Newspaper Page Text
Page Eight
.“STATEMENT OF THE CONDITION OF
The Bank of Powder Springs
Located ut ’Pg‘wder _Sprfi}‘gs, Ga., at the close of business, flay 81, 1912.
™. ' ..s ' p 3 v $ . ot . -
RESOURCEY§ - LIABILITIES :
Demand L0an5........ 3.8 '3,387.47 | Capital Stock Paid in. ... ....$15,000.00
gim:d Ifi:ns._....re_&: 72,905.10 | Undivided Profits less Current ;
verdrafts, ung B s ooy
Bt and' 8 tom“owned' by k. Ex.penses Interestand Taxes .
the Bunk e 108200.00 Pald. L L O Bas dg
Banking House.._____ 1,435.34 Due to banks and bankers in :
gulx;nitt;{r:a agd, Fixtures ~. “1,830.36| this State. ... __. .. . .
er . W s ividi i j
B Poom B&m Ly Ind{vgdual Deposits subjeet to
ers in u‘i’ &Qb re 1,857.49 c;heck........................_.._...,........ 40,420.43
Due from Banks -and Bank- Savings Deposits... ... 821.54
ers in other ‘States . 858687 Time Certificates ... ......... 38,959 27
(‘,urrencyu______'.__‘fi_s 1’362.00 Cashier’s Checks.-...................... 123.31
Bold. . 10.00 Bills Payable including Time
Silver, nickels, etc 358.20 Certificates representing /|
€ash Items . . 128.68 . 1,853 88| borrowed money ...............
Pasal, it . $102,056.98] Total .......... ...... $102,056.98
STATE OF GEORGIA-COUNTY OF COBB.
Befpre me came J, B. ‘'OGLESBY, Cashier of Bank of Powder Springa,
who, b ing du'y sworn, says that the above and foregoing statement is & true
c.ndition of said Bank as shown by the books of file in gaid Bank. \
Ko J. B. OGLESBY,
Sworn to and subscribed before m-, this Tth dhy of June, 1912. :
: A. W FLORENCE, Notary Publc.
STATEMENT OF THE CONDITION OF
THE AUSTELL BANK
LOCATE » AT AUSTELL, GA., AT THE CLUSE OF BUSINESS MAY 381, 1912
RESOURCES. AR LIABILITIES,
P 1 s ' » Capital Stock Paid in ... $15,000 00
Bl i=l Vas ods bo | Urtibided Proes To ot
Overdraite, secured ... ... '13200| Expenses,luterest and Taxes
Oserdrafte, Mashanend .........; - 500 P o Lo o 5 185078
Bonds and stocks 6wnkd by' * | Irdividual Deposits subject to Bl
th Bank LIS 16,34‘1.04
Furniture and Fixtures.... . 1,714.77 | Time Uertificate5................. 38913.72
Due fron] Ba“ks and Bank. Cert"fled (/heckfl...........‘.........-.. e
ersin this 5tate......... ... 3,942 06 | Cashier’s Checks ... 453.54
Due from Banks and Bank- . Bills payable, including Time
ersin other States. . . 83.47| Certificates representing bor-
Currency......_....51,083.00 rowed money ...................... 5,000.00
G01d..... . ...~y "
Silver, Nickels, etc '390.42
Cash It-ms___. 37 50 1,670.92
3 cvet M hee Fit 000 [——
Total oet e $42,698,68 TOME. iLo e
e v X L : :
STATE OF GHORGIA, County of Cobb:
Before me came B, H, Vea!, Cashier of The Austell Bank, who, being duly
sworn, says that the above and foregoing statement is a true condition of said
Bank as shown by the bopks of file in said Bank.
i B. H. VEAL, CASHIER.
Sworn to aud subscribed before me, this sth day of June, 1912,
R.S. MATHES,
Notary Public Cobb Co., Ga,
STATEMENT OF THE CONDITION OF
The‘ ; Bank Of S r
> "Pa - omyrna,
Located at Smytna, Ga., at the close of business, May 31st, 1912.
.RESOURCES | LIABILITIES ;
————
SRIANG Lo 50.00|C1pit111wckp1idin,..,...“.........,.}1'i,:;(\t)00
Time Loans . Sol 61,416,72 ) Surplus DR v i b
“Overdrafts secured, '~ * . 242,56
'Overdrahu'ig'nagp‘qm TR 311,24 Undivided profl:. less current expenses 5
honds and Stocks, ewned by the bank. %,000 00 interest and taxes paid............ 1.441.57
Haoking House 9,344.92 | Due to Banks and Bankers in this State,
ARRBINE : y "an o | Due from Banks & Bankers in ouher
Furniture and Fixture 5...........,... 1,08090‘ e e e none
Ochor ren) ombil v nic . 750 00! pue Unpaid Dividends .
Due trom banks & hankers ia the state 8,766.21 | Individual deposits subject to check.... 21.118.40
Due from bankswad bankers in other ' Savings Deposits... . o 1,028.10
BtAbeß L L A N 49183 Demand Certificates N
Currercy ...........00.i o 812,00 Time Certificate 5........................ 1.700.00
;_’.vljld. RO .“;s zfi(ll; g, I T
ilver, nickels an an 240,14 SRR Q 3 R
Uish itbmatt. .(4 pe B 3 80 3715 od Cashlef's EREORE .il G 785.81)
Exchanges for the Clea.ing House none Due to Clearing House . none
;'Nm nt."(li li‘:i‘“ ~--eDORE Notes and Bills Re-discounted. . none
nterest Pa none ;
S 3 }ideen ¢ Bills payable, Including Time Certificates
e tors ( 16ee Fun 2,744.40 -
Misaal Five Fuog a 120,00 Tepresenting Borrowed M0ney...... . 30.000.00
Total. . e %5 $ 72,378.87 Total, . LIS sansssnhncs i dusieinn BID 8T
‘F:\l‘h} OF GEUKRGIA, Countly of Cobb
Before me ¢amé W. G. Mauk, Cashier of The Bank of Smyrna, who, being duly
Sworn,says that ¢he above and foregoing statement is a true condition of said B'ank a 8 shown
by the books of filein said Bank. W. 6. MAUK, Cashier.
Sworn o and’stabseribed Before me. this 6th day of June, 1912.
J. 8. PACE,
Notary Publie, Cobb County, Georgiu.
C. E. HENDERSON,
Contractor and Builder.
Sash, Doors and Blinds.
il ROUGH AND DRESSED sssmmmm—
LUMBER
Shingles_~ — Laths—— ——Mouldings |
C.E. HENDERSON
FUNERAL DIRECTOR & EMBALMER
All Kinds of Burial Caskets, Robes and
. Undertaking Goods.
CALLS ATTENDED DAY OR NIGHT.
TELEFI"IfONES RESIDENCE 130 OFFICE 34
MAKIETTA JOURNAL AND COURIER
MUCH ADO ABOUT A PENNY
g‘mplo of Extent to;Which Red Tape
Methods Prevall in Gerr -
\ iy o NARLEE -, §
'Germany, declares Mr. S. Baring-
Id in his book, “The Land of
| " is absolutely swathed In red
pe. In illustration, he tells an ex:
yrience of his own while journeying
by rail from Ober-Lenningen to Owen.,
I asked at Ober-Lenningen for a
third-class ticket to Owen, and sup
posing that I had got what I asked
for, stepped into a third-class carriage.
On these branch lines nearly everyone
travels fourth. Before reaching the
next station—only a mile from Ober-
Lenningen, in fact—the inspector ap
peared.. “Hah!” he said. “You have
a fourth-class ticket, and are in a
third-class compartment. The fine is
six marks.” |
I explained, and offered at once to |
pass into a fourth-class carriage or
pay the difference in the price of
tickets. i
“That will not do. You have in-|
fringed the law, and must pay six
marks,” the man insisted.
“I get out at Owen, and will explain
matters to the station master,” I said.
I did so. |
“The fine is six marks,” said the
official, peremptorily.
“But, said I, “I demsnded a third-l
class ticket, and was given one for
which I had not asked. This was an
oversight on the part of the clerk.”
“You should have examined your
ticket,” the station master insisted.
The train was delayed five minutesl
while we threshed out the question on |
the platform in great detail, and the
other passengers craned their necks
out of the windows of the carriages
and listened with lively interest. At
last, reluctantly, the station master
vielded; but I must pay the differeice.
“What is it?” I asked.
“One penny.” ,
FIRST OF ANIMAL HOSPITALS
More Than 2,000 Years Ago One Was
Established in India, Says
an Authority.
The New York women who have
opened a free animal dispensary in
this city are regarded as pioneers in a
good work. As a matter of fact one
must go to the Orient and look back
more-than 2,000 years to find the first
animal hospital known.
The famous Buddhist emperor of In
dia, Asoka, whose long reign from 264
to 227 B. C. abounded in many good
works, was probably the earliest to
establish a hospital for the treatment
of animals, says Our Dumb Animals.
Asoka was a true humanitarian as
well as a Most powerful sovereign and
although ruling & vast domain be
came deeply impressed by the horrors
of warfare. :
He gave up his desire for conquest
and the rock inscriptions, which are
still extant, record such beneficent
edicts of his as the counseling of
planting shade trees, the digging of
wells, sending out of missionaries, ap
pointment of special officers to super
vise charities, the establishing of’ hos
pitals for human kind and animals.
It is of interest to know that the
last remaining of Asoka’s hospitals
was devoted to animals. It covered
twenty-five acres and was divided into
proper wards and courts for the ac
commodation of the patients. When
an animal was sick or injured its
master had only to bring it to the hos
pital, where it was cared for without
regard to the caste of its owner, and
where, if necessary, it found an asy
lum in old age.
Uncle Joe's Reply.
Some members of the house heard
a few days ago the strangest combi
nation of sacred and profane language
which had ever been uttered on that
floor. During a debate Uncle Joe Can
non went after A. Mitchell Palmer of
Pennsylvanta, and handled him with
out gloves.. Cannon is a Quaker and
80 is Palmer. When conversing pri
vately they drop into the Quaker ver
nacular. After the debate Palmer
went to the former speaker, who is
thirty-six years older than himself.
“Uncle Joe,” he sald, “thee treated
me a little roughly in the debate to
day.” :
“Well,” replied Uncle Joe, in a mix
ture of Quaker and Cannonilan Eng
lish, “perbaps I did treat thee a little
severely, but blankety-blank, thou de
served every damned thing I said.”
A Clear Case,
“You claim that the wheel of the de
fendant’'s car passed over your stom
ach,” said the defendant's attorney to
the plaintiff on the stand. “Yet, here
is your open-faced watch which you
testify to baving carried in your vest
pocket at the time, and the crystal
isn't even cracked. How do you ac
count fer that?”
“Why,"” said the plaintiff, “the car
was going so fast there wasn't time
for the crystal to break, sir.”—Har
per's Weekly.
it e
Houge Cleaning Time.
Woman of the House (answering
third ring)—Are you trying to pull the
house down? !
Book Agent—Beg pardon, madam,
but have you the “Life of Grant?”
Woman—No; but if was a man I'q
have yours in just about one minute.
(Slams the doof.)
St e
OLD NEWSPAPERS for sale
at this Office.
CRAB'S WALK OF 98 MILES
€ A P W lant'¥ &
‘Homing Instinct Is Shown by Some
: Recent Experiments In
. England. X
~ Some remarkably interesting de
~ talls regarding the movements and mol
homing instinct of the edible crab
were presented to' the Eastern SBéa
Fisheries Committes. - During the
past two years Fishery Inspector’ H.
Donnison has been carrying out in
vestigations on behalf of the com
mittee, and the results of his work
cannot fail to be -of considerable use
to those concerned in’ biological ‘rex
search. L
In the course of ‘an ' exhaustive. re:
port he stated that between July:and
September, 1910, nearly two thousand :
crabs were captured, and after ‘being:
labeled were again set free along the
Norfolk and Lincolnshire coasts. “I'he
crabs had recently cast their shells,:
and new ones were then in process.
of hardening. ' 1 e
Rewards were paid to fishermen
upon returning the crabs when recap
tured. They were returned to the sea
at varying distances from the shore,
and up to the present 21 per cent of
the labeled crustaceans had been re
captured and full data tabulated.
With regard to the Norfolk crabs -
liberated in the places from which
they were originally obtained, fifty-’
two were recaptured within one mile
of their first home, but one traveled
as far as Flamborough Head, a dis
tance of ninety-eight statute miles.
Nearly three hundred- had traveled
only three or four miles from where
they were originally taken.—London
Standard.
MARK GRAVE OF HEROINE
Clubwomen to Preserve Memory of
Woman Who Gave Life to Help
Smallpox Sufferers.
Clubwomen, assisted by the doc
tors of North Billerica, Mass., are tak
ing steps to preserve the memory of
Sarah Hodgeman, who gave her life
more than a century ago in her efforts
to help neighbors who were suffering
from smallpox. It happened during
the smallpox epidemic in 1811. On
learning that a family of four persons
with two guests were ill with the dis
ease, and had no one to help them,
Miss Hodgeman, against the protest of
her family and friends, entered the
infected house and did all in her pow
er for its inmates.
Within two weeks it was noticed
that the customary smoke did not curl
from the chimney. Some of the towns
folk finally mustered up courage to in
vestigate. -It was found that the en
tire ' household, Sarah Hodgeman in
cluded, had died of the disease. It is
now propgsed to erect a monument in
the place of the old gray headstone
which marks her grave,
. Hope Not Realized.
Dean :Sumner of the Cathedral SS.
Peter and Paul related the following
story at the:recent banquet of the
Chicago Association of Commerce at
the Hotel Sherman. “A Ilittle Jewish
boy went to his father on Christmas
day and asked him for a quarter.
Upon receiving it he sauntered out
into the city streets and didn’t return
until evening. His father called him
as he came in and inquired what he
did with the quarter he had been giv
en. ‘I went to the candy shop next
door and changed it into nickels,’ said
the boy. ‘Then I went to the news
stand on the corner and changed the
nickels into pennies. After that I
went back to the candy shop and got
five nickels for my pennies, and then
I went to the delicatessen and got a
quarter for my five nickels.’
“‘But why did you do all that? de
manded the father.
“‘I hoped that somebody might
make a mistake and give me too
much,” replied the boy.”
A Polyglot Playwright.
M. Dario Niccodemi is a citizen of
the world. He was born in Italy. He
was reared in the Argentine Republic,
where he was initiated in Spanish cul
ture. He wrote his first play in the
language of Cervantes. It was pro
duced at Buenos Ayres and was called
“La Duda” (The Doubt).
Soon after that an Italian actress in
South America offered a prize for an
acceptable play in her mother tongue.
M. Niccodemi took the prize with his
play “Per la Vita.” He soon after
ward wrote “L'Hirondelle” (The Swal
low) in French and it is played at
Brussels. At Paris he began his work
by translating and adapting the Eng
lish play of “Raffles.”—Le Cri de Paris.
M
Both Ways.
Gibbs—“ Personal appearance is a
helpful factor in business success.”
Dibbs—*“Yes, and business success is
a helpful factor in personal appear
ance.”—Boston Transcript,
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there is no fonic on earth, as good as Cardul. I used it
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| for Bpectal Instructions, and 64-page book, “Home Treatment for Women," sent free. J 56
R T,
li‘ W“ull
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A HANDSOME————
. « Archway
gives beauty and spaciousness to an inter
ior, and without materially increasing the
expense. Provided, of course, that its
design is correct, its workmanship faultless
and its wood properly selected and sea
soned. If we build it, it will have these
qualities in perfection and its cost will be
small.
J. J. Black Lumber Company
HAKIETEA GA ‘
RE BUTLER & SON
Real Estate and Renting
Farms, City And Business Property
Office 5-9 Over Marietta Trust and Banking Co.
PHONE 417 TR MARIETTA, GA.
Money To Loan On Long
Time at Reason
able Rates
R. N. HOLLAND & SON.
Real Estate & Loans, Court House,
MARIETTA, GEORGIA‘
Carriage and Wagon Manufacturer,
Carriage Trimming and Painting,
The Best Rubber Tires Put On,
REPAIRING HORSE SHOEING
done in a satisfactory manner. Satisfaction Guaranteed
Phone No. 67, Wash’ipfiton Avénue, Marietta, Georgia
*ridav, June 14, 1912