The intelligencer. (Anderson, S.C.) 1915-1917, July 08, 1915, Page PAGE FIVE, Image 5
ir FI
SORE, ACHING FEET
_, ?.
'Ah! what relief. No more tired feet;
no more burning feet, swollen, bad smell
inn, sweaty feet. No more pain in coras
callouses or bunions. No matter what
ads your feet
or what under
tbs sun you've
tried withoub
getting relief,
just une "TIZ."
.TIZ" draws
out all the poi
sonous exuda
tions which puff
up the feet;
"TIZ" is mag
ical; "TIZ" is
grand;. "TIZ"
will cure your
foot troubles so
you'll never limp or draw np your face
ia pain. Your shoe? won't seem tight
and your feet will never, never hurt or
get sore, ?wollen or tired.
Get a 26 cent box at any drug or
1 epa rt mont store, and get relief.
rn
Thrift
u Who taught Ule busy
bee to fly among the
sweetest , flowers, ned
lay his feast of honey
by to eat in winter
hoprsf
Nature teaches es
thrML WIU yon learnt
Put a itart of yagi
earnings In the Savings
Department ot The
Bank of Anderson.
The
Bask of Anderson
The strongest bank
in the county.
Benefltd by Cbambrlain's Liniment '
"Last winter I used Chamberlain's
Liniment for rheumatic pains, stiffness
and soreness of tne knees, and can
conscientiously say that I never used
anything that did me so much good."
-Edward Craft, Elba, N. Y. Obtain
able everywhere.
Beport of the C
Citizens Nat
at Anderson In the State
close of Busines
?
RE80U
1. a Loans and discounts (notes held
?.. Overdrafts, unsecured.,
3 a U. S. bonds deposited to secure cl
6. Subscription to stock of federal rec
.hank.
a Less amount unpaid.
b All other stocks, Including preml
same ....
6. Banking house, $17,000.00; furnltui
7. Other real estate owned.
8. Due from federal reserve bank ...
9. a Due from approved reserve agent
Chicago abd St Louis .. .
b Due from approved reserve agenti
cities.
10. Due from banks sud bankers (otb
. 12. Exchange tor clearing house ....
13. a Outside checks and other cash I
b Fractional currency,' nickels, and
14. Not?s of other national banks ..
15. Federal reserve notes ...
Lawful money reserve in hank:
1?. Total com and certificates .....
17. . Legal-tender notes'.
18. Redemption fund with U. S. treas
cen* on circulation).
Total.
LIABIL
1. Capital stock paid In.
2. Surplus fund.
3. Undivided profits. .
Reserved for interest.
Less current expenses', tnterea
taxes acid.
4. Circulating notes.
7. Due to banks and bankers (other
9. ' Demand deposita:
a Individual deposita subject to ch
b Certificates of deposit due In leas
d Cashier's checks outstanding ...
14. Rediscounts with federal reserve
35. ' Rills payable, Including obl?gat
boro wed.
Total.
?tate of South Carolina, County of Am
I, Jr. F. Shumate, cashier of the abo?
the above statement ls true to the best
Subscribed and sworn-tb before mo (
Correct-Attest :
J. H. ANDERSON,
JAS. R. ANDERSON, ?
.f. F. W?TtliNS, ?
?i Director?. _.._?_
CU SESSIONS
COURT AT WALKALLA
Judge Seatc of Spartanburg Pre
siding-Many Cases Dispos
ed ?f Wednesday.
Walhalla, July 7.-Court or general
Sessions opened on Monday mo ming,
Judgo T. S. Sease, or Spartan burg,
presiding, with Solicitor K. P. Smith,
gnd Stenographer C. V. Smith, In
their accustomed places. Several
minor cases were disposed or on yes
terday, and up till noon today- Four
I convictions were obtained, one tor
grand larceny, one tor resisting an
j officer, and two tor violating the dis
pensary law. The case against John
\ T. Fowler, and Sam Smith, of Salem
j charged with arson, was continued
I until the next term of court.
The grand Jury has been busy
passing upon the indictments handed
to them by thc solicitor. They will
probably flnlBh Cits part of their work'
this afternoon. A committee from this
body hss been examining thoroughly
the books of the county officers, and
this report will likely be presented
tomorrow morning.
The citizens of Oconee count" are
very much pleased with the way Judge
Sease dispatches business.
Owing to the recent heavy rains,
the farmers are unable to work their
crops, and for this reason, the at
tendance upon court ls unusually
large. The court of common pleas
will convene next week,
i Jas. P. Garey, Esq., of the Plckcns
I bar, is attending court this week.
Mr. Samuel Wilson, one of the larg
est land-owners and wealthiest men
or Plckens county has been attend
ing court here this week as a wit
ness.
Dr. D. M. RamBay, ot Greenville,
has been spending several days in
Walhalla.
DR, BR?NIER TO SPEAK
Will Address Colored Preachers fe
Greenville. .
Dr. Watson Brunler ol Atlanta, Ga.,
manager ot the Home Board Evange
lism tor Southern Baptist will be in
Greenville to attend the white Bap
tist assembly meetings from the 11th
to the 18th. He has consented to
speak to colored pastors and Chris
tian workers at Springfield Baptist
church McBee avenate, at ll a. m.,
Tuesday. July 12th. Greenville, S. C.
We wish to ask the white preachers
and other readers of your Journsl to
cali the colored people's attentlqn
to this meeting especially the pas
tors, teachers and Sunday school
workers of the counties of Greenville,
Oconee, Danrens and Spartanburg.
Other speakers at the meeting on
the 13th will be Dr. C. T. Walker of
Augusta. Ga.,' and Rev. Richard Caf
roll.
Committee: J. O. Allen, J. E.
Washington. C. S. Gandy, and J. M.
Burke. .
onditloa of tke
dona! Bank
of Heath Carolina, at the
s Jone 25,191?, Jr
RCES.
in bank). .'. $585.956.98
. 4,572.94
rculatton (par value) ... 37.500.00
ierre
.$10,200.00
. 6,100.00 5,100.00
um on
. 16,900.00 21,000.00
re and fixtures, $3,000.00.... 20,000.00,
. 754.00
. 11,900.00
ts In New York,
.$8.808.? J
* In other reserve
. . 2.857.99 9.M6.60
Br than Included In 8 or 9) ?56.25
... '.',615.80
Items.$1,338.47
cents. 774.07 2.112.54,
...' . 2,330.00 '?
. ... ... 500.00
. 7,860.16
. -1,816.00
urer (not more than 6 per
. 1,875.00
$710.805.16
mas.
... >.. $160,000.00
.80,000.00
.$32,370.20
?... 1,250.00 33.620.29
it and
...... 16.099.02
17.621.18
37,600.00
than Included ta 6 or 6).. 409.49
eek.t?ralo*
than 80 days .. 12,033.45
. tT.lJ 289.959.61
bank ... ........ ?A H6.414.88
lou s representing money
. 40,000.00
.?. ?710305.16
lerson, ss:
a named bank, do solemnly swear that
Of my knowledge and better.
J, F. ?SHUMATB,
Cashier.
his ?th day ot Joly, 1916.
J. E. SULLIVAN,
Notary Public.
EMPLOYESPRQTEG?ED
Government Will See That Enlist,
ed Men Retain Same Grades
' Held Before War.
Londoa, July 7.-Thc Ilri'Jsh min
istry has promised the National Union
of railwaymen^that at the end of hos
titftics the railwaymen serving with
the armed forces will obtain jobs equal
to those gave up. At the same time,
J..H-. Thomas, P., secrctury of
the union, says he is extremely un'
easy over the problem of women rail
way workers. Ina speech at a meet
ing of tho men in Nottingham, he
said:
"I am profoundly convinced that
you have to face tb? fact that female
labor has come to stay. Therefore
we have got to make un our minds
upon one or two tilings. First, what
grades would it be dangerous for fe
male labor to be engagod In; second,
whatever grades that we have secur
ed for particular grades by years of
agitation. What wc have to say ls
that no woman's labor is to be made
the moans of reducing the status ol
any grade in the railway service."
According to the speaker, there are
certain classes of railway work which
women are unable to perform, and
women are not proving satisfactory in
all the positions that have been open
ed for them.
In short thero were two courses
open to the unions-either to refuse
to allow tho experiment of women
workers altogether, as has been done
in some places by the streetcar men,
or to devbto the union's energies to
insisting upon the maintenance of the
standard of wages. Most of the
speakers favored the latter procedure,
urging that "while the trade unionisi
cannot, without stultifying Iiis own
principles, protest against female lab
or, he has every right to protest
against female labor, which is mere
ly cheap labor under an alias, and
lt is in the Interest of the country
that he should so protest."
The only government department
which bas made any wholesale effort
to avail itself ofthe large amount of
female labor at Its disposal to take
th', place of mon in military service, is
the nostomce. This department now
has ~ 3,000 new women employes In
tho various branches of its work
throughout the country.
Of tho 170,000 men employed by the
postoffice before tbe war, 37,000 have
joined the army. In the rural dis
tricts women have been employed in
a limited way as.letter carriers for
same years past; they have now been
introduced into some of the small
towns and cities- Other places which
are being opened to women,are .th,ose
of the malil sorters and messengers
Girl telegraph messengers, mounted
on bicycles, are gradually taking Gie
places of the boy messengers, and a
great .deal of the postofflce's tele
graph work is bolng done by young
women. Women dorks and accoun
tants have been introduced for the
first time into the London general
postoffice.
On the authority of a high postal
official, it is stated that Gie reports
from all quarter? are to the effect
that ,-Gie work of Gie women wh-? have
beeb'engaged to replace mon bas been
extremely well done. "They wont
quickly and accurately, and they arc
very conscientious," says ono re
port .
*?+******?#?+*?**##? ? ?
* STANDING OF THE CLUBS. *
? #
?9VTmmem*t??T o ? *
South Atlantic.
Won. Lost. P.C.
Augusta. 16 8 667
Columbus. 14 9 609
Columbia. 14 9 609
Charleston. 13 ll 64*
Alhany. 10 13 436
Jacksonville. 7 14 133
Savannah. 10 14 417
Macon. 10 16 400
Sentkern
Won. Lott. PC.
Memphis. 46 31 697
New Orleans. 46 31 697
Birmingham. 42 34 . 663
Nashville. 44 36 660
AG?nta .i .... ... 84 41 463
Chattanooga ...... 35' 43 449
Mobile..33 44 42?
Little Rock.. 29 47 382
American.
Won. Lost p.C
Chicago. 47 ?6 644
Boston. 48 24 ?43
Detroit. 44 28 til
New York. . 36 36 660
Washington. 32 36 471
Philadelphia. 27 44 280
Cleveland. 23 45 868
8t. Louis .. 4.. 25 48 868
"^"woo. Lost P.C
Chcago. 40 29 680
l-New York ....... 89 36 463
Philadelphia. 26 30 64?.
St. Louis. 38 35 621
Pittsburgh. 84 84 Ito
Brooklyn. 24 35 493
Cincinatl ........ 30 34 469
Boston. 20 39 435
FeJeraL
Won. Lost P.C
Kansas City. 42 80 689
St. Louis. 40 28 688
Chicago. 41 81 6Ct
Pittsburgh ...... 88 81 661
?.Newark. 38 34 628
Baltmore. 28 ' 45 366 {
I Brooklyn. 81 42 425
Buffalo -. 29 46 387*
! TO LATE FOftCLASSfFIEft
WANTED-Experienced stenographer
, for months of August and tiepWrn-,
. ber. Adirrss, x k> 2 esr* Intelli- j
* genccr.-^-tf.
SENEGA PREPARES FCR
FARMER'S CHAUTAUQUA
Many Features of Interest to Far*
mers Embraced in Program
Big Crowd Expected.
Seneca. July 7.-A farmer's chau
tauqua? What ls lt? That is tho
question that hundreds and thousands
[>f people all through upper South
Carolina are asking. It has been
heralded broad-cast over the country
that two of these uiectingB arc to be
lield In two Piedmont Carolina towns,
and many people have their curiosi
ty aroused to know just what they
ure.
A farmer's chautauqua is tho adap
tation of the "chautauqua idea"-in
spirational instruct ion-to tuc'prac
tical needs and problems of thc rural
community. It is the enlargement ot
the old Idea of the farmers institute,
with the addition of some of the* ele
ments of the county fair. Tho pro
gram embraces three distinct phases.
ola!form addresses, school work, und
exhibits and demonstrations. The
addresses are rendered by prominent
men in public life and those who have
made a special study of farm needs
and conditions. The school work in
cludes practical instruction by ex
perts in all the subject:' that pertain
to agricultural cievelopnul.it, and
rural home and community improve
ment. It embraces, for the men, suet
subjecs as Boll improvement, live stock
raising, good roads and marketing;
for the women and girls, such sub
jects as domestic science and art,
home docoration and si notation, home
gardening and canning, ihe care and
feeding of babies and nursing of tho
sick; for thc boys, instruction in ele
mentary agriculture, corn and big club
work and atbelot'.cs. The subjects
will not bo taught by novices or and o
dry as dust way, but by practical peo
ple Ia a living and practical way. Thc
exhibits como from two sources, the
machinery and seed houses and the
surrounding section. And thc re
quirement of each exhibit -is that lt
must teach some useful lesson.
Plans arc being made to bold one
7t these chuutauquas at Seneca. July
22 to the 2*th and at Williamson
from the 28th to the 30th. Both or
these towns ore making preparations
for the entertainment of thousands.
A man who ls familiar with this move
ment and with* farmers meetings all
over the country ha ssald that one of
these meetings will be the biggest
farmers meeting ever hell in this sec
tion.
The Seneca p?Ople say that they arc
going to claim 'this distinction, while
tb? Wllliamstori people think that it
will go to them.' The only wa yto de
termine the dui^tloh; p?sslbly, will be
?or those who aie interested in lt td
attend both. They will bo different
in many reapect while ifj.mllnr in
others..
CITBOLAX
CITROLAX!
CITROLAX!
Best thing fqr constipation, sour
stomach, lazy liver and sluggish bow
els. Stops a sick headache almost at
once. Gives a niosi thorough and sat
isfactory flushing-no pain, no nau
sea. Keeps your system cleansed,
sweet and wholesome.-H. H. Weih
echt, Salt Lake City, Utah, writes: "I
[ind Citrolax the best laxitlve I ever
used. Does not gripe-no unpleasant
after-effects." Evans' Pharmacy.
fr *
fr YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. fr
fr fr
6?fr *? fr fr fr *? fr fr fr fr fr* fr fr* fr fr fr fr
National League.
At Philadelphia 4; New York 5.
At.Philadelphia 0; New York 0. Sec
ond game ten Innings.
, At Brooklyn 4; Boston 3.
At Brooklyn 0; Boston 0. Second
Same sixteen innings, darkness.
At Pittsburgh 4; Chciago 7.
NO others scheduled.
America League.
At New York 13; Philadelphia 5.
At. New York 5; Philadelphia 0.
At Boston 9; Washington 4.
At Boston 1; Washii st?n 0.
At 8t. Louls-Chlcago. rain.
At Clevclaud-Detroit, rain.
Federal Reggae. x
At Baltimore 3; Newark 5.
At Brooklyn 2; Buffalo 3.
No others scheduled.
South Atlantic League.
At Augusta 2; Savannah 1.
At Columbia 9; Charleston 2.
At Jacksonville-Columbus, rain.
At Mac?n 3; Albany 2.
- Southern League.
At Birmingham 1; Memphis 2.
At Birmingham 1 ; Mempbs 3. Both
rames ?even Innings by agreement.
Af New Orleans 1; Nashville 0.
At Atlanta 6; Chattanooga 1.
At Mobile 6; Little Rock 5.
Traveling MBU'S Experience.
' in tue summer of 1888 I had a very
severe attack of cholera morbus. Two
physicians worked over me from four
?. rn. to 6 p. m. without giving me any
relief and then told me they did not
expect me to live; that I bad best tel
egraph for my family. Instead of do
ing BO, I gave the hotel porter fifty
cents and told him to buy me a bottle
of Chamberlain's Colls, Cholera and
Diarrhoea Remedy, and take no substi
tute. I took a double dose according
to directions and went to sleep after
the second dose. At Ave o'clock the
next morning I waa called by my order
and took a train for my rnaxt stopping
point, a well man. hat feeling rather
shaky from the severity of the attack,"
Writes H. W. Ireladd, Louisville. Ky.
Obtainable everywhere.
MS KR SAXONI A SOT BLOWS l l*
(CONTINUED PROM PA OH ONE
morning. WIIOIOBS warnings were at
once sent broadcast over the Atlantic
from the eastern seaboard advising
tho Saxonia und Philadelphia to uteer
toward each other.
The Philadelphia's captain replied:
"All's well?" The Saxlooia lian not
yet ..coiled. It IH believed tho Saxonia
ls beyond tho zone of wireless com
munication.
At both tho Cunard and American
linc offices it was stated today that
lt would be virtually impossible for
anyone to puss thc lines of guards at
toe piers and place explosives aboard
thc vessels. The Saxonia carried 82-1
{.assengers und the Philadelphia till.
In a letter Holt said he was not
sure on which liner lie placed tho
dynamite.
The warning of the destruction o?
the liuer. uncovered after his death,
was a fitting climax to the dramatic
events of Holt's life for the last few
days. He confessed in placing the
bomb in Hie Washington capitol on
Friday and WBH caught while trying
to assassinate Mr. Morgan on Satur
day.
. lils sensational suicide last night
and his positive identification (oday
as Krich Mucntor. thc alleged wife
murderer, formed a remarkable
series of developments.
ASBERSOS COUNTY DOCTORS
Licensed to Practice by State Board
of Exnmlrierx.
At a meeting of tho state board of
medical examiners held in Columbia
on Tuesday, *.lio loHowing were
among those who successfully pass
ed the examinations for thc practice
of medicine and surgery: L. W.
Koggs, Pendleton; G. C. Horton, Pen
dleton; M. T. Moore, Hones Path;
J. C. Pcpr r, Easley; W. I. Press
ley, Due Wv-st; L. C. Sunders, An
derson: A. C. Watson. Mt. Carmel.
Flies and Mosquitos
Carry Disease
They are dangerous to Ule
HILL THEM WITH
SHEPARD'S FLY
EXTER?tONATOk
Just spray In tb? room-?nra death to ?tl
Insects. Harmless lo People. Ask your
ii ?asst.
SHEPARD'S CHEMICAL CO.?
WILMINGTON, N. C.
JULI
lt
4
Oneida Corni
FOR READERS OF
EVERY STATE.
Every Spoon 1
The Oneida <
If you have not aire;
from The intelligencer.
Office.
Souvenir Spoon Cou
pon
T. la coupon. When pre
sented witb 15c (or by mail
20c), good for one State Sou
venir Spoon. If ordering by
mall, address Spoon Depart
ment, The Intelligencer, An
derson, 8. C. ,
For
Keep~Koo1 Krash
Palm Beach. Mohair and
Linen Suits
$4 to $10
"Yes, we sell Superior Union Suits"
T. L. CELY CO.
ENAMELDWARE
AT COST
bVWHMKfHfH '
We have decided to close out our entire stock of
Enameled Ware at cost. Our stock comprises no
'Seconds," all goods being strictly first-quality.
This is an opportunity for you to get whatever
?rou may want in line of Enameled Ware at a very
nuch lower price than you have ever paid for ward
J{ the same quality.
Make your purchase now while you can get just
what you want. *
SULLIVAN HARDWARE CO.
{
Don't start on that vacation
trip without first putting on
tires.
W A' TODD AUTO SHOP
7 W T ^Wf Opposite The Palmetto
nunity Ltd. State Souvenir
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idy started a set, begin today. Clip a coupon
You can redeem it at The Intelligencer
No Spoon sold at Arty Price With
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SOUTH CAROLINA and NORTH CAROLINA