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GARNERED WITH SCISSORS Sews From Within nnd Witt out ' the Chanty. COSDENSED FOK HOICK IEADING ' ^ - * 1$ ; ' - *1 - ' Fort Mill Times, May 4: Joe M. Bejk of' Fort Mill, World war-veteran, 'who was severely wounded In action in France, isvnow In:Spartanburg1 taking one of. the courses . In vocational training offered disabled veterans by the government... Woid received yesterday by j. T. Young, Jr., irom the hospital in Rochester, Minn., at -whichhis mother is.a patient was to the effect that Some improvement wsis. noticeable in her condition. Mrs. Yoohg's huirband. J. T. Young, Sr., is at bar bedside .'Mecklenburg count^ rrohibition officers, operating last Fri<1nleht near the South Carolina llnei "between Plnevllle and the home of the late W. O. Bailee, captured on a create h?nk 60 gallons of ch*ap whlsiy -whioft. waa thought to have been.. intended for sale In Fort Mill 'anff Rock Hill. No arrests were made In connection with 'the seizure Dr. 'an? Mrs. John' M. Hutchison and their children -and Dr. and Mrs. A. I* Ott expect to leave Fort Mill Monday for a visit of ten days to points of \ Interest in Florida. They will make the trip in Dr. Hutchison's car <-?Mrs. Kate Hale and E. H. Phillip* of 'Fort Mill Tuesday afternoon received a message telling of the sudden death of their sister, Mrs. Florence Warren, wife of W. W. Warren, at her heme at Griffith, near Charlotte. . Chester Reporter, May 4: At the meeting of -the Sunday School Bose/ ball League Monday afternoon it was decided to re-organise for the j ear with three teams, and to begin the ploying season about May 23rd. A committee was appointed to make up a.aohedule and tp look after-other arrangements....'....,....Miss. Florencp k. White, - of Clifton, Ohio, in remitting for-The Reporter, says: "My father, Andrew Hood "White, celebrated his 87th- birthday April 27, 1922. It will he ?l*tv-B??ven years next October j sine* be left Chfster, South Carolina,' but he is as much a South Carolir.ian >ih sentiment and manners as he was then.**: ..Marriage licenses as follow^ have been issued from the office of of Probate A. W. Wise during the bast few days Mr. David H. Donahoo and Miss Mortice Floyd, both of 'Great Palls; and Mr. John (Elliott Cooper and Mls^ Grace Pauline Simpson, both of Chester......_.The annual Cohfederate Memorial Day exercises will be held in Chester next WedneA|rfy, May 10th, und will be feat ir1 ed by a dinner to-the' veterans Vaat is being arranged by Chester Chapter, U/>?. O. T*hls dinner will be held in $ie Presbyterian Sunday School building, and Cheater Chapter is sparing ' iBo efforts to fnake the occasion a most delightful one for the old soldiers. The Children's Chapter will serve the dinner. At four o'clock the Memorial Day address will be delivered at the opera house by Hon. J. L. Br ice, Superintendent of Education of Fairfield County.* - Dr. Robert G. Lee will deliver the prayer at the opera house, and Rev. Henry Stokes will deliver 4be prayer at Evergreen cemetery. The children will sing patriotic songs, bnd -the exercises will include all of the features customary on this occasion.; There are now- so far as Chester Chapter has been able to learn, Only 87 surviving Confederate veterans In Chester county; and it is earnest!/ hoped that all of them can be T w Vrt.iri c wns prpis^ni,.., mi %t ?? A vv???o ? elected Alderman Tuesday In Ward A,' the only ward In which there was a contest. The vote was: Young, 28; Fry* 8r- The vote In the other wards was,as follows: Ward 1?M. H. White, 24; Ward 2?Z. V. Davidson, 5; Ward V-R D. Refo, 11 Mr. H. K. Hough, ther jeweler Is unable to open his big cafe; In which are a lot of his stcck, several finished and unfinished jobs, Bonte mnteHaK- and other odds nnd end* that are Indispensable to the conduct of his businessrtmd it looks as if he will have to get a man from the Mosler Safe Co.'s plant at Hamiltob, "Ohio, to open the safe for him. A safe expert who came from Charlotte J yesterday attempted to drill a couple of holes in the door, but after getting In several Inches struck a plate thi t i defied his drills, and made further "progress impossible. A mechanic from the company's plant with a drill to get through this plate seems to be j what Is required, and Mr. Hough is In communication with ^tlie company, endeavoring to locate one of their men I in this territory, V .4 ? ??? l Gastonia Gazette, May 5: In con nection with tne announcement m.iae Thursday that Gastonia postoffice Is to be advanced to the first-class July fltst, Postmaster P. A. Slate has Riven out the following1 figures, which are of Interest: Reqelpts for the last quarter of 1921 were $12,236.44; for the first quarter of 1922, ending March 31, they .were $12,961.64, an increase of $715.10. Under ordinary circumstances the Christmas business makes the fourth quarter's receipts larger than those of the following quarter, hence this increase shows an unusual growth in the business of the Gastonia office Mr. John W. Gaston, of the Belmont police force; was able to be down town Wed' nesday l?r the first time in several weeks. Mr. Gaston has been suffering from a broken artery and is able to walk but very little Mr. Errest M. Rhyne, a brother of Messrs. H. Gary and G. R. Rhyne, died at his home in Pinehurpt last night from pneumonia following an attack of influenza Mr. .Rhyne's illness was short and the end came suddenly. With Mr. i ^rf^'PAPA" JOFFRE ( . -V alW|{t *1 The Preach Marshal, hero of th fore they departed fojr home on th 'tlcally all there Is to see of the U. S. and attended more JmnQuets than i ever, Mme. Joffre cookdd an occaslc those banquets. t ; I Rhyne at his death were Mr. H. G. Rhyne, a sister, Mrs. R. O. Ford hum, i and Mr. Miles Rhyne. The body will arrive in Gustonia this evening, probably on th<^ 7. o'clock car. Funeral and interment will take place at Stanley Lutheran church Saturday morning at 41 o'clock. Rev. J. Q..peitz, will | conduct | the funeral. Clftuabn^ Star. IShelbv). Mav 5t When the county eommisisoners, all members (Messrs. W. H. Jennings A. j IE. Clinc and George W. Peeler) being present met in regular session oh Monday of this week, they asked the state highway commission to turn the two steel bridges over to the county that are being replaced on the ShelbyCleveland Springs road, by concrete bridges since this road is being hardsurfaced. 1?be commissioners will use these steel bridges at other places in the county should the state highway j commission sec fit to turn ,fhem over. I , most la-| I mentable deaths that has occurred In our community in some time is that of Spurgeon Moss Mauney, 12-yeftr-oId son of Mr. and M^s. Stonewall Mauney of the Union community, which oc- , purred Tuesday morning, May 2nd at 10 o'clock, after an illness of only three days, "?oung Mauney only a few days before had eaten green cabbage and strawberries, ptomaine poisoning being the immediate result and all that love and medical skill could do was brought to bear upon the malady, but ' to no avail, and now grief supreme j' sits in the Mauney home, at tne un-^ timely passing of this promising son. ? The Shelby Advertising Club is ' the name of a new organization perfected in Shelby Tuesday nigjit at a merchants' banquet held in the dining ? room of the Central hotel, at which time a sumptuous supper was served, each one present paying for his- own feed. The purpose of the meeting was to hedr Mr. Guerney Lowe of >Jeosha, 1 Missouri, explain his plan of the "Golden Rule" sales which will be inaugurated each first Monday of the month, at which time the merchants J ^rho are members of the organization | will offer one or two special bargains for that si>ecific day. No two mer- (' chants will offer the same bargains on the same day, but make one or two Specials, selling good staple merchan- \ dlse in season at cost. By this coop- j erative method, 30 or more real bar- , gains will be offered on this Golden 1 Rule sales day each first Monday. | These bargains will be duly advertis- j ed in press and circular and be of such a character to establish confidence be' i tween the merchants themselves and [ the buying public Mr. William H. Wriglyt died S'uqday at his home north of Shelby, at the age of 81 years.'9 months and 5 days. Mr- Wright was born July ,25th, 1840, and a very hardy j i and vigorous citizen, greatly beloved ' by his many friends. , Baseball for Shelby.?Things are being- shaped up rapidly for Shelby's second season of organized baseball. n meeting a few nights ago of those whq have subscribed to shares in the baseball club, at which time an able group of new officers were elected. 'The team is expected to be better this year than that of last, although Shelby had a winning nine during the Summer of 1921. The fact that Mr. Dick Gurley is to be field manager assures Shelby of a strong team. He managed the team last year and became quite a favorite. He was employed as a teacher in the Shelby graded school and instructor in athletics. A famous college star, he ; is known all over the state in sporting circles, l'layers are already being booked and it is hoped that games will lie scheduled some time this month. The officers elected were as follows: Max Gardner, president; J. J. Lattimore. secretary; Frank * Hoey, treasurer; Hen, Suttle, business manager; Dick Gurley, field manager; Ward Arey, advertising manager. The following were elelted to the board oi' e Marne, and Mine. Joffre Just be- | e Celtic. The Marshal saw pracA., received college degrees galore uost men do in a lifetime. How>nal meal to make up for seme of - - | - i GAS TAX COLLECTIONS. ^ Highway Department Received $57,,A 196.87 In'March. A total of $07,196.8/ was collected during March under the new gasoline tax a^ct, the tax commission announced last week after the figures for Mnreti hud been compiled. A few del'nqmmt taxpayers have not yet reported, but the total as announced Is practically the amount tTiat will stand RSvthc month's collections. i j March was the first month on which I the tax of two cents a gallon was paid on gasoline, anrf judging by the figures for this month a total of approximately J670.000 will he collected for the ten months of this year. However, these figures may be changed as the sales may increase during the summer months oi*vthey may decrease. . Under the terms of the gasoline tax | act, one-half of the money collected | goes into the Jtato treasury and one- j Nuf goes; to the counties,for building I B.nd maintaining roads. The commission 1? also certifying to i the state treasurer the gross earnings j of all the public utility corporations in ' the state. These public utility corporations pay a three mill tax on their ?ros& earnings ?nd the commission is, certifying a total of $84.257.81 as the taxes duo the state by these corporaA Huge Joke.?Down In Hampton county Sunday "Jake Terry" of Estill drove *out two miles to church and saw "Tack Kulton" sitting by "Jake's" gi/-l. Jake drove back to the village, got his pistol, returnee to the church, shot "Tack," presumably in the back, while the communion was being administered. This ig equal to the times. when gay sports considered a. girl nis chattel and not to be addressed by a competitor without .permirslon. This barbarous aftV.ir la only another illustration of the cheapness (of hutnan life in our midst. After a few days he will get bail from a "merciful'' judge o-nd run at large till public sentiment cools. Then shrtjwd lawyers will bring into play the numerous loop holes. Finally "Jake" will go free to shoot other "Tucks" in the back and he will have the usual chancej till the boodle gives out. He may then get a year or two in the pen. Verily "the course of criminal law" lr. South Cor- , olina would be a huge jo!;c if not so ' tragical.?Calhoun Times. ? Automobiles wouldn't be dangerous if the horse-power of the engine was proportioned to the horse sense of the driver. directors; Carl Thompson, Wythe Royster; Z. J. Thompson, Oliver Anthony. W. L* Fanning, George Moore. ?Shelby Highlander. THE AMER1 fa. ... . . >' > I ' ... V I v. > *-& y\ < .. > I > ; fe v: r ;\ : :"*> :'yx'-> ' | ./ , '? , t i , . : Fighting between the troop commander of the forces in cent eminent a Joint warning against for the protection o the Pekiu-T "OLD PUT." ;??? Source of the Nickname of General Israel Putnam. There never was a braver or a more | patriotic eoldier than old Israel Put- ; nam, ^nd no office^ was more beloved than "Old Put,'.' as his soldiers familiarly called him. He. was the idol of the common soldier, for he typified the undaunted spirit of the young republic. The mention of his name brings at once to mind three picturesque incidents in his life?tho l>uttle with the, she-wolf in tho cave at Pcmfret, Conn., the leaving of his plow in his furrow to respond to the cry from Leodngton, and his wild horseback i ide down the rocky stairs or cliffs, to escape capture by the British. These, incidents, not moi'e remarkable in a wuy than others in his l'fes. illustrate strongly tho character of the man. . . Putnam, from the day he first enlisted to serve in the Indian wars to the close of the Revolution, was always on call, ready to give the best he had, or all he had, if necessary. He has always occupied a warm spot in the hearts ' of the American people. Pne of the best tributes to "Old Put" comes from the graceful pen ot yvasnington, Irving, who says: "A yeoman warrior, fresh fr.'m the plow, in the gurb of labor, , a patriot brave and generous.but rough and ready, who thought not of,himself in time of danger, but was ready to serve in any way, i?d to sacrifice official 'rank and self-glorification to the good of the cause," , \ , . When Putnam enlisted for service against the French and Indians he had no jnilitary experience whatever, but he proved a good student and ,at the end of the first campaign he returned hqme a captainThe news of the battle of Lexington spread with repiarkable sytdf^ness. Putnam learned of. it, the fallowing <Jay. With his son he had gone to a field near > the ta,verq on Brooklyn Orcen to plow. ,An e*eited mossenger rode into the place.,with a dispatch from the town /clerK at Worchester. Putnam,'s response was characteristic. 1X0 inf? Kiln nlnw in* thn furrow. never * *-*-? ?V*k V/ H .t? ?..? - ? - - ? .. , waiting even to change his clothes, mounted, his horse and started to spread the alarming news. He rallied a number of the farmers about him and that night, wlthotit stopping to rest, dressed as he was in his check farmer's frock, he started on a night ride to Cambridge. Within a week after the "battle of Lexington, Putnam was in charge of the disorganized troops ad Cambridge.,- . Then came the eventful Bunker Hill, with Putnam's homely order: "DonU lire until you see the whites of their eyes." Bunker Hill, proved that "Old Put" and his colorilals could hold their own against Bhtjsh veterans.' He taught Americans ?. lesson that spelled "Liberty." But it was ncarlty three years later that the epispde occurred by which "Old Put" is best remembered. He was. In command of the forces in Con- j necticut in the spring of 1779. On the, 26th 'of February H'e was 'affcreeijwich. Tradition ha~tit that ho was shaving in the morning when an American officer rode up and informed him of the approach of Gen. Tryon with a | large fof-ce of British ancl\*rorfes. He hastily drew up his little body of Continentals. Resistance by such a small force was futile, and after the first VOIiey Putnam oracrea ms men iu see* safety, and he started on a gallop towards Stamford for reinforcements. A quarter of a mile east of the Congregational church is a precipitous and rocky bill, now known as "Put's Hill." In it were cut etcps, twenty-four in number. The British were confident that they had captured "Old Put" when they saw him dashing toward the steps. B\it, with reckless daring, he galloped his horse down the steep incline, while - the astonished dragoons reined up at the head of the steps, looking at one another with bewilderment. Putnam returned that da/ with reinforcements in time to capture a number of them as prisoners. Nick Carter.?Very few* Americans know who Frederick Van Rennsselaer Dey was but very few of them need any introduction to Nick Carter. Mr. Dey, who died last week, was the creator cf Nick Carter. In thirty-two years, the Springfield Republican tells us, Dey wrote 1,076 stories with a to-, total of about 40,000,000 words?a bcok a month, or an average production of some 4,000 words a day. "For such sustained industry there are few parallels, and the author naturally did ICAN LEGATION IN PEKI1 mmmmmmilmkmmmaiSeiMmi 'Xv- < ^ ; ; r ' i' V' * .a . ; s h A ' ' - "> km 4i & &$& * ^ ' & :V< ifiii: &? ir \'- ..,''.y#*3 :i '#? " s of Cen. Chang Tso-lln, Governor of ral China, has caused the foreign legi ; possible fighting la Pekin. and /warnir Hen-Tain Railroad. The picture abovf I not pause to polish his periods or to ( elaborate his characters. Even his ? plots were elementary, with no subtleties of ratiocination such as may be found in Poe, Gaboriau, and Conan Doyle. Qn the other hand his hero was in action every moment, and in the Nick Carter stories may be found j the prototype of a strirring kind of I film drama in which the youngr people ' of today take the pleasure which their j predecessors found * in the 'yellow- J backs'." One realizes how the world has ; moved when he reads the pleasant i )vords now being spoken about the j stories in which, were told the,adyeoI tures of the dashing and murvelous : land even-heroic Nick. ./'They,are not fat all bad books," the Republic s&yi , , of them, "and the censure which thoy ' i used to bear in common with all 'dlmo novels' was exaggerated , and [ based tb a great extent on prejudice I and ignorancS." Yet hotv vehemently | they were condemned and denounced in the old days! How dreadful a crime it was to be caught reading one i of them and how dire was the punishI mer.t sure to be visited upon the | youthful offender! There was no j hope at all for the confirmed dime ' noval devotee. Ho would grow up to be a criminal and would bring his father's gray hairs in sorrow to the grave. The jail yawned for him. And now we learn that Nick Carter was not such a bad fellow after all, and the proof of it is that millions of | boys who know all his adtentures by | heart are not now languishing in Jail, but are living happily in their own homes, the perfectly respectable heads \ of families. One is almost led to sua pect that perhaps the influences which < are said to be undermining our morals-^ today, just as Nick Carter was ac- ; cusecV of undermining them then, are ' not going to be quite as fatal as some j people fear they will be..?Charleston;: News ahd Courier. \ ; HOW SOME AUTHORS STARTED Kipling and Barrie Were Journalists,:; , Hannard a Lawyer. Sir Rider I-faggard- begun his ca- i reer as a barrister, going to South : Africa orv the staff of rtlie governor j of Natal. -He learned farming there,-; 1 and he also learned the Zulus, whlcs j knowledge he turned to notable acI count in "King Solomon's Mines," ! "Allan Quartermnin," and "She." j Anthony Hope Hawkins, who uses , I nno* bin wimo A bo tltln nQ (TPQ | umy l ui ma name vn vuv b??*v i-?n^ < of his books, is another barrister who turned aAithor. One of his earlier books was "declined with thanks", by ! more than half the publishers in LonI don. - But the famous "lTlsoner ofj Zenda" put him well up the ladder of; fame. * . Rudynrd Kipling: belongs to that > lnrge class of authors who started as newspaper writers. He learned the ; ropes in India^ and since those days : ho has lived everywhere and seen everything:. / Sir Jam^s Barrie for some time i was on the Nottingham Leader, and ' while there he wooed editors in London through the post. Today he possibly is making more money with his , pen than any other living man. | William Wymark Jacobs began his business career as a government clerk. He wrote sketches of life and scenes ' down Wapping way, but nobody appreciated. them sufficiently to publish ; them until a brother humorist, Jerome K. Jerome, saw them and printed them in his paper, Today. 1 William Le Quex had seen most of j Europe by the time he was 20. His j j father was French and his mother I English, and he learned to speak sev- 1 eral languages in the nursery. Beridos all that, he marrief an Italian. The other "Q" Sir Arthur QuillerCcuch, has never done anything else bat write. He started at Oxford, where he wroto "Dead Man's Rock." When it was published Punch wanted to know if Rider Haggard and Robert Louis Stevenson were collaborating under the disguise of the letter "Q."? Answers. Had Time for Reflection.?"Why ' have I never married?" the confirmed bachelor repeated a leading question. ! "Well, once upon a time in a crowd I | trod on a lady's gown. She turned, furiously, beginning 'You clumsy j brute!' Then she smiied sweetly, and said: 'Oh, I beg your pardon, I J thought you were my husband. No, I it really doesn't .matter in the least.' ; And when I came to think it over I I decided that I'd better let marriage j alone." " CHINA. 4 , ' , *' < \ ' . - a <{ ::? > V.. . > ' ' . 5: J Manchuria and Gen. Wu Pei-fu, itions to send the Chinese Govig that they would take measures i shows the American Legation, , I X ??* *? - ' *;' ,-??v? Y f Mr. B. WEEVIL I T J!> {L.'f. ,; I ? PASSES THE WINTER AS AN ADULT or beetle. In the ? X Spring and throughout the fruiting segsan of eottbn tho eggh are y y deposited by the female weevils in cavities foimed by eating Into ? ? the fruit of the plant. An egg hatches, undel- nbrmal conditions, in y about three days and the grub immediately begins to feed, fn from seven to twelve days the larva or grub passes into its'pupa stage ? corresponding to the. cocoon of butterflies arid moths. This stage a A lasts from three to live days. Then the adult issues and 'in about five t* j; days UEOINS THE PRODUCTION OF ANOTHER GENERATION. $ i? | " CLIMATIC CONDITIONS cause considerable variation In the . ?|? P -duration of the stage3, but on an cveroge?it requires from iw6 to J, three weeks; for tho weevil to developfrcni the eggs to the udult. Y iif Males and femhlej. are produced In about equal numbers. The males !j? f !-X feed upon the squares and bolls without moving until the food begins *j* y t6 deteriorate. The females refrain, throughout most of the season, ?? a from, depositing in squares visited by other fomaJes, but late In the ? ** fall when, all of the fruit has become infested, several eggs may be .'..A A placed in a single square of boll. V \ ALL OF US SHOULD LEARN ALL WE CAN ABOUT MR. B. t X WEEVIL AND BE GOVERNED ACCOnDlNGLY. '? I 4 > 1 I FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF SHARON J i I ' ' ' x * - ' WHERE THE FARMER IS WELCOME. A ? . SHAKON, - - s. c. i v - "1 111 " 11 1 i 1 ''. ' r' ' ' 1 iifiiiiEiusiiiniHiiiimiiiiiiifiiuiiiiiiKtiKiiiiiiiihiiiiihiHiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiii s r**' -i - ' ' ' - | [ it's Certain to Come i | ) v " *: ; * " " " < :i l : != j IT'S NOW ON THE WAY and you 'II notice | = it quite sharply when it arrives^?every fellow you = | meet will say something about it?ask you a very = g common question?smile at his brightness and go | g ou to the next 'un. Sure, you'll noticfc it arid you | g will be wise to prepare to get. by as bast you can. | | The hot weather?"is it hot enough for vpiTf ? 5 g you know liim. Well, let us help you ho not only ;g g grin and bear it, but to be real comfortable when = | it does come and it is coming?hasn't missed get- g ? F.vin. tiitwia tiFotr Konlr ill flirt Incf fiPTltllfi/ Sfl it ~ 25 HUI Ollll/C V\ (l^> k/Clv_<iv in i iuut wuvkAj.*yv ^ v ? is said?yes, hot weather's coming. Just bfc as e | comfy as you can and forget aboilt it and the fel- ;| g -low who hsks the question?Just'see us for ' = i = PALM BEACH, KEEP KOOL and MO- ;= g ( HAIR SUITS?all sixes and made in the 5 best styles with quality unsurpassed? = 'priced very reasonably for the qualities. ' i ' S | UXDERWEAR?Union Suits and Sepa- ? rate garments in alt sizes and in best | qualities?knee lengths, athletic and | | * short sleeve styles. Priced bright.' . s ? , ., % / . .4 v: * 1 ' 2 ' STRAW HATS?A great variety of good ? styles in all kinds of straw, in plain white 5 | and fancy colors?snappy styles for the = younger gentlemen. ir LOW SHOES?For Men, Women and for 5 boys and girls?Style and quality and = comfort built into cverv pairl J. M. STROUP I B .j ? c y ^ _ T ^ uiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiumiinmiiimmiiimiiimiiiiimiimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiiT i - i i-1 ,1 i -i i ur i' ' ' ? Charter No. 9,533. * ' Reserve District No. 5 ~ KAuniTinu or TUP KtKUM I ur wnui i iwn v. ..... FIRST NATIONAL BANK AT SHARON . : i In the State of South Carolina at the Close of Business on May 5, 1922: RESOURCES Loans and discounts, including rediscounts, acceptances of other banks, and foreign bills of xchange or drafts sold wi(h indorsement of this bank (except those i shown in b and c), $2o7,0Sl 25 Total Loans - - $ 207,081 25 Overdrafts, secured, $570.30; unsecured, $133.58 703 88 U. S. Government securities owned: Deposited to secure circulation (U. S. bonds par value)...$ 25,000 00 All other United States Government securities 12,250 00 . Total 37,250 00 Other bonds, stocks, securities, etc.: 1,500 00 Banking.house, $1,200.00;, furniture and fixtures, $1,520.00 2,720 00 Lawful Reserve with Federal Reserve Bank 1 13,198 28 Cash irt vault and amount due from national banks . 7,328 44 Total of Items 9, 10, 11, 12. and 13 _..?i $ 7,328 44 Checks and drafts on banks (including Federal Reserve Bank) located outside of city or town of reporting bank 1,357 48 1,357 48 Redemption fund with U. S. Treasurer and due from U. S. Treasurer # 1,250 00 Other assets, if any ?........? ?? 373 15 TOTAL x 4, $272,762 48 LIABILITIES Capital stock paid In - ? f 25,000 00 Surplus fund . 10,000 00 Undivided profits ..... ,...$10,344 45 Reserved for interest and taxes accrued 4,919 82 Reserved for unearned interest 7,012 55 $22,270 82 Less current expenses, interest, and taxes paid ? ?.. 3,991 16 18,285 66 Circulating notes outstanding 23,950 00 Amount due to national bank? ? :. 914 19 Cashier's checks outstanding i 244 53 Total of Items 21. 22, 23, 24, and 25 $ 1,158 72 Demand deposits (other than bank deposits) subject to Reserve (deposits payable within 30 days): Individual deposits subject to check 50,926 98 Total of demand deposits (other than bank deposits) subject tp Reserve, Items 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, and 31....$ 50,926 98 Timo deposits subject to Reserve (payable after 30 days, or subject to 30 days or more notice, and postal savings): Certificates of deposit (other than for money borrowed).... 120,577 39 Other time deposits ? T 10,586 50 Total of time deposits subject to Reserve, Items 32, 33. 34, and 35 .'. $131,163 89 U. S. Government securities borrowed :.? 12,250 00 Liabilities other than as above stated ? 27 23 TOTAL .l $272,762 48 . STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA?County of York ss: I, J. S. HARTNESS, Cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear :hat the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. J. S. HARTNESS, Cashier. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 8th day of May, 1922, (SEAL) P. F. FERGUSON, Notary Public. Correct?Attest: J. H. Slye, J. L. Rainey, J. S. Rainey, Directors. See The Enquirer Office for Titles ' Chattel and Crop Mortgages at The and Mortgages of Real Estate. Enquirer Office. < " ? ' i..