University of South Carolina Libraries
FORT MILL, S. C. j GENERAL INFORMATION. : CITY GOVERNMENT. A. R. McELHANEY Mavor I S. W. PARKS .Clerk V. D. POTTS .. Chief of Police ,1 DEPARTURE OF TRAINS. No. 31 Southbound ...5:35 a. m. f ?? No. 35 Southbound 7:12 a. m. * i No. 27 Southbound 5:12 p. in. 1 ! No. 36 Northbound... 8:50 a. m. J No. 28 Northbound 6:30 p. m. 1 i No. 32 Northbound . .9:27 p. m. f <, Note?Tra.ns 31 and 32 stop at a j Fort Mill only when Hanged. j MAILS CLOSE. f I For train No. 36 . .. .8:30 a. m. f For train No. 27 4:50 p. m. I i For train No. 28. 6:00 p. rn. J Note -No mail is despatched on [ . trains 31, 32 and 35. Trains 27 1 I and 28 do not handle mail Sunday. J POSTCFFICE HOURS. 5 Daily... 7:30 a. in. to 7:30 p. m. . | Sunday to iu?. wu.oup. ?. ^ l SHORT ITEMS of INTEREST to TIMES READERS. Mr. T. H. Mcrritt and family are this week arranging to move from this township to the Ruff plantation. nej>r Ogden station, over which Mf\ Merritt is to have supervision another year. Mr. W. M. Morrow has been seriously ill at his home in Pineville for several days, but the latest news from his bedside is that his condition is considerably improved. The following Fort Mill men have been drawn to serve during the second week of the approaching term of the York county court of common pleas: J. K. Windle. A. C. Sutton, C. D. Boyd, R. P. Harris. The Fort Mill friends of Mr. William Jones, a former resident of Fort Mill and brother of Mr. Chas. A. Jones of this city, will regret to learn that he has been dangerously ill of Bright's disease at his home in Rock Hill for several days. Farmers who have not sold their cotton this fall are in a good humor these days, for the price of the fleecy staple has been going up by leaps and bounds for several days. The Baraca and Philipha Suncntinol nlnas of Oak Grove VI GkJ UVI?W. church will give an oyster supper at the home of Mr. J. P. Stroup Friday, Nov. 15, beginning at 2:30 o'clock and continuing into the night. The public is cordially invited to attend. At the meeting last week at Clemson of the State Convention of the Daughters of the Ameri/' can Revolution, Rock Hill was chosen as the place for the next annual meeting. The Thanksgiving .turkey this I year is likely to cost the housewife from 30 to 35 cents a pound, - 1 'J^.tk 1A ! or more niun uuuuic mc pv<uu ( ing prices of a decade ago. The coid wet months of last spring are reported to have caused a short crop in this section. Mr. W. R. Bradford and family are now occupying the home on south Booth street which he recently bought of Mr. J. W. Elms. Extensive improvements are being made to the property by Mr. Bradford. There is an ordinance on the statute books of Fort Mill against the speeding of automobiles on the streets of the town, the limit allowed by the law being 12 miles per hour; but the ordinance seems to be honored more in the breach than in the observance. Unless there is a closer observance of the law, it is perhaps only a matter of time until some one, probably a child, is killed as a result of the fast driving. Frank Wheeler, a Rock Hill negro, shot and probably fatally injured his wife Friday afternoon. The woman refused to " ' ' - ?L- I U,,o to tell tne ponce wny uw Husband shot her. Wheeler is thought to have been drinking at the time, but he was sober enough to realize that he had committed a erime and immediately ran away. The woman died Saturday night and if Wheeler is caught he will have to face the charge of murder. The open season for partridge shooting opens in South Carolina tomorrow, the 15th, and a number of sportsmen of the community are figuring on the "bags" they expect to bring home at the end of the day's hunt. It is said that notwithstanding the excessive rainfall of the early summer months when many of the young birds doubtless were drowned, partridges are about as plentiful ' 1 A~~ ? boon Ill tniS SeCllOIl US inn nave nevn in years when the conditions were thought to be more auspi^ cious for a large "crop." On election night while Hon. Woodrow Wilson was receiving the glad tidings that he was being elected President of the United States, he was surrounded in his home by three young men formerly identified with Fort Mill who had the opportunity to bestow congratulations upon him. They were his brotherin-law, Prof. I. Stockton Axson, and Capt. George H. McMaster. U. S. A., former students of the old Fort Mill Academy, and Ed ward Mack, son of Rev. Dr. J. B Mack, formerly of Fort Mill The latter is a senior in Prince ton College and was present ir the capacity of special reporter Captain McMaster visited For Mill a few months ago for the Surpose of inspecting the For [ill Light Infantry. He is i native of Columbia, S. C. life New Schedules Proposed. A movement is on foot in Rock Hill to have the Southern railway rearrange the passenger train schedules between Charlotte and Columbia and to put on a motor car service between that city and Charlotte. An official of the railway company spent Friday afternoon in Rock Hill discussing the proposed changes and new service with Mayor Roddey and after the conference Mayor Roddey stated that there was hope of having the southbound tram which now reaches Rock Hill about 7:30 in the morning arrive at 11 a. m. and to so change the schedule affecting the northbound afternoon train arriving in Rock Hil! from Columbia at 6;lo p. m. as to have it reach there about 2 o'clock in the afternoon. The proposed changes and the motor car service would be beneficial to Fort Mill as well as to Rock U!ll ... O efforts lllll ailU LI IV. IIOUIV ?- w.. - . of the Rock Hill city officials in the matter will be watched with concern here. Dr. J. E. Massey, Sr., Seriously 111. Friends of Dr. J. E. Massey, Sr., will learn with regret that he has been seriously ill at his home in Kock Hill for several days. Saturday morning Dr. Massey suffered an attack of heart failure. At the time he was on Main street in Kock Hill and when he was stricken fell to the pavement. TViends carried him into a nearby drug store and^ shortly afterward he was re-, moved to his home. The latest news as to the condition of Dr. Massey is that he is somewhat better and it is thought that he will be out in a few days. York Teachers Meet. An interesting meeting of the York County Teachers' Association, of which Prof. F. W. Moore of this city is secretary, was held in Yorkville Saturday, at which about one hundred teach| ers were present. The program, as previously printed, was car| ried out, the various talks- being highly enjoyed. The entertainment by the Yorkville teachers was all that could be desired. The Rock Hill teachers extended an invitation to the association to hold toe next session in that city, the next meeting being J ^ |nMn on tne secona aaxuruay m uanu! ary. The invitation was acI cepted. | The Fort Mill graded school ; was represented at the meeting by Prof. Moore and Misses Helen Ardrey, Isabel Grier and Minnie ( Garrison. Crops of the Demonstrators. John R. Blair, agent for the farmers' co-operative demonstration work in York county, reports some unusually fine corn production in this county this year, says the Yorkville Enquirer. Mr. C. P. Blankenship, of Fort Mill township, measured up 105 bushels of corn off an acre. Mr. Wm. Ferguson, of York township, measured up 95 bushels. Mr. S. A. Love of McConnellsville, made about 60 bushels of extra fine corn. Mr. John T. Burris, of No. 2 Sharon, about 75 bushels. Among the heavy cotton crops, Mr. J. J. Jones, oi' No. 1 Bullock's Creek, has weighed up 2,010 pounds of cotton off an acre. Mr. James - * -? rii E. Bunk head, ol l\o. i onaror, has picked 4,600 pounds ol seed cotton from 212 acres. Mr. M. H. Stevenson of Sharon 1. has five acres of cotton that will average about 1,800 pounds to the acre. Mr. Biair estimates that all the co-operative demonstrators will average a bale of cotton and about forty bushels of corn to the acre. Ginners' Report. The fourth cotton ginning report of the season compiled from reports of census bureau correspondents and agents throughout the cotton belt and issued at 10 a. m. Friday by Director E. Dana Durand, announced that ; 8,849,989 bales of the growth of 1912 had been ginned prior to November 1. To that date last year 9,970,905 bales, or 61.1 per cent of the entire crop, had been i ginned. South Carolina's total of bales ginned up to Nov. 1st was 782,406 as against 1.022.614 at the same time last year. Thanksgiving. If President Taft can feel cause ? "? '! tkanlremtt. ior grauiiciuiun emu iiu?mv^fe?. ing, why shouldn't everybody else? Here are the reasons he assigns in his annual proclamation issued the day after the election: "For many years it has been customary at the close of the year for the national executive , to call upon his fellow countrymen to otl\r praise and thanks to Hod for the manifold blessings vouched in the past and to unite in earnest suppliance for theii ; continuance. "The year now drawing to ? .? close has been notably favorable to our land. At peace in, anc f without, free from the perturbai tions and calamities that have afflicted other peoples; rich ir > harvests so abundant and ir industries so productive that the overtlow of our prosperity has advantaged the whole world ; strong in the steadfast conserca tion of the heritage of sel . government bequeathed to us by . the wisdom of our fathers anc - firm in the resolve to transmit 1 that heritage unimpaired, bu . rather improved by good use, t< t our children and our children's i children for all time to come t the people of this cbuntry hav< i abounding cause for contentec j gratitude." Way to Core Perk. A day should be selected for killing when the temperature is low enough to insure a thorough cooling by the following morning, the hogs beingdressed and hung over night. On the morning of the day the hugs are killed, lor each 400 pounds of meat make a brine as follows: Twenty gallons oi rain water, 30 pounds ot salt, eight ounces of baking soda, 10 pounds of brown sugar, one gallon of molasses (use good molasses, not the adulieraud kind.) This fluid should be boiled and skimrned in the morning and left to cool in a shady place. When cool, add five ounce of saltpeter. Dissolve the saltpeter in warm water and stir thoroughly. The follow ing morn.ng cut up the hogs as usual, and pack in barrels. Put the Sides of the meat or middlings in the bottom and the shoulders next, and the hams on top of these, all with the skin side down. Weight the meat down well and pour the brine over until tne meat is completely covered. Tnen cover tne top of the barrel w itii some good thick covering that will prevent evaporation. Look at the meat often enough to see that the brine has not evaporated so as to leave any meat exposed. If it should become exposed more brine should be added. The meat can be left in the brine indefinitely, but if it is desired to smoke the meat, it should be taken out in about six weeks.? American Cultivator. (Advertisement.) Fortunes in Faces. There's often much truth in the saying "her face is her fortune," but it's never said where pimples, skin eruptions, btotehes, or other blemishes disfigure it. Impure blood is back of them ad, and shows the need of Dr. King's New life Pills. They promote health and beauty. Try them. 25c at Fort Mill Drug Co., Ardrey's Drug Store and Parks Drug Co. FOR RENT?Four-horse Farm on shares. Providence Township, Mecklenbure County. N. C.t 3 miles from Matthews, i mile from macadam road. New 5-room house, outhouse, barn, well, near school and churches, healthy, good neighborhood. Renter i must furnish stock, vehicles and onehorse implements, owner to furnish two-horse implements. Industrious man wanted. Reft retice required. Place shown by VV. N. McKee, Matthews. N. R. F. D No. 18. Frost Proof Cabbage Plants. Hardy, because grown in the open field, taking the weather as it comes. Reliable, because grown from seed raised by the original discoverers of the famous Early Jersey and Carleston Wakefield strains. Cultural suggestions and prices sjprif frpp I WAKEFIELD FARM, Charlotte, N. C. YOU CANNOT realize on what you think of yourself. It is what ^'our neighbors and friends think that brings you profit and pleasure. So it is with your homes, people are just as jealous of their appearance. When it comes to Paint and Polish let us take the worry off your hands and if this is done proper and tastefully it reduces the other decorations and conveniences to a matter of simplicity. We get information by every mail, notices of new things and new styles and easy methods of accomplishing things and it is free to you for the asking. Now is the time to renew your walls and floors for the holidays and the new year and there is no more fitting season for exterior painting. Let us show you our new ideas and when they are made to harmonize with your tastes your most fastidious friend can visit you and "find nothing tc distract her attention. Ardrey's Drug Store, As Much i Of the Earth FOR SALE CI 2 3-4 acre lot bounded by Sout and S. W. Parks and located in A most desirable lot with three i 50x92 foot lot on Academy thereon. The P. K. Mull property, loca C., with 5-room brick residence t The 7-room residence on lot 01 Main street, now occupied as a 1 The 6-room cottage on Clebou dence by P. L. Wagner. The 4-room cottage on Leonid The G-room cottage on Kim St ! The 6-room dwelling on 7-8 ac , now occupied as a residence by I COUNTRY ' The Wm. Nicholson fai n , to bounded by lands of \Y. H. Wii Nivens. located about 5 miles fi ^ being offered at a bargain. ! The Sam Billue place containi P-miles of Fort Mill: 35 pcres und es; good well and fine growth oj i The D. A. Dee place, south oi , Frank Massey, Fred Nims and ? idence, barns, outhouses; nice o ; In most of the above property ; cash and balanae in two; three j FOR J The home of Mrs. Jennie Spr; ? acres of land. Apply to us for ) 5 If you have property FOR SA , we will handle it to your advan BAILES & L TAX NOTICE?1912. ~ Office of the County Treasurer of York J County, S. C. Yorkville, S. C., Sept. 13, 1912. \J0HCE is hereby given that the | ; TAX BOOKS for York County ' ' vil) be opened on TUESDAY, the 15TH ; ; DAY OP' OCTOBER, 1912, and remain j ' I open until the 31ST DAY OF DECEM! BER. 1912, for the collection of STATE, COUNTY. SCHOOL and LOCAL TAXES for the fiscal year 1912, without penalty; after which day ONE PER CENT penalty w.ill be added to all naymerits made in the month of .JANUlARY. 1913, and TWO PER CENT pen- i I a'ty for all payments made in the month of FEBRUARY, 1913, and SEV- j I EN PER CENT penalty will be added ; to all payments made from the 1ST j DAY OF MARCH to the 15TH DAY j OF MARCH, 1913, and after this date j : ail unpaid taxes will go into executions j and all unpaid Single Polls will be i turned over to the several magistrates j for prosecution in accordance with law. i For the conveni".-ce of taxpavers. I will attend the following places on the days named: At Fort Mill, Friday and Saturday, November 1st and 2 I. At Rock Hill from Monday, No- ' vember Jth to Saturday, November 9th. j And at Yorkville from Monday, November 11th, until Tuesday, the 31st day of December, 1912, after which date the penalties will attach as stated above. Note ?The Tax Books are made up by townships, and parties writing about taxes will always expedite matters if " ?- -' f u:~ they Will mention tne iuwmmuji ui Townships in which their property or pre perties is located. HARRY E. NEIL, Treasurer of York County. "PAT." * 1 was born in Ireland and served my apprenticeship in the Dyeing of ail i grades of goods in Alexandria, Scotland. I have been in the United States I 31 years, between the North and South, I and I have b-.-en doing nothing but Dyej in? and Cleaning since Cleveland's ad' ministration, 28 years ago. I have been j I in Fort Mill for seven years. And, i I think of it, not even a single complaint ' ha-; been heard or said about my work. 1 I don't make my living like a mosquito bite. I believe I can take a pinetop, a bucket of molasses, a bucket of tar, one gallon of varnish and one bushel of clay, mixed well together, and working by moonlight can do better dyeing than anything that has hit Fort Mill in the last seven years. I DYE TO LIVE. PATRICK ROGERS. PROPERTY TAX LEVY FOR 1912. Be it ordained by the Mayor and Wardens of the town of Fort Mill, S. C,, in council assembled: Section 1. That three (3) mills on the dollar is hereby levied on all property within the town of Fort Mill, S. C., on January 1, 1912, for ordinary purposes. Sec. 2. That said tax shall become due and payable on the 15th day of October, 1912, at the office of S. W. Parks, Treasurer, and that the books for the collection of said tax shall remain open until November 15th, 1912. Sec. 3. That on and after November 15th, 1912, executions will be issued for all delinquents for the full amount of all taxes due, together with 15 per cent, penalty and all costs, including $1.00 cost for each execution issued by the treasurer. Done and ratified in council this 21st day of October, 1912. A. R. McELHANEY, Attest: Mayor. S. W. PARKS. Clerk. House Out of Shape Sounds funny, doesn't it? But Iyou have seen them; warped, : settled and shrunken. 1 Poor Lumber , was tne cause of it. Houses built i of sound, well seasoned Lumber I like we sell, keep their shape. I ' Remember this when making I your next purchase. | J. J. BAILES. . or as Little as You Want. [TY PROPERTY. hern Railway and Lero.v Springs j rear of residence of S. W. Parks, negro houses located thereon. Street with 12-room negro hotel ted on Main Street., Fort Mill, S. ai d well thereon. n I5ooth Street, 125 x 220 feet, ne; r evidence by the Hon. J. R. Haile. rne Street, now occupied as a resiI as Street. reet, now occupied by J. R. Erwin. re lot. located on Booth Street and !| E. W. Kimbrell. | PROPERTY. ldainii.g 124 acres more or less, .die, Sam Rlankenship and L. S. rem Fort Mill. This property is ng 121 acres of farm land within 5 er cultivation: houaes and outhous-* f young timber. ' Fort Mill; bounded by lands of J. VV. Ardrey; 130 acres. Nice resrchard. $30 per acre, easy terms, we can make terms of one-third ind four years to suit purchaser. RENT. , att. located in Sprattville, with two terms. iLE or RENT, list ?t with us and tage. Real Estate Brokers, IIIISl, Fort Mill, S. C. I ^ ' clc _ _ 1 1 1 I High-grade merchandise a feet harmony at this store, I working together every day : 5 greatest business house Fort others look on in amazement wonde * the same agents of progressiveness c and Low Prices. In order to make business career, we are offering spec ment. If you are not already acqua sale methods, you should come in a] Mills & Youi Dry Goods, Clothim ? i??11 inmiiiniiniiiiamiii nil? iiwiimi?? "The Place Where Quality Counts." , IF IT IS CLOTHING, - - - ?- f V T? WL bLLL 11. i| IF IT IS i' SHOES, WE SELL IT. IF IT IS I DRESS GOODS, - ! WE SELL IT. | HATS or NOTIONS, i WE SELL IT. j IF IT IS ! HARDWARE, j urn nrt i it Wt 3LLL I 1 . IF IT IS I GROCERIES, WE SELL IT. == % E. W. KIMBRELL CO. "The Place Where "Quality Counts." ? ???WELL! WELL! Here We Are PERFECT HEALTH FOR YOU. No need for that run down, tired out feeling -no reason for fV>in imnnuovichofl hlnod. llilll, llltpvf Nyal's Tonic ?that's what builds up your system, tones the blood and gives you an appetite with a relish. For thin blooded men, women and children?Nyal's Tonic is ideal. Then, too?when convalescent from a long illness-Nyal's Tonic will put you on your feet. Try Nyal's Tonic-it livens the entire system ?banishes that tired feeling. A dollar bottle of Nyal's Tonic makes a worn out, run down system feel like new. Parks Drug Comp'y, Agency for Nval's Family Remedies. irfection Attained, j I Fifty years is a long time I devote to perfecting a sin- I : thing, yet into this period I s been crowded an expe- I - i . /V B nee that has made othes what they are today the standard men's gar? mts of the world, univerly worn, wherever good ithes are necessary. - md low prices are in per- | going hand in hand and I solving the mystery of the I Mill has ever had. While I ring why it is that we are so busy I ire at work here, namely: Quality I this month a record month in our J ;ial inducements in every depart- I inted with this store and its quick If if id see how it works. |||||] ig Company I g and Shoe Store. 11 j "1 The Times wants to do your JOB PRINTING 'Phone 112. | A REASON |' 3 ???? j 8 When you see a lot of bees going in and coming jjj 8 out of a knot-hole in a tree it's a sign that there's * 5 8 9* honey in the tree. Also when you see so many J s g people going in and coming out of JONES' STORE g g it's a sure sign that there's something good in that g J store. Come in and see the GOOD THINGS TO jj Jj EAT that draw the people. Jj 8 8 S JONES, the grocer. f 8 8 H*0t*0t<CK*0**CK*0* ? tC3t?3tiCX40?i0(i0}K ?? i '*> ' : The Farmer Needs a Bank, j In it his money is safe, and his check upon it pays a debt so that there can be m + no dispute about it. 2 : thinirs are free to our depositors, t *-v?. a~ and with them comes the ability to bor- ? f row from an institution that knows him t ^ and is able at all times to accommodate v ^ him. This bank appreciates the depos; its of farmers and feels that it can help x I them. No account too small to receive I our warm interest and careful attention. \ : ===== |' I THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK, ml ff- \ l T. S. KIRKFATRICK, T. B. SPRATT, I + President Cashier. 2 I