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CREAMERY IN I WILL BE The Editor, The Times, Manning, S. C. Dear Sir: It has recently been my pleasure to to note through columns favorable mention of the establishment by the writer of a Creamery here in Flor ence. The plant is now under con struction and will be ready for op eration before Christmas. It will pe known as the Colonial Creamery Com pany, whose intention it is to manu facture butter from separated cream shipped in by the farmers and also for the purpose of buying, milk-feed ing and dressing poultry and the handling of eggs, all to be purchased from the same source. Alay I take this opportunity of ex pressing my appreciation of this favorable recognition ? It is gratify ing to know that we have publications that gives recognition to all classes of industries that promise relief to our Southern farmers who now find it necessary to free themselves from the one crop idea. For years I was located in the Southwest engaged in the same line of business and after returning to civil life at the close of the recent war availed myself of the opportunity of becoming associated with the larg est produce house in the state of In iiarm. This connection was iade oil account or the fact that I desirod to get more general experience and some of the Northern ideas of conver sion and conservation before I em barked in business for myself in the dear old Southland. In looking for a location I spent se'vIr1al months touring the country, through1 l Kentucky, Tennessee and North and South Carolina. In my travels I found m:any possibilities that held out hopes of quicker returns than did Florence. This feature however, did not appeal to me for the reason that I considered it more or less superlicial. Rather instead I chose this point on account of the fact that it otbered the greatest possible fu ture developimient and expansion on account of its utter lack of produe tion due largely to lack of education, its favorable climatic conditions, soil, needy an1d res ponsive to anIiIal fer tilizer combined with adequate rail road facilities covering the entire Ath!-mItic Coast from New York to Floria. It seemelld to me that n1o other point offered such possibilities for developing a large and useful in dustry as did the Pee Di e section of South Carolina. Since having decided defini tely to locate here I have familiarized my self more thoroughly with other plarts of the South and find1 many pointIs of fering jiust Is good anl opportunity. While I shall endear, by the 20th of I)etelnber, to afford evei'ry cream producer, within the rad1ius of three hundred miles of Florence, a ready 21 pairs E. C. Skuffer Tan Shoes Sizes 12 to 2 at $1.98 Begins and continues th UT Fine B Shoes Inci Just Think, Your McCOI l T( I O'NN I $7.95 LORENCE OPEN SHORTLY cash market for his cream, providing the product is properly cared for am shipped at regular intervals, the mat ter of encouraging other plants should be fostered. I would really and truly like to se every publication in the South vigor. ously get in behind this matter o: produce development which includes first, cream production; second, prop er development of the young dairy stock; third, poultry and eggs; fourth hogs. Another product which must not be overlooked is the manure produce< from the above mentioned, includ in the cow herself. In the course of ' few years, if this manure is properly conserved and economically distribut ed, it will materially reduce our com mercial fertilizer bills, and make it possible for us to produce, on fewei acres, more feed stuffs with less ex pense and labor. There should be no question in th< miils of any of us relative to th< matter of our comparative cost of produce as against its cost in the Northern states. The man that ad vances an argument against the pro duce possibilities of the South on ac count of his idea that it will cost. toc much to produce it, is to be pitied more than Censure(l. 11is wantor lack of knowledge in this respect is largely attributable to his greed for knowledge or cotton production. Since the Boll Weevil has become the great est "field agent" of the Creamery an ProItice business, our one timc cotton farmer is now confronted with tile absolute necessity of fortifying h1 imself against the loss, in the eyes of the world, of his social and econo in ie position. On accou~l't of this fact, he is now, without exception, .1 seeker of knowledge in order to suc cessfully combat the Boll Weevil an1 maintaim his social and economic standig with the result that he has t~uined to cencentrated diversified far ining. Beyond questioin, the economic s lut1ion of th' "concentrated diversi fication" is the high quality Dairy (ow, "the Mother of Prosperity." From her has sprung higher educa tion, higher standard of living, bet ter homes and improvements, mort economic home life, increase(l valcu of farmi lMds and various and sun dry other advantages too numerous to mention. Try, if you will, in comlparison with other sections of the countr-y whc have (lone concentrated farm dairy fing for a period of more than ten years and see if you can pirove thesc statements untruC. I do not believe that you will be able to contradict them and the one thing that has made thiis contraliction impossible is the fact that these people Who have fol lowed lairying Were enthusiastically ener('igetiCand were not calamity howl el-s. They accepted the advice and council of the United States Agricul OUR T HU RSD AY, DI rough Saturday, De Z &DU cots in Brown and BI uded in this Sale. Yc $7.95 Choice of any of Utz Stock for $7.95 LLUM I SHOE Department, SUMT ER, S. C. CYPRESS SASH DOORS BLINDS MOULDINGS AND MILLWORK tural and Animal Husbandry Institu tions; thle sound judgment and ad vice of their respective extension ser vices, combined with the knowledge and advice of those competent, con scientious men engaged in the mar ket of converting their raw products into a finished table commodity, prop erly marketed. Our Southland offers its people this same advantage and no one, no mat ter how much of a pessimist, can convince me that our people are not going to fall in line. This will be more readily accomplished if those of us who are interested in the conver sion and marketing of these products, combined with all other forces, in cluding the press, refrain from selfish motives. The produce men operating in a scientific way, drawing their raw materials from over a large area, operating on a basis of small profits from large volume rather than in a small haphazard way on a basis of small volume and large profits, will net the farmer highest return3 through daily cash markets afforded for their shipments of cream, poultry and eggs. My attitude is that the matter of small profits on a large volume i. economically sound, and I would b glad to see other Creamery and Pro duce mon -come into this country on such a basis with plants distributed throughout the entire South. When such a Condition prevails you will see rapid progress being made by all of our farmers to the end that they will eventually be free from indebtedness wliich makes for a better mode of living. It must not be forgotten that our farmers are the very back bone of our National Structure, and that the welfare of all others will be 100 pairs Ladies' Odd Lots Special Your Choice $1.98 C. 1st, cember the 10th. !%JN acks at $12.50 ur Choice, & Dunn Shoes in I R OS.' UTZ1 & I)IJNN Hf l(CK SI'l'1)E0 fi( )OTl' $7.95 reflected In acordance with the pros perity of the farmer. The high stend ard 'of intelligence portrayed in our Southern people will sooner or later assert itself to such an extent that we will arise again just as we did after the Civil War and in my honest opinion there is not a single rung in the ladder, while on our upward elilhb, that will bear its load with less strain than that rung emblematic of the Dairy Cow and her by-pro ducts. Again thanking you for your in terest and sincerely hoping that you will continue to njanifest this same interest to the end that within a period of five years we can all look Lack with much' pride upon the up ward trend th'at the Dairy Cow, "the Mother of Prosperity," has made pos sible. Yours very truly, M. W. Cartwright. MANY STORIES OF HIDDEN WEALTH SOUTH SEA ISLANDS Papeete, Tahiti, Oct. 11.-(By Mail)-The year 1921 has been the open season for treasure hunting in the islands. Every month or so a report that the vast treasure (alleged to have been buried some sixty years ago) on the Island of Pinlaki had at last been located, has induced a new company of ad venturous Papeete capitalists to equip a fresh expedition only to return with nothing more than a goodly coat of sunburn and back aching from the strenuous exer cise of digging for weeks in the blistering coral sai.d. Then, early in the year, came the yacht "Genesee" from New York in search of a great treasure of gold, said to have been left on the island of Tupai-Manu, in the western Societies, by the German Pacific squadron when they were fheeing from fhe pursuing British and Japanese fleets in 1914. Much real estate on Tupai-Manu flew in to the firmament, on that occasion under the action of good charges of dynamite; but the "Genesee" sail e(. away leaving the treasure to be discovered by a future explorer. And now there is the story of a new treasure. The tale is, that about fifty years ago a Chilaii war shil deposited on the island of Moorea (the island close by Ta hiti) a treasure of gold belonging to the Chilian government of that tine-as a measure to keel) it from falling into the hands of a stron-r revolutiona'y party. The revolu tion must have been successful; for none returned to take away the gold, the story runs. Years after ward, howeve,' the Protestant inmis sionary at Moorea received a letter from a priest in Chile enclosing an outline drawing easil yrecognized ais the outline of the mountain peaks about Opunohy Bay in Moorea asking for information of the loca tion of the island so represented and stating that he had knowledge of a treasure buried there. The missionary having vision; f - goldly adlvetnur''ers Ioupfin.' I is flock - ' io ir up ie let.,' llnd drawing without dislatch ing the answer. Nothing more was heari of the iaair until a month ago when a stianger arrived in the island bear 'ln. charts and (firaw ags which, he claimeld, woul 12,1d him to the tr-easurle. i Report from i Aoor'ea stale that at the place ild icated on his charit on digging down, he caine upon a concrete slab and great was the ex citement atil the s'ab was broken through and a cavity ,about thiree feet in de)th, was disclosed contain ing absolutley nothing. The seek er is, however, hopeful and is hard at work digging and sound ing. in the valleys ahout the bay. NEWY PO(WElU PLAN'TS ON TH'IE WATlERFEE G;reatl Falls, Nov. 28.--J. B. Duke and party, MIr. anid Mrs. E:. C.X Mar shallI amnd Mrin and Mrts. C. I. Buick holder of C harmlotte, ariivedl here Firiday morning in Mr. D~uke's pri ve enar, and the parIty is leaving tonight on a special foir Charilotte b~y the way of Monroe. Messrs. Marshall andl Blurikholder ar ic ol.. eer's in the Southern Poweri comn pany, anad are' here with MIr. D~uke lookmjg over the locatLion of the new power' ph1at, oni whlmich work willI cowmen(' within a few weeks. The party alIso drlove down to the Watereec power' planut, and on the way inispected , the nmany - farm dwellings andl impr~iovements being maide on the company's farms. $300,000) IIE IN FIT'lZGEIA)M Fi t'zeraldI, Ga., Nov. 29;-A half block: in the business sec'tion was vii'tually destroyed in a three hunit di'ed thousand dollar lire early this mormn ng. The firec stairtedl in a building occu pied by HI. A. Burk hart as aaeadatmbl sanlesroom. m '1g w atmbl NOTICE 01" SA LE State of South Carolina, County of Clar'endon. Court of Common Pleas. Bank of Santee, Plinitiff, vs. C. Watson Tindal and Felix R. Dingle, D e fend ants. Under and by virtue of a Decree of the Court of Common Pleas made in above enlti tled act ion to me directed, 1, J1. E. Gamble, Sher'iff' of Clai'endon will sell at public oiutr'y to the high e'st bidder foi' cash, in front of the ICouirt HIouse dloor! at Manning, S. C., on Mondlay, the 5thI day of D~ecember 1921 , beinig sailesdlay, within the legal hours for' judlic ial sales, the followving describedl real estate: All that. piece, painrcel or. lot of l and, with harins and dIwell ing thereon, situlate' in the Tlowni of Summei'ton, Count y of Clarendlon ,in the State of South Carol ina, on First Street, and hounded as follows, to wit. On the Not~h by lot of Abraham House; on the East by lot of Henry Sampson andl C. W, Tidal;' on the South by lands formerly said to be owned by Strauss and Rogan and on the West by First Street. This'lot being number 10 on First Street, all of which may be more fully seen by- reference ,to a plat of same made by H.T. Cantey, Surveyor, dated in May 108. November 15, 1921. Purchaser to pay for papers. J. E. GAMBLE, Sheriff of Clarendon County. CITATIO NOTICE The State of South Carolina, County of Clarendon. By J. M. Windham, Probate Judge: Whereas, E. H. Rhame made suit to me to grant him Letters of Admin istration of the Estate and effects Qf John Webb. These arc therefore, to cite and admonish all and singular the Kind red and Creditors of the said John Webb deceased, that they be and ap pear before me, in the Court of Pro bate, to be held at Manning on the 12th day of December next, after pub lication hereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said Administration should not be granted. Given under my hand this 21st day of November Anno Domini, 1921. J. M. Windham, chg- Judge of Probate. NAnONAL.CARBOMCO. I Columbia Dry Batterie H-, work better and last longer use --for bells and buzzers U C --for thlermostats' --for Cao engines oll -for dry battery lighiting in closet, cellar, garret. OR barn, etc. --for i:;nition on the Ford whil!estarting. Putanend Ringer. to cold wca:hcr "balks" You ne For gi ignition starting The world's most famous d, y Ignitior battery. used where group of ndi. dc"l c 'S is ,eede. quick, Falhnestock Spring Clip Bind. Solid p ;ng Posts at no extra charge Fits unt Sold b and gara and impl Columbia Pry Co The F -BLUE DI: On hand now. to keep a stock Manning CHANDLER &, OUR BANI THEY ARE INSEPARABLE A good future withoul doesn't often happen, y74 Our institution is a j and investing bank. We solicit the patrona -al attributes are likewis< ly desire to become such. You never regret mnc use to regret when it is The Bank i 10SEP11 SI T M- MO NOTICE OF EA'LE l State of South Carolina, Clarendon County. Court of Common Pleas. Notice of. Sale. The Sumter Trust Company, Plaintl against Billy Nelson And Cyrus Johnson, D fendants. Under and by virtue of an Executio from the Court of Common Pleas' to .me directed in above cause, I have levied upon and will sell at public out cry for cash to the highest bidder I front of the Court House door at Man ning, S. C., on Monday, December 5th, 1921, being- salesday within the. legal hours for -judicial sales the interest of above named defendants In tl;#, following described real estate: A portion of the Harper Tract I In and being in Clarendon County, 011 Carolina, conveyed to Billy Nelson at Cyrus Johnson by the Sumter Truo Compan , being lots Nos. 11 12 ai 13 on t of same made by G. Floyd, Surveyor, dated Septem 1919 and recorded in the office of Clerk of Court for Clarendon County in Plat Book No. 5 at page 10, and containing one hundred and sixty and four-tenths (160.4) acres. Dated November 14, 1921. Purchaser to pay for papers. J. E. GAMBLE, Sheriff of Clarendon County. 3 a] 2f v many you have for jmbias! bells, buzzers, thermos , as, etc., use Columbia "Beil " Little package of big power. ed but one. is engine igrvition; for tractor for ignition on the Ford while always Columbia "Hot Shot" Battery No. 1461. Starts regardless of cold weather. . .ckage of 4 cellpower (6 volts). ler the front seat of the Ford. y electricians, auto supply shops ges, hardware aad general stores, ement dealers. Look for the name on the label. Batteriews they last longer AL! amous K(IE GEM! Ve will endeavor at all times. Fuel Co. SPROTT, Pro prs. ~and our Future saving is something that >U know. rogressive money saving ge of these whose person ~-and those who earnest ney saved. There is no gone. )f Manning "ROTT, President UZON, Cashier