University of South Carolina Libraries
Treasurer's Notice! . I OFFICE WILL BE OPEN FROM FRIDAY, OCT. 15TH UNTIL MARC^i 15, ,1921. Taxes Paid From Friday, October 15, Until Friday, December 31?t Without Penalty. The rate of State, County, School and Special Tax including one dollar Poll Tax, two dollars commutation tax. In accordance with an act to raise supplies for the fiscal year commenc ing January 1st, 1920, notice is here by given that the ?ffice of the County Treasurer for Abbeville County will be open for the collection of taxes for said fiscal year from Friday, Oct. 15, until Friday, Dec. 31st without pen alty. There will be added?a penalty of one per cent, on all taxes not paid on January 1st, 1921. A penalty of two per cent, on all taxes not paid on Feb. 1st, 1921. A penalty of seven per cent, on all taxes not paid on March 1st, 1921. ~ ' ?* tavn+inn are as Kates per ceub. vi ? ??...'? follows: State Tax 12 mills. County Tax ' 8 mills. Good Roads Tax 3 mills. Constitutional school tax __ 3 mills. TOTAL 26 Mills. tax will be collected for school pur poses as follows: Abbeville City Shops Bonds 1 % mills 1 Corner 2 mills' 3. Lowndesville 16 mills 4 Rocky River 2 mills 9 Calhoun Falls 6 mills 10 Santuc ^ 4 mills 18 Bethia 8 mills 20 Sharon 8 mills 21 Bethel 3 mills 22 Abbeville 14 mills 23 Warren ton 8 mills 24 Reeds 8 mills 25 Brownlee 4 mills 26 Campbell 15 mills 24 Antreville ? 12 mills 29 Sonny Slope 8 mills Qn rioid Serines 4 mills 31 Long Cane ? 2 mills 32 Smithville 2 mills 34 Central ? 8 mills 35 Hagan 8 mills 36 Parks Creek ? 3 mills 87 Keowee 14 mills 38 Due West 12 mills 39 Donalds 17 mills 40 Pineville 6 mills 41 iVermilion 4 mills 42 Fonville 3 mills 43 Eureka 3 mills , 44 Broadmouth 8 mills * 45 Rock Springs 2 mills 46 Ray 4 mills 47 Winona 8 mills \ 50 Cana 4 mills 54 Lebanon _r_ 4 mills A poll tax of one dollar per capita on all male citizens between the ages of 21 and 60 years, except such as i,., lr.tit Tinii hp collected. " are exempt uj ???..... ? A commutation road tax of two dol lars will be collected the same time as other^taxes from all male citizens between the ages of 18 and 50 years, except such as are exempt by law. Unless said tax is paid by the 1st of March, 1921, eight days work upon the public highways will be required under an overseer, if so much be nec essary. Ta-xes are payat in gold and sil ver, United States currency, National Bank notes and coupons of State bonds which become payable during > the year 1920. At the sanfte time as other taxes are collected a license of one dollar and twenty-five cents will be collected on all dogs. A dog tag will be furnished by the Treasurer to each owner pay ing license. Parties desiring information \>y mail in regard to their taxes will please write before Dec. 16th, stat ing the location pf their property and include postage for reply. AN ACT To Provide an Annual Dog Tax For The State of South Carolina and a Penalty for Not Paying Said Tax. Section 1. BE IT ENACTED by the General Assembly of the State of South ^Carolina, That from and after the passage of this Act there shall be levied on all dogs, six months old or older, in the State of South Carolina an annual tax of one dollar and twen ty-five ($1.25) cents per head. Section 2. That upon the payment of said annual tax cf one dollar arid twenty-five ($1.25) cents by the own p* r>* any dogr in the State, the Coun ty Treasurer shall issue to the said owner a receipt therefor and a met al tax marked "Dog Tax" and the year for which it is issuedj Each County Treasurer shall keep a numer cal record of every dog taxed and in addition thereto furnish to the owner of each dog such number stamped on the metal tag. Which tax shall be lev * ? ? - i-i.- n a. m ied and paid to me boumy x1caoui - er, as other taxes are paid: Provide^ further, That this tax shall be exclu sive of all other license taxes, either municipal or otherwise. Provided, That all such taxes collected here un der shall be credited to the schools of the School District from which it is collected, to be used in support of the . schools of the District: Provided, fur ther, That said tax shall become due and payable at the same time State and County taxes become due and payable. Section 3. That every owner of a dog shall be required to collar and place the aforesaid dog tag upon the said collar. Except when such dog ^ shall be used for the purpose of hunt ing. when such dog shall be upon a chase or hunt. Section 4. Any person ownins. harboring or! maintaining a dog, failing or refusing to return and pay the tax aforesaid, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and, upo . conviction thereof, shall be fined no> less than five ($5.00) dollars nu more than twenty ($20.00) dolla one-half of which shall go to the per son reporting said failure to pay sa:-' tax, and one-half to the public sch?> H fund in which surh derelict occurs J. E. JONES, County Treasurer. Oct. 27, 1920. i JViTED TO JOIN DOLLAR A WEEK SAVINGS CLUB !:cc! To Become Member ' O -" rirrtion By Jnvest r * "c Prosperity? - '-Work Ar.d Save." .{:y iu this state, and In : il:ut matter, is invited ': ' 71:0 Dollar a Week Club." of this organization is r:n'! Pave." and its purpose is .0 i i:t i?1 lo dollars to work where they an accomuiish a real good. It is th6 liojic of the United States Treasury Department, which is behind the Movement for the organization of the Ration-wide campaign, that it soon will have hundreds of thousands of mem bers. i_ a. _m it* 11 13 lue luea UL LUC licaauij j partment that these clubs can be or ganized in mills, faotories and other industrial plants; in colleges, normal schools and high schools and in com munity centers generally. The gov ernment, during 1921, will issue a spe cial $1 Treasury Savings Stamp. It is the pla^ that all members of "The Dollar a -Week Club" pledge them selves to buy at least one of those new fl stamps each week. White the $1 stamp, like ttfe 25-cent Thrift Stamp, does not bear interest, the government offers a |26 full inter est-bearing Treasury Savings Certifi cate for twenty $1 stamps, plus a small additional amount of cash. This of fer, it i> hoped, will add great stimulus to the government savings movement and will be the means of inducing many people to acquire the valuable habits of thrift and saving. War Savings Stamps (worth $5 when they mature), will be issued through out the year, as also will the $100 and $1,000 Treasury Savings Certificates. During January of the new year the $5 stamp may be had for $4.12. It will increase Is value 1 cent each month. The January price of the new $25 Treasury Savings Certificate will be $20.60, its value increasing 5 centa a month. The $100 Treasury Savings Certificate may be bought during Jan uary for $82.40. Its monthly Increase in value is 20 cents. All these govern* ment savings securities may be had from postofflces or through banks. CENTIMES and CENTS France, say returned travelers, is barren soil for Bolshevism. Its people are concerning themselves with re habilitating the nation. American economists ascribe the incredible .progress of the French toward restora I tion to the universality of property | ownership, the determination to work, to live on something less than they produce and devotion of the surplus to making France its glorious self of pre-war days. Whatever America may have, H should possess these French virtues more abundantly. The nation should perpetuate itself. Since poverty, growing out of waste, industrial, in dividual and financial inefficiency, creates dissatisfaction, the soil in which anarchy and communism thrive like the noisome weeds they are, it is a wise, patriotic and foreslghted statesmanship that plans to prevent their recurrence in the next genera tion. Su,ch is the basis of the govern ment's "EARN, SAVE AND INVEST* eannaien. It seeks to make each1,boy and girl in school this year a convert to the doctrine that all must work, live within their income and invest their savings to aid the nation and themselves. French millions who saved a few centimes a day, rather than French millionaires, are responsible for France's strength in peace as in war They have, for generations, invested in government securities, and when American millions have that habit, t!:o future of the United States will be as> sured more incontestably than through any other means. And the United States has made easy the formation of such habits, as it offers securities of its own in denominations within the reach of all. "While the amount of money that you SAVE is important in itself, the big gest thing after all is that you have learned how to save. Money SAVED nach month will help you buy a home, if you start SAVING! now you will be on the road to inde pendence In a short time. How can you possibly be content nnlCkCQ vnnr fiiifiiM lo baamma r?.. *. J vui iwxuit 10 OCVUIC. Dy put" j ting your money regularly In War Sav? ings Stamps you can banish worry. Work for your money; then make your money work for you. Your SAV i TYP.S wisely invested will yield good j returns. Systematic SAVING builds fortunes, i [f .< on would be successful SAVE rcg , ! ? irly and sp'end wisely. Be sure to r ?. your money's worth. Access comes to those who deserve i all who plan 'heir work and ex? ; ''ir??.s jsnd S ' " money regularly. ' - our town depends j it the individual*,,1 NO SEPARATE PEACE , WITH BERLIN NOW Republican Leaders Propose To Ratify Treaty Excluding League Covenant And Then Negotiate a Substitute Washintgon, Jan. 13?The United States will, not make a separate; peace with Germany unless Presi-! dent Harding and the Republican! leaders in the Senate can find noj other way to untangle our very bad ly tangled foreign relations. That every effort will be made toj find another way out of a very dif ficult situation, and that another way will be found is the best judg ment of Republican statesmen highest in the councils of the party. Tfce above statements are made without qualification or reservation as the result of information obtain ed from many sources. Whatever may have been the poli cy of the Republican leaders before the election in respect -of this vital matter, there is no question as $o what it is now and probably will continue to be. ' The government and people of Germany, and those German-Ameri cans who worked for and applauded the great Republican victory be cause they beJieved that it meant the tremendous advantage to Ger many which would result from a separate peace, are in for a bitter disappointment. So are cerain senators, chief among them Senator Knox, the lat ter being the author of a Senate a r?f.ofn TtOQI reavuuuiuu ucwiaiuig a ovhw v& j with Germany. It is extremely doubtful whether the Knox resolution will ever be re vived. It certainly, will not be unless Knox and the other so-called irre concilable senators decided to de clare war against President Harding and the overwhelming majority of senators of their own party. Of course nearly every Democrat in the Senate would fight the propo sition of a separate peace to the last trench. Whether the final decision not 4o include the making of a separate peace with Germany as part of the plan for the new relationship be- { tween America and the rest of the world was initiated by President elect Harding or by the Senate lead ers is not clear and Is relatively un important. The important thing is " ^ n -1 - 1 1 1 mat me decision nas oee^i nmue. It is one of the bag results of the many conferences which have been held at Marion and at Washington during the past two months, in which the "best brains" of both par ties, including men in ?nd out of of fice, have participated. One of the objects of those con ferences has been to interpret what' was in the minds of the voters of the country when they swept tne Republicans into office by such an overwhelming plurality. The Republican leaders, including the president-elect, knew perfectly well that their victory did not mean that every item of their platform and program was approved by the millions of voters who voted the Re publican ticket. They realized that their victory was in spite pf certain rnvirwlac onH mlan? pnunoiflteH in px u.uyivo their platform and on the stump. STEEDLY HOSPITAL SOLD TO Y. W. C. A. Spartanburg, Jan. 13.?The Young Women's Christian associa tion of . Spartanburg has purchased the Steedly hospital on East Main street in this city, paying $130,000 for the property, which will be used as the home and headquarters of that association after March 1 next. The sale of the hospital announced this evening by Dr. B. B. Steedily, owner of the property means that Dr. Steedily will become associated with the surgeons or the Spartan burg County hospital, just being completed here at a cost of $350, uuu. The Steedly hospital, built about j six years ago at a cost of $75,000 j on an extensive lot on East Main | street, has been operated as a pri-J vate institution since it? establish-' ment. For some time the Spartanburg Y J W. C. A. has contemplated +hs erec*. tion of an adequate building in the city, hut with the offorini.' of the! Stee^lv hospital that plnr> was aban i '-irl the ^roi't'Hy " H to be' '".dapted for thp use of ' "tion in manv ways was . BEGINS 32ND YEAR ON S. C. NEWSPAPER E. D. Grist Winds Out 31 Years On One Paper?Works Sixteen Hours a Day York, S. C., Jan. 1$.?Mr. W. D. Grist entered upon the 32nd anni versary of his service as editor of The Yorkville Enquirer on January 1, a record of editorial service on the same paper that surpasses the length of service of any other South Carolina newspaper man. The veteran editor has witnessed many changes, political, social and otherwise during that thirty-orfe years of service; but remains unper turbed despite them all. He still put in sixteen nours a aay at ms aesK as he has been wont to do during all that time. The record of The Enquirer and that of Editor Grist who together with his brother, Albert H. Grist, are owners of the publication, it ra ther unique. They are the third gen eration of the same family engaged in the publication of The Enquirer here and their sons and daughters of the fourth i generation are en gaged with them in its publication. The paper was founded in 1855 by the late Capt. Lewis M. Grist and succeeded a paper founded here by his father, the late John E. Grist a quarter century before. Thus it is that the family have been engaged in .the publishing business here for more than a century. The Enquirer, which is regarded as one of the leading semi-weekly publications in the South, was the first country newspaper In the Uni ted States to install a linotype ma chine. That was more than twenty years ago. Since then the equipment has been increased and improved from year to year, until now, the plant is generally regarded as one of the most complete for a country newspaper in the country. Brought up In a printing office, the editor went to Atlanta when lit tle more than a boy and for a time was employed in setting type on newspapers in that city. Later he worked as a proof-reader and con Builder: / Abbeville, tributor under the late Henry W. Grady and for a time he taught 1 shorthand in the Georgia metropo ' lis. The call of the blood was too I strong however, and after a time he Increase the Yiel Corn, cotton, truck, barley, wi crops will pay well if a little a fertilizer for your soil. Planters to the needs of Southern soils. You cannot raise a 100% crop unless j a matter of balanced conditions of the i Potash must be present in the prop* be raised. PLANTERS I DOUBLES 1 became it contains available Photphoi tight proportions. Every bog is stamped with our Giant for jour protection, and better place yi avoid delayed delivery. Ask our sgent in your town for hthm us direct. Planters Fertilize] MANUF/ CHARLESTON, I ALL KINDS OF and SUPPLIES - Supply H. JACKSON, Mg returned here and went to woric tfS The' Enquirer, at that time owned j by his father. He has been at it ever since, and flattering offers ' from time to time to go elsewhere i . have never proved attractive. Id of Farm Crops heat, oats?these, and all other ttention is given to the proper Fertilizers are especially suited ou have a 100 % ?o3. Fertility ia largrly loiL Phosphoric Add, Ammonia, cod :r proportion* if bumper crop* are to FERTILIZER flOHIR YIELD ic Add, Ammonia and Potash in tBa ) ^ Lizard Trade-Mark. Look for it?itV our order for Planter** tifcbt bow and ' I f nation, free advice, or pricey ?r write r& Phosphate Co. ial / ompany