The one worry is the hardware store. It's been family owned for three generations,but the current owners who are brother and sister,are just a little older and a little younger than me. She has told me that they have so much inventory that there's no way an individual would ever be able to buy them out.
I'd talked to the bank president before about my fear of them being bought out. They've been around since 1923,didn't even close in the depression. He said it's in their bylaws that no person or entity can own enough shares of them to take them over. In fact,last year,two other large chains of banks closed,one right here in town and in a few surrounding town,and another one in Greenville. It increased the local bank's business to the point that they went ahead and opened a satellite location in the grocery store and put an ATM in another town. I think if anybody was going to take them over,it would have been done back when enough of that was going on to cause me to be concerned. It's the opposite here,the big chain banks are pulling out.
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Today's Featured Article - The Nuts and Bolts of Fasteners - Part 2 - by Curtis Von Fange. In our previous article we discussed capscrews, bolts, and nuts along with their relative hardness and thread sizes. In this segment we will finish up on our fasteners and then work with ways to keep them from loosening up in the field. Capscrews, bolts and nuts are not the only means of holding two parts together. When dealing with thinner metals like sheet tin, a long bolt and
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