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#T"IS i ne "SEAL" of your approval will be upon Chase & Sanborn's "SEAL BRAND" Coffee if you appreciate the best coffee. "SEAL BRAND" is the cream of the world's best coffee put up in air tight tin cans. All the freshness and goodness kept for you. "IT'S THE FINEST GROWN" "SEAL" every Meal Special Toasted Marshmallows, fresh from the oven, per lb.15c Anderson Cash Grocery Co, Special Sale Saturday MAY 1st We will offer on ?ale et the .hove dele 1,000 Shirt Webt Sets Gold Fronts at the rediculous price of 25cASet Three to a Set. See Them in the Window. They Speak for Themselves Walter H. Reese & Company Legal Notices NOTICE-AS TO COMMUTATION . HOAD TAX AU persons liable to road tax for 1916 are hereby notified that the time tor payment to the county treasurer of ?BM taxes will expire on the lit day Sf May, ISIS. After that date a penal ty will be attached. J. MACK KINO. Supervisor. Columbia, March 13, 191 G. Mr.. Winston Smith .County Auditor, Andersen, 8. C. Dear Sir: The State tax commis sion ot the State of South Carolina has sent me the following communi cation relative to the enforcement of the Income tax law: "Tho. tune for making returns un der Ute Income tax law ot this State expired on the 20th ot February last, and a very large number of persons liable to the payment ct the tax omitted to make auch returns withla tao time limited. "The neglect to make the returns in ' tune may have been caused by an er roneous impression that the returns and payment ot tho income tax to the federal government relieved these tax payers from shying Ote Income tax imposed by ute laws ot tb ls State. "The failure to make returns with in time have been BO general and wldeHSp?ead that we think further opportunity should be allowed auch persona to make these returns before the penalties provided by btw are imposed upon them." In order, uierefore, to save such persons who will now come forward and make the proper returns, I, Carl ton W. Sawyer, under, and by virtue ot power conferred upon Ute comp troller general, with the approval ot the governor, in Section 767 ot Vol baie 1, Code of Laws of South Caro- I "'"ina, J91S, do' hereby extend the tlme| f '4r>e snaking of returns and assess ed moona* taxes without penalty "?e flrck day ot July, A. D., 191a. I I *e iU govern yourself accord-1 PURELY F Mr?. Sarali Strickland, Of Holton, who has been visiting her daughter, Mr?, lt. W. Tribble, on Greenville airest, returned hom?' yesterday. Mr. J. Vi. Callabutn, who lian been sick for several weeks, but who had gladdened th?' hearts of lils many friends by appearing <>'? the streets for several days past, has suffered a slight rolupse. lils many friends hope to see him down streets again soon. Picketts Gaillard, of Columbia, form erly u resident of Anderson, is here for a week's visit. The venerable H. B. Broaxeale, who was confined to the hospital for sev eral weeks, has improved to the ex tent where lt lian been possible to re move liim to his Lanie in the coun try. S. M. Orr of Heard mont, Ga., is vis iting relatives in the city. Mr. Orr is engaged lu farming and is making a success of it. Hon. Joseph A. McCullough of Greenville was lu the city yesterday on business. Ile is one of Die most prominent members of the Greenville liar and on several occasions lias been appointed special Judge to preside over terms of court in tho State. Edgar Smith of* Townville passed through tho city yesterday en route to Augusta. Ga., whore he will visit for a few day?. Pro.*. George W. Smith, principal of Bethany school, passed through the city yoslerday on route to hi? home ut Townville, his school having cloned for the season. Miss Eula Compton of Townville wnB among tho shoppers li tho city yesterday. Mrs. Suo O'Neal of Townville was In tho city yesterday for a uhort while. A. V. BarneH, prominent merchant of L/Owndesvllle, was a visitor In the city yesterday. IJenry and Mrs. RoHn Moseley of Lowudesville were in the city yester- ' day. Mr. Moseley is cashier of the bunk at Lowndesvllle and a splendid business man. Market Report LOCAL QUOTATIONS Gram and Seeds. Ear corn, per bushel ....90c to $1.00 j Mixed peas.$1.50 to $1.60 Cane seed, per buahel.tl.SE Soy beans, per bushel.$2.50 California black eye peaa, per bushel.$2.75 to $3.00 Dwarf Essex Rape, per pouud. ..16c Seed Cotton. Cleveland, per bushel.. ..75c to $1.0? Cooks, per bushel .. ..$1.00 to $1.25 Toolo, per bushel.75c to $1.00 Mitchells Prolific, per bushel.. $1.50 Texas Riordan, per bu. $1.00 to $1.25 Cul pepper, per bushel.$1.00] Poultry. Hens, each.35c to 50c Priera, each.30c to 45c Fresh Meats. Porkers dressed, per lb. 12c to 12 l-2c Hogs dressed, per lb.'.. .Ile Mutton dressed, per lb. lOe to ll l-2c Lire Stock. Beet cattle, per lb.4 to 4 1-2c Veal calf, per lb.4 to 5 1-Iv Hoga, per lb.8 to 9c Sheep, per lb. .4 1-2 to 5 l-2c Provisions ? Country ha.us, per lb. 15c to 17 l-2c Eggt, per dos.17 1-2? Butter, per lb.20 to 25c Sweet potatoes, per bu. . .$1.00 to $1.10 Turnips, per bu..SOc to 85c Turnip Greens, per bti... Cue to Toe Spring onions, per bunch 3c to 3 l-2c COTTON Local Cotton.9 3-lc New York Cotton. Open high low close May.10.09 10.10 10.03 10.03 July.10.37 10.38 10.89 10.29 Oct...10.67 10.70 10.61 10.61 Doc.10.84 10.88 10.70 10.76 Spots 10.50. Liverpool Cotton. Opon Close. May-June.5.62 5.56 July-Aug.5.78 5.73 Oct-Nov.5.96 5.91 Spots 5.69. Sales 7,000. . Receipts 8,400. Has Steady Undertone, NEW YORK, April 29.-Cotton opened barely steady and steady at a decline ot 1 to ,5 pointa In response n>*atlvely easy cablea' and reports showers in ute eastern belt snd clear in i conditions In the southwest. Fluc tua tiona were Irregular -late in tho morning with offerings showing a tendency to Increase on alight ad vances. There waa enough demand, .however, on set backs of ft to ? pointa from last night's prices to give tho market a ateady undertone. Mnrke.1 for Terriers, goodf ., ? WRSONAL O. K. Poor? of Belton was p visitor la tin* city yesterday. A. t;. Wood of Williamston wa? among the \lHlto:s in the city yester day. 15. C. and A. Cromer of Town ville were among the visitors in the city yesterday. W. L. Merritt of the Roberts sec tion was lu the city yesterday. G. P. Pettigrew of Starr was In tho city yesterday for a short while. A. <'. Jones of Starr was a visitor In the eity yesterday. K. N. Sullivan of Portman Shoals was J ri the city yesterday on busl ness. H. 1). chipley of Charlotte was among tho business visitors in the city yesterday. W. S. linley of Lavenia, tia., was a business visitor In the city yester day. ES. P. Carr of Co vington, Cn., was In the eily yesterday on business. H. E. Seal of Hainbridge, Ga., was a visitor in tlie city yesterday. L. O. Craig and O. W. Garrett of Greenwood were visitors In the city yesterday. P. S. and Mrs. Amanda McMullin of Hartwell, Ga., were in the city yes terday . Claude A. Graves, editor of tho Hel ton Journal, was In tho city yesterday for a short while. Mrs. S. M. Byara arrived in tie city yesterday afternoon from Corinth, Miss., to Join lier husband, who re cently come here as agricultural do tuont8ator for Anderson county. Mr. Byars mot Mrs. Byar? In Birmingham. For the present they /ire stopping at Hotel Chiquola. A. A. Manning, -who does the law work for the government In connec tion with the acquiring of timbered lands on the wa'-r sheds of navigable streaniR, nnd, v. ! .. spent several days hero on official business, left yester dny for Plckens nnd Kaaley._ MBS. Vf. A. BUDGEN8, Editor Phone 87. Ma*, and Mrs. J. L. McGee left yesterday for Charleston, where they will spend u week or ten days. Rose Hill Club. Thom wm be a delightful little;! informal dance at thc Pose Hill club this evening, beginning at 8::i0. The visiting ladles In town are cordially invited. Elks Home. This will be card afternoon at Elks Home, and a large number of ladies have planned to play. All ladles who make up a table are requested to noti fy either Mrs. C. F. Ross, or Mrs. K. P. Smith as these ladles have been appointed to have charge of the serv ing. Miss ('asliin Entertains. Miss Bertha Cashin charmingly en tertained the Calhoun Street Card Club yesterday afternoon at her j hom*? on Calhoun street. The games were delightfully inter esting and Miss Cashin waa assisted In her duties as hostess by Mies Ruth Fretwell. After the games an ele gant salad course was se-ved. The guoHts for the afternoon were Mrs. T. L. Coly, Mrs. Keith Pr?vost. Mrs. G. B. Greene, Mrs. W. D. Mc Lean, M*B. Louis Hoeton, Mrs. Mar shall Orr, Mrs. Frank Reed and Miss Mary Dunovant of Chester. Beautiful Informal Affair. A beautiful little informal affair was given yesterday morning by Mrs. S. N. taimer. In honor of her sister, Mrs. Wilmot 1 irvin a of Boston. Those invited were 'ome of the old friends of Mrs. Evans, who had the pleasure of knowing tho Misses Kram mer, in the days when they visited Anderson ss the guests of Mrs. J.H. Casey, then Misa Julia Fant. These old friends were asked to come with their Bowing, and with their chairs drawn close together, they dewed and gossiped, repeating and laughing over many ot thc happy In cidents ot those days. At twelve-thirty they wore Invited into the dining room. Tho boantlfully polished tabla was most attractive wRli lace mats, the centerpelce being a large hamper of many colorrcl sweet peas, with a ton ot oink tulle. At each place was a lovely corsage hoquet of sweet peas, pauaies, verbe na and other bright flowers. An ele gant course uncheon was served. The guests for the morning were Mrs. Blair Crayton. Mrs. H. O. Evana, Mrs. DltLumpkln. Mr a. B. F. Krum mer, Mrs. Earle Barton, Mrs. Clar ence Pr?vost. Mrs. J. H. Casey. Mrs. Carrie Patrick, Mrs. W. A. Hudgena, I an? Miss Lorena Krammer. Aastrta Needs Doctors. VENICE. April 2D.~The shortage of doctors and surgeons tn Austria Ir] so alarming that the newspapers are argie medical men from nearby neu tral countries to enter ?be Austrian service. At present, it tn cUted. there i are only two doctors available for a d wounded merf. Any physician. ' the nevanajpea get $ti to $? a Mo? ! Value I* $250,000 ^^^^^ Xrs. Hnx Kleist, Who ?us Miss Juliet Breitling. Max Frederick Kleist, the German gardener for Kdward N. Breitling, the millionaire inlnging man. ic suing his former employer for tli.'.O.oO') for tak ing his wife away. .lullet Breitung fell In love witli thc garden. r and married him. Mr. Breitung at once hegau an effort. Kleist charges, tc have the girl leave him. She did ul timately. I.m the I'nited States court i:i New York, where the case waa tried, testi mony of a maid was introduced to show the daughter loved her husband, and that when the father was trying to send him off to a western mine .alie prepared a list of promises the father was to make. This list, thc maid said, was written. Among them was a demand that she be permitted to communicate with her husband. Kleist wont to the mine, but instead of having an opportunity to become a mining engineer, he taetlfled, he be came a day laborer. Darken Gray Hair, Look Young, Pretty Sage Tea and Sulphur Darkens So Naturally That No body Can Tell. Almost everyone knows that Sago Tea and Sulphur, ptroperly com pounded, bri.?gs back the natural color und lustre to tho hair when faded, streaked or gray; also ends dandruff, itching scalp and stops fall ing hair. Years ago the only way to get this mixture war. fo make it at I home, which is mussy and trouble I Borne. Nowadays, by asking at any drug store for "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound," you will get a large bottle of this famous old recipe for about 50 cents. Don't stay gray! Try it! No one can possibly tell that you darkened your hair, as lt docs it so naturally and evenly. You dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw thia through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning the gray hair disappears, and after an other application or two, your hair becomes beautifully dark, thick and I glossy. The Lady Rejoiced. Postal Clerk-Your letter Just bal ances, miss; if it weighed any more I you would have to put on another sttamp. Pretty Blonde-Gracious, I'm glad I didn't sign my middle name!-Judge. Drink More Water If Kidneys Bother Eat Lesa Meat and Take Salts for Backache or Bladder Trouble. Uric acid in meat excites the kid neys, they become overworked; get ?sluggish, ache, and feel like lump's of i load. The urine becomes cloudy; the I bladder ls Irritated,'and you may be I obliged to aeek relief two or three times during the night.' When the kidneya clog you must help them flush off the body's urlnous waste or you'll feel a duli misery in the kid ney region, you suffer from backache, sick headache, disxiness, Btomach gets sour, tongue coated and you feel rheumatic twinges when Ute weather ia bad. (Rat. leas meat, drink lots of water; also get from any pharmacist four ounces of Jad Salts; take a table 1 sponful In a glass of water before breakfast for a few days' and your kidneys will tben act fine. This fam ous salta ls made from the acid of grapes and lemon Jplce, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to clean clogged kidneys and stimulate them to normal activ ity, also to neutralise the acida , *n urine, so it no longer ts a source .?f irritation, thus ending bladder weak ness. Jad Salt? ts Inexpensive, can not Injure: make* a delightful efferves cent Huila water drinlt w*-*"* ono should take now and kidneys clean and a gists here eay they rt Baila to tolki Could You Use a little extra money to good advantage just now? Haven't you something to sell? Do you own something yon no longer use, but which if offered at a bargain price would ap peal at once to some one who does need it? : An INTELLIGENCER Want Ad will tum the trick. PHONE 321 I Charleston & Western Carolina Railway To and From the NORTH, SOUTH, EAST, WEST Leaves: No. 22 . . .; .6:08 A. M. No. 6 . . . .3:37 P. M. Arrives: No. 21 . . .11:15 A. M. ?No. 5 . . . . 3:07 P. M. Information, Schedules, rates, etc., promptly given. E. WILLIAMS, G. P. A., Augusta, Ga. T. B. CURTIS, C. A., Ande* son, S. C. Condensed Passenger Benedeie PIEDMONT A NORTHERN BAIL WAI COMP ANT. Effective January 17th, 1918. ANDERSON Armale, wo. 81..8t35 a. m. No. SS.ie too ?? m No. S6.11:40 a. m. No. 87.1:16 p. sa. No. 89 . 8:40 p. m. No. 41.6.00 p. ni No. 43.. j. .8:20 p. nt. Departures. ? No. 80.7.15 a. m. No. 82. 9:00 a. m No. 84.10:80 a. ?. No. 88. ..ISA* p. m. No. 88 .2:80 p. m. No. 40. ... . 4:48 p. m. No, 42.8:10 p. s?. -.C. S. ALLEN, Traffic Man ?tre r. Greatly Reduced Round | Trip Tickets vie Southern Railway Premier Carrier of the Sooth In Con. noctlon With Bloc Ridge From Anderson, 8, C. 833.70 .. .Houston, Tex. | and return account of Southern Bap tist Convention. Tickets on sale May 6th to 11th, with return limit May Slst. 1915. $22.50 .? .Memphis Teen. ] aud return account of Cotton Manu facturers Association. Tickets on sate April 10. ll i ad 12th with return limit April 24Ui. ?10.25. .. .Washington, D. C. and return account of Daughtera ot ; the American Revolution. Ticketa on sale April 15. 16 and 17th with return limit May 8th. 1915. 84.40 . .Atlanta, Ga. and return account of Atlanta Musi? Festival. Ticketa on sale April 26th to 30th, with return limit May 4th. 1915. SUS.Chattanooga, Tes s. and? return account ot Southern Con - ference. Tickots on sale April 25, 26 and 27th with return limit May 8th. 1915. For complete Information, Pullman reservation, and tickets call on any agent, or write to, W. F. M'GEE, A. G- P. A., Colv.ibla & C. W. R. TABER. T. P, A., Greenville. 8. C. To Held German Trade. CBRISTlA?ClA. April 29.-In order tn cheek the inroads which war has made o?* German trade in tao Scandi navian countries, a large number of ial traveler^ ii gr* in ted a fortnight's le/ d are now vi ?snSss*.'vv- H. matters befot . ?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,