VOL. 90. GREENSBORO. N. C.t THURSDAY, JUNE 29, 191 1 MO. 26. - i . . - rPl ESBARGAIN COLUir - - inserted under this rti7 "lie rate of one centra word ...iinir at pakam nnd firms : each l"se,;- advertising contracts ...! t'-' - f"? in adduce. lot ee Vtrav. pupms and oxfords in oi nic i Children's s'zes to . be ja-.es at s Take a look crSt ume 7u are in t. u Wt St wn ue at K;-tle v round tomorrow to rent p--. - hment sand privileges for the " Founh of July celebrat'on Ml k- ' desiring to se:ure refresh Pf;;Jn, aml privileges are invited to ffit him- - -p q i E Eleven acres of land, hoV.o and barn in city limits. A-":ly to's. V. Ziglar, City. -ant Fleming, of the Southern vmobil College, Oak Ridg?,! ' : nf the most expert automobile iVn in America. Students under S exrert teaching rapidly become misters of the machine. - t J2ister d imported Pe cheron slal v vpars old. color black; I . I 1 I V - ;ht abciit 1600 poucds. The best .-;:iinn ever brou-'ut to inis stu- ,7, ic now ready for service, and ir... st a: a ine season n o. o: -th"s ruue, uu iioiu vuese v t -ms and particulars, write or phone Oxford College Ho.se Company, s. Smith, Mgr. 1J"t!v - hars at iS cen s. We have re ce and opened ready for your in- so"- tion :: ladies" hats worth .$4 ea 1 We are offering them at .98 cr each as long as they last. Tt- greatest hat values you ever a . V. Sapp, 318 South Elm. " land China pigs for sale cheap. Six veeks old July 1. Can be made tn -1 iTh 200 pound by Christmas. R. V AHicnester, uiuinemeiu, an. v., r r. n. -'. 25-2L F R RENT A fa:::. Apply to G:--ns' oro. X. C. good two-horse V. F. Holmes, N-xt time you are in Thacker & Br: kniaim 's sore tell them to sh- vou the Commonwealth and Etonian ?h :es advertised in The Pa- or at -re illy reduced prices." Tie Southern Automobile . College, 0 Ridae, offers a special June pr.uo-ition to students -from the sciu-ois and colleges, and automobile oiris to fit them for pleasant simmer occupation, and for long summer journeys without expensive cb; M'fe-urs and garage bills. - V. White Leghorn eggs for sa . : for setting of 15. Eight b;r-:-5 entered for December shojw eisht premiums. J. A. Groome, Gr- nshoro R. F. D. 3. Phone 6811. 7 ? Southern Automobile College, Oak Ridge, N. C, is crowded with me i who want to master the mech anic and operation of the auto inot .le, and they are loud in their prai-es of Captain Fleming and his ab! assistants. S d Corn For Sale White Prolific grc-n especially for seed; yielded las: year 00 bushels per acre. $2 Pe: u hel. J. A. Groome, Greensboro R. r D. 3. Phone 6811. lQ-tt. Notice. 1 aecount of the first Tuesday in ily being a legal holiday, the July meeting of the board of county coii lissioners will be adjourned from Mo:, lay. July 3, to Wednesday, July 5. r' which time road petitions and oth matters will be taken up. V ('. BOREN. Chm. B. C. C. eft a ua"4 r;-: '. t-cCb Low Re. -SS S VttwS and full i ST T S 'tr iday School Convention. Twi, ship midsummer Sun- l convention will be held -'s church next Sunday at' k All the Sunday schools ai -''' to attend in a body, will he two services, one in "' ' inu and one in the after 'I Croome singing class i.ish music for the conven- 1, i'i , Th- tn- i following is the program: T: htiiKu will ho. rnllorl in order bv pres dent, and a song ser- vic. l.i ininutA? will hehAld. - dn sons "Rock of Aees." "'ional s r vices by the presi- ' ni.-s of iast meeting read. A"h s.. of w elcome by C. Groome. Report of schools. olunt remarks by members. nrs. and adjournment for dinner. At i o tiock tne afternoon ses sion .i rir. tt,;v. aarriA Of fivr- minutes and devotional ser vice Address by J. T. Fain at 1.45 0 Clock Song. Address by Rev. Shuford Peeler. gtcre i . '11 the next convention e sh FORM. Matterv 0r InUrert To Rtaden of Tho Patriot Far and Near. Arrt?C 3 pPscomb spent Sun day -with his family in Mt. Airy. a JrJlSn if" L Brooks has gone . to Ashevllle;for a stay of a few Veeks. AJud66 Thomas J. Shiw left Balttmore or a . business trip to TrrMl. E - sherrill is home from Washington to spend a few days with bis family. t ; 4 , m , Mrs. E. C. Sykes and child have returned from a visit to relatives at New, London. Register of Deeds W. H. Rankin spetit Sunday athis former home a Brown Summit. .J wrMlis Louise Born has returned from a visit to her cousin, Miss Eva Bowles, at Mt. Holly. Mrs. R. Murphy. Williams and children have gone to Wallett, N. C,, to visit her parents. . Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Broadhurst have gone, to Canton to spend sev eral weeks with f dene's. : . -Mr. and Mrs, E. R. Liles, of Orangeburg, s. C, are visiting the family of Mrs. J. R. Pearce. - Dr. J. S. Betts has gone to More head City to attend the meeting of the North Carolina Dental Society. Mr. Jesse Keith has purchased a handsome 'dwelling on Summit ave nue and will occuy it with his fam ily. City Attoimy A. W. Cooke has gone to Lake loxaway to attend the meeting of th3 State Bar Associa tion. Mr. W. L. Clement was removed to St. Leo's hospital Sunday to un dergo an operation. He is getting along nicely. Mr. W. A. Smith, of Reidsville, has accepted a position as . cashier in the freight office here and has moved hs"fam ly to the city. Mr. George C. Crews and Miss Kate Harger, btth of Madison, were married last night in ths city. Fol lowing the ceremony the happy couple left for a short bridal trip. Misses Blanche Johnson and. Irene Boyles have gone to Hickory to at tend the State Epworth League con ference, and from there will go to Asheville to attend the summer con ference. , A business meeting of the Better ment Society of the Hodgin school will be held at the home of Mrs. C W. Tenny, near Glenwood, this even ing at 7 oclo;k. All members are asked to be present. Mr. A. M. Scales left yesterday for Lake Toxawiy to attend the meeting of the State Bar Ass relation. He was accompanied by. his daughter. Miss Elizabeth Scales, and his cousin, Miss Bettie Martin Hines. Mrs. G. R. Herbin. Miss Lee Her bin and Leonidss Herbin have re turned from Re dsville where- they went to attend the funral of Mrs. Herbin's brother, L. L. Bennett, whose, death occurred Sunday. Those from Greensboro attending the meeting of the North Carolina Press Association at Lenoir are J T Fain, of the Telegram; R. M. Phillips, of the Daily News, and W. I. Underwood, of The Patriot. Mr. and Mrs. Lindsay Hopkins, who have been residing in Atlanta for some time, have returned to Greensboro, and for the present are living at the home of Mrs. Hopkins parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Pais ley. Capt. J. W. Fry has returned from a business and pleasure trip to northern cities. He spent a few days ir PhiiaHoir h a and Baltimore on business connected with the proposed railroad from Greensboro to kox- boro. Permits have been issued for he erection of $2,000 dwelling on Frisco street by J. C. Bishop, a $500 house on Gibson street by J. T. B. Shaw, and a five room house for the wa terworks engineer on North Greene street to be erected by the city. John Wylie, a well known colored man living a few miles from town, had two of his daughters, Annie nnH RniiiA Wvlie. in court last Mon day charged with the larceny of some household property irom mm, uuv. Justice Collins dismissed the war rant, after hearing the evidence. The board of veterinary examiners o Tuesday and examined candidates for license to Practice vatoHnnrv sure ery. Ten took tne examination and n'.ne passed. Yes terday the State Veterinarians Asso ciation, held its meeung ueic, closed with a banquet iasi nnj- -Misses Florence Hunt and Florence Pannill have gone to Chicago for the -. ti..n timII Talrp sut) summer, miss num. - cial courses in music nnow Julia Caruthers and n the Sherwood School of Music. .Miss Pannill who is a will teacher in tne cty ""r:r' take a special primary teacher s course. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. ce an- E Horton, of Durham. . r-f 1 ATI took, piace 19. Mr. and Monday afi Monaay i"'u"' - n chort mr t Twinn oro awav on trip and will return to in a few crays. Mr. G. G. Hendricks who resides near Friendship, had .s w heat tubing Tuesday and this was at tended by several of his Menos from Greensboro, The crop raised by Mn Hendrickswas IN BRIEF els. Tnis i-. - Davidson county recently sohT to a Davidson c 1 man for $15,000. .The following have " been elected officers of Greensboro Lodge No. . 76, -Masons: G. Anderson, worshipful master; C. R. Lincoln, senior war den; L. AI. Clymer, Junior warden; PtercrsecreJaS: STn,?;.- w. tl. Uoirln. traauroi" 'T- r mt ... - - 1 . i "cersm De named by the wor shipful master. ; . i M "Syftoor DeButts anjj Miss E1-, len Cutchln, two popular young peo ple of this' city, were married in Spartanburg, s. C, last Tuesday nignt.- They returned here Wednes day but kept their marriage a se cret .until Saturday night, when a formal announcement of it wps made by he bride's parents. Mr. and. Mrs. J. R. Cut-hln. The death lasi Saturday of Mis. E. S. Holt, at her home a few miles east of the city, following an illness of some time, was a paculiarly sad one. She was 22 years of aee and is survived , by her husband and , a two-year-old ch Id. The funeral was held at Midway Presbyterian church Sunday afternoon and was attended by one of the largest crowds that ever witnessed a funeral at Midway. The "service was con ducted, by the jastor, Rev. J. W. Goodman. Announcement of the reopening of Jefferson Academy at McLeansville this fall have been issued from the press. The new principal is Prof. Edgar T. Hines, a native of Guilford, and a gradafe of Elon College. Others who will be members of the fac ulty are Prof. Elmer L. Daughtery, who was educated at Franklin Mili tary Academy and Elon College; Miss Huldah Slaughter, graduate of the State Normal and Induscrial Col lege, and Mr. William N. Huff, of Gibson ville. The s:ss!on will open September 7. President Julius I. Foust, of the State Normal and Industrial College, lectured to the teachers of the summer school of the A. and M. Col lege here Friday afternoon, his sub jec being "The Changing Civiliza tion and Our New Ideals." Friday night, Prof. C. H. Mebane, of the state department of education, spoke to the class on "The Responsibility of the Teacher to the Public." He compared conditions in the educa tional system of the state twenty five years ago and now. He advo cated the kind of education that teaches men to work with their hands, whereby they become produc ers and not consumers only. Thfl Southern Bell Telephone Com pany has made arrangements "with the weather bureau of the unitea States by which aa ly weamt-r i ports will ba given over the tele nhnnA tr 25.000 Southern farmers. The reports will b3 furnished the telephone, cbmrany by the weather bureau and wlH -be read to - me farmers by telephone. At a s"" hour each day a general alarm will be sounded, calng every farmer to the telephone, wnen tney aie assembled the report will be read. Any farmer who Is not ame 10 swer the signal and hear the report has the privilege of calling the ope rator and securing the information. An aYrnrs nn fsom Durham to Dan ville Monday was productive of con siderable tioulle as the train pass ed through th s county. When ne train stopped here in t ""J two negroes were pulled off on a gambling charge. On the way back Robert Bennett and Jesse Nix both of Durham, engaged in a dl"cu1 while the train was between Bena ia and Brown Summit. Nix had his throat severely cut and is now in ct t.' hosDital re.overing, while Bennett is in jail in default of bona When the train was between here and Gibsonville Andeison Lyon was arrested for the larceny of a coat and was left at Burlington. He -was Sought back here Tuesday and bound over to court. Three Weddinc.8 in One Evening. Within the space of one hour there were three weddings in Greens boro last night Two of these were in the First Presbyterian church, half an hour apart, and the thira half an hour later t the home ot the bride. The first was that oi Miss Annette Sloan to Mr. C. J. kh of tnis city, uvvu - - first riBouj'""" - -Mn of- o'clock, Rev. Melton Clark . of ficiat D.ohirrar14t1 I 1 1 li 1 I.. 11 Ckb " ine in the presence oi a. "i6 iug . . nn of thA same dlence. At s.u " k. -place Miss Marion Lea a most pop ular young woman oi iuo "'n- . came the bride of Mr. S. W. Don nelly, a well known traveling sales mAt 9 o'c'ock at the residence f Mr and Mrs. J. C Bishop their daughter, Miss Bonnie, was fiarried to Dr. J. W. Tankersly, a well Knw" physician of the city, the cereinony being performed hy Rev. Father vm cent Taylor, of St. Benedict s churcn. Only a few relatives and close friends of the family were present. Charged With Running Lotteries. The grand jury last Friday re turned true bills against a number of druggist and cigar sellers for conducting what have been recently defined as lottery schemes, and while the cases may not be pressed they will serve to fix the ltfw and pre vent future violations. Under a recent ruling, of the attor ney general hte wheels so often seen in drug sotres, in which money is dropped and the buyer always gets one drink or cigar for his nickle aj.d some times more, are lotteries. Aii cafidy schemes and prize offers, where a man does not know definitely what he Is getting for his money are un at the ban. Solicitor Gattis is one of the first solicitors to cause m dictments to be found against such I dictments scaemes. HANESGOES TO THE ROADS. j. -TV Convicted of Simple Assault Upon Maggie Faucstt Other Sentences. : : Caleb Hanes, whose real name is oV-15. J' Jorc.. waS convict- txn in xiuiiinrn . snnorin v,-r-i- v: of ed In uilford -Superior court Satur day afternoon of simple assault up on. Miss Maggie Faucttt, of Madison township, and sentenced to two years; on the county vroads. Recent ly the legislature amended the law so that In cases of this kind, where a man Was Indicted for criminal as sault, the judge might give the Pris oner a longer sentence than is usu ally permissible in cases of simple assault." Hanes will , begin his sen tence at once. There are cases against him for carrying concealed weapohsand seduction, but these were not: tried. A circumstance that weighed strongly with the jury was the dis covery that the defendant is a mar-: ried man,- having a wife and child in'Stokes county, where he is known as John Joyce. He is wanted in that county also for assault with a dead ly weapon, and no doubt it was on account of thi charge that he came to Guilford and posed under another name. The trial was commenced on Fri day; and consumed a little more than a day. Solicitor Gattis was assisted, in the prosecution by Coun ty Attorney Wilson, wh'le the v defendant-was represented by Col. J. A. Barringer and Mr. Glenn Hudson, of the local bar. The principal wit ness for the state was Miss Faucett, whoojdetailed the circumstances of Hanes' coming to the community to work at & saw mill, her meeting him .at the home of Mr. Sha'w, where he boarded, the courtship and their engagement to marry. On Tuesday night, June-1. they planned to go to Danville and get married. After her people had retired, she stole out of the house and met the defendant rnd they started toward the Brc-vn Summit depot, a mile ava, to take the mif'r-rght train for Dauvilla. Whn aboW half way to the station the defendant assaulted her an required . her to remain with him all night. In the morning they returned to Mr. Shaw's and told them they were married, and the g?rl told her parents the same stoi v. They lived together for a few 'days until the truth leaked out The girl's story was strengthened by the fact that after she found that Hanes would not mai ry her she told everyone ihe same thing. She testified that Hanes had a pistol with him and this was corroborated by his having a pistol when arrest ed. . Other witnesses were put on the stand to tell of conversation with Hanes. The defendant did not The jury that sat in the casoras composed of W. C. Deboe, R- L. en tress, J. K. Ozment, John P. -ai noun, A. E. Davis, E. O. Pegram, W. P. Lemons, James Dennis R. L Ramsey, John A. Wyrick J F. Alli son and E. A. McAdco. Judge Dan ii oiiriwAH no sDectators in - tne court room during the taking of the 4 testimony. A number of other cases were disposed of before the adjourn ment of the court late Saturday af- tcrnoon. Jim suits, wuo uau convicted at a previous term of the court of running an illicit distil lery Was in court again chargeo with retailing. He was found not guilty. The solicitor prayed judg ment in two cases in which he had been found guilty. He was fined $50 and costs in one case and placed under a $250 bond for his good behavior in the other. John Hart, who on Friday was call ed out, could not be found so his sentence could be Imposed and a capias was ordered to issue and his bond fixed, at $1,000 if he is caught. There are two cases charging re tailing against Hart. When the case of David P. Green, which was set for trial, was call ed the defendant failed to answer and a bond of $300 was declared forfeited. Green was charged with seduction under promise of marriage. a .onioo wns ordered to issue ana if the defendant" is caught it will go harder with him. D , The cases against Charles Rober son, John Ray, and J. W. Rainey, the charge being assaulting a detec tive with a deadly weapon, was continued on account of the illness of one of the defendants. . W. F. Stinnette, who was sen tenced to eighteen months by the municipal court on three charges ol retailing,, appealing to Superior court, was sent to tne roaas iu months each in two cases and judg ment was suspended in the other cases. . Roella Siler was sent to the work house for 12 months on the charge of highway robbery. Frank Pennington was given six months in jail for abandonment, with privilege to be hired out. Alex Chaffin, Jr., was sentenced to the roads for one year on the charge of larceny. Alex Chaffin, Sr., was given four months on the charge of receiving stolen goods. Troy Fitzgerald was sentenced to serve six months in the workhouse on the charge of larceny, the sen tence to, begin at the expiration of a former sentence. A Peep Into Hia Pocket Would show the box of Bucklen's Ar nica Salve that E. S. Loper, a car penter, of Marilla, N. Y., always car ries. "I have never had a cut, wound, bruise, or sore it would not soon heal," he writes. Greatest healer of burns, boils, scalds, chap ped hands and Hps, fever, sores, skin eruptions eczema, corns and piles. 25c at 'Klutz Drug Com THE FINANCIAL PROBLEM. Saving Banks Investmert lttm ai d . ;;; - t-: Suggestion. : ; t.J This from the Christian Hehald is worth f passing along: "it Is mighty bad,, said an unfortunate working man some -time ago to the writer, "to save up a. thousand dollars by laying aside a dollarra" Week and then take it out of the savings" bank and lose it to a get-rich-quick swin dler, as I have ju3t done.;' This poor fellow could work and save, but he had not; had even a kinder garten education in finance, else his story would have been different. He had never given-a thought to in terest, and so was absolutely ignor ant of growth through compound in terest, and of cbuis?,' had never heard of that wonderful process of accumulation known as "progres-, sive compound interest." . One dollar deposited in a savings bank that pays 4 per cent, interest will amount to $2.19 In 20 years. This is simple compound interest. Now if you deposit one dollar every year for twenty years, or $20 in all, the sum to "your credit will have. grown to $30.97. Any wage earn er can put by one dollar a week. That money deposited in a savings bank for twaniy years will have in creased to $1,612. A deposit of $5 a week will have grown to $8,000, and this at 4 per cent, will be $320 a year. There is no secret, no mystery about this. It is clear as the cloudless sun and the method is just as clean and honest. What a Reporter Saw in NeJW York. A reporter sat in the office of the president of one of the big New York savings banks, talking about the bond market. A young man came in, whispered ' a few words to the president, and was an swered briefly: "Show her in." The reporter rose to go. "Wait," said the president, "I want you to see a savings bank at work." ' An old woman slipped through the door, which swung behind her. She bowed profoundly. The reporter noted at a glance the woolen shawl, the old battered bonnet, the big, rough shoes, the broad, red hands. "A scrubwoman," he thought. "Good morning," said the presi dent. "Is there anything you would, like to ask me?" vj "It's about me money, sir,"' she said, glancing nuers ly at the re porter. "What is it?" "I have about a, thousand dollars in th' bank, an- I wants the half iv it," she said, "f'r an investment. Ho wuld n't: gimme . it unliss ye says so. " n'-' r: "What kind of an investment is it that you want to make?" asked the president. She named a new mining com pany, floated by Philadelphia men to reopen an alleged Aztec mine. "A man wint down our strate, an told us all about it. I wants t' put foive hundred dollars in. He sez, sez he, as t' will be tin thou sand in a year, an' mebbe fifty thousand in tin years." "Can you at ford to lose that money? How d?d you get so much?'' "Sure, I 'arned it, sir, all iv it, wid me hands, an' on me knees. It tuk me twinty years. I can't af ford t' lose none of it I" "This mine, let me tell you, is a gambling concern. The men who are trying to sell stock to you have no reputations to lose. They mere ly want your money. They will romise you anything. ' You will never get it. I know all about them and what they are doing. Now, if a stranger-came along to you and wanted half of your money to bet on the races, in the saloons, would you lend it to him?' "I wud not!" That, at least, was positive. : "But you want to give your money to this stranger to take to Mexico, where you can t reach him, and siuk it in a hole in the- ground, where it will a.most surely be lost forever, -to you at least. Do you think tiia is w.'se?" "Sure, I don't," she saiid. "An' it's much obliged I am t' ye f'r y'r advice. I guess the likes iv me shud n't have a'nny money!" She came over to the big desk, forgetting ber firsi shyness, and impulsively wrung the president's hand. Then she turned and went out wi'ii a hasty "Beg y'r pardon, sir.' "You will see," said the president to the reported, "that a savings bank is a sort of nurse to 1 these financial 'babes. The people who havo a fpw hundred dollars in the hririTr nrA the natural prey of the sharpers. One has to be all eyes. The mining sharps are pretty bad, but the real estate sharps, who want to sell a Door woman two or three beautiful lots on the" edge of Rnmr, Tnsr Island swamp, are the worst. We have more of them on tho Rast srde than of any other vermin. From that day to this the report er who is the writer of this article, has looked at savings banks through iiifff-rpnt eves. Formerly tney ap neared to be merely business insti tutions, gathering together the funds of the neopie. investing tnem wise lv within the leash of the savings hunk law. but straining constantly At. ht leash. They seemed to be wise, keen, eager collectors of the neonle's money. They seemed to grow rich and poweiful. Months of quiet study that follow- thA incident of -the Irish sctud woman and the president convinced me that there is k great group of S i t 1 The Benefits: of a Account '.The benefits accruing from a savings account are manifold The interest received C is the smallest benefit produced. To lay aside a snug little sum for a rainy day" Is a com mendable undertaking, and .certainly worth all the effort any savings account ever re- quired, when the "rainy day" comes. - But .satisfying as these benefits are, they have not the merit that comes of the training acquired in sue cessfully conducting a sayingi; account. To have learned the principles of. economy is to have your independence and happiness assured. Such are some of the great values of a savings account. This bank en courages such accounts by pay ing 4 per cent. 1 interest on them, compounded four times a year. - Checking accounts in any amount cordially invited. Please call at the bank when you are in town. If X. American Exchange Bank GREENSBORO. N. C. Capital. : -' . $300,000.00. R.G. VAUGaV?res. T J. W. SCOTT, V.-Pres J?, lnCHOLSOU, Awt. Caihler Banking Hours 9 A. M. to 2 P. M. 4 strong, rich, influential savings banks, officered by men ke:n enough to avoid all traps, who give the best of their brains and-energy to just the .kind of work. th;t the- reporter saw on the - East Side. A savings bank has "come to be considered not so much a business institutIons- a philanthropy: It is' asafe naven. Its president, to fill his position well, must be the neverfailing lfght- nouse on tne reefs outside. C. M. Keys in Worlds Work. " Look on the next page and see What the foundation of every happy home is. AT THE BATTLE GROUND. Celebration This Year Will Be on Large Scale as Usual. The annual Fourth of July cele bration at Guilford Battle Ground net Tuesday win be one of the most interesting and largely attended gatherings held there in recent years. A spTendiid Program has been arranged and everything will be done to make it a pleasant and profitable day for all who attend. At this time a flag, which is an exact reproduction of one carried by the Continental regulars in the bat tle of Guilford Court House will be presented by the North Carolina Sons of the Revolution. The presentation, will be made by Secretary of State Bryan Grimes and the accept ance will be by Mr. A. M. Scales. Hon. Cyrus B. Watson, of Winston Salem, will deliver a memorial ora tion upon the life and servcies of ihe late Major Joseph M. Morehead, for many years president of the Guilford Battle Ground Association. Mr. Watson and Major Morehead were lifelong friends and knew each other intimately. Your Money What are you doing with it? It is not safe if you are car- rvinc it. around in vour Docket or keeping it in your home, lr g you will deposit it in our bank, j it will be absolutely safe, and o you can pay . your bills by g check, which is more business- g like than handling the cash. If g your" money Is deposited in 2 our Savings Department, we 5 will pay you 4 per cent Inter- 2 est, compounded quarterly. 0 o Commercial National Bank 1 rf o - y F. D. RICK0, Prealdant. F. C. DOYLE 3, Cashier. Savings 8 a 8

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