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Bul The Manning Builders Su] with a full line of Builders Sui Brick, Lime, Cement, Lumber, S WHEN IN NEED OF A Mannin Manning Warehouse, Near A. C. L. [ Mascot I (MA Absolutely free ol it's KILN ASK THE MAN I1 See A. I. BARRON for de American Lime Knoxvil M your new MI eepUEEEE.,Na.E MUseyu *Good M U TheyBry UsThe I)ome Cole toMMEEEMgg ply Company begs to announce to the public ti plies. We carry in stock at all times a full lir Framing, Dressed Sheetin ash, Doors, Blinds, Laths, I IYTHING IN BUILDING SUPPLIES SEE U4 Lg ..Builders lepot and Gulf Refining Station. dimestone SCOT moisture, because -DRIED ! [HO HAS USED I' [ivered prices, or write stone Coinpany, le, Tenn. 'chandise at Reasonable Pric( mn C1othin~ of K(nox Scho)u) aknd Stetson Ilats. Sumter, S. C. amnea....m -.. tat they are now open in Man ie of [g, Flooring, Ceil 3eaver Board an FOR PRICES, ETC. Supply OUR BILLION POUNDS WOOL IN THE STOREHOUSES Chicago, Aug. 31.-That there are nore than 4,000,000,000 pounds of rirgin (new) wool in the world's store iouses, or soon will be, awaiting manufacture, that the textile mills of the United States used 113,000,000, fewer poinds of virgin wool last year than in 118 and that the drop will be greater this year were some of the statements which Alexander Walker made today in his annual address as president of the National Sheep and Wool Bureau of America, whose head auarters is at No. 23 East Jacksonl Boulevard. Today's conference was the most im portant annual meeting in the history o fthe Bureau. The National Sheep and Wool Bureau of America is an or ganization of firms and organiaztions interested in the sheep and wool in dustry in every part of the Unlted States. For a year, it has been engag ed In getting the People of the country together bdhind the Preineh-Capper Truth in Fabric bili, ,hivh was, left in eansof the- Interstat', and For eign Commerce Committees of th 1'ranches of Congress at adjourn ment. [f elacted, the bill would compel tex -ile iniufacturers to stamp every 7ard of thir cloth entering interstate ommerce with Qs content of virgin vool and of wool substitutes, the chief of which is shodly--old rags, re-work d in some cases as ofteii asi eight itnes. Textile manufacturers consi r the measure as revolutionary as the lure Food law, which was fought by le ilterests for twenty.-six years. "If the French-Capper Truth in 'ruth ini F'abrie. bill is niot paissesd uickly so as to open the eyes of thdJ ublic to the fact that the textile mnan IEEEEEESUEE in er fr quarters for s U ( in te stles t M' Mn Uto U"li U"b~ El)o Ui HEEEEEEEB~sth ning Cotton Warehouse, near ng, Siding, Moul d Cypress Shingi Cornp A. J. ufacturers are meeting their demand for virgin wool cloth with reworked rags, "remarked Byron Wilson, Secre tary of the Wyoming Wool Growers' Association, one of the best informed wool men west of the Mississippi riv er, "there will soon be no wool grown in the United States to supply their demand and no sheep for food pur poses either. Sheep men cannot con, tinue to grow sheep, if the textile manufacturers will not buy their wool at a living profit," His remarks were strongly second ed by J. F. Walker, president of the Fleece Wool States' Association and chairman of the Wool Committee of the American Farm Bureau Federa tion, 11C vontinued: "I doubt if the manufacturers are allowing the people of the Uznited States three pounds of virgin wool per capita thii yea. They need twelve pounds per capita. I remember a short ime ago visiting a certain woolen mill. rlbere wasn't a pound -of virgin wool on the prrmiAsds-nothing but shoddy. They were tuming out woolen blan kets of straight ishoddy, which shoukld not have retailed for more than $15 a pair. When I returned to Chicago, ! found these blankets selling at the lead ing department store for $45 a pair. A compeitor had a special sale of the blankl'tS fotr $39.0 ai pair." George . Wilber, Executlve Conit teeman of the .hio Sheep and Wool Growers' Association, gave it as his opinion that the sheep :.ndustry of America can only be saved by the pro ducers and consumers getting togeth er. He said: . "The people want virgin wool cloth an dthe people receive re-worked rags from the textile manufacturers in its steadt. The textile manufacturers can make more money by using re-worked t'es in t'eir 'all wool' cloth than they rot by buying virgin wvool from the sheep~j TCon at a fair price and using I hat. [ sa anf annfouncient~iff the c~ther day' thaif, a steamer had arrivedl ri1t h 1,700 tonms (f ra from Antwerp, untI 52r hales of ragg inud cuttings Fronr Geirmanay for the Amnerican ;hoddy mnilk. I wonde/. Ihow (tur 1;o de woulId fee!, i' they knou that they er being clotheCI. in re-*wokd (Ger nan riiags" P'residen t W~lIker sa~ id in his' addre. hat the unisohl BritisD. Goverunmen t' 010nial woholens anmonim' to1 920,777, 8( poumb-~ anud the sto~red wool in] this Outry, to, 431 I,031I,547 po'u~ ds. These mouflits are exclusive of thse 1920 ol1 eliip, which the ritidh 40ove-m lent (exterts estimate at 2,70L1t000, 00 pounds(1. The AmnerieaN Cti mn'. uid about 2(;5,(00,000 pounds Thee gatos d10 not include res-srve siuppli e., I I variim1s parits of the worldt, such as ''uth A inca anud South A merica. [[ .c iiniatinig ini thei stornehouses. the orbi p; od!uces les sthan a third ofli ra.in wvool it needs1 annually, I U timat ed that the wool growers of the mtei; S( t(s lost $75,000,000 in I e op -- '5e a pound ini the pric' of W wool early this sumier. li10.\T 'TO tBISClITSp IN. Chapmnan, Kan. A ug. 29. Tr'' .ansfor rition of' whea t from stantding grin - hot bliscui ts in fifty- five nmiuesj a recordl establi shed here recen Ir Harriv Ruff,'head of a local milling mjpaiiv. tHe dtrove into a fieldl where farm er was tinrvesting whenat w itt inarvest(er-thrieshier, which (ent s anidj -eshes the gr'ain in one operation aund k two busheis of wheat. This he' shedl to t he mill where'it was groiu'nl miedlinately, then took the flourn home dI Mis. It uill' imade bisceuits, l''rom the tIime the grain was cut the fi r:t bi te (if bis'uit was five n us less than an hour, ineliding rty-t wo miinutee m;pn m, tie ..ad. A. C. L. depot, lings, Finish' es. 9ny, RIGBY, Manager. NOTICE STATE OF SOUTHV CAROLINA, County of Clarendon COURT OF COMMON PLEAS SUMMONS FOR RELIEF (Coinplaint not Served) Mitchell Levi and Ferdinand Levi, co partners under the firm name and style of Levi Bros. Plaintiffs, against Boykin Cantey, Ben Cantey, Rose Boz ier, Irene -McBride, Agnes Watson, Dorcas Martin, Willie Cantey, Es telle Wells, Stella Cantey, Reva Taylor, Samuel Cantey, Daniel Cantey, Ben Green,.Julia J. Cantey, and Rena Ellis, Defendants. TO TIlE DEFENDANT Rena :l1W above named: YOU are hereby summoned and r. quired to answer the complaint in this action, which is filed in the Office of the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas, for the said County, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber at his office, in the city of Sumter, S..C. within twenty days after the service hereof, exclusive of the (lay of such servicej and if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the reliog demanded in the complain. Dated February 16th 1920. Wendell M. Levi, Plaintiff's Attorney. TO THE DEFENDANT Rena A ls: TAKE NOTICE that the complaint in this action together with the sum mons, of which the foregoing is a copy was filed in the office of the Clrk of Coturt of Common Pleas for Clarendon County, Yn th Statd of South Carolina, on the 20th day of March 1920. Wendell M. Levi, % Plaintiff's Attorney. The next timne you buy calomel ask for alotal s The rir4ed and refined calomel LM' les; that are iiadsealess, en anid sure, Meiia virtuca retain. ed arid improved. Sold only in analed packages, Price 35&. F CYPRESS SASH ~ BLINDS MOULDINGS AND MILLI WORKs