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To The Public: Frankness has alwz in communal intercours this community. With basing our clean record one to disprove. All ti the best force and the ' the success of the busin< us success in business d honest reputation we r< any coml)laints or any With the same spirit w Our good intentions in i take place on January 1 letter. But events of t is well known to every ed, and terminating to s carry out our well laid ganization plan for an i Our business will b charged, nothing given we find will work for th and scarcity of money t their absolute needs. Th facilities in the heart of ready cash we are able will be offered to you. I chasing value at the pr( our expenses will be gre of profits that it will re will be backed strictly v bought of us for any re out question, providing )osted every week, thrc (late. It will be to your before your )urchases a There are so many pursue in the near futur sible and common sense yourself or. your famil.) as cheaply as you can 1 * - 1benefits will be all yours p~ossible, paving the way make it. Be cheerful a perous for all of us. Wi TComne to The Times FOI 3 New Modern Conv< Price, $2.0 DuRan MANNING, An Open] tys been our policy in all ou e for the last 23 years since pride we come before you i on true and honest statemi irough the history of our t nost able man.gement to c, ?ss but for the welfare and on't mean only in dollars ai tain. We invite any criti wrong treatment, or any i e are now ready to explain -eorganizing The New Idea st. All plans have been mai he last two months, has i one; everything working d uch an extent that matters )ut plans. We are compell aidefinite time. conducted for the present >n memorandum. We will e benefit of your interest a. ie public needs goods at su us we are ready to furnish the purchasing market ar< to command our own price: Ull our goods on hand will 1 asent market. Eliminating atly reduced it will enable 1 quire very little cash to bu, vith our old established ruk ason whatsoever and your the goods returned is in sar ugh the columns of The Ti interest to watch our adve re made. different and confusing opi e that we don't dare to vent advice we can render to y( r from necessities of life. >ut keep on. buying. Keep Spend part of your money for a clear opening in the.: nd make others to feel sami th our best wishes for year The New IdE Office for Your I SALE) Bung~ mniences. Best 00.00 to $5,50C WY TERMS Lt & Flo S ions as well as n business in Rn open book, : we defy any ored to select 3, not only for and last. To the clean and face us with mistatement. ovember Ist. 1otives vas to ;s change to a it rapidity, as )f all concern wva:rant us to >one the reor IS. Nothing ash only. This of depression iem to supply before. Our ncern. With such benefits basis; or pur unts, whereby small margin with purchase irn any article efunded with will keep you ell as styles to ome to see uS r the course to The only son 'ON"f deprive you need, buy se of time the ss as much as hard as you be ver'y )pos you. M'anager ATlSO)N l'LANS F'INANC(C .\lOVIC orgia Senator- l'lect Tlells of ltemnedy Hie Will P~ropose Whent ile Tlakes Seat. aits-on, Unitited staites ieattor-('lct 11m Georgia, anntfounctes ina a copy th tedi st atemaenit to bae pulished in e Atlatnta Constitutiont Sunday that the exta sesionf of the t;7th caon ess he wvilI jitroduce a hill t ike L iberty anad vict ory bonds and hera govern menit war apern a legal Mr. Watson has aniouniedi plans r jitdug hill s to force t he fed ail reserive anad faram louan han iks ti 'ad money directly to indiividluals :d to requtir'e the secreta ry oif the aasury to issue the unulhsed green eks auathorizedl by a hill signed by -esidlent Lincolnu. 'The total of these thorizedl but unaissuedl gr'eenbacks, coralmi glo the seaatori-el'ct, i 02,000,000. Discuassinig hais plan to 1 make legal idea of Liberty anad Vic tory bonads. adit cErtificates, war savinig stamplJ d all governimenit olligatioan pa pea medl diuring and since~ the world Iir as a remedy for what hie climsni ani existinig "dlomtest ic crisis,"' Mr aitsoan dec~a red such action wouldl ve an electrilfyinag effecvt upon01 iaericani business life. On passage of such legislation Mr. atson dleclaired "all nnnnhono-'. of mUmt ummm mmmuM Letter r dealings in business relat we established ourselves i vith the same policy, like ants, as we always did, whi< iusiness we always endeav irry out our best intention benefit of the public first ad cents but the good name cism or any individual to nisrepresentation or any our announcement of *N Co., with well explained r de to carry out this busine >ved with such unprecedei etrimental to the interest did not materialize to ed, to our sorrow, to post] on a strictly CASH BAS buy for cash and sell for c 3 well as ours. In times ch low prices, to enable tl you now better than ever a better equipt of any co ; on all our purchases, all )e marked down on same the burden of charge acco is to sell our goods at such y from us. Our guarantee . You are at liberty to reti money will bc cheerfully r ne condition as bought. We mes with latest prices as w rtisements carefully and < iions, advising the public o ure out with our advice. >u is live economical, still E Buy what you need, when things moving and in cout and retire your indebtedne future. Times are not a; 3 way, and the future will 1921, we are, as ever with ~a Company, MORRIS NESS, Legal Blanks ith dlos ! Section. .00.C (1' it I 'S! ydW outh Carolina. w NUT-BEARING TR[[S FURNISH RROFIT AS WL. AS SHADE There Are a Number of Them That Grow as Rapidly as Maples or Elims--More Attention Given Nut Tree Planting Than Formerly. They were gathered about the farin house fire in the mellow light of a swing lamp, and the head of the house sent his youngest so nto the garret for I butternuts. A little later, with an ironl< lapstone oi his knees and hammer in hand, he was producing a rhythmic i rap-ratp-rap-c rack-clink, as the crinkly brown shells split open and I wc re tossed into a basin, exposing their delicately flavored twin meats. "This is the last crop fro mthat old I tree." he remarked, thoughtfully, pausiig after a few minutes of fas cinating labor. "Rotted out, and the wi d got it last night. And I have gathered nuts from that tree since I - was a little tike in short breeches." The htmmer rested for a few mo men's, and the fingers of the farmers' left hand ran meditatively through the pile of richly laden shells . "Fifty years," he mused. "Fifty springs I've seen the green conie out on the leaves; fifty falls I or my child ren or gr-indchildren have picked up b Ishe!s of nuts; and fifty winters I've ,A by the fire here and cracked them. 'hat butter-nut tree has been a good old friend. None to Take Its Place. Yet with all the pleasure that lie hii obtained from that tree, the far mer, thrifty in nearly everything, had no new butternut trees coming up to take the place of the patriarch which the wind destroyed. It is only recently that serious at t- tion has been paid to nut-tree plant jog. Landowners set out orchards and olit trees in dooryarIs and on the highways for shade; but nut-bearing trees, which usually require 8 to 15 years to come into bearing, have beeO in a measure neglected. There are a number of nut-bearing eeits, Say specialists of the United States Department of Agriculture, which gorw as rapidly for shade as the mapl" or elm and which will yield pleasure mid some revenue for a nowr'er or half a century after the first few years of cultivation. Th ! butternut is no wbeing producel by ni urserymen and grows farther north than most other species. But I enwit trees will bear in about eight ~e-ir's and form an attractive yard or iwi -.He ornaiment, espe-;.lly in the N") o' in Stlt(S. Yore attntion, however, is being ')*id to its relative, the black walnut. 'The late war made heavy inroads on the ranks of these fin' old trees for <runstocks. airplaine parts, and other -naterial; but nurserymen already had beg'm to grow young trees to make up the loss. Contrary to the common idea, the black walnut is not neces sarily a slow grower. -Under good conditions of culture, it becomes one of our imiost rapid growing trees, es pecially of the more valuable woods. It binq been known to hear a few nuts in six years. At 15 to 25 it is a heavy producer. and in (1 dage it is always a re )Ource for timber. The chestnut, which has be'n an important resource ior centuries, is now one of the trigedies of treedoi, due to the bark disease brought from Japan. 'I'he United Stater Depart III( nt of Agricultur? amd various nut Iulture associntions are now work ir with some promise of success to i velop varieties whic'i are blight-resist ant. Until tl'"y arrive at e't 'blished res ilts, it will probably not be wise to pl ant chiestmt.ts in anvt sect i %' -re the bark disenste i-; prev' nt. 'le shagbark hickory makes a hainisoie shade tree, andl qui te a few vaur e ties havye been propagated. Shagba rka gene'ralIly comie iinto bear mng after lI or 23 years. A few :1ekory treces ph:'otedi now wvou Ildie ai coimforta:ible resour0 cc for ano hir gene raition. Th'b beech is a slowv grower, a nd canO icarice ly be cla:ssed as a comtmeri, ~ I nuit , buit is an attIrauct ive and hoov i.r e whb 're t here is roo for1 t, itI pre:i. lHeeinuts f uinitlh daint ie. for an eveinig's chat, or lefto the groundl in woods(l andl pastures the.y1 Corn ish tatItein ig mat eiialI for pig's < 'nd tu:rkeys. If' the b '"Ih trm' is he el. I 'i OW, it oflfers lIss (bhenc. for dlefa'-4 n ii its smioothi brk ith cknf he iro4glyph ies. 'vtI i~ (iif . I One (othe(r interesting nut tiee' is the liiberct, of Euriopeani haizei. It is one of I 41r1 mit titalliz/inig species. for while it canii be mad:. toi grow in many parits f the North, n(o vality has vet been tooud tol biar pirolit::bly eaust oft the I iforcky Mo(ntaints, dlue to the fact thati Ii tlowers (early and14 is cauitght by fiost. it the l'ac'itic Northwest it hids' fajir to soonui be4oemle ani imtpoitant nuot. 'The. pecaii is eusily the favorite an I motist iinplortanit niut of Amiierican' orig- < WELl Is an Art or N< Ac\cor'ding to the abiI emlJoy only the beCst wV yourl exper'ience with m1 your' wVork to us and get Inl addlit ion wve op~erat mac'hine andl~ repair shop a~ other parIts, etc., on short G;as engines are anot] Siddall-R ichi Phone No .'l79 a mt e --. n, prolific and profitable in the South Ind now being introduced well into iorthern States. Boaring pecan tre m ire not infrequent along the Atlantic oast as far north as New Jersey. Fine lpecimen trees are not uncommon in nany northern St itec. Occasionally auts mature on a cw of the stray rees scatetred about in the State of dichigan. The Persian, commonly called Eng ish, walnut can be grown in a few rears. It does well in a limited way i certain sections of the East, es )ecially along the Atlantic coast in astern Maryland, Deleware, and New [ersey. It is one of the important ree crops of California, and promisei 0on to become of considerable imlpor ance in the Pacific Northwest. Al-tonds of some hard-shell vari-t es endur practically throughout the 'ange of the beech. Japanese walnuts. an be grown over a large part of the ountry. r1L)ElRLY FARMER )IES OF POISON Nife and Young Man Taken to Jail Jury Accuses Woman-Verdict at Inquest Says Death is )ue to )ose of Strychnine. Marion, Dec. 31.-B. Jones, an C: lerly farmer living on the Gall: 'ant's ferry road about six miles ;outheast of Marion, came to hit.L leath last night about 10 o'clock us :he result of an overdose of strych ,lme alleged to have beeii adminis line alleged to have been admin is ered by his young wife with inten ;o kill. Lizzie Jone:, the wife, w ii aken into custody and is held in tlh'! \Iarion county jail on a charge of ioisoning her husband, accordoing t:> :estiniony which came out at the cor aner's investigation. Mr. Jones hat1 ieen indisposed and asked his wife to ix him a (lose of soda and salts. Sht )repared some medicine for him, ,vhich he took. Shortly afterward.i ie was seized with violent pains ani )elieving himself to be poisoned, be ran to shout and scream in order t> tttract the attention of some peop'x iving nearby. At the time Mrs. rones gave the dose there was no on - n the house but herself, her husban I ind their three little childreir. Th.. toise made by Mr. Jones soon at :racted neighbors to the scene ar-f Ie told them that he had been poi. goned by his wife and when ques ioned by them she is said to have a nitted that she puItrposely adim ini ered the overdose of strychnine. Witnesses say that she said she lnd had the bottle of strychnine over t year and had been saving it to )oison her husband. Mrs. Jones ii 5 years of age a'I'l has been mari* ied six years. Her husband was p:s, 10 years of age. It has be(n rumor !d for some time that the pair di: lot get along well together. It i illeged that Mrs. Jones states tha' im Animmons, a young farmer livin ibout a mile north of Mar on, giv.. ier the bottle of strychnine over ; ear ago and told her to kill her usban with it. Ammons was a rreisted this morn he fact andI is held in the iI her Ors. Jwoes male no attempt to es ape an1d appar'nt ly no effort to con eal Iler alleged ni't I. The neigh - >ois sum1monied Sheriff J. V. Roweli i md keot her under obseivationa until lis arrival. The coroner's jn-y fo n: h- followin.r v Ilit.!: "3. Jones came to his deith as -sult of mtrychis, niint-' i .1 niniistered by his wife, Lizzie Jones." The sheriff' is in possession of .h m tle which contained the strych ine. It, is the half o'ince size and is virtjialiv fill:'d with powdered strvelh iine. The bottle is marked "Poison," vith the usual skull -and cross bons' abel. WOMIAN 1(11.1.5 NEGR~O Newv Orleans, Jain. I .--.Sam sani !ers, 27 yeair., ohl, ntetfro, was -h K 11nd instantly killed last night by vire of -1local 41ro''. ice byv .\lis. ladh it. su-m t iitere.l him- v : -,s!ked fi 'n cntt vol i h, ofhees, t il ler in;' -Tht en' -ents in chiange'. Ieturn;ing-. to the Ileo e inutes later he dem'ian I. -I $1I.5(0 more ini change. I0 ingi refuised, .\lr. I ohdel sys h I gtun anid kill heri. A. short wh i i Krag arimy rifle which lie levelt'i it the he.adl of the womiian. whlo inatchied a :tx enllibre re'volver fro in 'nithe~(Ii countev, an shot the negro in the head. D~eauth was inistantane 'Te police repoirt that ithe, niegr vais fonnd lying oin thme llor of Ite tore with a loaded Krag by his side. -'ollowinig the 'hooting Mris. I.oh,t. olhaipsed.( D'ING ity of the oper'ator. W\e ('els that money1~ and~ )on't beC dlis'our aged1 by ake(sh)i ft welder's. Ship it off' your mfind(. e a first class automobile nd( c'an make axles, notice. ler' of our spec(ialit ardson I