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aign fm Thte ?ram gencer Even the candidates themselves predict \hat the coming campaign will be the most interesting in years and because of the tact that people in all sections of Anderson and adjoining counties are deeply interested in the approaching State Campaign, The Intelligencer has arranged at consider able additional expense, to secure a complete and comprehensive report of the campaign, day by day, as it progresses. In addition to that The Intelligencer now announces a remarkable reduc tion in the subscription price DURING THE CAMPAIGN ONLY. The campaign and elections will continue over approximately three months and for that length of time The Daily Intelligent" will be sent .to any address for Seventy-five Cents, strictly in advance. PO NATIONAL Ai Boston 3; Pitteburgb 2. At Hrool?l"i!l; St. Louis ?.. At Nev< York 4; Chicago 7. At Philadelphia 3; Cincinnati! li. New Vor!:, June H.-Chicago opened up the series with Kev/ York by win ning today's.ganie 7 to 4. A throw to the plate which Meyers dropped put Chicago in the way or tali> !n? a total of 5 runs in the iHh inning. Four clean hits, a wild pitch by Mathewson, a pass, and a 1 unible by Snodgrass were the other scoring faclorr. Sectb: Chicago . 100 005 100-7; 8; 2 New York. 100 002 100-1; 5; 4 Vaughan and Biesnahan; Mathew rin. Fromme and Meyers. Brooklyn. June ll.-St. Louis made it two ?tiaighta from Brooklyn today in a pitcher's battle In which Doak r had- the "Setter until the eighth, when' with a r.?oro of 2 to t and one out, ho walked Dalton, bringing up Dau . the Icft-bandeli. biller and held Brook lyn ::ufe the rest of tire way. .; : Scorn: y ' ? ? . . St. Lofts . 000 010 100-2; 8; 1 Brooklyn .I OJ0.000 000-1; I?; 2 Doak, Salee and Snyder; Bernbach and McCatry. Boston. June ll.-Boston won its thiid straight game defeating Pitts burgh today :! lo 2. MaranvUlo was the principal factor in tho Braves* victory. Oh attack ho made two hits in tho three times at the. bat, driving in two runs. Defensively ho accepted IS chance? without error. Mitchell's' nomcr gave thc pirates one of their vam-.. Score-: Bor ton . 200 100 000-3; 10; 1. Pittsburgh .... 010 000 100..2; 7; 1. Bet due, JaifVos ami Gowdy; Adams, Cooper and Gibson, Coleman.--^t; ^ Philadelphia, June ll-After pitch ing a line game for eight innings he"ro today Yingling weakened in tho ninth und Philadelphia defeated Clncinnattl by 3 to 2. Burns, who batted for Beck er In the ninth Inning received the only pass given hy . Y in'?lin g. Reed ran for Burns, took second on a pass ed ball and scored on Loberf's sacrl llce bunt and Mngee's sacrifice fly. t'raynth then won the game with a home run. Score : Cincinnati i _ 000 000 20?-2; 8; 3 Philadelphia .. 001 000 0(12-3; r,; l Yingling and CInrk and Gonzales; Alexander and Kllllfcr. South Atlantic At Augurto ' 8 ; Columbia .11. At Chai leaton 2; Savannah 5. At Jacksonville 1; Albany 2. . At Macon 3; Columbus 2. SOUTHEJTOTTIEAGUE '-' At Memphis'3;'Atlanta' 4. Al Nashville 8; Chattanooga 1-. At Montgomery 3; Mobile 7 (1st ..' . gaipe.l. ' .'" Montgomery' 4; Mobile i. (second ' . ..bamo.) . " - , -r ; ~5.t Bli mingham 0; Now Or leno n 4. . North Carolina League '""AtAchevillo 2; Durham l.'-^V At "Greensboro 1 ; "Wlnoton'-Salem"ti. Af Raleigh 6; Charlotte 7. i RTS ?; AMERICAN At Chicago 2; Washington 4. i At Cleveland 3; Philadelphia 0. At St. Louie 3; New York 1. At Detroit '?; Boston 1. 1 Steen's brilliant pitching enabled the Naps to 'dint out Philadelphia to- i , day 3 t 0, and break a lobing streak I . of six games. Steen did not give I j more than one hit in any inning and ? i he did not allow hits while he was l I giving ba-es on balls. i Score: I Philadelphia .. 000 OOO OOO-O; 5; 0 1 Cleveland 001 001 010-3; 9; 1. I PoiiDock and Lapp; Steen and O'Neill. i Chicago. June ll.-An S inning ral ly after two men were out today gave Washington the victory of 4 to 2 over Chicago and .checked the winning streak of. the.locals. FaL.-t pitched a fino game nrttil *the g?1r-M?lng.?wl.*i Smith, a Warhlngton recTrfllt, pTacod a double In the loft. ^SCTlSetef "Yffri {for. .SnLlth-i^ro?:*.e?pred :*he-~t??jng'?run [ on .Milan's tripple. Gaur"il 1 b Bingle also scored Milan with thr winning run. Was hington_ 010 000 030-4; 7: 0. Chicago . 200; 000 000-2;'-8; 2 Uoehiiug and Keary; Faber* and Schalk? O - .*? Detroit, June ll.-In a splendid pitching duel between Haass, dud "Shutout" Foster. Detroit won from Borton, 2 to 1, today. Busch accepted eight fielding chuncos, several of them thriller?. Cobb vas not well and stayed out of the gam \ Score: Boston: ri'..-... 000 010 000-1: 5; 1 Detroit ........ 100 100 000-2; 7; 0 Foster and ' Thomas ;. Dnuss and Stanage. ,' | ' St. Louis, June ll.-St. Louts bunch ed lilts today In the rix th inning and scored two lunn.'enough to win the gallic of tho reries from New York 3 to '1. Manager Hickey Twitched .his line-up. scuding Leary behind the .hat and Miller to the ilrat base. After the si::th inning . Leary went to the first base and Agnew behind the hat. New York running wild on the bases on" Leary. Score: - New York . 001 000 000-1; G; 3. St. iMUis-. ?0? 102 0'jO-3; 4; 0 Wat hop, McIIale and Nunamaker; Jamec and Agnew and Leary. FEDERAL LEAGUE At Indianapolis G; Baltimore 5. (1st game.) At Kansas City 3 ; Buffalo 4. At Chicago 3; Brooklyn 5/ At St. Louis ,2; Pittsburg 7. At Indianapolir ll; Baltimore 4. Indianapolis, June ll.-Indianapolis won both games of a doubleheader to day with Baltimore, the first G to 5, and the-second ll to 4. * Score-First'Game: Baltimore - 002 010 200-5; 10; 2. Indianapolis ... 021 000 3ff0-G; G; 2. Quinn, Wilhelm and Bussell;' Kal sorling and Kariden. Second Game: . ? .-.'.?, Baltimore ....OOO 001 120- 4; 8; 3 Indianapolis . 100 144 100. .11 ; 12; 1 Smith and-Jacklltecb; Moseley.and Railden. St: -Louis, June ll.-Knetzer today kept St; Louis bite scattered'in all but two innings while his team- 'matas pounded Crandall hard in two innings. MISSING AN OPPORTUNITY. to have us examine your eyes, ls a crime against your sight. Come and submit your eyes to our "skill an l ex perience. That is th\only wu)' you can be sore of glasses that will aid and not. Injure your vision. Prices ... -ii reasonable, $3.0a to $5.00 and upwards. Dr. M* R. Campbell 112 W. Tfnltner St. Ground Floor 0?3ce 'Phone 888J. Bes. 'Phono %m Pitsburgh won from St. Louln 7 to 2. Score: PlUburgh . 00 004 003-7; 10; 1 il. Lout*. 010 000 100-2; 12; 1 Knetze and Berry; Crandall and Hartley. Kansas City, Mo., June ll.-Four lits in the sixth inning today gave to Buffalo 3 runs and a victory over Kan sas City. Manager Stovall, batting for Packard In the ninth, bit u home run. 3coie: Buffalo . 000 003 100-4; 7; 0 [Caneas City .. 010 001 001-3; 9; 17 Ford and Blair; Packard and Eas terly. Chicago. June ll.-Broklyn made lt i out of 5 from Chicago by winning be tiual game of the f eries today. Sea ton struck cut ll of the locals. Mana ger Tinker was in the game for the Urft time since illness forced him io take a rest. Score: Brooklyn _ 022 010 000-5; 10; 0 Chicago . 020 001 000-3; 4; 2 Seaton and Land; Hendrix and Wil jon. VIRGINIA LEAGUE At Newport Newe 2; Portsmouth 1. (10 Innings.) At Norfolk 2; Richmond 6. At Petersburg 0; Roanoke 1. International League At Providern e 10; Jersey City 7. At Baltimore C; Newark 5. At Rochester 2; Buffalo 1. At Montreal 9; Toronto 15. American Association At St. Paul G; Indianapolis 5. At Minneapolis G; Louisville 1. At Kansas City 7; Cleveland 12. At Milwaukee l; Columbus 4. 3000000000 o o o o o o o o ; O tl n THE DAY IN CO Mi UK SS ol a o I JOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOO Washington. Jun" lt-Bay In con RrOES. House: Met at noon. Consideration of thc; sundry nlvJl np- ! proprlaUon bill waa resumed. Speaker .'Hark designated Rori* sentative Dixon, of Indiana, to oet as speaker tomorrow while absent to ad-' dress Marshall College. Huntington.! W. Va., of which he was once rresi-! dent. 1.'cpr i .. entail ve Keiner, of California, u ?der |.enonal privilege, dented .rc-'! ports that President .Wllsnu had* re-' fused to net California Shrlners her* rt coi. Cy. Adj?urnf d nt fi:10 i>. m. u noon Pr** d'.v Senate: Met at ll a. m. , Debate wus resumed on the repeal' of the Panami tollu exa uhtlon Diplomatic appropriation bill was reported without provision (or buying embassy properties in Mexico City and Tokio, and legation property in Berne. Passed repeal of Panama capal tolls exemption, with ' Simmons - Norria amendment, 50 to 35. Adjourned at 10:20. p. m. to mum Friday I'LSTEB TO THE EXCEPTED The A me nd ttien I to the Irinh Homes Rnlo Bill Authorized. London, June. ll. -Premier Asquith, an noun dod in. tho 'House of Commons, today his intention to introduce t!u? promised measure to amend the Irish home rule hill before any further progress is made by tho House of Lords with the second reading of tho main measure. The Unionists 'hus have won the day with their Insistent demand that he should tako this action. The lords-will be entirely free to change this amending bill as they think proper and it generally is as sumed, they will insert provisions for the unconditional exclusion of UUtor from the operation of the Irish hom* rulo l ill and ?Iso for the protection of the protestant minority in the rest of rntrol BQrder Closely. El Paso,'Texas, Jun,? ll.-Orders '.s ere issued tonight my Hie Treasury Depart mont st Washington ; that cus tom officials all along the Mexican border exer??Be extreme vigilance to prevent tba passage oz arms ?nto Mex ico. BECAUSE OF HEALTH - f t Overton Westfeldt Price Shot Himself At His Mother's He Near Asheville Yesterday (By Associated PreBs) Asheville, June IL--Overton West femt Price, vice president of the Na tional Conservation Asociation, aged 39, ended his lite at Rugby Crange, in Henderson county, 1& ndles from. Asheville this afternoon at 4 o'clock by firing a pistol ball through hi3 brain. Death was instantaneous, life being exttr.it when the 10-year-old ton of the deceased ran to the room to lind his father stretched on the Hour. The de? il wai' committed in the room oceiv'ed for years by his mother and in the house occupied by her fam ily for fifty years. Mr. Price arrived wah bis family-from his howe at Alex andria, Va., at 10 o'clock this morning with the expressed Intention of apend iug the Bummer here to regain his lost health. ,? A wrecked nervous Bystem and 111 health for many months is given as the" reason for ?he deed. HIB finances are reported to he in- excellent condi tion and no intimation was given that he intended taking his own life. Mr Price took a prominent part in the Dallingcr-Pinchut forestry dis pute being a personal friends of Mr. Pinchot and ex-President Roosevelt. He left the forestry service of the gov ernment when Mr. Pinchot was re moved. STATE ?Bim Rev. Dr. Cordon 13. Moore of North Carolina, formerly of the faculty of :ho South Carolinu university, has buen given the honorary degree of ?.. I. I J. by the university. Congressman Bryncs has secured for Aiken an appropriation of $10.ti(i0? and the services of an expert road builder from the national government. Thc county give $20.000. Chas. W. Roberts of Birmingham has been eleced secretary .-"f the Hoc? Hill chamber of ..commerce. Maj. Jonathan J. Lucas died at So ! cfety Hill Tuesday night. He was one of 'the organizer of. the Atlantic Coast Line Railway and during the war com. m anded Lucas' battery of artillery, which for months kept Dahlgren's forces ont of Charleston. Maj. Lucas i has been one of the states foremost j men. In Greenville county there arc 102 school districts and of this number more than half have voted special school taxes, and consequently, ore re ceiving State aid. At least 25 of those which have not voted a special tax have by private subscription rased money for school purnoses, and h av ; In thlB way received aid from the State, as dollar for dollar waa put up for all money raised hy subscription. The hotel at Caesar's Head will be opened on Juno loth. The South Carolina Bankers' Asso ciation will meut at the Isle of Palms June 28-25. A alight earth-quake was felt at Walterboio. \ . .-. . 3U8PE?T VO$L PLA? Further Inquest Will be Made Into Beith of Miss ,Winter. - Washington, June H.-?Police of An ne Reundel e.ninty today Wftre inves tigating the ilea th Of Miss G. ia W. Winter, a stenographer whose body w?s found'floatutg iii Curtis crrek lant ?fnnday. After n 9econd post mc; um v,.Htorday an c'fielal of iii? compati? endured he believed the gt*' had not .nen drc'VPt?d. State's Attorney Green today said be would not take definite action until he had received the report 'of tta? chemist who will analyze the vtjeera Of the body to d?termino the possible presence of poison. MARIN 8AI8. ff* HE "Thumb Print" ls s new four] ' ? Part release. This ls a detective drama, where the whole plot centers around a thumb print which ts discovered when a curtain banker ls murdered sod robbed In his own library. The plot ls ooe of a very powerful nature nod highest possible class or photography, combined with excellent acting and dramatic street. Big, hungry .loe Drown Is jailed for threatening wealthy Preston Scuull lu "The Coward and the Man." He saves the warden's life during a prison clot and stumbles upon tbe victim of Be nail's Bwiudle w.beu he gets out. Then be bss an opportunity to force the greedy Sennll to make restitution to the poor widow. I Financial and New York Cotton Now Vor,{' June ll.-The cotton market was rather more active today with prices advancing in sympathy with bullish cables,and on reports that continued dry weather and very high temperatures in many sections of the eastern and central belts were hurting thc crop outlook. Closing price? were steady at a net gain of from G to 10 points. Private cables reported covering of shorts In Liverpool on less favorable crop reports and continental buying in a comparatively narrow market. The opening here was firm at an advance at G to 10 pointu in keeping with tho English advance and there was con siderable foreign buying us well as covering by recent sellers and renew ed bull support. Realizing was heavy around tho ini tial figures, however, while private predictions for more general rains in the eastern belt, encouraged some local selling and the market eased off six or seven points from thc best daring tho early trading. At any rate buying became more ac tive during the early afternoon with the market making new highs for.the day and selliug about 9 to 13 points net higher, but private reports of good showers In Georgia promoted lo cal realizing In the late trading and last prices showed reactions of five to six points Cotton* futures ciosed steady. t* . ' ... Open Close July.13.27 13.29 August.13.20 13.20 October.12.86 12.87 December.12,89 12.88 -January.,.12.76 1?, 76 March.12.78 12.81 Spot cotton quiet; middling uplands 13.70; gulf 13.96. No sales. Liverpool^ Gorton Liverpool,. June ll.-Cotton, spot' finu; good middling, 842; middling' 7S7; mw middling 739';. Sales 7.0.00. . Speculation and export 500. Receipts' 9.000.' ^ ; J ' SCENE FROM "Tl Marin Sals ls now playing leads In big pictures every few days and ac quit/, herself with great credit Having seen a beautiful painting,of tbe old slave market in Cairo. Blinny? the henpecked property man Inp ?mull theater, falls.asleep and dreams be ls a millionaire, outbidding .a crowd of Arab sheiks j for a bevy of beautiful slaves Mite the ones be saw in the pic ture. Of course there are all sorts of comic consequences. "The Road to Pl?lndnlf?" tells bow two Uves ?p-rt thc,,.broad highway , of restless desire and luxury. Having but two.months to live, the elder brother shouldered tho other's crime. The rough life of ,tho prison, coupled with fresh air and hard la bor, brought health and the desire for freedom. His escape made good, he came face to face with his former sweetheart Through. her efforts be I was reinstated in society, (? Commercial New Orleans Cotton . New Orleans, June ll.- Bullish -sen? tlment, followed hy continued drouth over a large portion of the cotton belt and unfavorable crop accounts, made Itself felt in the cotton market today although tho net results of trading were again only 1 to 4 points. ThS highest levels, n rise of 9 to 13 points were reached in the afternoon, but this advance invited realizing sales and offerings suddenly became .'sj|? heavy that the market went into a quick reaction. - The detailed weather reports Indi cated that practically no rain fell in the belt overnight and the forecast promised little change in the rit nation. Temperatures were . high. Crop nows pointed to considerable aban donment of acreage. Bears pointed out that crops east bf the.Mississippi were clean and were fast being dean ed In the west, but bearish utterances received little consideration. Cotton futures closed steady: Jnly 13.67; August 13.65; October 12 82; December 12.82; January 12.82; March 12.32. , Spot cotton quiet, uncnahgerc Mid dling 13 15-IC; sales on the spot 725; to arrive 300. Cotton Seed Oil New York, June ll.-Cotton seed: was higher today on covering of July shorts and new investment buying In spired by? the rtrongth in cotton, re ports of a broadening compound*^" ness and professional supn--*f - ' il] prices were 2 to 5 poli te u.fcurfr. Sales ?,000 band.. . Grain and Provisions ? 1 1 ? i. ' ' Chicago, June, ll.-Aggressive se li ing today, on flattering news of tbs harvest broke the price ofw heat Tho market closed heavy 3:4'a 7-8 to-Ic under last'night, Corn'finished 5-8 a 3-4c to. lo down, oats off l-2c to 6-8 a 3-4C and provisions unchanged to 17 l4c higher. HE THUMB PRINT.? "Judge Not]" ls a magnificent four reel subject Soon to bo releused. Tho story Lus n distinctly out of tho Ordi nary plot uud is conspicuous'forit9 in teresting situations and swift nctlom A prosecuting at torpor, subject to . spells of temporary aberration; .and' a . dear friend of* a Judge, mindora tb? Judge one evening v.-hlte strolling down .the Street. .Another man JB aecueed, n'nd the prosee ut In g. attorney, wljb n? , memory of bi* deed, throw a hlm?olt vigorously Into the 'pn&aouiio&^'ltafr n scientist untangles the ekeln pf des tiny la riot- only mutually, interesting, but-highly scientific. " . -'. ' "Buddy's First Call" wtll remind 1 you of your Hist attempt nt being a. real ' ?--?u and calling upon n yopog'. Ind*"for t?ie first. ?jue.' Rud,dyX,ex> perlence ls perhaps n little different ,from ours.. 6ptIO? Just.BB^?bjijnu^,'. lng and a great deal funnier. .Ho 'nmIce* the mistake of calling on a gili I who bus a mlsChlevous'r.tstbr. " *. ' Stocks and ?pncJ? ,Ncw York, June ll.-Heaviness ap peared in spots in the stock vlarkej today. Speculation -vas dull and colorless .ns on recent dayn. Canadian Pacific was depressed by the state ment bf gross earnings'.inf Uti first week in June,, revealing ,a .??crease pf nparly $500,000. St. Paul/ftlline nlnd for a'liiye owing presumably to. disappointment "ipyer ,tp^./B|owf ab sorption of jhV neW bonds. Tithing and Smelting also wore, heavy asiere a few ot tho specialties: l The move ment as a whole, however,'was .nar row wit li only, a fractional change, . ? .Engagement of $2,^00^00 .gold for Paris today brought 'tip the total this week tb 117,:? 50,000, u high record lp the outflow of gold from New York in a single week,'but exchange ratea held a' an abnormally high level. De mand sterling touchedva new high mark for the movement at 4.88.?J0 and cables mounted to.'40.89.45' Sixty and ninety day loans moved up T-4 c'eut. Once more the freight rate decision was the foremost consideration in the stock market and lt was said generally thut barring the unforeseen, specula tion would be held down to a low point until the Interstate' Conferee Commission announced its' ruling. .Weakness appeared again. iu Vir ginia debt cert If icaten, which fell 4 points to 50." "' llbck Island' issues Were ul s o heavy. The general bond market moved uncertainly. .Total eales, par value, $2,000,000. United States bonds were unchanged on.jjfdl.-?) .<' >[? ::K*ewvY-ork, June ll- Mor?antilo paper 8 1-2 a 4 . ? T | .'Starling ftrcug; sixty days'.. 4j6.'4<>; ?pr,3r. 4.88M. Commercial billa ?? i... i-4. Bar silver-te Mokfcan. dollars, 44; Qoyernmept bonds steady; railroad bends U r?gner. ??? 7 fi Call modey firmer; 1 7-8 a 2; rnlUrg rate. 2; closing 1 7-8 a 2.' ^. : : Time loans stronger; sixty day?Ht i'^V. "n?t??fy days' if?-2f atc mon?u 3 a 1-4. ? ' .'" 'f"?;^ - . .-'?f.. ' For Cleaning Tinware. First wash the tin to Bot soapsuds and wipe tbprougbJly"dry. Thea scour. ArY AW applied \wm aa bat newspaper. ... ;