Yorkville enquirer. [volume] (Yorkville, S.C.) 1855-2006, March 18, 1921, Page Page Two, Image 2

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UARMERED WITH SCISSORS News From , tfitWii* ,.anft Without the County. CUNIJFNSED F0R QUICK READING Some Items of-Fact, Some of Comment Helpjng. to..Give an. Idea- of What Our Neighbors Are Saying and Doing. ^ChesteriReporter, March 15: Messrs. Huildhn Johnson and H. C. Libby, representatives of the Southern railway, ( visited Chester last Thursday, and\VMjr 'tut and had; a look at the overbridge on the L?ewis T. O. road, ibo.ut-. which there has been so much f',nip!.:ini. came back Saturday and ? ! ppvai'ed before the county board, whiyh after listening to their arguments ik-olined to take up the matter^ , wilii i lie attorney general's office and Msk.iiiar official to desist from the proixeflinurs that have been instituted: to \si\-.io m'|iiire the Southern railway to- . <; imply with the orders of-the railroad. i?>unnis.si<'!i of the state relative to ' irr-vritig-a new bridge to conform with Mil- myv road..: The contract was vios'-d this morning for a game of base- . hall here on Friday, April 29th, between. | Krskiuf. a.inl Davidson colleges. Both , in.<iituti>>iis" have many graduates in Clu-st'-r: and the game for that reason | will unmet more interest than usual, i Krskitm ajso has two Chester boys in rtu- Ihix-iip? J. K. Henry, Jr., and Da- . yiri Phillips.. Sheriff D. Gober An- , p dm-sott <-<jnUnues to show improvement. . lio improves, however, very gradually, |, and ;it will be several weeks yet be'forc l , y.eiK his strength back. The sheriff ( . vv.wS able to sit*-up a good part of yes- , terday....Mr. "W. Cornwell Stone's | UuiiHMi ?pevister was stolen last nighti \ on West' Knit, the theft occurring about | Ul.J'i o'clock.' So far there is no clue to | the. thief... About two years ago Mr. , SJton* had mJluick roadster stolen from Ititn. tli?* machine being recovered sev- , t r.tl months later in Memphis, Tenn. | Air. J. A. Wallace is at the Ches- j tor sauat&rium. suffering from ? '._dly c broken nose, uuuvrous bruises, contu- ( ?! =. ir..\ Uf.MfAtioo. anrt his enr , presents uii'twn' worse spectacle, the j coritrW-mps.. responsible therefor hav- ] lug: 'occurred Friday evening at the Southern -railway's overhead bridge on ^troSnhuhi riir.,I. . Mr. Wallace evident-' ; ly_tlrt*ught thfu tit- bridge had been put; o inthnin'-w location, as when approadh; ixig. the filructure from the Rock Hill : side. ho. kept straight ahead instead of turning t*> tli*; Mr; and the result wns ; U'.s iiiUlsori ra,< inrown uuu mc up -vveral cross tics \l IT* v c: rJ/'-li1'-' badly .sm.iplit-d by the impact.. The !v\ j. rOiir wheels were broken. tin- H'ccrins . ?t'i>wr:ii!is smashed, the Ti i pr<!tjy well >ni??[iid off, besides .other dnrnngr 1'int will m>-.nn a nice 1;t\ic repair job for mie of the garages. Mr.:?S. S. McCulIough and family. tycnt. to Luck harl Friday, to attend the fun oral <n .Master Ralph "Westbrook, li'-.v ttr-oM nephew of Mr. McCulIough. . ...The many friends of Dr. H. E. Thomas will regret to learn that he has deridTI i" move to Whitmire for the piMoti?'i: '.f his professibn....- Mrs. jjiiCampbell spent the week-end, in YJorK wjt'!i Miss Kate Gordon A y? gi; ?.u:iit, consisting of an electric hi ill, i . plv.aitf'ul supply of dynamite, mi cups, were found outside the Ssnuhertt milway ticket office this jioruing. where the yegg or yeggs had -vl?'.Ki,a nt'ufp nrenaratoiw to enter nrg- the-ticket office. A window had . tjje*ni raised.; but the police had evi- i sent :!y.? strolled along about that time, < or i-otn-'thing else . had occurred to < make- ? ." robbers vamoose, as no at- I r^mpi-.was made to loot the premises. 1 'UN . "lit ill was found this morning, and 1 tic* ?.i?olioe immediately notified. The { Hjitio jiH:' - mtaining the outfit, is at the station; also an old coat i r.piti v..is vidently to be used to.muffle tn?: o.-jt-o of the drilling and explosion. WlM'tr.w these are the parties who dt'jlv Mr. W. C. Stone's Hudson autom-ibile or not is not known; but it may 'Mrve been- the plan of the yeggs to secure a fast car. break open the Southern's safe, and be far into North Carolina or to the south by morning. Lancaster News, March 15: Governor ; Cooper has appointed O. S. Porter, of this; city game warden for Lancaster county. .Mr. Porter succeeds \V. J. Crenshaw, of Van Wyck, wlio has held tfe place for several years Dr. < Melvil1- Stover has given up his practiee-at Heath Springs and gone to accept a position as surgeon in the navy, a place.vhe held during-the late war. I A quiet though lovely wedding took place at the home ot' Mr. and Mrs. Beaureguard Cunningham, when their daughter. Miss Bessie Cunningham was rhrirripd to Robert Hardy Greene, of Abbeville, at 5.00 o'clock on Monday afternoon Jesse l'ord. colore J tenant living on R. E. NVylie's "". no Creek farm several miles north oi the city brought in Monday and had oa exhibition the heads of a two-head! eu mule calf, to which a cow had give-i birth the day previous. Both heads v ere fully developed, but the limbs of i t* e calf, Jesse says, were very small, : 'ng about the size of one's linger, ''i; calf was of the Hereford stock. ..Judge J. S. Wilson told the grand Jar, yesterday morning that Uancas1? county needs a new court house. ' I tm sorry to see that nothing has b ?-n done to the court house since I v last here," said the judge in his charge to the grand jury, "l^incaster is a grand old county and ought to :Jie; abreast of the times. It is rich in 5; history which tells us that Andrew /Jackson was born here. This court bvuse ought to have some irnprovo'V :i<up.t?not necessarily a new build.but .the conveniences of n modern building are needed. The accommo v* r-.*** .vt dations ought to be at least as good as at a hotel. People think it tfull cost too much and they can't afford it. That is false economy. The trouble and expense caused by the lack of the necessary conveniences would in a few years counterbalance the cost of the improvements. Lancaster News, March 11: J. Lawrence Driscoll; for several years manager of the Lancaster Department Stores and who last'summer left here for Wilmington, N. C.. to become connected with the Bon Marchc store in that city, is now connected with the Little-Long company in Charlotte! R. B. Mackoy and family have; moved to Charlotte where they will; make their home. Mr. Mackcy's handsome residence on Elm street was purchased by J. C. Edwards who now occupies it. Mr. Edwards' home on^ Chesterfield avenue was sold to Mr. \iackey Lucius Robinson, who was convicted- in Union county, N. C., superior court a few weeks ago of the charge of murdering his brother, Noah Robinson, and- who appealed the case to the supreme court, arranged bond in the amount of $5,000 Wednesday and was released from jail in Monroe. The death of Mrs. Caroline L. Hines occurred Wednesday morning at three o'clock at the home of her son Harry Hines, on Chesterfield avenue, after an illness of six months. Her health had been failing, however, for several years. She was S7 years old.' The Lancaster county "supply bill" passed by the recent legislature is no departure from those of past! years, and with the exception of an additional levy of one mill for the specific purpose of building a bridge1 across Lynch's river, the tax levies tor tno uiuerent purposes leumin (.insame as last year. The levy for gen-: eral road and bridge work is eight mills, which, together with the capitation tax and the automobile license tax, will provide approximately $75,100 for roads and bridges in the county Miss Dallice Estridge ?ind lrrin Walters, both of the Buford section, were married yesterday afternoon at 6.30 o'clock at the Baptist pastoriutn, Rev. J. S. Corpentng offlciatng Mr. and Mrs. Frank Green! >f Rock Hill, are guests of the former's father, John T. Green Mrs. Beuurejuard Conner left- Tuesday evening or treatment at the Fennell infirmary. Rock Hill. Cleveland Star (Shelby, March 15: Mr. Mart Earl, a familiar figure of No. 10 township, died Saturday at Lawnlale, where he was visiting relatives. Mr. Earl was about 47 years of age ind had come to Lawndale from No. t ^ /Jntroi TM'Ai'lnnu on fi visit \ns a member of St. Paul church and : good Christian. Mr. Karl had a defective speecji. His remains were hurled Sunday afternoon at 1 o'clock it St. Paul church, the services being: onducted by Rev. Sankey Blanton Much to the surprise of their many friends. Miss Ida Hamrick. daughter >f Mr. Sidney Hamrick and Mr. Baxter C. Putnam were married Saturday night at the home olf Rev. W. A. Elarn, pastor of the Second Baptist church, inly a few intimate friends witnessing the ceremony..-. The handsome Buick six automobile of Mr. E?rl Hninrick was stolen Friday night from in front if the First Baptist church, where Mr. Hamrick had driven the car to attend the Christian workers' conference. A number of cars were in front and sev 2rai people were suuiuiu^ uem-u.t, um no one suspected a theft. Two men were seen to gel into the car and drive off without turning on the lights. Mr. John Doggett saw them drive away, hut thought the owner of the car was at the wheel. Seeing the lighls .out he called to them to turn on the lights, hut I hey heeded not Peter Origg confesses that he was almost frightened to death a few nights ago on the lias tenia road beyond Linwood college where ho saw directly in front, of him in the rays of his automobile light, the figure of a negro man sitting down in the road with a shot gun lying across his knee and pointed directly in his face. For a few raiments Peter thought he saw a dozen other negroes with guns and sticks and rocks closing in on his ear. He had just cause to be frightened, because on this road several cars have been held up lately and it was not many miles away from where a young man and a young woman were shot by unknown parties. Peter was going to the CJastonia hospital to take a negro man and his sick wife. Of course the negroes in Mr. Urigg's car also became frightened and the sick woman gave a scream, while the negro man urged Mr. Origg to speed up thecar and rush on. Air. (Irigg's car bore down directly on the armed ligurc right at a sharp curve in the road. Rwlli.mon1 \v:iv inli>n?. I'nr ;i low min utcs, but presently Mr. ripru saw I lint the negro's figure was purely an imitation placed there. no (lrmi.il, by youngsters, to piny n prank on passing motorists. The "dummy" was a perfect, "make-believe." It had a black face, slouch hat. coat and trousers and the pun with which ho would hold up passer-by was a crooked limb of a Lree. The dummy was so placed in the road that the pun would be pointinpat nutoists coming in cither direction. It. was late at night, when Mr. Grigg had this experience and it may lie that highwaymen were in the woods to close in on him h:ul he stopped, but as soon as he saw the figure was a dunmfv he ran against it. knocked it down in the road and proceeded 011 his way to Gastonin. Gastonia Gazette March 15: Miss Mary Clinton of Clover, is visiting relatives in the city Before a representative gathering of Gaston counr tv farmers this morning at 11 o'clock in the county courthouse. Mr. ,\. v\r. Swain of Raleigh, told how necessary co-operative marketing is before the cotton farmer can come into hi? own. He deplored the haphazard methods of selling that are in vogue in the south today. Mr. It. M. Johnston, president of the Gastonia branch of the American Cot.ton association, presided, and introduced Mr. Swain. E. S. Millsaps of Statesvillc, distric tagent, was also present Mrs. \V. ]'. Grier and children, W. i\ Jr., and John Charles, left this morning for Mecklenburg county to spend a week with Mrs. Grier's parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. it. Cross A card from Mr. and Mrs. V. E. Hong and Mr. and Mi's. L. >Jt. Long, who have been spending several weeks -in Fioridn, states that they expect to return to the city about Friday Mr.-G. E. Brewer of the I.orny section, aged 45 years, died yesterday. Mr. Brewer was a native of Moore county and 1.hc remains were taken there today for interment. ' Mr. Brewer was twice married. He is survived by four children Dr. L.11cius N. Glenn returned Sunday night from 1 n?ular spring trip to Rochester. Minn., where he attended clinics at the famous Mayo Brothers hospital. Doc says lie had line .weather during the Irip?it was almost like being 'down south." On his way out to Rochester he stopped in Chicago to attend the annual meeting of the Federation-of state Roard Examiners. Of the seven members constituting the .North Carolina hoard six were present at this meeting. "I had the pleasure," said the doctor to the Clay.ette scribe, "of riding for two hundred miles in a smoker with former Vice President Thomas R. Marshall. He was the life of the party during our ride together. He's a dandy good story teller and, in fact a jam-up good 'all round sport. He has a keen eye. talks in a. terse jerky style and always says something when lie opens his mouth. While we. were talking, the subject drifted around to-Eugene Debs, the standing Socialist presidential candidate, who is serving a term in the penitentiary at Atlanta for making seditious utterances during the recent world unpleasantness. Debs, he said, is much more popular in jail than out. He received more votes for president while in the pen than he ever got while he was out. He poses as a martyr and his continued imprisI'onm ?ii?w (in/1 )iiu /.rn/l/l flflvOt*. Used constantly. 'If I were president," said Marshall, 'I'd open the door and let him out quick. If that were done, he'd soon be all but forgotten. Of course now. if you could nlectrocutc him. but?' Marshall is as good a listener as he is a talker. He can listen to two or three conversations going on at the same time and he gets it all. When I walked into a railroad station at Indianapolis," said Dr. Glenn, "whom should I see and hear but Gypsy Smith, the evangelist, who was its Gastonia a while hack. ITc was preaching to a big crowd in tl*c station and he was everlastingly giving it to 'em. I was through Ohio a few days ago just after the race troubles at Springfield, and it was quite interesting to hear the conversations on the trains relative to the riot. As often as not you would hear a southerner and an Ohioan or a northerner dis cussing the subject and as a rule the southerner was getting his northern friend something told that the latter did not like." MOORISH STYLES May Be Adopted by Fashionable Women of Paris. If the fashionable women of Paris adopt the Moorish style of dress, which is dominant in the new spring vogue now being shown by the dressmakers here, they will lie seen hiding their hair under turbans and learning to wtllk with a swinging motion of the hips, says the Daily Mail. The Oriental note shows itself not r.nlv in ilir. briirhtlv colored turbans ;in<i inscarfs and sh;ipr hut also in the use of sequins as ornaments for evening gowns. Artificial flowers of gaudy color and great size are favorite trimmings. A single bloom worn on the leIt. hip, or a. loose garland hung around the body some inches below the waistline, enhances tlie Oriental style. 16799 DIED in. New York City alone from kidney trouble last year. Don't aliow yourself to become a victim by neglecting pains and aches. Guard against this trouble by taking GOLD MEDAL The world's standard remedy for kidney, (Ivor, bladder and uric acid troubles. Holland's national remedy since 1696. All druggists, three sizes. Guarantocd. Look for the nemo Gold Medal on every box. and accept no imi tation "WE PAY YOU TO SAVE"" There Is a Feeling "OF COMFORT in the knowledge ( that no matter what the future has In ; store for you or your family, you are| assured against want by a Bank Ac- j count. You oan enjoy this fealing by | starting a Bank Account with us and; adding small amounts to it at your convenience." BANK OF HICKORY oyE INCOMES OF WOMEN Anila Loos Makes 5100,000 Annually Writing lor the Movies. OTHERS COMMAND LARGE SALARIES Numbers of- Women Make $10,000 a Year?Many Women Have Successfully Invaded the Business World? Personal Stories, I Prom Lhi* New York- Horn Id.) Ono hundred tlun.isa.ml jtlollars n year! Not a mean salary Sir a man, oven ho he a wizard in his lines. Still more remarkable it seems for a woman I to he. drawing such a pay, ,yet.a, few i at least are petting that amount, and they- are becoming legion whose stipend runs into Ave figures. In fact, woman having proved her mottle by invading the business world, is proving her merits by pushing to the very front in the realm of the highest salaried workers. If ever there was a favorite of fortune it is Anita Loos, who writes "scripts" for Constance Talmadge. She may have been born with a silver spoon in her mouth or even a golden one, since each year $100,000 pours into her own personal treasury. Her story reads like a romance. Born to the stage she got a ten years' start over her contemporaries?such women an Gertrude Atherton, Elinor Glyn, Zoe Akins, and men like Kir James M. Barrio, Robert W. Chambers, Kir G1Iboit Parker and the rest of the celebrities who arc or have been in California studying the technique of the motion picture business from the inside?and she has made the most of it. , . Kho came naturally by her literary as well as her theatrical talent, for her father was not only an actor and a manager of stock companies, hut an editor, also. She played a part on the stage as soon as she could walk, and there paved the way to the success she lias scored in her present work. Blazes Trail In Wall Street. Miss Mary Hull is an index and filing specialist in Wall street, who not only inaugurated the work but built it up until she is now making $10,000 a year and during the war her income went even higher. She installs her system into.toJ'fices; of business men, lawyers, bankers and mercantile concerns. Sho-roorganizcH and rearranges correspondence files, clippings, records, statistics, reports, pamphlets, dale files and business libraries and then puts in skilled girls to carry the work on. (... Miss Hull js the pioneer, in her line, She established in 1011) the first school of tiling and; indexing in the country. Capitalized Curiosity. As 1\ T. Barnurn, the great American showman, achieved success by capitalizing human credulity, so Helen Woodward, a young New Yqrk girl, become a power in the advertising world by capitalizing curiosity. She saw a way to fortune by taking into account Lhc iiiqiiisilivencss, which is an inmate quality in American makeup, so when a big publishing company decided to put a new edition of Mark Twain on the market anil Miss Woodward got the advertising contract through the company witlt which she is connected she conceived the idea of baffling the mind of tin; rending public to get his works a new oudiencc. The works of the great humorist hod already gone through scores of ediiioris, had been printed in many languages but as an active selling proposition was for the moment a back nuinj YOU NEED THE DOCT | CALL NO. 65, CLOVER, : ; OUR PRESCRIPTION DEPARTI\ ; Pharmacist. I WE KEEP?Fresh Candies all th( 1 and WJUTLVG MATERIA. ! '* THE REXALL CITYPE STORE * Prompt and Accurate Servic | The Loar I Savii | YORK, = Continues to offer its = of a Progressive and | aged Bank, having ac' 1 thoroughly equipped | supply your needs in | OF.RIC | B. N. MOORE, President | J. S. BRICE, Vice 1 T. M. FERC | M. E. Mc | DIREC W. B. MOORE, = C. E. SPEXCER, I W. W. LEWIS, I B.i Ki MOORE, | T. M. FEI her; To win nltontion, to revive the old lovcPnnd gain the new?the countless thousands of boys and girls and this generation?meant strategy, but a* perfectly legitimate kind. Miss Woodward flashed the tale of Hack Finn before the public eye, illuminating her sketch with the high lights of the story, hut cutting it short at its most exciting juncture. It was all over then but the shouting. The people to whom Hock Finn had been a childhood idol were keen for the book which brought back such happy days. The younger generation felt an uncontrollable desire to know all the story. Everyone wanted a set of Mark Twain, so that thei first year the royalties, increased to something like ?00,000. East year they reached ?75,000. A $25,000 Ad Woman. Beatrice Hastings, young, but very businesslike holds a three-fold job on the largest dry goods trade paper in America and is known as the "$25,000 ad woman." She didn't work up to that from the ribbon counter, either, hut jumped right into the dry goods commercial world without knowing a consignment of fifty gross when she saw one. "How do women get in tho game?" Mrs. Hastings .was asked. "With me it was a case' of wanting a big job and money," she replied quite frankly. "I took stock of my talent and determined to soli myself," she said, using the technical term of advertisers. "i am a university graduate and was once very literary and theoretical to the point of sentimentality. I' worked in social service lines and literary ones till I fQund that thero is. no money in those. I have been a dependent wife and housekeeper although I am a suffragist and feminist. When I determined to make a big.living I took stock.of myself to see how efficient and well prepared I was. Literature and college degrees and experience in philanthropy do not prepare one for the hard lussel to obtain big advertising contracts or to be worth thousands of dollars to employers. . "Dry goods naturally interested me and I picked the biggest trade paper and went after job. When, asked my experience T admitted I had none, but declared that I was determined to learn the game and begin right there. Consequently they took a chance on me and started me pretty near the bottom. In time I knew considerable about, dry goods and women's clothes and was doing fashion articles. But 1 well knew that there is little money anywhere for writers. It is the solicitors who bring'in cash. "Bo I went out after ads and like all wise solicitors I took care of my 'accounts' through the year, not being content merely to.have landed the contract and get the money, leaving the client to struggde on alone and possibly become disgruntled. A satisfied customer curries u?uin, wucmei iu ?.?. coiner store or to a magazine." Rising From $12 a Week. Four years ago Mrs. V. Brewster took a- position with a talking machine company as a sales clerk at $12 a week. Last year her income reached the $10,000 mark and this year she expects a considerably larger amount. Personality and service account lor her achievements. In addition to the importance she at tachos to a pleasing personality, Mrs. Brewster stresses the idea of service not only by giving it herself, but by instilling the thought in her sales force, for she is now the manager, with a very unusual personnel, selected primarily because of ldividual intelligence and trainingfor her staff. /"v-rv a ( vn r? ind. we will get one for you. \ /IENT i.s in charge of a Licensed i time. See us for STATIONERY i L'S, Magazines, l'erfumery, etc. " [ARMACY J- E. BRisoN, j Proprietor \ e CLOVER, S. C. ; ... ... f mnjiiiiiniwirmnwwui'wwiiuiiii'B i and i igs Bank ; - - s. c. I patrons the Services = Conservatively manlequate facilities and ~ I iii every detail to | the Banking line ? ? 5ERS: | President E rjSON, Cashier Ij CORKLE, Asst. Cashier. |; ITORS | J. S. BRICE, e J.R.CANNON, ? QUINN WALLACE, = ! W. & AWLIvERSON, I iOUSON. = DOGS ARE BARRED. t > " ' . L Commissioners Will No Longer Allow ( Canines In Ico Cream Parlor-. ? Sweet-toothed members of the canine 1 elite, who have been regular patrons of Jersey City's cream and soda empori- , urns, left their silken cushions today to bark protest against the latest order of the city commission. The order, effective immediately, prohibits the keeping or taking of dogs into any candy, confection or soda \vaI Optometrists & Opticians HAMPTON ST. ROCK HILL - - - - - 3. C. Feeling ; I One of our T 1. i* _ 11__ r__ 1 I nave routs reei I bank; to cultiva I good will; to pre that THE PEOPLE I COMPANY is , a I ready to serve o I times. You will alw I come here; you ai I time and attenti I bank here or else f nnnn; rn rksuii/" A/&T1 I iwm MM m X ** x C. L. COBB, President J. H. B. JENKINS, X Active Vice President | C. W. McGEE, Cashier | SAFE SUCCESf I TAKE I If any of our custom c tiablc valuables, such as ings Stamps stored in Sa we suggest that you turn will give you a receipt for our money safe, which is I BURGLAR PROOF, if CONTAINED THEE ! COVERED BY INS! I But Bonds stored in our \ | as tlic vault is only fire pr i ting bonds in the vault. I Please give this your I is not responsible for loss I our receipt for same. I BANK OF I M. L. SMITH, President. | FRANK McELWEE, SALLIE 1 Safety ? Satisfa ,cr shop. It \vjtsi issued following a iomplaint by the; '-New Jersey Retail Sanely and. Ice Cream Manufacturers' Lssociatlon, that dogs were served from , :he same dishes used by humans. miS BANK IS 1 YiHIR SERVANT " i ... . .,. , / \ We ?re Here_ to Serve You. We Take 'Pleasure'Irr Serving You. Let Us Help You As We Have .Helped Others. < You can keep an accurate record of what you buy by -paying, everything with Checks. . Open...two accounts?a. Checking Account ' and, a Savings Ac^ A r\f vnvtr count, m a cei wiii aiuuuu. v. ? pay in each account. You will, cut down your expenses by knowing what you are spending your money, for, and' at the same time your savings account will grow. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF SHARON, S. C. . ... J. H. SAYE, J. S. HARTNESS, President. *i Cashier It Home j ambitions is to | ait home i inthis J, te geniality find! | >mote the feeling 1 S BANK' & TRUST | home institution, I ur people at all | ays find ai wel- 1 re entitled to our I on, whether you I where. | 9 TRUST COMPANY ! J. M. STROUP, Vico -dent & J. T. CRAWFORD, | Vice President r . & WM. S. MOORE, Asst. Cashier | 3FUL 'SECURE I i - ' t NOTICE | irs or friends have nego- I Liberty Bonds and Sav- | fety Boxes in our vault, 1 them over to us and we | same, and place them in . f AND EVERYTHING I iEIN IS FULLY I [JRANCE; | $ s rault arc not insured and | oof we do not advise put- $ attention, as., tliis Bank i of bonds unless you have i CLOVER JAS.. A. PAGE, Cashier % i SIFFORD, Asst. Cashiers jx ction ? ? Service i