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>y || il "%_|i |l^ If >> T ? "n *A FORT MILL, S. C. | GENERAL INFORMATION. ( CITY GOVERNMENT. I A. It McELHANEY Mayor f C. S. LINK Cl*-rk i P. N. GAS'l ON.. Chief of Police j DEPARTURE OF TRAINS. ( ( No. 31 Southbound. . 6:00 a. in. J * No. 35 Southbound ...7:12 u. m. I j No. 27 Southbound 5:12 |>. m. j No. 36 Northbound 8:50 a. m. [ No. 28 Northbound 6:30 p. m. J No. 32 Northbound 9:07 p. m. / i. No. 113 Southbound . .12:00 p. in 1 No. 114 Northbound. 11:50 a. in. T Note?Trains 31 and 32 stop at [ Fort Mill only when flagged. ] MAILS CLOSE. f For train No. 36 8:30 u. m. I For train No. 27 4:50 p. m. I i For train No. 28 6:00 p. m. 1 Note?No mail is despatched on [ trains 31, 32 and 35. Trains 27 1 l and 28 do not handle mail Sunday. / i POSTOFF1CE HOURS. 1 Daily 7:30 a. m. to 7:30 p. m. ' l Sunday 9:30 to 10a. 5 to5:30 p. m. | ACTS ON THE LIVER Dodaon'a Diver Tone Livena Up the Liver la More 1 ban a Mere L axative. Calomel was for years the only known medicine that would stimulate the liver. Hut calomel is often dangerous, aad people are not to be blamed for being afraid of it. Within the last few years many mD/1 liotm I wuin ?\??f r\nt ?.? tuvuivi I ivo i?n? w wvuu I'Ul WUl u? be used instead of calomel, bui their effect is the bowels - not on the liver. Ardre.v's drug store says that the only real liver medicine to actually take the Elace of calomel is Dodson's iver Tone, a mild, harmless, vegetable liquid that Ardrey's drug store recommendsd to take _ the place of calomel and which gives prompt relief in cases of constipation, biliousness and sluggish liver. So confident is Ardrey's drug store that they give their personal guarantee with every 60-cent bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone. You can be sure that you are getting Dodson's by asking at this store if they are giving you the medicine they personally guarantee to reiund money on it unsatisi jictory. TAX RETURNS FOR 1914. Office of the County Auditor * ~ . of York County, S. C. YorkvilTe, if. Cr, December 2, 19!.'k As required by statute, my will i?e opened at mv ollico in Yorkvilli on THURSDAY, JANUARY 1. 1914. and be kept open u:it 1 FK11RUARY 20, 1914, for the purpose ??f listing for taxation all PERSONAL and RKAl. PROPERTY held in York County on January 1, 1914. 'J .'txnavers will nlen^e fi'mcmhcr this is the vear for re-assessment of KEA1. ESTATE. For the purpose of facilitating the taking of returns and for the greater convenience of Taxpayer-, I will (?* at the following places on the dates named. At Foft Mill on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, January 21, 22, and 23. At McConnellsville on Monday, January 26. At Ogden on Tuesday, .January 27. At Coates' Tuv? rn. iKoddey's), on Wednesday, January 2S. At Hock H'll from 'i hursday, Januuary 2i), t>? Wednesday, February 1 And at York viile from Thursday, l?Vl>ruary 5, until Friday, Ft brum y 20. All males between the ages ol twenty-One and sixty years, t xoept Confe.:erate soldiers over the age >>i0 fifty years, are liable to a p<>ll tux of $l,o0, and all persons s<> !iaid? are esp? eiai'y requested to give the numbers ?>>' :ht ir respective school district.-> in making their returns. BKOADUS M. I.OVE, County Auditor. AN ORDINANCE Providing for the Sunday Closing of Stores and Other Places of Business. Be it ordained hy the Mayor and Aldermen of the Town of Fort Mill, S. an l uum u iiorii 111uit iI ttiiii uy ?uthority of the same: Section 1. That from and after the passage of this ordinance, it shall he unlawful for any person, firm, or < < rporation, to buy, sell, barter, exc ange, or deliver goods of any description on the Sabbath day; Provided, the sale of medicines and necessaries lor burial purposes shall not be forbidden, and that restaurants and hotels or hoarding houses may furnish regular meals to patrons or transients; and. Provided, further, that the sa'e of goods of any description between the hour of eight and ten a. m., end lour and six p. 111. on Sunday by drug stores and r? staurants is not prohibited hereby; and. Provided further, that milk and ice may be delivered at any time pr.or to nine a. m. Sec. 2. That any person or persons who shall violate this ordinance shall e deemed guilty of a misdemeanor nr.d, upon conviction, shall be punished by a fine of not more than One Hundred Dollars, or by imprisonment of not more than Thirty Days. Sec. 3. That all ordinances or parts of ordinances inconsistent with tins ordinance are hereby repealed. Done and ratified in Council assembled this 16th day of January, 1914. A. R. McELHANY, Attest: Mayor. C. S. LINK, Clerk. % ITEMS Of LOCAL INTEREST. Mrs. W. McD. Jones, of Timmonsville, is visiting at the home of W. M. Carothers in this city. Capt. John W. Ardrey has been confined to his home to.* several days by illness. Mr. Harry D. Harkey has been ill lor several days a', his home j in Sprattvilie. Mr. and Mrs. O. P. Heath and j daughter, Miss Helen lleath, of jCnarlotie, were visitors the la>t week at the home of W. F. Har-; ris in this city. S. A. Anderson and family who have resided in Fort Mill for ! several years, moved the last week to Mr. Anderson's farm in i Lower Mecklenburg county. I Elliott and John B., the little i sot 18 of Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Ben-! I nett, have been ill for several days at. the home of their parents I on Forest street. N. L. Carothers, proprietor I has recently made a great iin- i provement to the interior of the I Acme barber shop by the instal-; lation of a handsome cabinet and ' i other up-to-date fixtures. The time for the payment of State and county taxes with the | one per cent penalty expires on ; j next Saturday. Alter that date j i and during February the penalty ' is two per cent. According to statistics of the census bureau, there were 39,980 bales of cotton ginned in York county up to January 16, as compared with 39,546 bales ginned to the corresponding date in 1912. The ninth cotton ginning rej port of the census bureau for the season, issued at 10 o'clock Friday morning, announced that 13,589.171 bales of cotton had been ginned prior to January 16. J. W. Latham was here t ;e last wceK from Ellerbe, N. C.. where he has resided since leaving Fort Mill several months ago. Mr. Latham's health, which was very poor when he moved to North Carolina, is much improved. The marriage Sunday afterj noon in the village of the "old I mill" of Miss Minnie Burrage ; and S. P. Johnston was wit: nessed by a large crowd of the I friends of the couple. The cerej mony was pronounced by MagisJ irate R. P. Harris. Members of the local military : organization will be interest" d to | I know that Lieut. Col. David C. .Snanks, of the Federal inspector j I general's department, U. S. A.. has been designated as inspectoi j of the South Carolina militia foi t he inspections of H)14. I County Supervisor T. W. Boyd is circulating a petition to be presented to the governor askinp ! that all York prisoners now in ; the penitentiary be returned t > the county chaingang. The chaingang is now at work on the spur road between Filbert and Allison creek. The Rock Hill Chamber o; Commerce has, according to The Herald, taken up the matter with Congressman Finley of securing some aid from the national government for improvement to 1 the roads in York county. The government has recently offered j aid to several counties ot the e in road building. Tim l?. ...wi ?.? 1 T O . .. i ii? ilium \j: i/i . .1. ij. OJJIitll, in Spraltville. narrowly escaped destruction from tire Friday morning when a stick of wood rolled from the fireplace in the living room ami ignited th floor. Fortunately Mrs. Spratt entered the room from the !i .. ag room before the fire had gained j head way nnd extinguished tin ! flames. % Hepresentative Finley has introdueed in congress a hiil providing for a $75,000 postoffice building at Yorkviile. Mr. Finley ranks next to the chairman of the postoffice commit te?, and the people of Yorkville feci confident that he will in a very abort time secure the building for his home town. On February 1st, next Sunday, the practically level reduction of iG p?r cent, on existing interstate express rates goes into effect for two years, as proscribed by the Interstate Commerce commission. The new rates, however, may not necessarily remain in force for that length of time, the commission having intimated that if, after a reasonable period j it is shown that the rates are un- j reasonable, express companies or | other shippers will have opportunity to appeal. I r. ' , '== I Morc> Np: if] Just received a third ship Brand'' Shoes for fall and wi n(; line complete. We can anyone in grown-ups. We also have a few pair at half price. Don't fail to examine buying. We are selling all Fall Good for Snrincr I | v PW j-r ? a a j ?^ ?. ^ V<t KJ I To the 1 j Before you do your Spring sewing, ! Dress Gingham, Chambrays, Percales g think we can please you, and our pric | JUST RE g New lot Sylvia Embroidery Thread in broidery thread in white and colors. / Centers, Pillow Girdles, Etc. Come i I ways welcome. We are agents for P l^y^n i o o \7 U 1V11UL.O Ot I ^ Telephone 12 Our First Car Of Fine Young Mules is on hand and ready for your inspection al | our stables on Railroad Street. It will pay you to see them before I buying. We can please you. j m We also carry a full line of Busies, Wagons, Humors, Etc., and positively our prices are the lowest consistent with the <|Uulil.v of the goods we sell. j MILLS & YOUNG CO. . 1 WHOS YOUR COALMAN? | > o ? o I To buy Coal with judgment as to its every ele! . ^ rnent is our purpose and your protection. ?. > Coal that stands up to every claim we make ^ for it in word and advertisement and meriting > ? the endorsement its users accord, are the best ^ < > a I icaso;.:; for urging you to use 1 Our Coal I I i ^ Principles falling short of that mark ought to ^ $ * '* agitate some tall thinking on your part. f J Stewart & Gulp, | f* Quick Delivery Telephone No. 15. * ? - M'^Haaaaa>B<d-^ J^^HB. |<Q| ' ""i, v.J | vj?^B.' w Goods If hs^^HB&I H i->.^V?y''^^3 : Ilv' v -^ - > V^pjjj ment ot the tamous "Star | r-T-n ' nter wear. This makes our the family, from the tiny tots to the 8 s of odds and ends which we offer I our immense line of Shoes before V Is at great reductions to make room ' Ladies! I come in and look over our line of >, Madras, Calico, Linen, Etc. We es are always right. m CFIVRn I i ? I l white and colors; also D. M. C. Em- | \ new line of Bureau Scarfs, Table n and see our stock. You are alictorial Review Patterns. I OUNG CO. J "Buy and Sell Everything" ^flj ^tadm^ff^WrtTTW--'llT^y-l-;r ??lll III ! ?MM? """Ti rtlr rnhrM" a Have. Your Eyes I | Tested Free. | 1 ? They are the employers?the spendthrifts are the em- ? ^ ployed. This doesn't imply that every employe is a spend^ thrift; the hardworking, thrifty laboring man is the back- pJ ^ bone of this and any other community. But every man who ; ; ^ saves can become his own boss. * We'll help you along by welcoming small deposits, t guarding your interests safely and giving you the very beat ' I t of courtesy and modern scientific banking service. | The First National Bank, f ' "jjjljj I I).?r,'t take medicines for headache, when it is caused I y defective eyesight. With 30 years experience in fi'ting glasses, we are in p>sition to correct all hinds of defects. ' yV y||8jH Al solute Miiisl'i.riion guaranteed, and our prices are very low. so why will vou go to a stranger for ? this ser\ice and pay twice ;is much for your glasses? I "J ! 1L. J* Massey. | J * V "? V /'<? %- vr > * V C" ' f $ I * ere Are They Now? | ? 1 if) vo -r i i: ie you have seen a feood many spendthrifts? ;y the pood fellows as they are called. v' % ^ \. Ik re are they now? We don't need to tell you. # Then?the fellows who worked hard and saved their \ ? money slowly until they had hacking capital where are now? J