New $100,000 Industry
Is Under Way. . . Hawn Ice Cream Company Recieves Its Charter. . . Will Handle
Ice Cream, Butter, Milk and Eggs
A charter for the Hawn Ice Cream Company, with a capital
stock of $100,000 authorized, and $10,000 paid in, has been issued, and at a
meeting of stockholders of the corporation yesterday morning in the Chamber of Commerce
rooms the following officers were elected: D.B. Snyder, president; W.B. Love,
vice-president and general counsel; O.D. Hawn, secretary and treasurer and
general manager; and a board of directors composed of Messrs. O.D. Hawn, G.S.
Lee Sr., Heath Lee, R.A. Morrow and Albert Redfern.
The company will manufacture ice cream, fancy creamery
butter, and distribute guaranteed fresh eggs. It expects to do a business
amounting to $100,000 the first year. Plans for the erection of a modern
building are also on foot, but for the present the plant will be operated in
the old creamery building on Tallyrand avenue. Mr. O.D. Hawn, the manager, has
bought the Simpson property on Washington street, and will move to Monroe from
Hickory, where he has been living for the past year, in a few weeks.
In addition to the manufacture of ice cream and creamery
butter, milk will be sold to the people of Monroe through sub-stations. It is
planned to install a milk station in a couple of local grocery stores, one at
Icemorelee and one in North Monroe. Deliveries of mil will e made by stores
along with grocery orders.
The manufacture of ice cream will be the main interest of
the company, and it plans to ship cream daily during the summer season to
nearby towns, and to places as far as Chester on the Seaboard, to Hamlet and to
Columbia. Cream will also be supplied to local druggists and Mr. Hawn says he
will also make deliveries in one-gallon lots to homes in Monroe.
Orders for about $8,000 worth of the latest ice cream making
machinery have been forwarded, and shipment will be made by the manufacturer
some time after the first of the year. The plant will be in operation by March
first, which will be sufficient time to begin to supply the demand for ice
cream. The capacity of the plant will be about 200 gallons of cream a day.
However, the company will begin the manufacture of creamery butter within a few
weeks, machinery for that purpose being already installed in the temporary
building which it will occupy.
Much interest has been manifested in the ice cream plant
here, and the promoters had little difficulty in disposing of the necessary
stock. A great future for the company is predicted, and some believe it will be
only a matter of time before its business will amount to a half million dollars
or more annually.
Mr. Hawn, the manager is an experienced creamery man, and
the manner in which he conducted the creamery here, after it had fallen
hopelessly in debt, won for him the confidence of the men who are backing him
in this enterprise.
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