The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, November 13, 1919, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6
PAGE* SIX
TAX NOTICE. 1
The books will bo open for the col- 1
lection of taxes for fiscal year 1919, 1
from October 15th, to December ,'Ust, 1
1919, without penalty. ]
Payable during January with 1 per 1
cent, penalty; during February 1 per ]
cent additional, and five per cent, ad )
dltional for March, making a total of ]
7 per cent, from March 1st to 15th, 1
which time the books will close. ]
REGULAR TAX LEVY. 1
The regular tax levy for 1919 is as !
follows;
Mills
State Tar 9 i
Constitutional scnooi lax i
Ordinary County Purposes G <
Courthouse and Jail Bonds 3-4 ,
Past Indebtedness, Bridge and <
Highway Bonds and Interest? i
Bridge Bonds 2 1-4
Township Road Fund 2
i ; J
Total 21 Mills ,
For Bucks, Conway, Dog Bluff, ;
Bayboro, Galivants Ferry, Green Sea, <
Little River, and Dogwood Neck ;
Townships an extra levy of two mills
(2) for Township Road Fund, and for
Floyd* Township an extra levy of ! J
five mills (5) for Township Road
Fund.
An additional levy to pay special1,
taxes voted for School purposes in I
certain Districts is as follows:
Districts Mills j
No. 1 Port Harrelson 8 Ji
No. 2 Ever Green 10
No. 3 Dog Bluff 8 i
No. 4 Bayboro 2 h
No. 5 Sandy Plain 8
No. 0 Athens 8
No. 7 Green Sea 10
No. 8 Bear Bay 4
No. 9 Little River 8
No. 10 Dogwood Neck 4
No. 11 Socastcc 12
No. 12 Collins Creek 8 |
No. 12 Withers 4
No. 14 Savannah Bluff 12
No. 15 Haw Branch 5
No. 16 Pine Grove 8
No. 17 \Vanna-maker 12
No. 18 Boris 12
No. 19 Burroughs 13
No. 20 Mt. Olive 16
No. 21 White Oak 3
No. 22 Burcol 8
No. 23 Good Hope 8
No. 24 Cedar Grove 8
No. 25 Gurley 8
No. 26 Cool Spring 2
No. 27 Zion 8
No. 28 Chapel Hill 8
No. 29 Powell 8
No. 30 Princeville 4
No. 31 Sidney 8
No. 32 Hickory Grove 8
No. 33 Finklea 11 j
No. 34 Oak Grove 8
No. 35 Howard 4
No. 36 Grassy Bay 16
No. 37 Midway 8
No. 38 Hickory Hill 16 |
No. 39 Simpson Creek 8
No. 40 Joyner Swanlp 3
No. 41 Daisy 8
No. 42 Hughes Mill 8
No. 42 Hulls.Island 8
No. 44 Beep Branch 8
No.45 Tilly Swamp 8
No. 40 Oakland 10
No. 47 Red Hill 8
No. 48 Eight Mile 8. .
No. 49 Red Bluff 8
No. 50 Flo yds 10
No. 51 Floyds X Roads 8
No. 52 Poplar Hill 8 j
No. 53 Allen 8
No. 54 Valley Forge 8
No. 55 Knotty Branch .. .. 8
No. 50 San ford 8
No. 57 Sweet Home 10
No. 58 Johnson 8
No. 59 High Point 8
No. 01 Warn pee 13
No. 03 Rohoboth 8
No. 04 Enterprise 11
No. 07 Mt. Pisgah. . .. 8
No. 08 Homcwood 8
No. 09 Maple 8
No. 70 Poplar 8
No. 71 Shell 8
No. 72 Leon 8
No. 73 Mt. Herman 8
No. 74 Four Mile 8
No. 75 Virgo 2
No. 70 Toddville 8
No. 77 Strawficld 3
No. 78 Ebenezer 8
No. 80 Spring Branch 10
No. 81 Salem 3
No. X'2 Mill Xwjimn . 8
No. 83 Red Hill. / 8
No. 85 Watts 4
After you eat?always take
fatonic
V CrOR YOUR AClD-STQMAClO
Instantly relieves Heartburn, Bloated
Gassy Feelinj. Stops food souring,
repeating, and all stomach miseries.
Aids digestion and appetite. Keeps stomach
aweotand strong. Increases Vitality and Pep.
EATONTC is tbo beat remedy. Tons of thoulands
wonderfully benefited. Only coatun cent
ortwon day to useit. Positively guaranteed
to please or wo will refund money. Get u L &
ho* today. You v/iil tjoc,
CONWAY DRUG COMPANY
8 21 ( ONWAY, S. C. 52t.
Mo. 87 Norton 8
Mo. 88 Waccamaw < 8
Mo. 89 Seven Mile 8
Mo. 84 Brunson 3
Mo. 90 Pauley Swamp 2
Mo. 79 Bucksport 3
Mo. 92 Vaughts 4
Mo. 94 Oak Grove 8
Mo. 95 Twelve Mile 2
Mo. 9(1 Eldorado 4
Mo. 97 Carolina 8
Mo. 78 Kingston 8
Mo. 99 Ay nor 16
Mo. 101 Pleasant Grove 8
SCHOOL HOUSE BOND TAX.
An additional levy of the two mills I
(2) in Districts Nos. 19 and 80, and
n LMsmct x\o. 01 an additional levy
>f one mill is made to pay interest ^
m the School House Bonds, and to 1
:reatc a Sinking Fund for their fi- t
rial retirement. 1
CAPITATION TAX. f
A Poll tax of One Dollar, for f
Skhool purposes, is levie<l upon every 1
male citizen between the ages of 21 I
:tnd 60 years, able to earn a living. ^
except confederate veterans over 50
rears old. ,
CAPITATION DOG TAX. t
A Capitation tax of One Dollar is ^
levied upon each dog in the County. ?
COMMUTATION ROAD TAX. t
Road Tax for 1920 is payable from A
January 1st, to March 15th, 1919. j
FISHERY STAMPS. .
Fishery Stamps can be obtained at ,
the County Treasurer's Office at any I j
time. 11
Those who write for statement of !?
taxes will please slate whether or \
not their property is all in one School ]
District. k
TRF A SURER'S ITIN ER AR Y. j.
Tuesday, Nov. 18th. |t
Aynor, 9 to 11. k
Galivants Ferry, 11 to 2. A
Itehobopth, 3 to 4. t
Wednesday, Nov. 19th. \\
Mt. Pisgah, 9 to 10?Sam P>. Ger-k
raid's house-. 1
Hinson's Store, 11 to 2. >
Stevens X Roads, 4 to 5. \
Thursday, Nov. 201 h. {
Floyds School House, 9 to 12. t
Spring Branch, 1 to 2. \
Stroud's Store, 3 to 4.
Friday, Nov. 21st.
Cireen Sea, 9 to 12.
Fowler's School House, 1 to 2.
Saturday, Nov. 22nd.
Lor is, 8 to 12.
Daisy, 1 to 2.
Nathan Bellamy's Store, 3 to 4.
Wednesday, Nov. 26th.
Kbenezer, 10 to 12.
Brooksville, 1 to 3.
Thursday.
Little River, 9 to 11.
Bayboro, Dec. 9th, 9 to 10.
Balance of time in the office at
Conway, beginning Dec. 1st.
W. L. BELLAMY,
Treasurer of Horry County.
11 6 19--3t
VEG ETAELESTNWIN TE R
IN SOUTHERN GARDENS
(Jit! nn/iU i-L <tn 1 < I Ln iri'lf/m ?l twnm I n. I
ii uw ^IVUIS ci |/i win i ii
cnl place in the southern winter par<1<
n ami two or three plantings should
be made in order to have a succession
<><' cuttings. Spinach requires a rich
sail and the seed bed should be thor<
rghly prepared before the seed is
planted. A bed 7 feet wide and 75 feet
long, containing about 7 or 8 rows
spaced just far enough apart so that j
the hoe can be usel between them,'
v. ill provide all the spinach that i. |
j needed by the average family. These i
'suggestions are made by garden
specialists of the United States Department
of Agriculture.
In many parts of the South, Bermuda
onions may be grown as a wintin
crop and used in the early springtime,
either in the form of young
i onions or later as mature spring
onions. If grown from seed, the seed
should be placed in the ground at the
earliest possible moment and later
thinned so that the plants stand about
| inches apart in the row. If grown
from sets, they mac be planted any
jtime up until the middle of December.
The common yellow and white
I onion sets may be planted during
November or December and will fur,
(ininne <lnvirt<r thn npvr>!lff>r
[ nil ~ ?
part of the winter.
Lettuce for Winter (trowing.
Lettuce of the Cos or Romaine type
is especially adapted to growing in
the South during winter. The ordinary
hardy varieties of lettuce require
some protection to prevent
their being "tip-burned" by frost.
Kor growing the more tender varieties
of lettuce, a cold frame or cloth
covered frame is essential.
In many sections a fall planting of
beets can now be made to advantage,
:the young or baby beets becoming
huge enough foi table use before
their growth is interfered with by
< ( Id weather.
IV a can he ph.-ntod in certain
paid of the Soutli late in November
o. during 0 comber and will be
r<:m 1 \ . a gathering early in Mar'h.
(' iv any uh'o he pbi ited in
.!ai:Ucit\ <.y Cehruary and will ne
THE HORRY HERALD, CON1
Catarrh Is a Real 1
Requires Vig
When you use medicated sprays,
atomizers and douches for your t
Catarrh, you may succeed in un- t
stopping the choked-up air pass- t
ages for the time being, but this 1
annoying condition returns, and I
you have to do the same thing
over and over again. <
' Catarrh has never yet been ?
cured by these local applications. y
Have you ever experienced any ?
real benefit from such treatment? 1
nrge enough for use in the early
ipring. f
Winter cabbage of the Charleston- ?
>V?kefield or Jersey-Wakefield va ieties
can be planted in the open c
;round during November and will i
nature the latter part of March or c
luring April. A number of plant '1
fiowors make a- specialty of supply- i
ng the hardy, outdoor grown cab- s
iage plants suitable for winter culti- a
ration. t
One point which should bo borne -n ^
nind when planting semihanly crops
hat are to be wintered over is that f
rery little fertilizer should be used |
it the time crops are planted, but
hat an abundant supply should be
yorked into the soil alongside of the |
ilants about the time that they start
in active growth in January or Feb uary.
If large amounts of liigh?rade
fertilizer are used in the fall,
lie plants will grow soft and be more
subject to injury by cold weather
ban if they are kept growing slowly. t
'-ater, when the weather begins to be 1 %
varm. the fertilizer may be applied j
md the plants pushed to a- rapid
growth. In the case of the first
jlantings of spinach, the product of i
.vhicli is to be used in the autumn,!
lie general rule above stated should
ie disregarded and an abundance of
lighly available fertilizer used. i
Where spinach is planted later, to be t
.vi lite red over and used in the spring- i
:ime, very little fertilizer should be t
lpplied at the time of planting and a i
".opdressing should be worked into
die soil about midwinter.
Insist on Good Seeds. ]
Try One I
Then 1
The best way to know for ;
Brunswick Tire is to buy one s
That is, if the very name of ]
to you, as it is to most men, th;
Thousands uf men who have
for years, realize that a Brunei
for a mediocre product could ne
Long before the Overland T
of Brunswick was established,
of rubber for fifty years before
No concern with such r. his
thing but the best. For reputz
be quickly destroyed.
This is a practical guarant<
more than the usual, yet at no
Get your first one now. Y
have ALL Brunswicks.
THE BRUlNSWICK-BA!
Atlanta Headquar
There9s a Bmnswic
v/u'i m a uv? ?,
LOCAL I
J. E. NICHOLAS &
WAY, S 0., NOV. 13, 1919.
Enemy and
;orouft Treatment
Throw these makeshift remedies
o the winds, and get on the right
;rcatment. Get a bottle of S. S. S.
oday. and commence a treatment
hat has been praised by sufferers
for nearly half a century.
S. S. S. gets right at the source
Catarrh and gives satisfactory
"esults. For special medical aarice
free regarding your own case,
tddrcss Medical Director, 51 Swift
Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga.
Many of the failures of southern
vinter gardens are due to poor prepiration
of the land and to inferior
seeds. In many cases the land is
overed with weeds, which should be
emoved and the soil afterward turn
d over and thoroughly pulverized.
There is always the danger of securng
seeds that are left over from last
ipring's sales and as a result a- poor
;tand of plants is secured. Insist that
he seeds procured for planting1 the
vinter garden are reasonably fresh
ind of high vitality. Good seeds may
ost a little more than poor ones, but
hey will effect a great saving in the
ong run.
WHY ARMY IS GIVEN
RECREATION WORK
Secretary Explains Reason for
\
Transfer From Organizations.
Secretary Baker has issued a statenent
in explanation of the reason for I
he transfer to the war department of J
lie recreation work in the army, here j
ofore carried on by affliated organ-,
zation, says the Washington Star.
To Make Trained Citizens.
In its new noliev he snvs the flo.
f -? > ""~ '? v"" ~
a^rtment seeks two things:
Brunswick
Decide
yourself the superiority of the
md compare it.
Brunswick isn't sufficient proof
it here is an extraordinary tire.
known the name of Brunswick
.vick Tire has to be the best ?
ver bear this historic name.
rail became famous, the House
It was one of the chief users |
automobiles came into use.
tory cculd afford to offer any- j
itions are built slowly, but can
se that Brunswick Tiros offer
added cost.
ou'll not be satisfied until you
LICE-CO LLENDER CO.
ters: 38 Luckie St.
h Tire for Every Car
'.?Solid Track
1EALER
CO., CONWAY, S. C.
HAVE
FO
ELECTRICAL!
1/ _
Hiwaier rve
THE DESIGN
RIGHT TO FI
Call, telephc
CONWAY MOTOf
I
Exclusive Agents
j CONW
?
(1 To have the people of the c un|
try realize that the war department s
| interested in the round and full devol- '
| epment < f the young; men who com'" I
I into the army; that our purpose is io
I turn them out trained soldiers, but in
addition to that, trained citi/.en<;
that we propose to give them milita. y i
training enough to make them useful j
should the emergency require it, but
also education enough to make them I
self-supporting and self-respecting j
members of he civil community when 1
they return to it, and to add to these'
formal gifts the social development!
and quality which are necessary to ;
make balanced and stable character.
(2) To have the men in the anny
themselves feel that the relation they
sustain to their government is not one
of drawing pay from the government |
for so many hours of drill, or other
form of studies, while they look 10
outside agencies for profitable opportunities
of relaxation and character
development, but rather that by enlisting
in the Army they secure both
the opportunity of service and the |
opportunity of growth, development
and culture from the same source.
Religious Aspects.
"So far as the religious aspects of
this question are concerned," says
I Secretary Baker, "I, of course, speak
S The oldest Amei
I THE MUTUAL LIFE INSUR/
W. B. Coxe, !
P. F. Covixig-toi
Bullock
R; M. Bull
i i
I
Nobody wants anything
when he buys from a merchai
buy what he needs at fair pri<
At the Sam
The year of 1919 finds i
a full line of staple good;
that are fair to our customer!
II
uive us
If you have not been trai
us a trial this year.
j Toddville,
^ m r?>iW >4SlRw\SRF? %
. u v 83g
JL I
YOVR.
RD
. 1
.Y EQUIPPED
)
nt Systems
IS EXACTLY %
T THE FORD 4
?? .j
>nc or write
i CAR COMPANY *
; for Horry County.
AY S. C.
with gloat hesitancy. I r?\ili^' that
the welfare agencies have in a certain
. enso abated soctanan di fferc noes
without surrendering the cardinal beliefs
upon which their .associations
are ordinary formed, and yet I am
persuaded that the true place for
religious effort in the army is from
tlu chaplain down, and that it is a
mistake to have the chaplain rogaitied
as merely the exponent of formal
leligious activities, while the informal
religious impulses are carried
on by conflicting agencies, only incidentally
religious impulses are carried
on bv another function as the
basis of their work among the soldiers.
If the chaplain is made responsible
for all of the religious activities
in the camp, and chaplains
be selected with a view to their
| broad and tolerance of opinion and
| view, they will invito casual reprcs<
ntatives of other denominations to
minister whenever special need ex*
ists, and this, of course, will obviate 4
[conflict, while it will supply abundant
opportunity for individual
choice in the matter of religious af- 1
1 filiation."
o
Czecho-Slovak forces in Siberia will
(take no part in the political life of the
country.
rican Company H
\I\ICE CO., OF NEW YORK I
Special Agent |
1, District Agt. B
Bros.? H
ock, Mgr., Agents. 9
Tms&BsmsamamBaamammnmmmm
iid ddipP
till I I1IUL
less than a fairly good article
fit; and a customer wants to
ses.
e Old Stand
us at the same old stand with
a which we offer at prices
3 as well as to us. Y
; a Trial ,
ihng at Toddville before, eri^TJ
RY fc CO,
s c
I