- . I \ > ? ? J ? c~ii *? 1 ;o sons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This April 22, 1922, 1926. Peoples Bank & Trust Company Executor. June 4, ex. J"50 , v ?" li < ; . : ?% ? I; Jf ?? Mf 1' NOTICE Having qualified as administrator ith will annexed, of the estate of m . ing Service "1 ?t & "We don't do it All, but we do the Best" Garrett 8c Son "07 >or.? ? 1 * Pluir.bing and Heating* : burg, S. C. 124 S. Church St. j Helen Leonard^ deceased^ this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to ifresent them i to the undersigned administrator | within twelve month3 from date or | this notice will be pleaded in bar of 1 their recovery. All persons indebted i to said estate will please make im ; mediate payment. This April 22, *1922, 1925. Peoples Bank & Trust Company Administrator. Expert Plumbing We have opened a mod- | ern plumbing establish ment on Trade Street in the Ballevv building. Expert attention given to | plumbing and heating | equipment and installa tion. SEE US Shields & Morris TRYON, N. C. Straight to tkcMark Home! Home building is the most worthy effort in all ff man's activities. It's an unselfish building of Mel', a haven, comforts, luxury? for others Jose heli i most dear. The home builders are in (ruth the backbone of all nations, states, towns or lommuniiy. BuiMinga home calls for vision? courage and kith, Ewrv man who resolves to build and own Illume "t his own is deserving of encourgement pi suppni't of all the community. It is an established fact that 95 per cent of the Ioomesin.it are financed through loans. Even ^hen inuyest rates on loans are highest it is thrifty tu i uy and build. Interest rates are low loi, Tr.is l, in position to help home builders in Tryon T out * h.-ir plans. ftnen y.r.i- new home or improvements on the old place^ is panced o'h an institution of this standing it is an in sarance o:' -.mrces unattainable in any other way. Come in and Let Us Help You. We pay 4 per cent on Savings ?!, 000 Surplus uver $6,000 Resources over $200,000 No loiips are made by this bank to any of it s Officers or Directors. HOLv,rS -jrra-. w F. LITTLE Preside,,. Cashier 1 T' wal, ,^P t&mii&m v- A- BLA?D Oris^r Asst. Cash. I&TdR '"v??S MORGAN MORRIS Pr'csri?>.,t Asst Cash. IB BANK AND TRUST COMPANY emto;. r American Bankers Association J ryon, North Carolina ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE : The undersigned having qualified as administrator of the estate of Chas. C. Hinsdale, deceased this is to notify all persons indebted to said estate to pay said indebtedness to the undersigned and any person or persons holding any claim or claims against said estate will present same to the undersigned properly verified for payment within the time allowed by law, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. This April 30, 1925. (Signed) B. B. Hinsdale. B. R. Hicks. O Come and see us or write for cata log and price8 on GARDEN, FIELD, and FLOWER SEEDS, PLANTS, POULTRY SUPPLIES HOLMES SEED COMPANY, ..152 E. Main St. Spartanburg, S. C. Ex. 5, 14 O Day of Egypt's Glory Thebes, the capital of ancient Kgypt. had 100 gates and 'JOO chariots at each gate. < 4 ountg Correspondence. MILL SPRING ROUTE ONE Rev. H. G. Liner filled his regular appointment at Big Level Sunday. A J largge crowd was present. Mrs. W. E. Elliott called on Mrs. j ] V. B. Hyder Friday afternoon. 1 Misa Vinetta Hyder, who is a stu- . dent at Hill Crest Institute, accom. | panied by her cousin , Miss Aim,, i Metcalf, also a student of this school, ! spent the week-end with homef61k.s. | Miss Florence Jackson from route 2 was a dinner guest of Miss Vernie | Hyder^ Sunday. i . Several from here visited the pow er *plant Sunday. All report a nice time. ?????? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?- ?. ?- *? ?- -? SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM Passenger Train Schedules Tryon, N. C. Effective April 26, 1925 8:52 A- M. Hendersonville, Asheville and local 8:52 A. M. Spartanburg, Columbia, Atlanta and local 11:25 A. M. Asheville, Knoxville, Cincinnati, and St. Louis 12:40 P. M. Carolina Special; Spartanburg, Columbia and Charleston 6:10 P. M. Savannah, Charlrston also Jackson ville and Florida points, also At lanta and New Orleans 6:10 P. M. Carolina Special; Cincinnati and Indianapolis, and Chicago Above Fignres Published As Information Only J. H. Wood, J. H. Rion * | Div. Pass. Agt. Agent I Asheville, N. C. Tryon, N. C. Lebanon school closed Thursday^ with a pleacant picnic to Boar Uen Mountain. The teacher bein^ .Miss Ellen Edwards^ Mr. J# C. Powell B. Hyder Sunday, jeen very sick but ng. called on Mr. V. Mr. Hyder has is slowly improv_ 1 To Berlin fA,uTOC^^TCRl Dr. Jacob G. Schurman, former president of Cornell university and minister to China un?W Harding, is the new U, S. an ^asoliuor to Germany. COM Whether you burn coal in furnace, stove or jrrate. wo have just what you need. Egg, nut or lump in ^oori clean coal. Wood, both oak and pirn-. Cut to meet your require ments for stove or fireplace. ? Phone 154 ? i W. S. GREEN Wood and Coal farms Partners banks The successful farm is as closely allied with a bank as with the stock or seed it proposes to increase to a profit. As an example, take sheep. It has been many years since the British learned from the Romans the art of spinning wool. It was in 1609 that the first sheep into the U. S. were landed ai Jamestown, Va., and almost two centuries later, 1792, that the first carding machine was invented. Progress has been fast since then. Today? one of the biggest woolen manufacturers produces 70,000,000 yards of fabrics each year, and its assets are $130,000,000. When that much money is involved? banking is a part of it. In our humble way, this bank is vital in the industrial and agricultural progress of the world--and you ? Mr. Stockman or Farmer ? have a hand, no matter what commodity you cultivate or produce. To keep wheels turning, we should work together, whether it be savings, checking, loans or investments. Capital $15,000 Surplus and Profits $7,500 Resources over $1.75,000 Polk County Bank & Trust Company Member American and North Carolina tankers Associations Columbus, ... North Carolina OFFICERS: E. W. S. Cobb, Pres. J. R Sans, Chm. of the Board Frank Jackson, Vice-Pres. Fred W. Blanton, Vice-Pres, & Cash. M. L. Arledge, Asst. Cash. Gertrude West, Asst. Cash, j DIRECTORS: J * W. T. Hammett, P. D. Williams, Frank Jackson, Fred W. Blanton, E. W. S. Cobb, J. W. Newman, E. B. Cloud J. R. Sams J. H. Gibbs Names to Live Up To Two youngsters will be In the Southern league this spring who will try to perpetuate the great names of their fathers in baseball. One Is Frank Bower man, Jr., son of the old rough and-ready catcher of the Giants, who gets a trial with Chatta nooga, and the other Howard Burkett, son of Jess Burkett, the old Cleveland and St. Louis player, who is now manager of the Worcester Eastern leagu* club. There is no little senti ment connected with young Bowerman's going to Chatta nooga. Strang Micklin, who runs that club, played with the old Giants under the name of Strang. In sending his boy to Nicklln, the veteran Bowerman remarked in a letter: '*1 know of no one to whom I would rather trust the future of my boy than you." Graceful High Jumper r ? r-^fer? ? ~ i Miss Nell llerrin, student ol Wash | Ington seminary at Atlanta, may not />be able to clear the bar when it Is as hltrli as Harold Osborne ? but' just the same she is equally us graceful as the famous high juniper, and clears the bar higher than any other girl of ath I letic inclinations. i Veteran Sam Rice Made Nine Jaunts to the Pan Sam Kice, veteran outfielder of the Washington Nationals, is believed to be Ihe holder of the record for the greatest number of times "at bat" In a single baseball game. Rice was at bat nine times In a game July 19, be I tween the Senators and jBrowns which went 16 innings, with the Browns vic | tors 10 to 9. Checking over the 1924 American league records revealed that the Wash J Ington fly catcher smashed out four hits, two of which were triples, in his nine trips to the pHte. The only rec j ords available are for games of nine i innings. The National league records ! show a number of players who were at bat eight times, while American league records show several who have ' j been at bat seven times in a game. The Browns used Urban Shocker and , I>ave Dnnforth on the mound during the game, 76 Nationals facing them in I the afternoon. Four of these drew bases on balls, but Rice was not one of them. Incidentally. Rice carried off the sea j son's record for the greatest number 1 of times at bat for the season. Play ing in 1f>4 games. Sam was charged with 646 times at bat. Ln addition, he made 16 sacrifice hits, drew 46 banes on balls and wai hit four times by j pitched balls. The St. Louis Browns have .v.::* 'n flelder Sylvester Simon to Tulsa of the Western league, lie will be expected to fill a vacancy at third base. ? ? ? St. Louis Cards used no less than j four men at short In 1924. They were Cooney, Thevenow, Toporcer and Bell. i Cooney played the most games? 99. ? * ? I j No doubt "Big" Munn, the wrestler who picks the opposition up and throws it on the floor, sees nothing especially comical in jokes about train windows that stick. ? ? * Putt Mosman, Kldora, Iowa, succeed ed himself as national horseshoe pitch ing champion, winning the national tournament at Lake Worth. Texas, from a field of 12. ? ? ? University of Oklahoma's memorial 1 stadium is to cost $1,000,000 and In clude a double-decked steel grand stand to seat 43,000. A new gymna sium also is being considered. ? ? ? Jimmy Welsh, the young outfielder, sold recently by Seattle to the Boston Braves, for a reputed sum of $.'{.">,000, is trying to force the Seattle club to give him a part of the purchase money. ? ? * New Haven has signed Gene Suggs, an Infielder, who was with Beatrice of the Tri-State league until the loop blew up last year. Su^gs is twenty j one years ?'?' weighs 150 pounds and hits left-h: ;. . 1. ? ? ? Chattanooga has obtained Tom Itog ers, veteran Memphis pitcher, on waivers. Rogers, who has been in the j Southern league many years, pitched | a no-hit, no-run game against Chatta j nooga in 1918. He was then with Nashville. ? ? ? Outfielder Walter Oberc of S; r'vj field of the Eastern league, believe* | is better than a Class A player an<; : declares he will retire from organized j baseball if a deal Is not made where ! by he will he given a chance te uiakt j good higher up. 9

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