3. At Macon 7;"AH?ny-S; .. > * ~y n- <? c e Heathorn League. At Mobile 7; Atlanta 2. At Memphis 3; Little Bock 4, eleven nntngs. At New Orleans 9; Birmingham 0. At Nashville 6: Chattanooga, .*>. [ American League. At Philadelphia 6: New York 2. At Detroit 6; Chicago 3. At Washington 2; Borton r.. At St. Louis 0; Cleveland 9. University Games. I .Lexington Virginia, University, N. ' X-8? Washington ?nd I<ee S. j Durham. N. C., University Georgia ?;" Trinity 8. Radishes, Rh _Salsify WASHINGTON, April 16.-The rad ish li quite hardy and may be g -own in ?the open all winter in the lowor South and in cold frames in the up per South. Sow the seed in the open ground as soon aa danger ot hard frosts ia over, or in cold frames whenever space ia available. In the open, sow the seed in drills 12 to 15 inches apart and thin the planta to one inch apart. Successive plantings should be made ?very ten days or two wooka until hot weather comes and again Jn the. autumn whop the weath er'begins to get cool. Varieties recommended : Thero aro three '.types of. radishes-turnip shaped, and long. Of thc turnlp Bhaped, thc best varieties arc the Scarlet . Globe, and Scarlet Turnip. The best or tito jllv?-8hh.ped aorta are the French Breakfast and Early Scarlet. Tho Long Scarlet Cbartier. Lons Wlilte Spanish, and Icicle are the best varieties of. tho' long type. Rhubarb This crop can be grown in the up per South, but can not be grown sat isfactorily in the lowor South. For home uso lt is beat to buy roots from a dealer rather than to grow plant? from seed. Ten.to twelve good hills ure sufficient for the average family. Set the roots three to four feet opart along the gardoe fence and ma nure heavily. The treatment suggest ed for asparagus is satisfactory foi rhubarb. Do uot allow the plants tc go to seed. Salsify* or Vegetable Oyster. Sow seeds of. salsify at the sann time anu In the same manner at those of parsnips and carrots. Ar ounce of seed will plant a 100 foo! r.-w and should be sufficient for at average afmlly. After the plants an up, thin them to about tvt/ lnchei ?part in the row. SalBlfy may bo da) and stored the same as parsnips ant r-arrqta'or loft in the noll until need ed. lt is a biennial, and If the root? are. not dug they, will product? eee< the:second season. . Salsify deserves more general etil tivatlpn. as it Ia one of tba most ilk attable root crops. It may be neat tn about the same way ac parsnip? It la sometimes bolled, rolled ti cracker crumbs, and fried le butter Salsify whin fried or /used for siak lng soup has a decided oyster flavor from which it gets the name vega table oyster. The Sandwich Island ts the varlet; commonly grown. Spinerh. ? 'Spinach is one . of ho beat crop grown fer greens and should be faun in'every home.garden. .It can. b Srovn, In ibo sopcn throughout th Autumn and winter in all section ?long th*, count fro touts and in tlie tower Uer of ubarb, and Spinach orn States. In the colder regions of tho South it may neeu a little pro tection during tho coldest weather. Two or three inches of hay, straw, or leaves will be a satisfactory protec tion, or the winter c np of spinach in the colder regions 01 the South may be grown in canvas {covered frames. The seed planted in the autumn will lurniah greens. through the winter and early spring!. Sow the seeds of spinach in drills J.2 to 15 inches apart at the rate of one ouuee to ,100 feet of row. Three or four ounce's of seed will produce enough greens for ' the average ' fam ily. In gathering, the ?utlrc plant ia removed. The large plants are se lected first, and the smaller or. later ones are thus given room to develop: The Savoy ls the variety moat ccm h.only grown. Sufficient Excuse. At the battle of the Modder river an officer observed Pat taking shel ter from the enemy's fire. After the engagement the .officer, thinking to take Pat down a petj. said: "Well, Pot. how did you feel dur ing tho engagement.'" "Feel?" said Pat. "I felt as if every hair on my head was a band ot mu sic, and they were all playing, 'Home, Sweet Home.' "-LIouBton Chronicle. Could Use a little extra money tc good advantage just now? Haven't you something to ten? Do you own something you no longer ase, bul which if offered al a bargain price would* ap peal at once to some one who does need it? An INTELUGENCER Wont Ad will turn the ?rick. PHONE an