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You Do More Work, You Ore more ambitious and you get more enjoyment out of everything when your blood 18 in good condition. Impurities in i the blood have a very depressing effect on the system, causing weakness, laziness, nervousness and sickness. O3ROVE'S TASTELESS Chill IONIC restores Energy and Vitality by Purifying and Enriching the Blood. When you feel its strengthening, invigorating effect, see how it brings color to the cheeks and how it improves the appetite, you will then appreciato its true tonic value. GROVE'S TASTELESS Chill TONIC i not a patent mslicine, it is simply IRON and QUININE Suspended in Syrup. So pleasant oven children like it. The brood needsQuinine to Purify It and IRON to Enrich It. These reliable tonlo prop erties never fail to drive out impurities in the blood. The Strength-Croating Power of GROVE'S 'ASTELESS Chill TONIC has made it the favorito tonic in thousands of homes. More than thirty-live years ago, folks -wouki ride a lonti distance to get GROV ES ' TASTELlSS Chill TONIC when a member of their family had Malarla or needed a body-building, strength-giving tonic. The formula is just the same to -ry, and you can get it from any drug tere. 0o per bottle. NOTICE of the COUNTY TREASUJItEl. The Rooks of the County Treasurer 1i be open for the collection of to, County and Commutation Road axes for the llacal year, 1919, at the easurer's office from October 15th December,31st, 1919. After Decem 'er 31st one per cent will be added. ter January 31st, two Per cent will e added, and after February 28th, seven per cent will be added till the bth (lay of March, 1920, whon the -sks will be closed. All persons owning property in iore than one township are recluested I to call for receipts in each of tho everal townships in which the pro -ty is located. This Is important, as dditional cost and penalty may be ftached. All able-,bodliedi male citizens he vwoen the ages of 21 and 60 years of are liable to pay a ;,oll tax of .00, oxcept old soldiors. who are 1 Vempt at 60 years of age. Conmniuta- i In Road Tax $1.50 in lieu of road trty. All men now in military ser. fye are oxempt from road tax. T'ho Tax Levy is as follows: to Tax .-....... ... .9 mills dinary County Tax .. .1 mills load and Bridge ......4..- mills tail road 1ond ....... .. mill d Bonds. - -- . 'mills t -Il Bonds............ % mill natitutional 48ebool Tax ..3 mills ermanent road and bridges 2 % mills Tot ..............25% mills ocial Schools--Laurens Township.! urens No. I I.. .. .. ..10% mille Inity-Ridge No. I. .. ..8 %t millt addons No. .........4 mills rule No. 3 ..5 mills C iley No. 4 .......... ..4 mills I Ila No. ( ............4 mills k Grove No. 6 ..........2 mills a No. 13 ...............8 mills .S.pecial Sahools-Youngs Township. ngs No. 3 .. ..4 mills ungs No. 2 ............8 mills fungs No. 4........ ..11/ mills ungs No. 5 ............8 mills t auntain Inn No. 311.. . .20 mills I nford No. 10 ..1.. ....0% mills dra No. 12 ..............8 mills Youngs No. 1 ..........3.. mills Central No 6.. ........ ..2 mills Yomgs No. 7 ..........8.. mills 1 Special Schools-DIals Township. Vireen Pond No. 1 .. .......7 mills Mlais NO. 2 .............8% mills - llh No 3 . .... .. . ..2milla a&y Court-Owings No 5 .2 mIlls Dlarksdale No. 6 .... ....... mIlls Ib*als Ohureb No. 7 . .....4 mills Fountain inn No. 311.. .....20 mills Mppna No. 8.. .. .........10 mills Dials No, 4 .... .. ........4 milla Speal Schools Suhlivan T1ownshtip. - Dothel Nc. 2 .... .... ... mills TUrnceton No, 1 . . . . .. . . . 121/% mills Poplar Springs N'o. 3 .. .. ..12 mHls J chary Tavern, No.-17 . . ..S 4/~ mills 19yeowerton No. 7 .. . . .. .. mills ,Silllfvan TownshIp 11. Rt. bonds 3 mill.; Morna No. 8 . .. .. . ..8 mills Spoolnl Schoolis--Waterloo Tow~nship'. Mjterioo No. 14 .... .. .. ..4. mills . Gaill agher No. 1I.. .. .. ..8 mills Bethlehemn No. 2 .... .......4 milla F0kom Ne. 3 .. ...... ..... mills (Entorpoint No. 4 ... .... .. ..4 mills I y vllio No. 9 .. ........8 mills Pleasant No. 6 .. ......4 mills . Olivo No. 7 .. .... .....8%/ mIlls fsncial Schools-Cross Hill1 Township. tiosHill R{G. 10... .. .. .. 10 %. millsi G~on Hill No. 1 . .... .. ....2 mills fOss Hill No. 2 .... .......2 mills H5~s -ill No, 4.1.........2..mills (toss Hill No. .. .. .......2 mills Oit6ds 21ll N-o, 6'.. .... .. ..3 mills 1 'peial Schools-,l mter Tawnship. a( tviile No. 16 .. ........11 mills terlNo. 2 .. ...... .....4 mills SNo. 3 .... .........6 mills I *ton No.56.. .... .... ..11 mills1t ldtmtor No. 4.. .. .........4 mills , Iater No. 1 .... ...... ... mills If tr No.0@.... .. .......4 mills Soeofa gchools-4acks Townshlp. Vs No. 6 .. . .....,.A .3 mills turrinane No. 15 . . ... .. . 3 mills ~rGrove No. 2 .........3 mills JNo. 2 .. .. ... ..... .5 miis J N.4 .....,.. .... mills 8 se S chools, ieutffletown Township Sstona Church No. 3 .. .. ..3 mills - - et own No.1 .. .. ......8 mills No. 1i .. .. .. ..10% mills 7Uletown No.6E. ,... ....4 mills ~ft.. ..... .......4 mille ~'opt attention will be given $il 4who wish to p~ay their' taxes the mil by check, money or 7wesoas ,endisg in lists of names tede takes e are requested to send Umesuly: ansd give the towvnshi fl at athe Treaurer is very busy * t. maath of December. 0SOS D). TOUNG,i ownty Treasurer. SOLONS CONCLUDE FIRST WEEK'S WORK ilesolution to Reject Equal Stiffrage Amendlment to e' Offered in House. Severail State-Wido Mteasures are Of. fered. Columbia, Jan. 15.--Both houses of the general assembly adjourned at 2 )'clock this afternoon until 8 o'clock lext Tuesday night. Nextjlonday Is I holiday and as there was little work lending, the legislators fixed Tuesday light, 'that those In the remote coun Jes might have opportunity to get In .o Columbia for the night session. While no great amount of work has )een accomplished the three days the egislature has been in session, con lensus of opinion is that the program las proceeded with greater dispatch ]han usual. With a considerable num er of bills introduced today and with tl budget coninis-ion's ireport in land next Tuesday there should be lit 1e opportunity for a slack period igain soon. Governor Cooper this morning ransmitted the Susan B. Anthony qual suffrage amendment to the louse, which had been received from ashington. This was received as in 'ormiation and was ordered printed in he calendar. No resolution to ratify las yet been offered in the house but mteh a resolution has been offered in ,he senate by Senator Christensen. Vhen the general assembly recon genes next Tuesday a negative reso ution will be introdiuced in the house )y Representatives Bradford of .York Ind In the uipper house by Senator Milliams of Aiken. To requect, tile 'esolutlon is an exact duplication of h- ratilleation resolution, with the 'xception of the word "relect" for 'ratify." DIu)iring the monling a coneurrent -esolutlon wa s introduced in the house )y Represeiiative Crews of Richland, nviting Attorney General Palmer and drs. (att to address a joint assembly f the two houses on -the rieustion of !qual suffrage. Objection was enter d to immedlate consideration of the -esoltition, which means the resoliu ion will probably remain intact oi. he calendar. The joint resolution to provide for he0 callhig of a state constitutional olvention was up for a consideration or a few minutes, when debate was ostponed on the question until next ruesday night. Tile senate passed his resolution Iast year and it is now m second reading li the house. Be lef that tile house will algo pas% the esolution, as the calling of the Con ention would be a question for the icople to determine. Several of those vho spoke briefly today emphasized hat no harmn could be done by allow lig the people to vote on tile qies loll. The governor sent up several veto niessages of last. year's local measures. i each instance the county delega ion asked tiat the acts be not. signed n several were (uplieations, and one vas found to be contrary to tile state ~eeral law, and therefore un~const itu lonal. 'The bill by Rlepresenltative lickson of Anderson to have all lie 1001men give b)ond( to tile amlount of 2,000 wvas sent to thle third reading. Several.1)bill of statewvide interest vere 'introduced. One by Herry and Z'urry wold~ repleal thle law against reek letter fraternities at state inistl ultionls. Anothler by Messrs. flusbee .ndl H~amlin is to preveWnt. public chool teachlers inlfted~ ,witir tuber ulosis or othler infections~ diseases romi teachling in thle public schools. m leasure iby thlese 1men1 was also Inl roducedl reqluiring physical exainaili in by physicianls andl (dntists of all hidren attending publlice school. Mr. lamblinl of Uinionl introduicedl al meas re to provide a penaIli.y for' tile hav ng poss5essio.' of a distillery. IfAIRSIIA 11L FliA ES RED) AGITlA'tillS 'lee iPreside'nt Says in ('oiumbiu Speech Future of Nation Rests onl Mouth. Colunmbia, Janl. 1-.-Thlat thle plureo anglish-speaking people0 of the Southl, he0 Oeemplars of unldiluited American sml, must stando as a bulwark against he menaces whleh thlreaten the Re itblic, was the assertion made hlere .onight in a speech delivered by rhomas R. Marshall, of Indiana, vice >residenlt of the UnIted States. air. Marshall, who spoke in the halt i the Ilouse of Reopresenitatives before in audience whichl packed the chamn er, unmercifully flayed the foreign gitators nOW on1 the soil of tis ~ountry, and~ advocated their deporta ion. Hie, along with Mrs. Marshall, was ni Columlila today anld tonight as thle Ifests of tile local lodge of .the Order' >f Moose, who tendered him a dinner t the Jeffer'soni hotel. While here he ddressed thle worklers of the combinedi :hive being prosecuted hlere for funds for various chlaritable and philan thropical organizations. .Mr. Mars'hall was escorted into thle ball of the House5 tonight b~y Cole IL. Stease, former Governor, chairmlan of the entertainmuent committee of the troase, and lie was Introduced by R, D. Parrish, dire~tor of the local lodge. 10 was followed by William T. Giles, of Baltimore, supreme lecturer of the irder, who spoke on "Mooseheart." The Vice President "prefaced his peoch with the assertion that lie is tiil i believer .in States' rights and vtas and is a protagonist of the League if Nations.. He said that the danger o popular government did not lay so nuch in the people as in uninformed nd unwise leadership. In his advocacy of the Lcag1e of Na Ions, concerning the interpretations ir reservations of which he was .lent, 4r. Marshall told of the trials of the Yar Between the States, at which Ime -he was seven years of age, and aid that the desire for peace was Im >lantdd in his fnind there and has ontinued to grow. 11. ' believes that rbitration should sup:lant force. A .eague of Nation4, which lie piredicted is certain to come, to be effective Oust have the coacentrated lesire of lie peoples if Ihe eart i for p.'a Te be kind it. Mr. Marshall said had there been a ieague of Nations when South Caro ina adopted its ordinance of seces ion, this State would -have been al owed peacefully to withdraw from lie Union. ie said that he wvas glad hat it was not in fot.' then, for the lepublic needs Sout. Carolina now, even if it did ?ake seven or us Van ,ecs to cone down here to lick one of ou Southerner to hot i you.' The irony of history, contcndcd the Fice President, is that the section vhicli once tried to withdraw from the Jnion will now have to save '4. lIe aid that the Reiiu'ile is orcoipiassed l.h perils from Hlolshevists. 1. W. V.'s and other radicals, but few of hese are in the South witi its pure!, inglish-speaking population, the vry ssence of Americanism. "Yes," he continued, "you are to be lie saving krace of hv lI publici, ind f you standIl flirm I promse you th:af. here will be ('11ough of us in the North hat. think as you do to save this Ie tiblic. Rheumratism wher, our l anu .t enit. l. i<. . Un 3 x3% Good Fabric, All-W 30x 3% Good Fabric, AntI-SI GC Because--MA .I maintain three Very extensiv8 chemical labornator-ies in which all materials are thoroughly tested. Noh:. - ful materials can ever enter into Royster goodis 9ur home and foreign markets are picked over for the choicest raw materials; then I formulate them rj to be best for each crop for which the fertilizer is ir ted ed. Tesuts of all this care is, naturatdiy, a Complete mixture which is really the "last word" in fertilizer. So, you see, I am justified in feeling proid of the Royster Products, which come from our fifteen up. to-dato plants. F. S. ROYSTER GUANO COMPANY Owings & Bobo, Agents T A r isual Value-In Tires Not only is characteristic Goodyear merit conspicuous in Goodyear Tires for small cars but ordinarily the first cost is found to be not greater than that of other tires; often it is actually less. The combiination of unusual value in first \ \cost and very low final cost, of course, is a result of Goodyear experience, expertnes and care employed as insistently in the making of 30x3-, 30x31/2- and 31 4-inch tires as it is in the construction of the famous Goodyear Cord Tires used on t e ig~est priced automobiles. For this reason more cars using these small sizes were factory-equipped last year with Goodyear Tires than with any other kind. Get this unusual tire value to enjoy on your Ford, Chevrolet, Dort, Maxwell, or other small car, at the nearest Goodyear Service Station. Get these tires and Goodyear Heavy Tourist Tubes at this station. . . - ioo - - 1 . .. ear Double-Cure $200 Goodyear Heavy Tourist Tubes are thick, strong tubes that mather Tread........ -- reinforce casings properly. Why risk a good casing with a cheap tube? Goodyear Heavy Tourist Tubes cost little more ca Single-Cure $1765 than tubes of less merit. 50x3/2 size in water- 9 Aid Tread................ proof bag...................... . ODO EDbF!EA _NVWW 1O t