18
THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1919.
STUDIES BREEDS
OF SHEEP SUITED
TO JAPAN NEEDS
Dr. Tanimura Arrives in Portland
to Attend the pacific Interna
- tional Livestock Exposition.
NATIVE FEEDS. INSUFFICIENT
near Fuji mountain where the ground,
because of : airplane and bom bins prao
tlce by the war department, U too dan-
eroua to raise other crops ; one at
araenono, aeld where they practice
maneuvers and where Tanimura has
more than SO varieties from America.
Canada and Australia, and one at Kaseo,
grounds belonging; to the Imperial house
hold, where he grows 100 varieties of
wheat, rye, oats, barley, corn and other
Tram.
Now. after years of jitodv. T&nimura.
has his foodstuffs, and has come to
buy the sheep. The empire has only
about 4000 sheep of rather poor variety.
E3TBOt7TErTO XTJBOPE
Tanimura is also' roinr to Europe,
sailing- from New York next month, to
study livestock in Scotland, England,
France, Italy and Belgium, to see how
the animals are wintered and especially
their feeding conditions and esoeclally
what use was made of them durimr the
war. He will return to Japan via the
united States early in the spring.
Japanese Makes Specialty of
Seeking Breeds of Sheep That
Will Thrive in His Native Land.
As a special commissioner for the
Japanese war department, the im
perial household and the department
of agriculture and commerce, Issa
Tanimura of Tokyo, Japan, arrived
In Portland this morning to spend a
day at the livestock Bhow. He is on
his way to the international livestock
chow at Chicago.
Dr. Tanlmura's mission is to study
the livestock situation in general, to
investigate breeds of sheep with a view
to importing new stocks into Japan and
to consider the desirability of purchas
ing American horses for the department
of the Imperial household.
MAKES MANY EXPERIMENTS
Tanlmura's hobby Is sheep, and the
last 11 years of his life have been de
voted to making Japan conducive to the
profitable growing of sheep. On native
feed they do not thrive and Tanimura
has been experimenting with innumer
able varieties of foreign grains 4n the
empire. When he first came to the
United States to find out why sheep
grew here, he met C. C. Coltthen presi
dent of the Union Meat company, who
told him all he knew on the subject and
then sent him to the Wool Growers' con
vention at Ogden. Then ensued years
of study at the agricultural colleges In
Iowa, Illinois, Wisconsin and Cornell,
where he was an honorary fellow in
agricultural , work. He then visited
James Wilson, secretary of agriculture.
who gave him a great many samples of
grasses and advised him to try their cul
tivation first In Korea and Manchuria.
This Dr. Tanimura did with great suc
cess in 36 varieties. He then returned
Mo Japan.
CULTIVATES FOREIGN GRASSES
Six years has he been cultlvatinjr for
elgn grasses in Japan, the bulk of the
' crop going to feed the emperor's horsea
Three experiment farms he has, one
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FROM INDIGESTION
RELIEVED in TWO MINUTES
ABSOLUTELY HARMLESS
SENT on FREE
30 DAYS' TRIAL
, Relieves Oas..Sour and Burning Stom
, ach (heartburn). Belching, Swelling and
i Pull Feeling, also Parns in the Stomach
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Flck-headaches, Biliousness. Dizziness,
: Rheumatism, etc.
flo confident is the nellingham Chem
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called Jo-To, that they are willing to
- send you a $1 box on 30 daysl FREE
' TRIAL. At the end of 30 days if you
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t the box with the unused portion and
.you owe us absolutely nothing.
Send 10c to cover war tax and post
age, your name written plainly, and
; we win mall you a $i box of this won
aerrul stomach preparation at once.
; Write ua today. ' The Belling ham Chem
; leal Co.. Belllngham, Wash. Adv.
OMPROMiSE REFUSED
BY THE LODGE CROWD
(Continued From- Pia One)
parties, be appointed to prepare a com
promise and submit it to the senate.
COMPROMISE REFUSED
Third The entire Republican major
ity refused to permit the Introduction of
any amendments or changes in the Lodge
resolution that would make-it satisfac
tory to enough senators on the Demo
cratic side to enable it to get a two
thirds vote.
Fourth The votes on the numerous
questions which came up show clearly
that there are least two thirds of the
senate who do not wish to see the treaty
killed, but who would vote for it if
reservations satisfactory to them were
adopted. The opportunity to do this was
removed by an insistence of a 10-day
adjournment, but this by no means pre.
eludes a revival of these same efforts
when congress comes back a week from
Monday.
DEMOCRATS ARE SOLID
The manner.ln which 13 Republicans
refused to stand by Lodges resolution
of ratification because they believed the
treaty should be beaten altogether Illus
trates the difficulties of the Repub
lican leader in handling his own party
in the senate. On the other hand, the
solidarity of the Democrats, who mus
tered 38 of their number, which is three
more than necessary to prevent the
Lodge resolution of "nullification." as
the president termed it, from being
adopted, illustrates clearly that the
president has by no means lost con
trol of his narty in the senate.
The Democrats, stoody ready to make
compromises. Their opponents said
these offers came too late, that their
minds were made up. The big ques
tion for the country to decide is wheth
er or not the Democrats in trying to
get the treaty adopted without quail
flcation and in not offering compro
mise earlier committed a greater blun
der than the Republicans, when when
those offers of compromise finally did
come spurned them altogether
TIME TO COOL OFF
Pride of opinion, party politics and a
bitterness on both sides that made it
impossible for either to see clearly the
unmistakable desire of the country for
some sort of action ten the treaty pre
vented an agreement at this time and
unquestionably the recess of 10 days will
help matters.
It will give both sides an opportunity
to cool off and analise public opinion
It will give the country an opportunity
to say what It thinks of the member
ship of the Democrats and Republicans
in the senate, who together failed to
ratify a treaty of peace and officially
bring the war to an end.
The Republicans are serenely conn
dent that the country is not much con
cerned about the treaty anyway and that
it would not lose much sleep if the whole
thing is beaten. Even the supporters
of the Lodge resolution with its reserva
tions are lukewarm in their desire to see
the treaty or League of Nations rati
fied and many of them are just as con
tent with the way things have turned
out as are Senators Borah, Johnson,
Knox ana aicuormicK. wno maae no se
cret from the start of their wish to see
the whole thing beaten, league, treaty
and all.
CLAIM TIME WASTED
On the Democratic side, there is no
discouragement. The Democrats feel
that the Republicans will mend their
ways when they have heard from the
country. From a political viewpoint,
the Democrats are inclined to be happy
because they think the Republicans have
presented them with an issue for 1920
and have made it possible to charge the
Republicans with having wasted six
months, the entire time of the extra
session of congress, without doing any
thing, least of all acting on the vital
question, of a state of peace or war.
But disinterested observers are in
clined to think that both parties will re
ceive a large measure of blame from
the country and that the roles of the
senate will come 4n for particular con
demnation. . Vice President Marshall
stated the situation clearly In the clos
ing hours of the session when he spoke
to the , senate as follows :
SEXAfE RULES CLUMSY
"I suppose the chair might as well
state now, . as at any time, that
this parliamentary situation arises
from the part of the rule of the senate
touching treaties which suffers and per
mits all questions except the final vote
to be decided by a majority vote in
derogation, if not in violation of the
constitution of the United States. It
would not have been here (the parlia-J.
mentary situation) If we had adopted
all that was agreed to by a two-thirds
vote. Then we would have known where
we were."
Under the constitution of the united
States a treaty can be negotiated by
the president, but a two-thirds vote of
the senate was deemed necessary by our
forefathers In order to ratify a treaty.
Logically, any change in a treaty ought
to require a two thirds vote to make it
the will of the senate, but the senate
Republicans, who possess a majority of
two votes, have been able to put into
the treaty by a simple majority vote
anything they pleased so that when the
final vote of two thirds is taken the
original treaty can be displaced by
another treaty containing a number oi
things that are distasteful to two thirds
of the senate, but which they must ac
cept in entirety unless they want to re
ject the whole thing.
TREATY MAT T ET WIN
The reservations In the Lodge resolu
tion were construed by the president
and the treaty negotiating branch of fche
government as nullifying the contract
entered into at Paris, and as unaccept
able to foreign governments whose con
sent has to be obtained to changes in
that contract, so the Lodge resolution
failed.
A compromise was, and is, still pos
sible. The only change in the situation
Is that the Republican majority have
refused to permit any amendments to be
made to their reservations. These tac
tics will continue just as long as public
opinion approves. 'The move was not
unexpected. Each side has taken a stub
born position, but the Democrats are
now willing to compromise and have said
so openly. When the senate reconvenes
In 10 days some of those offers will be
accepted, though more debate and delay
will be necessary.
CHIVALROUS ACTS
E
MAK
SOME
HERO
NERVY
BANDIT
Sympathy Expressed That High
wayman Finally Escape; Robber
Twits His Many Captors.
Cheyenne Wyo., Nov. 21. (U. P.)
William Carlisle, elusive train robber,
has the whole western country guessing
today. He dropped into the Casper
telegraph office Tuesday, left a message
thanking ' the Union Pacific for the
"haul"he made on the Los. Angeles Lim
ited Tuesday, poked fun at the road's
detective force and then disappeared.
The posses. United States cavalry
and railroad officers are helplessly
waiting for his next appearance, hold
ing trains with full steam up at several
points in Wyoming to dash quickly to
the scene.
Carlisle's daring has so gripped the
west s fancy that the public quite gen
erally hopes he makes good his escape,
The authorities, however, regard him as
the greatest menace to safe travel in
Wyoming's history and are determined
to take him dead or alive.
Carlisle has never shed human blood.
His chivalrous refusal to rob women
passengers is now matched by the dis
covery that during his penitentiary term
he was a wizard at crocheting doilies
and weaving hair lariats.
His pictures, spread' broadcast over
this region, but . more particularly his
enormous hands and feet, have made
him a marked man.
SENATORS TO CONFER UPON
TREATY AT WHITE HOUSE
Washington, Nov. 21. (I. N. S.) Pres
ident Wilson has not given up the treaty
fight, it was indicated today when it
was said there will be constant confer
ences at the White House with the Dem
ocratic senators relative to the treaty
situation.
Senator Underwood held a long con
ference today with Secretary Tumulty
snd gave him much valuable Informa
tion for the guidance of the president in
his preparations for a new fight for the
life of the treaty. When Dr. Grayson
permits the Democratic senators will
confer with the president himself.
It was announced that the president
is devoting all the time allowed him for
work by his physician upon his next
message to congress and that this mes
sage will contain the first public com
ment by the president on the treaty sit
uation.
Catarrh
Of The Stomach
Is Dangerous
"Thousands Have It and Don't
Know It," Says Physician, j
Frequently Mistaken for In
digestion How to Recog- m
luse and treat.
30 Stops COUGHS
"Thousands of people suffer more or
less constantly from- furred, coated
ton CUB. bad breath, sour hurnin atom.
ach, frequent vomiting, rumbling in
stomach, bitter eructations, gas, wind
and stomach acidity and call it indiges
tion when in reality their trouble is due
to gastric catarrh of the stomach,"
writes a New York physician.
Catarrh of the stomach is dangerous
because the mucous membrane lining of
the stomach is thickened and a coating
digestive fluid cannot mix with the food
huo uigesi it. xms condition soon oreeas
deadly disease in the fermented, unas
simllated food. The blood is polluted
and rarripa thA lnfrttnn thmnvhAnt t K
body. Gastric ulcers are apt to form and
irequenuy an uicer is uie rirst sign or a
deadly cancer.
In catarrh of the stomach a good and
HQ f A t ran m.nt a ,A Bk. 1 T 1
teaspoonful of pure Bisurated Magnesia
in half a glass of hot water as hot as
you can comfortably drink it The hot
water washes the mucous from the stom
ach walls and draws the blood to the
stomach while the bisurated magnesia
is an excellent solvent for mucous and
increases the efficiency of the hot water
u-eaimeni. Moreover the Bisurated Mag
nesia will serve as a powerful but harm
less antacid which will neutralise any
excess hydrochloric acid that may be in
your stomach and sweeten its food con
Unta, Easy, natural digestion without
distress of any kind should noon follow.
Bisurated Magnesia is not a laxative, is
udnnietis pieasant and easy to take and
can be obtained from any local druggist.
Don t confuse Bisurated Magnesia with
other forms of magnesia, milks, citrates,
etc.. but get it in the pure bisurated
form (powder or tablets), especially
Fight in Yakima Is
On Over Dismissal
Of Chief of Police
e
Yakima,- Wash, Nov. 21. A clash be
tween Mayor Forrest H. Sweet and the
executive officers of the Good Govern
ment league has reached the state where
e mayor will either dismiss John Gil-
ore, chief of police, or fight a recall
election. The Good Government league
Is demanding efficiency in. the police
department An appeal was made to
the commission, ,, but Commissioners H.
F. Marble and A. B. Cline take the
ground that until specific charges are
filed against Gllmore they are not Jus
tified in taking the matter out of the
mayor's hands, as he Is an appointee of
the mayor.
Wreck Blocks Two Roads
Yakima, Wash., Nov. 2 L The wreck
of a Northern Paelflo freight train nearj
union Gap Wednesday Diocaea mat
road for It hoars and forced traffic
on the public-highway, parallel to the
tracks, to detour through a field.
Palmer's Strength
Taxed; Needs Eest
Washington, Nov. 21. (I. N. S.) At
torney General Palmer today canceled
all engagements and announced that
"upon advice of his physician," he
would leave Washington for a three
days' rest. The attorney general has
been under a severe strain during the
coal crisis and his physicians fear a
nervous breakdown.
Statement of the Condition of
At the dote
of Business,
Hungary Has New Premier
London. Nov. 21. (U. P.) Dispatches
from Budapest report thai Karl Huzzar
has been appointed premier and charged
with formation of. a coalition cabinet.
Packwood Coal Mine
At Centralia Opens;
Strike Is Settled
"Reopening of the Packwood coal mine
near Centralia, Wash., and federal re
lease of all shipments designed for the
trade, were announced today by the
Kdlefsen Fuel company of Portland,
sales agent for the prodsxt In Port
land and elsewhere.
That the resumption of' work in the
mines, which was temporarily halted by
the coal miners' strike, and the release
of the shipments, will add materially to
relief of the consumer, is the statement
of Edlefsen.
At the time of the strike a number of
union miners walked out, but a force
sufficient to operate the mine at full
capacity is now at work.
WILSON STARTS WORK ON
NEW MESSAGE TO CONGRESS
By William Philip Sims
Washington. Nov. 21. (I. N. S.)
President Wilson has begun to prepare
his message to the Sixty-sixth congress,
which .convenes in first regular session
on December 1.
This message, according to common
consent will be one of the most im
portant ever written by a tenant of the
White House. It probably will go down
in history as the president's reconstruc
tion message.
The president is known to be of the
opinion that affairs in the United States
are in a very grave condition and as his
message will have for its subject "the
state of the nation," it is expected that
he will plunge into the topic in a right
ing spirit
PRESIDENT STILL HOPEFUL
Whether he dwells at length upon the
peace treaty and the events leading up
to its rejection in the senate will depend
largely upon what takes place between
now and December 1.
The chief executive believes the tern
per of the senate will cool between now
and when they next meet and that the
treaty of Versailles may still be rati
fied practically as it stands. Others
consider that the only hope for the pact
lies in the administration leaders ac
cepting the document with the Lodge
reservations attached. But a third group
believes a compromise is possible be
tween now and when the congress con
venes, which will enable the president
to withdraw the treaty from the senate
and pigeonhole where it now ia: re
submit it at ohce to that body and se
cure its ratification within a week. -WILBOIT8
PLA3TS INDICATED
ln case there is no indication that the
mood of Uie seante has undergone a
change of heart, ti Is more than likely
that President Wilson will devote con
siderable space in his message to what
he regards as a holding up of the world
and keeping it fro mgetting back to.
business. j
The nations of the world can neldTl
settle down to the work of reconstrld
tlon, to producing what they need and to
cutting the high cost of living, he holds,
until the treaty of peace is disposed of
and that he will Insist in emphatic Ian
guage that congress attend to this part
icular matter without delay and hes
pasB on to other exceedingly grave
problems confronting the country, is
considered a certainty.
I5HTJ8TBIAL TJITBEST FAQTOft
The industrial unrest, continually on
the increase throughout the Unfted
States, will form another important part
of the president's message, according to
the impression here. In this chapter it
is anticipated that he will not ,only go
into the causes of the unrest '.pointing
out some of the errors committed by
both sides of industry, but will outline
some kind ef constructive policy where
by they can get together on a live and
let live basis.
Why Is
111 Health?
Many Causes for a Run-Down
Condition
One of the Most Common Is
; Anemia (General Blood-lessness)
CONDENSED REPORT OF
The United States National Bank
PORTLAND, OREGON
Submitted to the Comptroller of the Currency at the
Close of Business, November 17, 1919
RESOURCES
Loans and Discounts ; $22,417,910.20
United States Bonds and Certificates. . . 4J47.4G8.39
Other Bonds and Securities 3,277,860.41
Stock in Federal Reserve Bank 75,000.00
Bank Premises and Other Real Estate 743,424.04
Customers' Liability under Letters of Credit
and Acceptances 8C6.007.13
Interest Earned 180,878.76
Cash on Hand and Due from Banks. ... 9,105,771.20
$11,614,320.13
LIABILITIES
Capital $ 1,500,000.00
Surpluand Undivided Profits 1,784,348.30
Reserve&for Interest, Taxes, etc 187,518.74
Circulation 1,050,000.00
Letters of Credit and Acceptances 868,032.13
Unearned Discount 78,036.89
Federal Reserve Bank 500,000.00
Deposits 35,646,384.07
$41,614,320.13
November 1
17,1919
RESOURCES
Loans and Discounts 118,500,096.79
Federal Reserve Stock 37,500.00
Other Bonds and Securities i,346,20t.03
Furniture and Fixtures 76,00t).00
Customers' Liabilities under Letters of Credit,
Acceptances and Bills of Exchange 486,3 17.76
Due us on Liberty Loan Sub
scriptions I 110,312.04
United States Bonds. . 186,400.00
United States Certificates 1,332,500.00 1,629,212.04
Cash on Hand and Due from Other Banks 7, 720,681. 60
Total $29,796,009.22
LABILITIES
Capital Stock Paid In ... 1,000,000.0X)
504.701.37
50, 000.06
147,061.08
29,947.24
319,970.59
150,000.00
Deposits 27,594,328.94
Surplus and Undivided Profits
Circulation
Commercial Letters of Credit
Acceptances based on Imports and Exports.
Acceptances Executed for Customers
Acceptances of other Banks endorsed
Total ' $29,796,009.22
Publicity Heads of
Forest Service in
Conference in City
A conference of'll the publicity
heads of the different district forest
serrico offices In the United States
opened in the office of A. G. Jackson,
director of . educational cooperation of
the forest service here, this nrornlnc.
In attendance Were H. A. Smith, na
tional director of the publicity activities.
from Washingtos, D. C. ; Paul . Kel
leter, in charge of Information work at
Washington ; C. A. lindstrom, in charge
of national exhibits; W. L. Mutchinson
of the Denver office, George E. Scott
of Ogden, . Utah, M. F. " Hannitt and
W. J. Maxfleld from? San ' Francisco.
Ward Shepard of Albuquerque, N. M.,
and Major F. A. 1 Fenn of Missoula.
Mont., are expected to arrive this afternoon.
I "Til health" Is a relative term.
Some Individuals are terribfy and seri
ously ill, and need the services of the
best doctor .obtainable.
Others' are not so seriously affected.
If your ill health is a result of weak,
watery blood (an exceedingly common
condition) you can recognize it by the
following signs or symptoms :
1 poor color or real paleness.
i "Tired-outness" or general weak
ness. Frequent headaches.
4 Loss of appetite.
5 Lack of spirits and ambition.
6 Loss of "bodily strength.
1 The best remedy is one that will over
come the cause Anemia or Bloodless-
ness. "Gude's" Pepto-Mangan is the
one peculiarly valuable medicine for
this purpose. It supplies the weak,
watery blood with the very elements it
needs to put new life into the vital fluid
(the blood) which carries the good one
gets from one's food to all parts of the
run-down body. It repairs, re-crea.tes.
revivifies and rebuilds the exhausted
blood, .the fountain and foundation of
health and life. Try Pepto-Mangan if
you are run-down. it cannot narm
you it will certainly help you unless
you have some deep-seated cnronlc dis
ease requiring the physician's care. Be
sure the name "Gude's" is on the pack
age. Without "Gude's" it is not Pepto-
Mangan. For sale at all druggists.
Adv.
Hibernia Savings Bank
OF PORTLAND. OREGON
Statement at Close of Business, November 17, 1919
RESOURCES
Loans and discounts $3,209,594.90
Bonds and warrants
City of Portland $104,996.94
U. S. Government 994,865.17
Other bonds and warrants. . . 18,377.33 $1,1 18,239.4 1
Stocks and securities 56,585.10
Real estate., 117,777.03
Furniture and fixtures 5,000.00
Cash on hand and due from banks 1,074,059.22
$5,581,255.78
LIABILITIES
Capital stock $ 200,000.00
Surplus and undivided profits, less taxes and
interest paid 166,594.47 ;
Dividends unpaid 2,200.00
Demand deposits 2,087,354.25
Savings and time deposits ' 3,125,107.06
$5,581,255.78
Elllllf IEIIIIIEII IIIIII
ji
Statement of Condition of
L ADD MILTON BANK
PORTLAND, OREGON
At Close of Business, Nov. 17, 1919
HE80UECE8
Loans and Discounts UM74.8S1.80
Stock of Federal Reserve Bank 60,000.00
Bqnde and Stocks 2,228,860.8
Customers' Liability on Letters of Credit 1,243,666.14
Customers' Liability on Account Ac-
ceptances 1,001,224.88
Real Estate, Claims and Judgments.... 40,819.43
Accrued Interest Uncollected 98,851.88
U. S. Bonds and Treasury Certificates.. 1,295,722.11
Cash and due from Federal Reserve
Bank and other banks 6.277,408.04
31,720,64.69
LIABILITIES
Capital Stock fully paid I 1,000.000.00
Surplus and Undivided Profits 1.B77.D24.H8
Reserve for interest, taxes, etc 164. Sua. 88
Letters of Credit 1.243,666.84
Acceptances 1,001.224.68
Unearned Discount 40.6t0.t9
Deposits 26,292.684.7a
131,720,594.69
lBlIElElgBlBBllllBiriIlglffiellflgjElglBE
CONDENSED REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF
The First National Bank
AND
Security Savings and Trust Company
At the Close of Business November 17, 1919
RESOURCES
Loans and discounts
U. S. bonds
Other bonds, etc
Stock in Federal Reserve bank
Bank premises and other real estate...
Customers' liability under lexers of credit
and acceptances
Due from U. S. Treasurer
Cash on hand and in banks
Total
LIABILITIES
Capital stock
Surplus and undivided profits
Circulation
-Letters of credit and acceptances...
Deposits
Total
The First National
Bank
125, 597,917.09
5.394,445.20
2,697,011.31
105.000.00
886.442.48
. 2,895,540.00
75,000.00
10,031.512.20
$47,682,868.28
Tha Flrtt National
Bank
12,500,000.00
1,344,558.29
1,499,895.00
2,952,230.00
39.436,184.99
147.682.868.28
Security Savinca and
Trust Co.
12,692.238.04
1.276.568.29
42.75
4,950.00 676,472.66
14,650,271.74
Sectxitr Saringi and
2 50,000.00
271,010,37
4.90.00
4,124.311,37
4,650,271.74
Combined.
128,290,155.13
5.394,445.20
3,973.579.60
105.000.00
886.485.23
2.900,490.00
75.000.00
t0.7O7.984.86
52.333.140.02
Combined.
2.750,000.00
1.615.568.66
1.499,895.00
2.907,180.00
43,560.496.36
152,333,140.02
The stock of this bank is owned by the stockholders of the First National Bank of Port- land. Ore
STATEMENT OF CONDITION
of the
State Bank of Portland
of Portland, Ore,
At the close o business Nov.- 17th, 1919.
RESOURCES
Loans and Discounts
Bonds and Warrants
Furniture and Fixtures
Cash and Due from Banks.
....,$3,226,365.13
,i1 925,638.32
25,000.00
673,016.79
$3,850,014.24
LIABILITIES
Capital Stock $ 200,000.00
Surplus 50,000.00
Undivided Profits 18,851.71
Deposits 3,581,162.53
$3,850,014.24
Leroy D. Walker. Presidnt
Anthon Eckern. Vice-President . Morland, Assistant Cashier
Maynard Redmond, Cashier H. O. Voget, Assistant Cashier
cowiyE?f8ED bepobt or
THE CITIZENS BANK
POETLASD, ORE60IC
At the Clote of BBulaeaa, 5evember 17, Hit
BESOTJBCES
Loans and Discounts $1,296,422.17
U. 8., Portland and 8tate Bonds 471.163.72
Bank Premises and Fixtures : 68,408.00
Other Seal Estate 5,780.00
Cash and due from banks &10.K27.;i
. ' - 12,142.701.62
, ' 5 r LIABILITIES)
Capital paid in .: S 100,000.00
Surplus and Profits , 48,437.00
Dividends Unpaid 12.00
Reserved for Interest and Taxes 1.485.48
Deposits ., 2.1J2.727.04
$2,142,701.52
DIRECTORS
X. U. Carpenter Joseph Paquet O. M. Clark
A. W. Lambert Joseph Supple
-r "". Jiujyuec. AUV, i