Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
Charter No. 1639 Reserve District No. 6
REPORT OF CONDITION OF
.
- The National Bank of Athens
In the State of Georgia, at the Close of Business on June 30, 1950.
Published in Response to Call Made By Comptroller of the Currency,
Under Section 5211, U, S. Revised Statutes,
ASSETS
1. Cash, balances with other banks, including reserve
blhncegand cash items in process of collection ....$2,844,859.33
2. United States Government obligations, direct and
g&mteed e Ak Bae ek daaw NS L bied DN 0
8. Obligations of States and political subdivisions ..., 122,467.46
4. Other bonds, notes and debentures .... .... ..%« seee 13,002.29
8. Corporate stocks (including $15,000.00 stock of
Yodarsl Reseuve DREBKY ...... ¢ooo voswtsrin hioe srun 1500000
6. Loans and discounts (including $1,120.78 overdrafts). 4,027,432.39
7. Bank premises owned $39,650.84, furniture and
Bnburen SIOIBO.ER coae oioo soss svee soui sioe aodie - 00,500.08
BD U oo sion sons sass Ssos aras seve ssevibess v DEILSNO
8. DR AU «.ovee saoy §irs seas sessisosn sses aey-PNEOT, 2108
LIABILITIES
18. Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships, and
SRS o« vus ooos svas wvsrravss irns 2 uie o s DRIONAORAO
14. Time deposits of individuals, partnerships, and
DRI i ivv sase cban sois Mady sdvsiseaV aiße 1,179,990.75
15. Deposits of United States Government (including
Kstal RN i v i e v maes HIRTRON
16. posits of States and political subdivisions .... .... 1,848,113.75
LAY Dl OF DBOINS sosscu vack lain wone vess verr sssn SUEDIBIG
0D Wotel DIODONES coss soss shev ssee 04, $8,751,816.79
YRS, DDE MabDILIOR ooss soun sues coov voss ¢res vore voss 19,794.45
0. DT D IIMIOR oo e coos siav os¢s vnov nnes srve 00 «$58,171,611.24
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
i 85. Capital Stock:
(¢) Common stock, total par $100,000.00 .. .... ....$ 100,000.00
B.« v o it virmuirs it ibe wiin sver SENDDY
?g'z. BRI IARA SOORIES . ooco ovs sannssis iy sase wane lORDIDHO
i 8. Reserves (and refirement account for preferred
& BUOCK) cone soee anee sues 0000 6006 soss sons sses suss 14,690.84
£O. Total Capital ACCOUNtS +v soss soee seee soes coss soo.s 635,709.84
| 80, Total Liabilities and Capital Accounts ..., .... ....$9,407,321.08
MEMORANDA
81. Assets pledged or assigned to secure liabilities and
{ B ORI DRICTEON o s sbie i vaes washiaere oo SRATRINE.I6
$2. (a) Loans as shown above are after deduction of
BN OF .. i i B kel i e 13T
STATE OF GEORGIA, COUNTY OF CLARKE, ss:
1, T. Evans Johnson, cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly
szear that the above statemrent is true to the best of my knowledge
'ind belief.
[ T. EVANS JOHNSON, Cashier.
| Sworn to and subscribed before Correct—Attest:
¥me this 7th day of July, 1950, W. A. SAMS, JR,,
. SARAH L. BRADBERRY, W. R. ANTLEY,
F; Notary Public, CARTER W, DANIEL,
j 1 Clarke County, Georgia. Directors.
|et e e ettt et e eet et
REPORT OF CONDITION OF
Of Clarke County in the State of Georgia,
At the Close of Business on June 30, 1950.
ASSETS
1. Cash, balances with other banks, including reserves,
and cash items in process of collection .... .... ....$265,017.05
2. United States Government obligations, direct and
BRI . . s i e s e e MIDBODTY
8. Loans and discounts (including $150.28 overdrafts) .., 228,977.93
7. Bank premises owned, none, furniture and fixtures,
B 0 e sy e e 525.00
DR DTRL ABBIEI . cociv a 2 sres vadw wive nave 90 $000;010.88
LIABILITIES
13. Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships, and
OOEIRIIRIRARS |ok 5o b Camh shie crae dosh ons weee vees $928,880.78
i 4. Timre deposits of individuals, partnerships, and
ORI . o ot sagw s snt Niav vy core aese 166,801.80
16. Deposits of States and political subdivisions .... .... 39,912.09
18. Other deposits (certified and officers’ checks, etc.) .... 28.00
20, WOTAL DEPOSITS os coov ovos asse ¢0+,5020,931.23
BRN DRI | . Lo, Sk s e wdaeaien vass o @EEOT]
£4. TOTAL LIABILITIES (not including subordinated
ebligations shown DEIOW) .cev sees aver coee eses 400.5532,67T1.04
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
g:. T T R T. s
36, SUTPIUS .... sove soen sess soes suve seos sivs sune sars 10,000.00
37- Undlvid.d pl‘ofltl S 8 BEEP SEL BIEN FREE S 0 seos e 2,4’48.04l
99. TOTAL CAPITAL, ACCOUNTS .cse coes sose ooee ooee 02,448.04
SO. TOTAL LIABILITIES AND CAPITAL ACCOUNTS ..$595,019.98
*This bank’s capital consists of:
Capital notes anyl debentures of $50,000.00.
1, Virginia H, Kellar, Cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly
@ffirm that the above statement is true, and that it fully and correctly
’epresents the true staie of the several matters herein contained and set
orth, to the best of my knowledge and belief.
Correct—Attest:
VIRGINIA H. KELLAR, Cashier.
BLANCHE H. BRACKETT,
” - 'W. R. BEDGOOD,
Directors.
BTATE OF GEORGIA, COUNTY OF CLARKE, ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 7th day of July, 1950, and I
Yereby certify that I am not an officer or director of this bank.
HENRY T. AIKEN, Notary Public.
My eommission expires December 28, 1951.
MM
Read The Banner-Herald Want Ads,
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-~
-S.-Mexican -
End Explained
WASHINGTON — Termination
of the trade agreement between
the United States and Mexico on
‘ Deec. 31 will affect traders ail over |
'the world and raise import duties
‘on many thing bought by Ameri
can consumers — such as gasoline
‘and tomatoes,
~ When any trade agreement
lapses, all of the American import
‘duties which had been lowered by
that agreement go back up to the
rate established in agreements
with other countries. If the rate on |
a particular import has not been
set by some international agree
‘'ment, the rate which will then
control is that one established in
‘the U, S. Tariff Act of 1930.
. When the U. S.-Mexican gov
ernment was signed in 1942, tiie
U. S. lowered its rate on about 40
classes of items on which Mexico
sought concessoions. When the
‘rates went down, all countries in
‘the world got the benefit of the
'new low duties. That's a part of
‘the “most-favored nation” policy,
under which tariff reductions are
‘made to apply to all nations.
When Mexico found that its
‘dollar balance was dwindling it
decided it needed higher tariffs
to protect home industries. Mexi
co and the U. S, tried for two years
to work out some new trade agree
ment which would be mutually
satisfactory, but they finally gave
up and announced a joint denun
ciation of the treaty on June 23.
~ Then the U. S. Trade Commis
sion went to work revising upward
all of the duty rates which had
been lowered by the 1942 Mexican
agreement. The chief items in the
United States’ $231,000,000-a-year
irnort trade with Mexico are lead,
petroleum, zine, cocoa, fibres, for
cordage and tomatoes and other |
fresh vegetables. These were the
principal items in which Mexico
was interested when it negotiated
| the treaty in 1942. Other nations,
however, exported to the U. S.
as much or more of some of these
items. And they too got the bene
tit of the tariff reduction.
The item creating the most ex
citement now among foreign trad
ers is petroleum. Under the Mexi
can agreement, the import tax was
1-4 cent per gallon on a quantity
of peroleum equal to § per cent
of the total U. S. refinery produc
tion for the previous year. This
amounted to about 97,000,000 bar
rels in 1949. The remaining import,
of about 109,000,000 barrels, was
taxed 1-2 cent per gallon. Now all
peroleum imports will be taxed at
the 1-2 cent rate. This rate was
established in the next most lib
eral trade agreement—that with
' Venezuela in 1939.
"Hardest hit will be eVnezuela,
which in 1949 sent to the U. S.
51.06 per cent of all U. S. petro
leum imports. Other .oil importers,
in the order of their importance in
the U. S. market, are the Nether
lands, West Ifidies, Kuwait; Saudi
Arabia, Colombia, Mexico and
liran. Mexico accounted for only
On the other big item, lead, the
3.66 per cent of the toetal.
import duty will rise 100 per cent.
Lead bearing ores, for instance,
will rise from 3-4 cent per pound
to 1 1-2 cents per pound. Canada
contends with Mexico for first
place among lead exporters to the
U. S. So Canada is greatly con
cerned about this.
More will be heard of these im
port duties when the leading na
tions of the western world gather
at Torquay, England, in Septem
ber to spend the winter writing
new trade treaties. The net effect
of the termination of the U. S.-
Mexican agreement will be to
stregthen the bargaining position
of the U. S. at Torquay, since sev
;enl nations, such as the oil and
lead importers, will be eager to
sign new agreements with the U.
S., which will at least restore the
duty rates in effect during the life
'of the Mexican agreement.
Eggs absorb odors of other foods
and never should be kept near
fia::eh items as fish, onions and the
THE BANNVER-BERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA °/!
Evelyn Keyes Is In Business,
Imifafing The Goddard Style
By ERSKINE JOHNSON |
NEA Staff Correspondent |
HOLLYWOOD— (NEA) — Eve
lyn Keyes' battle royal with Co
lumbia studio and bossman Harry
Cohn to break her contract stuck
a lot of people as a combination of
a Goddard right to the chin and
pure Confederate do-or-die.
It was,
Evelyn has been Paulette’s best
girl friend ever since she arrived
in Hollywood from the grits and
pecan pie belt as an inexperienced
actress—*“Oi, yoi, yoi, I didn’t
know from anything.” |
Evelyn hasn’t moved kit and
caboodle into Paulette’s diamond
mines-and-oil-wells territory yet,
but she’s getting a hefty chunk of
the profits that will be raked up
by her new picture, “The Prowl
er,” now that she’s free of Colum
bia. |
“It’s bound to make money,” ahe‘
said. “I think Paulette will be
proud of me.” ‘
About her troubles at Columbia:
“It was always S. O. S. at the
studio,” she says. “Script or sus
pension.” |
Her beef list would be the envy
of the Chicago stockyards.
“Once they said my head was
too flat,” she bristles. “So they
stuck one of Otto Kruger’s old tou
pees on top of my dome. It was de
vastating. Everybody called me
Miss Kruger.|” : ,
She didn’t like having to sprint
to the front office and screech her
lungs out for good parts, either.
To snag her first role in a western,
Evelyn haunted Sam Briskin’s in
ner sanctum and kept yelling:
“T look great in pants!”
Pals
Distaff side palsy-walsiness in
Hollywood is limited to a strained
“Hello, dahling” in night -club
i
N ; d
. -y Valte . ' 4
1o the Fine Cars |
I}rst 0 // R i
e AT N\ T e —E Te T
i*N L R
e P fa, —e% b 8
Bt el & : BSO "”i».:.fa,“' Sy b R e e [ R ]
R e g ' Pe N o MY )3 e
eetet e~ O 3 s e Fa - N e R, \§ |
y S *iij il = g ’/\ . T h\ o
ey 1T N : ) Yy |
e ’7’/,,% o el e ’ J 4 ‘J ; , :?:5’,'__:_1.;35.;.&\-.»;\ i
Brpan ; . e ?:Q\ ~.:_.‘;“M v‘(-,- ) ol G :
‘ I ‘&‘ !, R : B B epneiama '
4 S/ - e I
? i .
rhis one 44. ku 4
OF eourse you recognize it. L )
Who doesn’t know that those four finger’s touch—the soul-satisfying lift longer for such satisfying experience. ’
ntipgrts, that graceful sweep of in a big 152-hp Fireball engine just : <
Ventipyrts, g P e P g There's a Buick dealer near you. He
fender-chrome, mark RoADMASTER— waiting for the release your toe- 7 : €
- : S delights in showing off ROADMASTER.
best of all the Buicks, unquestioned pressure gives it? -
L. s feld? He’ll arrange—unless all his demon
ig buy” of the fine-car field? L :
. Ever sampled that famous Buick ride stration cars have been snatched away
But have you tried it? —steady, level, unperturbed, soft from him by eager buyers—to put you
- with the special gentleness of coil behind a ROADMASTER wheel.
Have you matched this sweet- : :
L b springs on all four wheels, sweetly S . :
steppin nny against the s ’ ~to find
PPlng y : * restful in both front and rear seats? Y- ORT SWy S s
and the call of the straightaway? what’s finest in today’s fine cars, and
Ever tooled it across town—and seen Therc’s no reasoun, really, to wait how litie it takes to buy one?
how Dynaflow’s quick surge and S
smooth take-off slip you through Only Buick has @ and with it goes:
traffic with minimum of foot-motion HGHER-COMPRESSION Fireball valve-inbead power in three engines. (New F-263 engine ia SUPER models) ® NEW-PATTERN
and maximunl Of timcsaving? STYLING, with MULTI-GUARD forefront, faper-through fenders, “double bubble” taillights - WIDE-ANGLE VISIBILITY;
close-up road view both forward end back ® TRAFFIC-HANDY SIZE, less over-all length for sasier porking end garaging,
Ever known the good feel of 2 ight o turning redivs ® EXTRA-WIDE SEATS cradied between the axies ® SOFT BUICK RIDE, from alfcoll springing,
and Casy Wheel S“’iflgiflg al.most at a Safety-Ride rims, low-pressure fires, ride-steadying forque-tube * WIDE ARRAY OF MODELS with Body by Fisher.
L 4 Standerd on BOADMASTER, optionsl ot astre csst on SUPBE snd SPECIAL wmedsls. 24
YORKEYN )y 'd
Tune in HENRY J. TAYLOR, ABC Nelwork, every Monday evening, CREATER VALE /) !
Bt pip bt e : %
__——-___—___:——-:—-:_'—l'—'_;"3‘ N : . & 4
FOUR-WAY = & g : e ¥ e :
This rugged front end (1) sets the style nose, A b : i e
(2) saves on repair costs— vertical bars @ o a 3 — : i ! :
are individuclly replaceable, (3) ovoids o M(é et ’ : 1
*¥locking horns," (4) makes porking and 3 ~ 9‘\‘\\\\\\‘\\\\\\\ : g o y 3 =
arogin asier. RN o . ;
goreetia: e = SO, 8 | 2L ez
B ST I — SR : 5 » 2
GEORGIA M OTORS INC
| 80' h';fo"'”’ Athens, Ca M G
; o N"" o Warren C. Thurmond — President T
i mpki g
i Nroid . Lymgtie “YOUR BUICK DEALER FOR 20 YEARS” = Phone 4311
; 7 Phone 3141 143 Spring St.
i '_ WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT BUICK WILL BUTLD THEM i sooe s i meung?
powder rooms. But Paulette and
Evelyn have been proving for
about six years that it’s possible
for movie dolls to keep their fin
gernails out of each other’s scalps.
“paulette,” says Evelyn, “is not
the big sister type. I like every
thing about her. Even the way she
puts on the lipstick when she’s
dying."
Playing Miss Damon to Pau
lette’s Miss Pythias keeps Evelyn's
ha-ha, ho-ho from the rust and
mildew that hits*the humor mech
anisms of most Hollywood stars
sooner or later.
“paulette wears diamond neck
laces with her bathing suits,”
Evelyn laughs. “I howl and so does
Paulette. Paulette knows that this
is & big joke.”
Days when Evelyn has to be a
chuckle girl on the sound stages,
no matter how tired she may be,
she thinks of the time Paulette
telephoned the doctor, crawled in
to bed and announced that she
was not for this world much long
er,
That practically doubles her up.
“Paulette groaned and groaned,”
she laughs. “But she dragged her
self out of bed just before the
doctor came and put on full make
up.n
Paulette slings the “Bravo, sis
ter,” Evelyn’s way, too.
The blonde half of the Pals-~
Rain-or-Shine team had the bru
nette half all bug-eyed over the
way she got ex-husband John
Huston to pop the big question.
She says that she was on a
yacht with Huston, Paulette and
Jennifer Jones.
“Jennifer and Paulette changed
gowns three times a day, put on
the war-paint every hour and kept
sticking hows in their hair. Pau
lette had on all her diamonds. Me,
1 was in denim shorts and couldn’t
be bothered with the ah-de-dah
stuff.”
New Technique
Evelyn, being a big outdoors
girl, coaxed Huston of the yacht
and rushed him to a bowling alley.
It was after she almost conked
him with a bowling ball that Hus~
ton proposed.
Afterwards Paulette told her:
“Evelyn, this is an entirely un
ique method of getting a man.
Don’t ever lose it.”
Anybody who harbors the the
ory that Evelyn reached the Al
most-an-Oscar League by playing
Trilby to Huston’s Svengali-is cra
zy as far as she is concerned. She
argued:
“l didn’t marry him for that.
Twice I went to him to read my
scenes, He said ‘Fine’ So I
thought, Hmmmm, I don’t need
him.”
Evelyn has even caught up with
REVIVAL MEETING i i
s - §
e g ee e
Beginning July 10 |f = = ‘;g’f -
AL e gt
CHURCH N i
@ vol e
i P
Conducted by t;%fi%}é ST .
Greenville, S. C. S L
Lo
. i '_:,::::;.: p : 9
Services Each Evening ‘%g* o
at 7:30 Y '
e
Public Cordially Invited | ’”}s e
Rev. Harold Hanley,
Pastor. REV. B. B. CALOWELL
Paulette as a vine that does any=
thing but cling.
She flipped through her date
book, stopped at a tennis match
appointment with Kirk Douglas
and said:
“He tells me that he’s going to
beat me. Haw! That's what he
thinks.”
NATIONAL HATREDS
TO BE STUDIED
MELBOURNE— (AP) - The
psychology department of Mel
bourne University is trying to
find out why people of different
nations dislike each other. It is
conducting researches sponsored
by the United Nations Edvcational
Scientific and Cultural Organiza
tion into psychological causes of
international tension.
Melbourne psychologists already
have made a study of the attitude
of Australians to immigrants.
~ SUNDAY,'SOLY 9,45 kg, 1
S smmae
Is Backache |
*
Kidney Trouble
By DR. A. HARRY TIMM, JR.
Many people have the idea th,;
backache is caused by a kidney
ailment and they take something
to purge the kidney but many
S tinres the back..
: s ache is persist.
tent, even aftey
g & such measyreg
.t:llt taken, In
o realily, very f
R buckachuerya :‘:
caused by the
kidneys, for only
in rare kidnsy
3 diseases is thers
p any pain what
¢ ever in the back,
—_— Pain or back.
ache between the hips and in the
lower part of the back is causeq
by pressure on spinal nerveg
caused by a misplaced spinal joint,
and to be permanently rid of the
persistent, nagging backache, tha
cause of the weakness must be
dealt with. A man aged 30 con
sulted a scientific Chiropracto;
recently about a backache he hag
experienced four years. Thorough
chiropractic examination revealeg
decided curvatures of the spine,
pinching vital nerves in lowey
back, which was the basic cause
of pain, The spine was straight.
ened by painless Chiropractic ad«
justments. Patient noticed relia"
the second day and at the end ol
8 weeks patient was dismissed with
all backache gone,
Remember that few backaches
are caused by kidneys but are bas
ically caused by misplaced spinal
joints and your Chiropractor spe.
‘cializes in correcting these condi«
tions.
(Number 1 of a series of articleg
written by Dr. A. Harry Timy
Jr,, and published in the pubnx
-interest to explain and illustrate
‘the practice of Seclentific Chiroe
practic.) (Advertisement)