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] CAPITAL $50,00000: EARNED SURPLUS OVER $150,000 00 I Twenty-six Years’ strength 1 Twenty-six Years’ Growth i Twenty-six Years’ Success I This is the record of the First Na I tional Bank. I * Whether your banking business is | of small or large volume you will al J ways receive prompt and courteous j I attention at this bank. 1 You will derive many advantages I from the service and prestige of this I old-established, successful institution. THE WEATHER. Tonight and Tuesday partly cloudy to cloudy. HERE AND THERE t • Walter Fife spent Sunday at Little Rock. , . Bevens Heat Lotion cures all kinds of heat. 47dlmo. P. H. Van Dyke is in Memphis to day on business. For home grown watermelons call Wm. H. Dyer. 68d3t James Q. Blackwood has been quite sick since Friday night. Knox mends shoes cneap. Ill Wal nut street. dtf. M. S. Littleton was able to be Gut this morning after a week’s severe illness. Bevens’ Heat Lotion cures heat with one application. 47dlmo Gustave Jones is home from Little Rock for a day or two, looking after business. Wanted—Middle aged white lady for chambermaid. Board and room. Apply L. J. Cooksey. 58dl2t. Don’t miss Douglas Fairbanks in “Mr. Fix-It.” at the Madaline Thea ter tonight. Drayage of all kinds handlec uomplly. Phone No. 10. Chester Robinson. 13-dtl Judge and Mrs. E. L. Boyce went down to Little Rock this morning on the early train. — W. A. Mink, contractor and build I er, satisfaction guaranteed.— 825 I Malcolm Avenue, Newport, Ark. 43dl mo. Mrs. Myrtle Young and son, Paul, j spent a few hours in Batesville with J relatives Sunday. For Rent—One or two large, cool j bedrooms, close to town, bath and electric lights. Apply 123 Beech St. or call at Independent office, dtf See the famous comedian, Douglas Fairbanks in “Mr. Fix-It” at the 1 Madaline tonight. -- Corn for Sale at $2.00 per bushel at crib five miles west of Newport. Crib open only on Saturdays. See | Mack Bros. 48dtf lOwtf. Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Raney, of New ark, were here Saturday night, going home from Little Rock. I For Rent—Two nice sleeping rooms in private home, very close in, and ■ rates reasonable. Apply 123 Beech Street, after 6 p. m. 58dtf Mrs. Charles E. Hipolite left this afternoon for Cotton Plant to visit | her mother until Thursday. Rice Flour, Grits, Pearl Homi ny, Cream Meal, Huberts Country Style Corn Meal and Branzos to save flour and help win the war. Also a Full Line of Staple 1 I and Fancy Groceries I See Our Line of Altimintim Ware and Get Our Premium Catalogue R. J. Wise Grocer Co. I iki_ Mr. and Mrs. Marion Dickens re- i turned yesterday afternoon from a visit to relatives and friends at New ark. We have one and one-half loaves of bread that we can sell for fifteen cents. This is the same bread we have always handled only the loaf is 3 ounces lighter.-1—Newport Novelty Co., W. H. Dyer, Manager. 67d3t Mrs. M. M. Erwin will return this evening from a visit with her friend, Mrs. R. D. Williams, at Batesville. ! Lost or Estrayed—from pasture in lower end of town, one black Poland China sow, weighs 375 pounds, marked with crop and bit in left ear; has bob tail. Liberal reward paid for information leading to recovery.— Harry Grimes. 68d3t wit Mrs. Emma Lester, of Little Rock,! arrived this afternoon and is the guest of her niece, Mrs. Belle Grant. Prof, and Mrs. Edgar Williams re turned Sunday evening from a two days’ visit with his cousin at Walnut Ridge. — Mrs. Evelyn Kinman is taking a two weeks’ vacation and will probably go to Hot Springs and Little Rock, during the time. L. C. Cope, mechanic at the South ern Cotton Oil mill, left-this morning for Pojolar Bluff, where he will go in uusmess jlui mmseii. _ Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Bandy and Mr. and Mrs. Lockard Bandy and children drove to Jonesboro Sunday and spent the day with Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Williams. J. S. Handford, of Fort Worth, Tex as, and his daughter, Mrs. V. V. Bates, of Little Rock, passed through here Saturday night on their way to Batesville. Kenneth Reed, of St. Louis, brother of Will L. Reed and Miss Florence Reed, of our city, will be married in St. Louis this evening to Miss Ger trude Ryan, of that city. Lieutenant Eugene Wallace left at noon Sunday for Camp Gordon, At lanta, Georgia, after a short visit home. He expects to leave in a few days with his company for France. Phillip and Anschultz Lockard left Lambert Peters, of Pocahontas, on his way to Little Rock, stopped off here Sunday night for a short visit with his aunt, Mrs. Fred Smith, Mr. Peters has offered his services as an electrician and has gone to Little Rock today for an examination. Rev. Sidney Babcock, of Oklahoma, brother to Mrs. J. W. Armstrong and Miss Mary Babcock, of this city, will sail August 10th for France to do Y. M. C. A. work there. He has com pleted the secretarial course at Louis ville, Ky., spending two weeks there. —Jonesboro Tribune. Rev. Martin 1. Rope, pastor of the Christian church, is spending the week with his people here, coming down from West Plains, Mo., Saturday night. Mr. Pope stated that he would be here al} the week and would hold prayer meeting at his church Thurs day evening at 8 o’clock. Clyde McDonald, of Weldon, was here Sunday, leaving for Fort Sheri dan, Illinois, where he will take a spe cial summer course in military train ing, and will teach in Hendrix college this winter. His brother, Ralph McDonald, leaves tomorrow for Starkville, Miss., to enter the agricul tural college, as an aid to the govern ment in that department. “Uncle John” Willis, aged about 75 years, one of the old-time negroes who had many friends among the white people, died last night at Au- j vergne. “Uncle John,” in the days of ; slavery, was owned by the father of j Mrs. J. B. Avera of this city, and Mr. I | and Mrs. Avera will probably drive i down to Auvergne to attend the fun jeral of the old negro this afternoon. The officers and teachers of the Christian Sunday school are urged to be at the church Tuesday evening at l£:30. Mr. and Mrs. Ben White and Miss Fannie Hinkle and Miss Ollie Mae Kidd returned home today on the Rock Island from Memphis, where they have been attending the All South Christian Endeavor Convention. They report a successful meeting and a good time. The local exemption board on Sun- j day afternoon sent to Tulane Univer- ( sity at New Orleans, four young men, who enter the university to study ra dio work and automobile mechanics. Among them were Robert G. Holden, Hubert E. Tyler, of this city, William Allen Edwards, of Tuckerman and William Harmon Reid, of Grubbs. The exemption board also on to morrow, the 16th, will send to Stark ville, Miss., four young men, who will enter the agricultural college, where they will also study radio. The five young men from the county entering this college are Stephen Graham, of Tuckerman, Basil Orman Wingo, John Ralph Sink, Elmer Byrley and Ralph McDonald, of Weldon. On this date the board will send on No. 33 in the evening 90 negroes to Camp Pike. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Avera and Mr. ; and Mrs. Charles Holmes made an automobile trip to Batesville yester day and spent a few hours very pleas antly with relatives and friends. Mr. and Mrs. Holmes, who reside in St. Louis, came to Newport Friday in their car. Mr. Holmes visited his pa- ( trons of the different towns en route, 1 representing the company for which he travels, and made the trip to New-1 port in five days without any car trouble whatever, which speaks well for the Ford he drove. -BUY W. S. S.-▼— SELECTIVE SERVICE IS A GREAT LEVELER. Special to Independent Little Rock, July 15.—The selective ; service—a term that is preferable to ' the “draft,” is a great leveler. Great j companies of young men come to the | city with a few personal effects in a ! grip, possibly in only a bundle carried over the shouder. They come, for j the most part, just as they left their | vocations, some dressed in blue jeans jumpers as they had come from the To The Public ~ I have purchased the eat ing place and cold drink stand located on Hazel street next to the First National Bank, and will conduct one of the best places in Newport. All kinds of sand wiches and cold drinks at all hours. The public h is cordially asked to give * me their patronage. Van Walton —1 'arm and the factory, others in neat | susiness suits from the stores or pro- j fessional life, and still others attired j with all the care and sartorial per-1 Section wealth might insure. The ooy from the slums or from the poor j oillside farm, who could not have 1 raised enough money to come to camp, kept step with the millionaire’s son, and between them was quickly established that comity which bodes ill for the future of the kaiser. Last week, among those who reported' for duty was a Missouri young man who is said to be worth $16,000,000 in his own name. But on the roll of his country’s prospective fighting men, he ranked no higher than the poor fruit vendor on the comer from whom he had bought apples and or anges. So war becomes the great leveler, and so firmly fixed will have become this fellowship of individuals during the war, that after peace is declared the lines of demarkation will less distinct and will have, lost their counterfeit sacredness. -BUY W. S. S. Subscribe for the Independent. *1 - -— STOCK NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that, as marshal of the city of Newport, I have taken up the following livestock, to-wit: One Jersey heifer, crop and split in right, swallow fork and underbit in left ear, one year old. v One black Jersey heifer, crop and split in right, swallow fork and un drbit in left ear, one year old. One yellow and white heifer, crop and split in right, swallow fork and underbit in left ear, two years old. The owner of said stock is hereby notified to come forward and prove ownership to the undersigned, and that in default thereof, I will on THURSDAY, JULY 25, 1918, offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, in front of the city hall in the city of Newport, Arkansas, between the hours of 10 o’clock a. m. and 3 o’clock in the af ternoon of said date. G. C. MARTIN, 69dl0t City Marshal. ^^^^Wolff-Goldman Merc. Co.HH^H_H^MwWolff-Goldman Merc. Co WOLFF-GOLDMAN'S JULY CLEAN-UP SALE ' Starts Wednesday, July 17th (fe. After a very successful spring season we find many lots of merchandise broken in sizes and assortments. These we wish to clean-up at once and offer them to you now at a great reduction from their regular selling nrices. This will be a splendid opportunity to secure merchandise very much under today’s wholesale market values and comes right in the heart of the season when > they are most wanted for immediate wear and use. Many of these lots are limited in quantity and will be sold out quickly and not to disappoint any of our patrons we are not going to quote the items in this sale. Watch Our Windows from Day to Day During this Sale I They will tell many an interesting story. i i 1 I *|§J g§M ; ^ 1