The Anderson intelligencer. (Anderson, S.C.) 1914-1917, August 04, 1914, Page PAGE EIGHT, Image 8
m
Paint "DEVOE"?Fewer Gallons Wear Longer
RISSE Y LUMBER CO M RAW Y
I
a
Here's Something to Think About!
OUR DEPOSITS
More Than Doubled!
During July
Isn't that enough to warrant you opening an account with us?
Statement of the Condition of the
DIME SAVINGS BANK
As to June the 30tK 1914,
? AND ALSO -
As To July the 31st, 1914,?One Month Later.
"THE HOME OF SAVINGS.
&TES?ENT THE CONDITION OF THE
STATEMENT OF THE CONDITION OF THE
Dim? Savings Bank Dime Savings Bank
? AS TO
" .... JUNE 30th, 1914.
RESOURCES.
Loans and discounts.$33,649.?2
Overdrafta . 292.94
Furniture and fixtures. 676.66
Cash on hund and duo from banks. 2,029.56
Checks and cash Items. 163.67
Exchange for clearing house..;. 1,275.11
Net expense. 302.28
"THE HOME OF SAVINGS."
ONE MONTH LATER, JULY 81st.
RESOURCES.
Loans and discounts.$43,906.27
Overdrafts . 84 22
Furniture and Fixtures. 576.56
Cash on hund and due from banks. 11,219.99
Checks and cosh Items.'.-. ' 406.90
Exchange for clearing house. 5.003.02
Net expense.,.None
LIABILITIES.
pital stock.i.
divided profita.
[SG ?ualviduai doposits.
[?? ..Cashier's checks, i.
^Bllls payable.
$88,188.33
.$13,487.50
.None
. 22,059.75
. i 141.08
2,600.00
$61.195.96
LIABILITIES.
Capital Stock.$13.875.00
Undivided profits. 96.96
individual deposits. 44,630.22
Cashier's checks. 187178
Bills payable. 2,500.00
$38,186.33
$61,195.96
OFFICERS.
J. B. BROWN, Pres. B, SHE lou, Ties Pres.
W. E. WATSON, Cashier.
DIRECTORS.
J. R. Brown, James H. Craig, A. 8. Farmer, E. M.
Due worth, John B. Humbert, J. W. LInley, M. M.
Mattlson, 8. R. Parker.
J
_ 7iL u_ n__v_
vve nave ouggies
coming in almost every day Iha
latest shipment being a car of
?COLUMBU
Coma in and let as show them.
They are 1014 M*wUk.
We bave a nice lane of Pony
buggies.
1
J. S. FOWLER
LEGAL
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
All persons saving any clain
against the estate of Wylle J. Marel
deceased, arc hereby notified to pr
sent them properly proven to the ui
derslgned wlthir. tho time prescrlbi
by law, and those Indebted to mal
settlement.
, W. O. MARETT, Admr.
NOTICE OF ELECTION
Thero will be an election in Mart
?isti ici, No. 16, on Saturday, Augu
8th, for the purpose of voting on
special I mills tax. TV.;:- open 1
m , and eloja at * p. m.
J. B. FELTON,
Clerk of county board ot education.
Shtloh dlsrict No. 49 on August 10t
DIVIDEND REFERRED
renditions of the H. B, ClaOIa Ces
pany Responsible.
m
m
ON L?ST
FINEJ-?UNDRY
Says That Building Was
troyed at Early Hoar Yes- .
terday by Fire
? ? \nS Sa?u~d?^s Daily ; .
lit was impossible last night to get
t ract details of tfce urevbut a r*
rt cached reached the city late in
e, atternoon to the effect that the
' hd^^fliWffiiQgs jCl?nsoh college
ooVolCte'.jf dfe?t?oyod by ?re at
ly hour yesterday rooming. Re
, Jpfred this city {hat deieorl
??. electric wires were responsible
Vttfa fire b?t the.details could not
' med.
erstand that the loss Is ful
urance.
(By Associated Press)
New York* July 31.?Directors <
the United Dry Goods Company todi
I notified holders of the preferred stoc
that they deemed it expedient to ta'
'any action this time in regard to d
curing a dividend. The said that th
was because of the present condltioi
of the H. B. Claflln Company, U
Block of which, forma part of the s
curltles owned by the Associated Me
imhuiiiiAr P*aalMtatf? Is YtavM of chants company, which In iura
Amonnnadoi I * in m ai oyt0fi? fey ^ VniteA Dry Goods Co
turkey may fight
Uta Site-tien*
(By Associated, Press)
cerh. The announcement also atat<
that the. net earning ot the sobatdai
companies,, were however, more .thi
i_a 'sufficient to meet the dividend r
nwnDBwii, August ?. .-" ouirementa
Rustem Bey, the Turkish ambassador, qu'reroenis
who la on his vacation, said tonight tie1 virv it wi st point
believed Turkey would soon IxKouac- AT rv"1
Involved in war with. Servia.
ja(!k80n's AIDE DEAD
Aged Veteran
Aas were
CaU.
Last
West roino, N. Y., Aug. 1.?Fire d
Utroyed a section of the stables at tl
I Military Academy tonight. enUUing.
Roll loss of $5Q.OO0. V
One hunder and eighteen artille
WarrCnton. . Va.,'. July M.?-Captain horses which were taken from tl
Will lam i FlUhugh .Randolph; Stone burnic ? ' building stampeded.,. Sod
wall Jackson's aide, who waa with the jran[.il?aw..the railroad tracks, whe
noted Confederate leader when ho re-'they held up tn.lns. The horses t
cetved hla death wound, died here to
day, 83 years old.
night were running wild
oountry.
across tl
SEALED SENTENCE IS
FOUWD IN MIX CASE
TO FACE TRIAL FOR HIS
LIFE
A FIENDISH CRIME
Man Charged With Almost Unbe
lievable Act Now In Greenville
Once Convicted Here
(From Suturday's Dally)
Jefferson D. Nix, who Is shortly to
he given a trial In (ireouylllc county
on a charge of having committed an
almost unbelievable' crime und who
' .-.cenis to admit part or t!ie charge, was
'once convicted In the courts of Ander
son county but fled the co.inly und
, state before sentence could he passed.
j.'.U the office of the Anderson county
j clerk of court a sealed sentence now
awaits him for having committed as
Jjjsnult and battery ot a high and aggra-j
j The old charge came to Ugh:. vben|
I Greenville county ' authorities inter- j
I.viewed F. F.. Nunnally, once a prosper,
our. farmer of this section, but now an
Inmate of the Greenville county home.
Nunnully says that Nix was responsi
ble for his downfall, caused him to
, lose bis wife and all his property and
upon one occasion, in company with
two other men, came to Nuonally's
house and tried to kill htm. This is
the .case in which Nix was convicted
here.and the musty old court records
in the Anderson office, for th? court of
general sessions .p^,'.. October, 1892,
show, that every Word Nunnully now
tells about the case ,1s true. Toe re
cords show that Nix and Bub Brooks
, were arrested in this county and giv
en trial on a charge,of having assault
ed Nunnslly and beat him. up and evi
dence of other witnesses showed that
i the charge was a true one. However,
1 when the Jury '.retUM?ed a .verdict of
guilty both the defendants ' hud tied
the country and they had never been
heard of from that duyiuntll Nix was
' arreated in Greenville on the charge
for which he may pay his life.
I A Pitlfol ACcouutl
I The following story, taken from the
Greenville News of, "yesterday, tolls
what Nunnally knows of Nix.
"Once a prosperous ' farmer, owner
of r line home- and a,LbiK farm and the
bead of a happy family, but now an
inmate of the Greenville county, poor
house, W. F. Nunnally, who says he
will be 80 years old. Saturday of. this
week, tells a pitiful otory of his fin
ancial ruin and the ".estrangement of
his family, all of which he says J. D.
Nix, the man arrested last Sunday for
.Incest and murder is responsible.
I ".Seated upon a broken down chair
on the lawn facing 'the poor house,
pausing now and then' to gaze wistful
ly acror.s the hills, the . aged man,
broken In health and ? piriis, laid bare
his past to Sheriff Rector and a news
paper reporter. Th? sheriff had gone
Ito the poor house to secure informa
tion from Nunnally regarding the past
"of Nix. According to. Kunnallyj a
*t sealed sentence now awaits Nix In An
eJ . derson county, where he was trf.d and
convicted in his absence. Nix. It is
ig ' said, fled from this . scetioa of the
(e country to Alabama, later going to
Texas and finally to Oklahoma, where
he lived for twenty years, by more. -,
? Twenty Years Ago*
} "'It was about 23 years ago when
trouble first arose between Nix and
In ' me,' the old man said. -'We lived In
stf the same neighborhood about seven
a mHes from Orcor ville, and were av
a. that time living but a few hundred
yards apart. Nix began to pay atten
tion to my wife, which I naturally re
sented. Well?yi m understand?tho
upshot If It was that'fay wife t?hd T
became estranged, resulting finally In
her leaving mo and marrying another
man. She took pn.etl call y everything
1 il ad except the 1 md Itself, and causr
?d mO?t nf mv nhl!Hr?n tn.riim aealust
me.? V '
"The old nan'j vblce wavered as he
reached this point in bis story., Tears
. welled into hip eyes. . v - '
iy t "'Along in tho fall, about 1892, I
ik think It wa?, I had gone to. Cely's gin
te to see after the ginning of some, cotton
- and there met J. D. Ni*.:.He said he
v/?b coming to seo me *, ^bat.1. night,
I wanted to do a little, trading with me,
,v he said. I told him to ?orae ahead. It
?. was late when he got. th?Te and ,he
Jl brought another nnJ^wfttT ntm7 H?
lg examined my pistol which was lying
n:< on the mantel nearby, and/laid H
>d ??wn after askmgin^e-.w?iat i- would
fy take for it. Ho then picked/up^h*
m shot gun in the corner and looked It
e- over carefully, sotting behind me and
and near tho light. BeTbro I knew
what he was about he had raised' hie
1 bodily from ray ?^feM^iK
tfeet from unoor me ana caned for b's
! friend to help him. About this time a
e- third man. whose name I havo never
io learned, dashed through the door from
a tho outside and the thr$4 carried ni?
intp the. yard. TofiM'?n?y tied me
ry with a rope and proceeded to boat me,
io They used the huit end jf- a cowhide
ae whip, and left me jrpou tho ground
re almost dead.'
o-v ' "Again the old man?a'voice r qu?y?y
ae cd. and he looked earnestly Into the
- ifaces of his honrera.' Almost ? min
'.?' ' ;\V- -r- . .
18
Of
FEW PRECINCTS TO1
RETURN CLUB ROLLS
HEAVY ENROLLMENT
THE COUNTY
SIX ROLLS ARE OUT
Rules Called For All Registration
Books Be In Hands of County
Chairman by Last Night
(Prom Saturday's Dally)
Tlio rules of the Democratic party,
as adpoted at the convention held in
Columbia In May, call for all the
secretaries of clubs to return the reg
istration books to th? Secretary with
in three days after Mu- books have
closed. The final day rot enrollment
was Tuesday and therefore ull tho
books should have been In the hands
of S. Dean cParman, county chairman,
by midnight last night but seven of
the secretaries out of the 65 in the
county failed to comply with the rule. .
Mr. Pcarman said last night that in J
all probability the secretaries had j|
turned the ro??? uvur to'the executive li
committeomen to bring in Monday, at
which time a meeting of the executive
committee is to be held.
TI.3 following flgtreB taken from
the books already In and from the re
cords of tho vote two years ago, are
very Interesting:
Rolls Vote
1914 1912
Anderson. Ward 1 . 312 295,
Anderson. Ward 2.172 138
Anderson. Ward 3.182 141
Anderson, Ward 4 . 244 226.
Anderson. Ward 5.: 182 143
Anderson, Ward G.314 249
Belton 1 and 2. 445 354
Belton 3. 217 225
Bishop Branch . 51
Brodaway. 80 78
Bowling Green . 126 104
Brogon Mill . 186 175
Brushy Creey.10? f-S
Campbell Storo. Gl
Cedar Grove . 11 104
Concrete. 104
Corner .'. 80 ,73
Cox Mill. 71 124
Chlquola Mill. 71 124
Craytouville . 128 1 96
Flat Rock . 100 102
Five Forks . . 145
Fork No. 1. 122 116
Fork No. 2.J. 94. 67
Frankville (new) . 129
Friendship .v.. .86 95
Gluck Mill. 114 83
Grove School. 38 49
Hall. 119 102
Honea Path.'259 263
Hopewell. 110 99
Hunter Springs .140 . 118
Iva. 292 283
Long Branch .. 69 81
Martin. 242 24*
Mt. Tabor ..-.. 101 81
North Anderson. 84
Orr ' Mill. 276' 258
Pelzer No. 1. 29?
Pelzer Mill, No. 4 669
Piedmont . 851
Piercetown .;-:. 164 187
Riverside - Toxoway ...... 179 .118
Rock Mills. 156 141
Sandy Springs . i
Starr . ., 129
Three and Twenty.134 t 60
Toney Creek .?82 70
Town ville. 100 102
Walker - McElmoyle-. 108 115
West Savannah . 63
White Plains .;.. 127
WllllamBton No. 1 . 269 272
Willlaraston No. 2 152 147
FOR A COMMON CAUSE
Militant Suffragettes WUT Tempoirtr.
Ily Cease HoMllItres.
London; July 31.?The headquarters
of the Women's Social and Political
Union, the militant suffrage organi
sation, todsy sent a proclamation to
sll members of ita branche* la the
United Kingdom ordering the Cessa
tion of all acta of milita .-y?
the continuance of the'*nnernaWaT
crisis.
ate, It seemed, passed b?fol
?umed his story. ; . It
' 'Alter that,' ho continued!ddibCr
. if,; 'my wif? and familyWt me. I
Ad only the farm left,,I
for several years and final
it sacrifice. In the meantime
had gone to another part of tl
try and I heard nothing-tfrom,\
drifted around fro mo no 'pi?co 10 /an
other, finsv jr going to live al the old
soldiers' home in Columbia. They .fed J
be well enough, but the j
home was hot conger
ery .ellflouc belief
some are'In u d els. I
time In thla WorldLand my^
drawing near, but I do look
reward In the hereafter.' ^};r
"At t?mca the speaker would -wan* I
dor In hlsfttory and go ba<*^ ?r?ttff
times wh?n he fought uhder Lee In
Richmond and wh?n h? went on a
campaign through .Georgia and Mtssl?^
slpji. He would cwntf ^tia ?te
story when his hearer* questioned him 1|
regarding certain facta;..^>ia\^S^
The War Is On!
The Great European World Powers in
volved in war?Bailes' is, too, and has been for
years?waging war on high prices-'-but the sit
uation at this time is peculiar.
We arj ju*.. ? m*\ front the Northern niir
kets?the world's busiest trading center, New
York city?and every train is bringing goods
to the Bee Hive.
Great Excitement
Prevails in New? York
and elsewhere and we have bought goods -at
our own prices.
Watch for ?ailes' ultimatum".
G. H. BAILES, Proprietor.
When In Town
Hot and Thirsty and
iry one oi
OWL DRUG GO. ^Mtt^
^< Palmetto Detective Agency
A corps of framed Speclallst? whoa? services may be eeeprod to strict
flegtUauife work. -
M} Address P. ?. B&x 402 >