Word: cashier
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Inspector. In Louisville, Gordon Jones was sent to the penitentiary for posing as a Federal agent, taking $590 from a bank. He did it by walking in, telling the bank cashier that he wanted to take the money away to see if it was counterfeit...
...City Newsmen held their wake. Among them were oldtimers who had covered the Triangle Waist Co. fire in 1911, the Wall Street explosion in 1920, the General Slocum disaster in 1904. On the wall a sign read: Profanity is vulgar and offensive. Why not quit it? In her cashier's cage Anna Daly Sullivan, only woman on the staff, swore through her tears...
Every bank said that there were remarkably few persons who grumbled at this shortage, most of them feeling that "it was great that they could be sold so fast." As one cashier said, they felt that it was "a solemn duty" to get the money to the government as fast as they could, bonds or no bonds...
...elderly man started to buy bonds some time ago, and keeps coming in regularly to buy bonds for his children. Altogether he has bought $15,000 worth, and keeps reminding the cashier that he "wishes he could buy twice as many," adding that he would "like to get a sock at Hitler myself...
...steps a subway rumbled up. People pushed for the turnstiles. Vag fumbled for two dimes. Keys, paper clips, everything small and bothersome came out of his watch pocket--but no dimes. He reached for his wallet and pulled out a dollar, then had to wait in line for the cashier. Just as they got through the turnstile, the subway's doors shut with a grim thud and it nosed down into the dark underground passage. They got the next one all right, but it was so filled that Vag couldn't get her a seat till after Charles Street. Then...