Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934, September 19, 1918, Image 11

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    TILLAMOOK HEADLIGHT SEPTEMBER 19, 1918,
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REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
At Tillamook, in the State of Oregon, at the close of business
on August 31, 1918.
Mothers of French Soldiers Flee
Life Abodes With Remaining
Few Treasures on Backs
By Mrs. Hazel Pedlar Faulkner
An army of French refugees was
pouring into the relief station main­
tained by the American Red Cross.
Carrying in their hands bundles of
varying sizes,—all their worldly pos­
sessions, old men and women, young
women and children, came through
the gates of the canteen where was
furnished the first bit of rest and
refreshment available for many hours.
The Boches had made travel neces­
sary for these dwellers in the oc­
cupied portions of France.
"May I help you any?” asked one
of the workers in the canteen of a
weary looking French woman.
"I can help myself,” tho woman re­
plied, “you see I know just what
to do when we are away from home
like thie. This is the third time I
have had to leave.”
‘‘CAN HELP MYSELF,”
BRAVE ANSWER
The third time she had had to
flee. Three times she had been ob­
liged to leave her home, or what
was left of it, and start out on an
unknown Journey. With her worldly
goods reduced to the size of a
napkin-bound bundle, this old wom­
an, mother of French soldiers, had
turned her -back on all she loved,
and gone out into the night, an
enemy at her heels and the uuknown
before her.
Do we realize what that means:
oh, women of the West? Can wa
visualize for a moment the tragedy
of it all?
Yet there are women in France
who have done that thing daily for
four years, and all without a word
of complaint, with never a sigh
or a tear.
Ours has been a happier part. We
have lived in plenty and peace. True,
we have given our sons and have
divided our food. But of the horrors
of war we have known none.
What will you do to relieve the
condition of those mothers of France?
Our government is pledged to help. It
has given its word to aid to the limit
of its capacity. It calls for the
assistance of every individual one
of our people in the work.
EVERY AMERICAN
MUST HELP
I The Fourth Liberty Loan is our
opportunity. You say you have sub-
The
scribed three times before?
women of Fiance have been driven
¡out of their homes three times, each
time more cruelly than before. Can
we hesitate to save them a repetition
of that suffering. Ours is the lesser
part, however much it may seem to
entail of sacrifice and deprivation.
An American marine, wounded
grievously, was visited in hospital by
a Congressman from his State. “What
shall I tell the folks back home?”
asked the Congressman.
The marine smiled. “Tell them
we may not all come back, but we
are all helping to win the war.”
Shall we be able to answer as hon­
estly, when the boys from over there
ask us the question?
Nothing is too hard for us here.
Nothing can be too hard in com-
parison with what has been 1 borne
for us already.
Let the Fourth Liberty Loan sub-
scription be our answer to the call
from over there.
You Can Stop These
Casualties Quickly
The Brutal, Bloody Hun will
be stopped when an overwhelm­
ing American Army lands in
France and crushes him—not be­
fore.
The Fourth Liberty Loan is
the next step in getting that army
across the Atlantic.
BUY LIBERTY BONDS
DON’T MAKE EXCUSES
MAKE SACRIFICES
(Editor:
This is suggested as a
Resources.
Loans and discounts, Including rediscounts.........
$458,320.34
Overdarfts, unsecured............................ ...................
5,880.10.
V. S. Bonds deposited to secure circulation........... >25,000.00
U. 8. bonds and sertificatea of indebtedness owned
and unpledged........... ..............................................
$30,000.00
55,000.00
Liberty Loan Bonds, 3\4, 4 and 4*4 percent
unpledged ................................................................. $13,350.00
Liberty Loan Bonds, 3*4, 4 and 4% percent, pledged
to secure State or other deposits or bills payable. . $15,000.00
28,350.00
Bonds (other than U. S. bonds) pledged to
secure postal savings deposits................................ $ 3,000.00
Bonds and securities pledged as collateral for State,
or other deposits (postal excluded) or bills payable $5,000.00
Securities other than U. S. bonds (not including
stocks) owned unpledged.............................
$55,285.59
Total bonds, securities, etc., -other than U. S,
63,285.59
Stock of Federal Reserve Bank (50 percent of subscription. . . .
900.00
Furniture and fixtures.....................................................................
7,247.16
Lawful reserve with Federal Reserve Bank.................................
37,759.10
Cash in vault and net amount due from national banks...........
84,000.23
Net amount due from banks, bankers, and trust companies
other than included above.............................................................
854.18
Cheeks on other banks In the same city or town as report­
ing bank........................................................................... a............
7,093.26
Checks on banks located outside of city or town of reporting
bank and other cash items..............................................................
1,492.60
Redemption fund with U. 8. Treasurer and due from U. S.
Treasurer .........................................................................................
1,250.00
War Savings Certificates and Thrift Stamps actually owned. . .
1,085.21
Total
$752,517.77
Liabilities
Capital stock paid in ........................................................................ 9 25,000.00
Surplus fund ......................................................................................
10,000.00
Undivided profits............................................................ $8,283.53
Less current expenses, interest, and taxes paid......... 2,596.59
5,686.94
Circulating notes outstanding . . ..................................................
25,000.00
Net amount due to banks, bankets and trust companies...........
6,594.16
Demand Deposits (other than bank deposits) subject to reserve.
Individual deposits subject to check.......................................
418,404.92
Certificates of deposit due in less than 30 days....................
15,000.00
Certified checks............................................................................
60.00
Cashier’s checks outstanding....................................................
4,273.96
State, county, or other municipal deposits secured by pledge
of assets of thia.bank......................................................
15,000.00
Dividends unpaid.................................................................
78.00
21,804.94
Other demand deposits........................................................
Time deposits subject to reserve.
36,213.74
Certificates of deposit (other than money borrowed) . .
1,040.82
Postal savings deposits.............................. .
148,360.29
Other time deposits.......................................
Total of time deposits subject to Reserve .
$185,614.85
20,000.00
Bills payable, with Federal Reserve Bank
LIBERTY
LOAN
be without it
I
•I
$752,517.77
Total
State of Oregon, County of Tillamook, ss:
I, W. J. Riechers, cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear
that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
W. J. Riechers,* Cashier.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this 11th day of September,1918.
George G. Laver, Notary Public for Ore.
My commission expires January 23, 1918.
Correct attest: C. J. Edwards, Peter Helsel, A. W. Bunn, Directors.
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF
The First Bank of Bay City, at Bay City,
in the State of Oregon, at the close of business August 31,1918.
Resources.
Loans and discounts including advance installments on
Liberty Bonds................................
Overdrafts, secured ad unsecured . .
Bonds and warrants..........................
Stocks, securities, judgment, etc. . .
Banking house and lots...................... .
Furniture and fixtures..................... .
1
Other real estate owned...................
Due front banks (not reserve banks)
Due from approved reserve banks ..
Checks and other cash items......... ,
Cash on hand.....................................
Other resources..................................
Liabilities.
Capital stock paid in........................
Surplus fund .....................................
Individual deposits subject to check
Time and savings Deposits...............
Bills payable for money borrowed . .
A
Expenses .............................................
Other liabilities, Bond Interest .. . .
Total
In Handers fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on rbw,
That mark our place, and in the sky
The larks still bravely singing fly,
Scarce heard amidst the guns below.
We are the dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie
In Handers fields. .
—
$83,543.93
Total ....'
$25,000.00
600.00
48,323.13
4,395.80
5,000.00
1,462.04
225.00
$83,543.93
State of Oregon, County of Tillamook: ss.
I. John O. Bozorth, cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear
that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
John O. Bozorth, Cashier.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this 12th day of Sept, 1918.
T. E. Ashley, Notary Public.
My commission expires August 18, 1920,
Correct Attest: R. J. Hendricks, Scott Bozorth, Directors.
Fire Wood.
------ o------
It is an odd sight, here in Tilla-
standing feature for display in or mook, to see carloads of slab wood
being shipped in for the cheese factor
alongside casualty lists.)
ies and farms surrounding the town,
and it is strange that they should
choose to use this fuel for their win­
ter use.
At its best, slab wood is poor fuel.
It is expensive. The work of unload­
r
ing it from the cars Is hard. The
hauling it from the freight depot is
>■
costly. It takes up car space now so
r
badly needed for the transportation
of war materials and jprery loyal
American should bear this in mind.
When it is finally set down at Its
destination it must be cut into stove
lengths and this costs more money
and more time for handling. In Till­
amook and all through the county,
wood of the fleet quality is plentiful,
and the only reason we can think of
to account for the shipping in of slab
wood is
a shortage of labor.
The cutting of logs has always been
a slow job, and we suppose that the
.t „ ..
—
ranchers have found it Impossible to
get out their wood In the usual way,
This is a reproduction of the win- and so have turned to the slab wood.
dor» pbsier to which subscribers to the
But the problem has been solved
Fourth Liberty Loan are entitled.
by those who have used the Vaughn
No AMERJCAN Home should Light Drag Saw. Thia useful little
SUBSCRIBER
BY COL. JOHN F. McCRAE,
DIED AT BOULOGNE, JANUARY 28, 1918.
saw eats its way through a big log
as a boy bites through a pie. They
are mobile as machine guns and as
steady as armored tanks. One of
thorn in a day will get out an im­ i
mense quantity of wood, cut out of
‘big logs into stove length.
A number of farmers or cheese
factories might co-operate in buying
one of these saws and get out their
winter’s wood in a fortnight—bid
defiance to the slab pile,, have bet­
ter wood at less cost, have more
cleared land and more neighbors and
the consciousness of having done
something towards winning the war.
Kuppenbender will demonstrate the
Vaughn Light Drag Saw to you at
any time. See him.
*
Ornamental Fire Places Built
of Brick and Stone. All Fire
Places absolutely guaranteed
not to smoke or money re­
funded.
Brick work of all kinds done
on short notice.
We make a specialty of re­
pairing smoking Fire Places.
RALPH E. WARREN,
Take up our quarrel with the foe,
To you from falling hands we throw
The torch -- be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die,
We shall not sleep tho poppies grow
In Handers fields.
BUY Fourth Liberty Bonds
I
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V*
Any Bank Will Help You.
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A. A. PENNINGTON.
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