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v NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS }i ? |? For the Purpose of Accomodating ihc Fu'olic in the Matter of Mak-ji ing Their Returns, I Will Visit the.S "" J RoUu, rtrl :T I laces aicmiuiicu Dates Indicated in Schedule. jl ALL RETURNS must be made un-j der oath of personal property re-(J EfSv turned at its market value. ;t Persons not mbaking their returns i* between January 1, 1920, and Feb-! ruary 20, 1920, are liable to a penal- ? ty of 50 per cent. This penalty will 2 be enforced against delinquents: for '< the failure to enforce it heretofore '< has put on neglect of the law. jl The returns of those who conform to the law are placed before the Township and County Boards, while ' those who disregard the law come in j after the meeting of the Boards and ( r return to suit themselves. The en-j || !E@IN MOT WATE1 !' BUNION? IF YOU s [ ?ONT IFEKL M<S?T ? Say* glass of hot water with * phosphate before breakfast washes out poisons. ! 2 If you wake up with a bad taste, bad * . breath and tongue is coated; it your j head is dull or aching; if what you eat sours and forms gas and acid in stomach, or you are bilious, constipated, 1 nervous, sallow and can't get feeling just right, begin inside bathing. Drink before breakfast, a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestono phosphate in it This will flush the poisons and toxins from stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels and cleanse, 1 sweeten and purify the entire allmen- a h tary tract. Do your inside bathing Immediately upon arising in the morning c to wash out of the system all the pre- s y1ou8 day's poisonous waste, gases and | sour bile before putting more food into j0 the stomach. |p To feel like young folks feel; liko 1B you felt before your blood, nerves and | muscles became loaded with body im- a purities, get from your pharmacist a g quarter pound of limestone phosphate which is inexpensive and almost tasteless, except for a sourish twinge which a is not unpleasant. i . Just as soap and hot water act on the skin, cleansing, sweetening and t freshening, bo hot water and limestone phosphate act on the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels. Men and women c who are usually constipated, bilious, a headachy or have any stomach disorder should begin this inside bath ins a before breakfast. They are assured r they will become real crank? on the subject shortly I SA i I ;; ' : Whal I Wal W.r Mr. Abbeville, m I gSv ?? BBBBHBHHI R' iiiilllli i'- (,il! '|'Mjl l|; j!) j! ill1' k ilr "Vii !MW fire 1ft ..... fei: >. , ... :Vvi- . 4 :orcement of this 50 per cent penal,y will correct this evil. Returns will not be taken by mail mless they are sworn to before ;ome proper officer. All improve?? rtwtf 4-vowe^ov nr voq! ocfnfo UCllta yj i. ailtV l/A MilOitl V?X nust be reported to the Auditor. Employers are requested to return, ill their employees after notifying ;hem and getting a statement of ;heir property. All tax returns must be made by school districts. So please look up four ^)lats and find the number of icres in each school district, also imount of personal property. My Appointments Are as Follows: Calhoun Falls, Tuesday, Feb. 3. Lowndesville, Wednesday and ["hursday, Feb. 4 and 5. Donalds, Tuesday and Wedneslay, Feb. 10 and 11. Due West, Thursday and Friday, ^eb. 12 and 13. Dr. Joseph Hicks will represent ne at Calhoun Falls. R. J. Huchinson will represent me it Lowndesville. D. H. Humphries will represent me it Donalds. S. J. Todd will represent me at )ue West. E. A. Patterson will represent me it Antreville. W. W. Wilson will represent me at jevel Land. RICHARD SONDLEY, Auditor, Abbe. County. .-19?&-2?2-9. THE SPRING GARDEN Clemson College, January 28.? Co have an early garden it is almost i necessity to have a hot-bed and a old-frame, in which plants can be tarted out of their natural season if growth and be ready for transbanting to the open garden as soon is danger from frost is over. They ire very easy to construct and every ;ardener should have them. The hot?ed is used for starting the plants ;nd the cold-frame for hardening hem before being transplanted to he open field. In making a hot-bed the soil is exavated to a depth of eighteen inches ind the frame built six feet wide md as Ion? as needed.. The hot-bed nay be built any size, but the stanlard greenhouse or forcing sash is YES WIF1 ' * 1 ana KIDS ires You t< t! V Ask Iter R. Hil Phone 322 Soutl * . * x.,,v . .. ? . three feet by six feet. A good sis .hot-bed for the home garden is si ifeet by six feet, although a six b 'twelve is much better as it allov ! room for plants to be thinned an ! transplanted. The frame, construc led so as to be six inches higher i jthe back than m front (usually i (inches in back) is fitted over t! j trench, which should be placed in sunny place. The slope should 1: to the east or south, so as to adni the sunlight. Fermenting: stable manui'e ia pla led in the bottom of the frame to j depth of twelve inches, packed ugh ;ly, and then watered freely. Th 'manure furnishes the heat, "n tc of the manure is placed six ir.chi | of rich garden soil which has bee ! thoroughly sifted to remove root lumps and trash. A good plan is 1 j place on top of this soil one inch < finely sifted woods-earth, as this j usually free from grass and wee (seeds. After the bed is complet ,the sash are placed on and the frarr allowed to stand for three or foi days before planting the seed. Th allows the bed to become warn The seed may then be planted, wi tered slightly and the sash replace* 1 I SOUTH CAROLINA CROPS. Clemson College, January 28.Crops in South Carolina for 191 increased in value over 1918 croi by nearly 60 million dollars, accort ing to figures just announced by tVi United States Department of Agr culture, through the South Carolin field agent, B. B. Hare, at Saludi For 1919 the total value of the croi is estimated at $403,517,000, ? compared with $344,549,000 in 191 The average value per acre in 191 has been $60.42, as compared wit $51.59, for the year of 1918. mi ' a. j 'ii l i ne crops listea in me report ai corn, wheat, oats, rye, potatoes, rici peanuts, tobacco, hay, sorghum, an cotton. The total value of thej crops for 1919 is $403,517,000, i against^a valuation of $344,549,00 in 1918. The details of these est 'mates for 1919 follows: Production Total Vali 1919 1919 Corn. bu_ 37,440,000 $ 73,757,0C Wheat, bu. 1,836,000 4,737,0C Oats, bu._ 11,730,000 12,903,0C Rye, bu._ 170,000 502,0C ' y) 1 ^ E .. 30 /ho? \ ton i Carolina :e Potatoes, x bu. 2,291,000 4,590,000 j >y|S. Potatoes, re bu. 7,560,00 11,189,000; id! Rice, bu. 90,000 270,000 j t- bu. __ 585,000 1,753,000! in; Tobacco, 8 j lbs.. 81,000,000 18,468,000 ie:nay, iame, a I tons,. 358,000 11,008,000 >e|Hay, wild, it I tons __ 11,000 280,000 j Sorghum, c.| gals 680,000 680,000 a j Cotton, t- bale?- 1,4 75.000 263,283,000 is J p Summons?For Relief. ?sj STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, | n ! County of Abbeville. 5,] Court of Common Pleas. ;o S. J. WAKEFIELD, Plaintiff, )f! against is! MRS. S. B. KNOX, and R. C. KNOX, id I Defendants. e, (To the Defendants Above Named: ie YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED tr and required to answer the Com is | plaint in this action of which a copy i. j is herewith served upon you, and to i- serve a copy of your answer to the 3. said Complaint on the subscriber at his office at Abbeville Court House, South Carolina, within twenty days after the service hereof, exclusive of ? the day of such service; and if you 9 :'ail to answer the Complaint within )S the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court ie for the relief demanded in the Complaint. ia Dated 21st day of January, A. D., a- 1920. WM. P. GREENE, Plaintiff's Attorney. lSiTo the Defendants Above Named: O j Take notice that the Complaint in ^ ! the above stated action together with ^ j the Summons, of which the foregoing | is a copy, was filed in the Office of 'e Lhe Clerk of Court of Common Pleas e? for Abbeville County on January 23, 4 1920, where it is now on file. >e January 23rd, 1920. 15 WM. P. GREENE, Plaintiff's Attorney. 1_ 1-23?30?2-6-3t. ie THE ANTI-LYNCHING LAW. 0 The prpvision of Representative '0 Buckingham's bill thai, officers from 0 whose custody prisoners are taken 'Ojand lynched by mobs be indicted and | be suspended from office, pending B I prosecution, has merit. Knowledge [by the sheriff, jailer, constable or j policeman that to surrender his prisoner or allow him to be snatched I away would be equivalent to surren!der, temporarily at least, of his of 'fice, would have an excellent effect. Clearly the burden of explaining should be on the officer who loses hi? i prisoner. A considerable proportion of the llynchings, most of them indeed, are jdone by mobs that capture their victim before he falls into the hands of the law officers. In South Carolina it is not often nowaday? that a prisoner is taken by a mob from a jail. The responsibility of the county in damages to the victim's family, pro-j - - . .. - I vided for in the constitution of 1895,; tends to deter the lynchers into whose hands a suspected criminal! falls before the law officers have apprehended him?or it would do so were it generally enforced. We believe that; the disposition to enforce his law is growing and that the people of South Carolina, if they do not turn aside from the course that they have entered upon, will, before jmany years have passed, put an end to lynching withir the borders of j their state.?The State. .? ;mrs. p. u. miller died at piedmont thursday Mrs. P. U. Miller, widow of the late P. U. Miller, died at her home j two miles north of Piedmont Thursday morning, after illness for several months with paralysis. She was 72 years of age, and was a woman iof sterling Christian character, and oved by all who knew her. She is survived by nine children, ns follows: 0. L. Miller, G. C. Mil Iler, and T. W. Miller, of Greenville; W. T. Miller and T. S. Miller, of !Piedmont; D. W. Miller, of Spartanburg; P. W. Miller, of McCormick; Mrs. J. 0. Hammons, of WoodIville, and Mrs. F. L. Huff, of Piedjmont. She had made her home with Mrs. Huff since the death of her husband.?Greenville Piedmont. i i i; Engraved Cards and Invitations? jl, The Press and Banner Co. J? WHICH? A season's toil wasted food, or a little money invested in I Truck, Cotton or Grain crop more choice now. Progressive Southern farmers long ago realiz hausted soils with Phosphoric Acid, Ammor needs. PLANTERS FE DOUBLES VOI (because it contains available P hosphoric Aci right proportions. Better place your order for Planters right no Ask any agent in your town for informatior us direct. Every bag is stamped with our < for it?It's for your protection. Y Planters Fertilizer & \ ^ MANUFACTUF CHARLESTON. SOUTI I'nnm*niiiiitiNiii?iiiiimmffiiftimiiiitiiiittiiitfiiiMiiirMiiitiNiimKiiiMiiMifittMmtimiiitiiittMiiiiiiiiiiHiitJiiti You No Doubt Asp S Success can be yours. If yc j new year in securing a good bi be ready to hold a good positi( Year rolls around. I Our New Term starts on Jar 5 II us in regard to course and rati .. 3 2 Greenwood Busin 326 1-2 WALLER AVE. if Under Same Management EMANUEL BUSINESS COLL 11 = = >*i<HiininuiiimtiiiiiiiiiiMiiutniiiiituuiiuuiiiUHtiiiiiiMiiuiiiiiuiNiniiMfiiiuimiiNJUiHiiiicitiHUH(tHii?iitr:iiH gHH55B5B5i | Austin-Pert 1 Comp; We are essentially a < I want to emphasize that j fine line of drugs and i jj medicines, etc. | WE PAY SPECIAL J ir> nnrcrmnnrn UUK rrvLov^ivir 1 j Among other items th m be mentioned: Stationery Boc ?j Toilet Articles 1 Toilet Paper We handle a com [ NUNNALLY'S CAlv | Austin-Peri g Lomp on a soil deficient in plant & banters Fertilizer?and your g than doubled? Make your ? ed the necessity of supplying cxtia and Potash, which every crop KTiUZER III) YIELD I d, Ammonia and Potash in the w, and avoid delayed delivery. i, free advice, or prices, or write jiant Lizard Trade Mark. Look ' ? 'i : Phosphate Co. / J ^ . : 1 0 fj :|||| lire to Succeed jj a? i hi ? jj :M >u will spend part of the fj usiness training you can fj )n before another New fj ? y } I 3 {[ luary 5. Will you write jj BS? i! -nj ' Ml 1i it i*; iess College, ij GRHENWOOD, S. C. I I! ; ij .EGE, Asheville, N. C. W '"m in Drug) any If ^ J ?: lrug store ana we p fact. We carry a ?? medicines, patent ?f ATTENTION TO I (ON TRADE. | | tat we carry might jj >ks Cigars Tobaccos jj Cigarettes jg plete line of IDIES?FRESH | rin Drug | any | ; r:^