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SOCS H For Your Tobacco A AUCTION I.N you patronize our house. No one third down, but every penny your to bacco sells for, just as quickly as it is sold. The Season Opens Tuesday Next, AUGUST 1st Bring your tobacco to our house and get the High Dollar. We have one of the best auctioneers in the business and he knows tobacco. Come on Opening Day. Banner Warehouse, W. T. Harnsberger, Prop. SUMTER, S. C. TOACCO~i Splendid wvork was done by the as an independent warehouse. The DNBOW IT ACCO department, however, in preventing Farmers warehouse, across the WAREHOUSE BURNS she of the flames. Just across street, has been taken over by the testreet, ntover twenty-five or Tobacco Growers' Co-operative As thirty feet distant, is located the sociation. Mr. Lewis says that he Cause Is Not Known-Building and Farmers warehouse, one of the had stored in the warehouse be. and oCntents Valued at 30,000 largest frame buildings in this tween $5,000 and $6,000 worth of Total Loss-No Insurance. part of the State, and only a few tobacco, and did not have a cent feet distant on the other side is lo- of insurance. It was his intention, Bamberg, July 24.-The Denbow cated the residence of J. A. Mitchell, he said, to have taken out insurance tobacco warehouse, one of the two to- both of which were saved, the only today. bacco selling houses of this city, was damage being the scorching of the The building was insured for cqfnpletely destroyed by fire yester- walls of both buildings and the $8,000, but Monday the policies were day afternoon at 12:30 o'clock, entail- bekn fsm idwgass loe oete as rwr ing a loss of approximately $20,000,Thbuligwsondbtecaeld. hrfre heeie without a dollar of insurance, either Dno oac aeos on acos n otnswr on the contents or the building itself. pnalclcroain fwihcmlt os aoiyo h The fire was discovered soon after MyrVreToa speiet tci ssaewsondb noon by some laborers who wvere A .Dnovvc rsdnadJ .M ebw omrpeieto working In the warehouse at theFrnFoksceayadresir.tePplsBkfthsiyme time grading tobacco. The cause of Tebidn a h is oac eetycnetdwt aki the fire has not been ascertained. wrhueeetdi hsscinBrwladMs ebw The laborers were engaged in the o h ttadcsi ssinme fBmegctznhw front part of the building, it isaprimtl$1OtItbul.tevowdsocin heopr stated, when they saw smoke is-haalagforcpciyanwsto. suing from the rear of the storagebulofwdwihcrgae room, They gave the alarm, but wls ODBID W the entire building was enveloped Thwaeos wsrntdhiWIDHESGLS in flames even before the fire de- sao oEns eialclt-DprsFo utmr ehd partent ouldget n th sce e. acoman, hower onperevetingIt Ad ppesFr Pinpls the streetdnottoveromwenty-feteoor hFsrbegunwtoemonusacture Itstoe plate glass, andaareadydhasnin opera feetn thetanrstnmoderntglassihouse 1ve equipped especiallyetoaveg, glassnfy damagis customary whenctakingfovee wallsmanufactureuofdannswapdoduc ofrproiuctionoan, asnaoconsesuen. theemethodsinndwmachinery usethi makingwFordglass areearadicalode panarturelfcal cstablishedpracticeh TheyFordecnntinuousscosveyorisynte A.eaturesnthw operationsdsotthatdfJo theetimeltiegglass leavesrthetfurnac until itsbecomestapolishediwisdshiel of the Statitais clwayst msviagd approximaaking,15,006viewedild.tht -qha FordaPgentolorkstoacetyeryanimple Theerawamthrials reslntrnded thint .seasoe torEaneswhereithea lecometa parltennmass.lDrawn fromhthecfur. ' ~~-- acea inda emi-en den twae, h ese. s} passes wareos, whcros it witht aen tkend one to a.ov ingctoneyor. Leis caris tht i 464 fetrd thraeoughaeual cooln funwe Atth5,0,It0scu and $,0 ot toacdon anodidrnotohveyo aw'ee carie itnsurance. Itwshis ginintin iheNeu.~,Go his aids o haew lik touth ast W~~'8~SU.F whhe builing ewablisred nd o pand00, butronda tie oieies lie alwihteod oicr achie or er waeousnepnd nen futsid maeria scpetess manufctrig Fod the ducts, anit th staeim arwed thy A~onqimionof~t iA..menbwic forde isdenldt o us nthe Poutonk of t crs,r trucksntranctors matehialbanknr ~ ~ (', ManninBrnelyhgult a nddMsel hemw A ~ ~ Aeverh faouned toc ne corpora SHOPMEN SPEND MORE THAN YEAR PREPARING FOR STRIKE Waited Fifteerf Months to "Accumu. late -Grievances to Support De mand" for Walkout, Says Union Officer. Washington, July 24.-That the railroad shopmen have been prepar ing for the strike now in progress since April 1921, and waited fifteen months, because of a desire to "ac cumulate enough grievances to sup port a demand for a nation-wide strike" were statements made today by P. J. Conlon, vice president of the International Association of Machin hts, at a public mass meeting here. Union officials learned April 8, 1921, Mr. Conlon said, that the national agreement with the railroads was to be abolished although the railroad labor board did not act until - April 14. When individual agreements were sought, he declared, the unions "ran into identical demands from every road we approached which indicated to us there was some central agency of authority directing the fight against us." "Then we realized Vice President Conlon continued, "that we would have to sit tight and suffer in si lence until enough grievances had been accumulated to support a de rnand for a nationwide strike." Of the 1,100 decisions handed down by the labor board, the speak er listed 700 as favorable to the railroads and 400 as "nominally in favor of our side," but of the latter, he said, at least 300 were not put into effect by the railroads and therefore "didn't mean anything." Asserting that the strike leaders were well satisfied .with the situa tion, Mr. Conlon said. "It generally takes from thirty to sixty days to make a shop strike effective but before this one had been on ten days more than 250 trains had been cancelled out of Chicago, West Virginia non-union coal mines were bottled up, and the iron and steel industries were crying for help. And we have hardly started yet." SOUNDS WARNING TO REPUBLICANS Washington, July 24.-Failing to get action from the Senate finance commitoe majority, Senator Len root, Republican, Wisconsin, launch ed today in the Senate his fight to limit to 60 per cent advalorem the duties in the pending tariff bill on coarse wools, both in the raw and the manufactured state. His pro posal met with sharp opposition from spokesmen for the committee and Senators engaged in the pro duction of wool and there were frequent and at times sharp ex changes. Warning his Republican col leagues that the 33 cents a pound duty proposed would result in an increase in the cost of woolen clothing, Senator Lenroot declared the Republicans would have dif ficulty in justifying to the people in the large cities proper protective dluties for the wool producers, but that they could not justify "this enormous equivalent advalorem duty, equaling in some cases 137 per cent," on wool of a kind not produced in this country to any ap preciable extent. Before returning to its fight over wool, the Senate wound up its work on committee amendments in the flax, jute and hemp schedule. Two controversies developed, Democrats vigorously opposing the rates pro posed on jute bagging for cotton and on cotton floor coverings. Sen ator Robinson, Democrat, Arkan sas, sought to have the rates re duced from 6-10 cent and 3-10 cent a square yard to 1-10 cent and 1-20 cent, respectively, but his amendment was rejected, 36 to 18, and the original rates approved, 31 to 17. By a vote of 34 to 16 the Sen ate rejected an amendlment by the same Senator to cut from 35 per cent advalorem to 20 per cent, the proposed duty on cotton floor cov erings. FOREST SERVICE EMPLOYES NOTEB LANDSCAPE ENGINEER Dr. Frank A. Waugh, professor of iandscape engineering at the Massa chusetts Agricultural College, Am herst, Mass., has been apopinted re creation engineer in the Forest Ser vice, United States Department of Agriculture. Dr. Waugh, a noted author, andl one of the leading land scape architects of this bountry, will spend the summer formulating plans for the development of public camp grounds and summer home sites In the national forests of oClorado, Wyoming, Utah, Idaho, and other Western States. This study is a part of the established plan of the Forest Service toward providing adequate camp and sanitation facilities for the 6,600,000 persons who yearly Beok rest, health, and enjoyment in our na tional forests. Judgment Day For South Carolina Tobacco Farmers Comes Next Monday, July 31 With Your Last Chance to Sign Where Will You Stand Mon day Night? on the road to prosperity with 78, 000 members in the Tobacco Grow ers Cooperative Association, or fac ing another year of the Auction Sys tern which has kept us poor in a Land of Plenty? Will You Sign or Dump Your Crop? Take Your Choice To-day! Are you able to purchase your Electrical Appliances in Manning? If not, we want you to visit us when in Sumter. Our Stock of Appliances and Fixtures is complete in every detail, having one of the most complete and elaborate Fixture Display Rooms in this section of South Carolina, at proper prices. Lamps and Appliances for country lighting plants also in Stock. Lynam Electric Co. 33 W. Liberty St. SUmTER, S. C. How the Bank Serves the Farmer You, the Farmer, are America's greatest pro ducer of wealth. But before YOU receive the money for your crops many months usually elapse. The crops must be sown, must be fertilized, tilled, reaped and SOLD! The Bank is your Friend because it helps to carry you over the weeks and months between planting and profiting seasons. It permits you to purchase seed, fertilizer, machinery, on credit. In times of stress it stands behind you and ,helps you weather the storm. Are YOUJ getting all the benefits which the bank offers farmers? Learn how we can help YOU. Ask for full information from our officials. They will be pleased to tell you more about our service. H ome Bank & T rust Co. CHARLTON DuRANT, President T. M. WELLS, Cashier