The Pageland journal. [volume] (Pageland, S.C.) 1911-1978, February 16, 1916, Image 4
Tax P
Tl,? ?.:ii
1 lie 1UA UUV&9 Will UC upcu
15th October until 31st day of Mj
Ta* levy for State
Ordinary County
Constitutional school
County Roads
Total levy
Special
Cheraw Graded School
Marburg:
Orange Hill
Pat's Branch
Pee Dee
Stafford
Cheraw (Outside)
Bethel
Center Point
Chesterfield
Parker
Pine Grove
Shiloh
Snow Hill
Ruby
Vaughan
Womble Hill
White Oak
Black Creek
Cross Roads
Uenter
Mt. Croghan
New Hope
Wexford
Winzo
Zion
Mt. Croghan (Outside)
Buffalo
Dudley
Five Forks
Mangum
Pageland
Plains
Center Grove
Friendship
Jefferson
Long Branch
Jefferson (Outside)
Green Hill
Middendorf
McBee
Sandy Run
Union
Aligator (Outside)
Bay Springs
pear^o^eeK^ ^ .
v>ur x unu
Lewis
Ousley
Palmetto
Wallace
Steer Pen
For Back Indebtedness and I
School: Chesterfield School Dis
mills, and Ruhv 5 miilc
Cheravv Township, specia
tor, 7 mills for Road Bonds.
All unpaid taxes will be subje<
January, two per cent lor Fcbuai
After March 31st executions will
Sept. 15.1915.
Auditor:
The Auditors' office will be i
sonal property from January 1st .
All male citizens between th
deemed Taxable polls, except th<
causes are incapable of earning a
The Law requires 50 per cen
ertv subject to taxes and not retui
the 20th of February 1916
I will be in the Auditor's otfi
and 31: Feb., 5, 7, 10, 11, 12, 14, i
T. W. EDDINS,
1 Frost Proof C;
Four varieties. Early Jersej
Wakefield, Succeesioi
I now have ready for shipm
that will give vou absolute sa
WWWCOUNT GU
Do not forget that my
Grow PerU
%/V Price F. O. B. CI
One thousand to three the
Four thousand to six thoi
Ksond to nine tl
ind or more, p<
tities at special
on.
DGUGLi
CHESTER*
Notice.
for the collection of taxes from
irch 1916.
7 mills
7 1-2 mills
3 mills
1-2 mills
18 mills
Local Bonds
3 mills 4 mills
3
8
4
3
4 %t 2 1-2
2
4
4
4 3
4
3
3 5
4
5 4 1-2
3 " 2
4
4
5
6
4
3 * 4
7
4 5
2
2
2
2
3
2
3
6 M 5
4
5
3
5 " 4
4
2
4
3 5
8 " . 412
4 "
2 "
i?^
V 3 > . 4 N j
2 "
3
7
3
3
5
^Aiuuuuig scnooi i erms, Special
ilrict, 2 1-2 mills; Mt. Croghan, 5
1 levy of 2 mills for Roads; Aliga
:t to a penaltv of one per cent for
y and seven per cent for March,
be written for all unpaid taxes.
W. A. DOUGL ASS
County Treasurer.
5 Notice.
opened for the assessment of Per
1916 to February 20th 1916.
e ages of 21 and 60 years are
jse who are maimed or for other
support.
t penalty added to taxes on proprned
for assessment on or before
ce Jan., 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 15, 29,
15, 16, 17, 18, 19, and 20,
County Auditor
ahhanp Plants 1
? ?|
r Wakefield, Early Charleston 1
i, and Early Summer
ient very find Cabbage Plants ;
tisfaction. j
ARANTEEDWWW
plants are the kind that
;ct Cabbage
tiesterfleld, S. C. *W
>usand, per thousand $1.25
jsand, per thousand 1.00
tiousand per thousand .90
?r thousand .85
prices. I will meet any repu\S,
Box 45.
IF.LD, S. C.
\
i'ja U ll ? ...
The Son Kish
This story has been told elsewhere,
but the people ot Delaware,
Ohio, insist that it started
in their college town. An old
farmer, tall and with gray hair,
was walking toward the country
at the edge of town when he
was met by three students.
"How do you do, Father Abraham,"
said the first.
"How do you do, Father Isaac,"
said the second.
"How do you do, Father Ja
cob," said the third, and all three
bowed deeply.
The patriarch deliberately
stopped and eyed them.
"I am neither Abrahom, Isaac,
nor Jacob," he replied, "but Saul,
the son of Kish, who went out
to seek his father's asses; and behold,
they are found."
The head of the family, with
his beloved briar- root pipe and
his favorite magazine, had settled
back in the rocker for a
quiet, comfortable evening.
On the other side of an intervening
table was the miniature
counterpart of himself, the
wrinkling of whose eight yearold
forehead indicated that he
was mentally, wrestling with
some perplexing problem.
After a while he looked toward
his comfort-living parent, and,
with a hopeless infection asked:
"Pa."
"Yes, my son."
"Can the Lord make everything?"
"Yes, my boy."
"Everything?"
"There is nothing, my son,
that he cannot do."
"Papa, could he make a clock
that would strike less than one?"
"Now, Johnny, you go tight
upstairs to your ma, and
stop down here^^ aijnoy
vvnen
"My husband," remark^** a
Philadelohi^palron to '.l ,7onp
x)/- a confirmed
smoker with a tobacco!"1 keart
when I married him a year tab,!
but toda> he never touchesvthe
weed." ;
"Fine," complimented' Oiu of
the group. "To break otl ft' life
time habit requires astrOngAvill."
"And that's just what I (have
got," declared the wife.
"I can't find any old clo|lies to
nut fkn 11 w? ? '''
r..> uii inv .1V.IUCL1UVV, I complained
the farmer. "Wht don't
you use some of the fanc^ duds
that Son brought home from
college?" sug<zested his wi e.
"I'm trying to scare the crows
I'm not trying to make 'em
laugh."
An Irishman was walking
through a pasture when a buh
tossed him over the . fence.
Picking himself up quietly lite'
I Colds, 1
j Pneui
?
j rh.s is the tim
? take every precaution
? which attack human
j* We have the guarant
t and all the winter-tim
? you need something
> ividiiyuiti
Treats Yoi
*
tt
1
i
! ?a-fi
this io
\
! jZoYslc
I t
COTTiJpQ.
i
I
i
I
1
|
I
i.J .p?
- ' =
son of Erin fac^d the animal and
said with suppressed wrath:
"If it wasn't fer yez bowin' an'
scrnoin' an' vnr nnolrnriyin* T'H n*
thought yez did that on purpose."
-r
WOOD'S
Prosperity Seeds.
With bright prospects a head
for good prices on Vegetable
and all Farm products,
our farmers should feel encouraged
to plant improved
varieties of seeds, so as to increase
their crops.
WOOD'S VEGETABLE SEEDS,
long known for their superior
quality and productiveness,
have greatly increased
in demand and popularity
WOOD'S GRASS, CLOVER and
FARM SEEDS are of tested germination
and superior qualities.
Write for prices.
WOOD'S DESCRIPTIVE CATALOG
gives valuable information about
all Seeds for the Farm and Garden.
Mailed free on request.
T.W.WOOD <j SONS.
SEEDSMEN, - Richmond, Va.
roup and ?
noma. $
*
i when you need to ?
against the diseases ?
beings at this sason. *
eed remedies lor each ?
e ailments, and when J
to take remember the ^
Drug to. I
11 Squarely. \
wvw%www*
*
dnoa. as
~Royi
vtilizev dealt
you, askyoui
?r's is die sian
.VISOTL.
IS.
trade mark
S.Rovjster Gixarto
Norfolk,, A/a..
Sold. cvfer/wker?
"Bobby, do you know you've
deliberately broken the eighth
commandment by stealing
Jame's candy?"
"Well, I thought I might as
I well break the eighth command
ment and have the candy as to
break the tenth and only 'covet'
it."
''Dorothy," asked her aunt
one dav, "do you like to go to
school?"
"Yes, ma'am," replied dutiful
Dorothy. "I like going and 1
like coming back. It is staying
at the place betweentimes that
always sticks me."
M. M. JOHNSON
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Will be in i'agcland Wednesday
Thursday and Friday of each week
i
KING C
Is on his throne
is circulating
The time to j
the time to s
money is in c
use to get it un
it. No better
than to ilpnncil
* V UV|/VU1<
the bank*
The experiei
proved the a
bank account,
condition of th<
i bank account <
to hold their cc
own condition
Begin now. 1
posits to the Bai
as hundreds <
done already.
THE BANK 0
-1
siers I
?r says I
-sol^why I
davd of I I
. R&U/O bsi
'1
Co.
Town Tax NoticeNotice
is hereby given that the
taxes tor the Town of Pageland
J
for the year 1915 are now due J
andTsyabter^niCttrarart*taxes m
not paid by January 1, 1916 are
subject to a penalty. H
The tax books are open at the H
Pageland Hardware Co. H
L. J. Watford, Clerk
Monuments 1
It will pay you to see me 1
before you buy a Monument or 1
Tombstone of any kind, if you I
want to save money. I
G. R. KNIGHT I
||H
OTTON I
: again. Money I
freely. 1
jet money and 1
save fs when I
Iretilaffon, No
[less you save
way fo save '
i reguiariy in
ice of last fall
dvantage of a
Compare the
jsc who had a
ind were able
tton with your
Bring your de~
nk of Pagelanc 1
if nthorc
-* * vtaivi u *m?j? w \
F PAGELAND