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08 Total loans .... Liberty Loan Bonds, 33, 4, and 4% or bilfs payable ... Securities other than U. 2 ot! Furniture and fixtures Total of Items Redemption fund with past due ...... War Savings Certificat Other assets, if any . Total Capital stock paid in Surnlus fund .. Undivided.profits . (approximate) Circulating notes outstanding Total of items ...... Total contingent liabilities made, was $ None. (Seal) FIRST } téatis and discounts, including rediscounts Notes and bills Tediscounted (other than bank acceptances sol J bonds deposited to secure circulation (par value) u: = bonds aid certificates of indebtedness owned and unpledged . Liberty Loan Bonds, 3%, 4, and 4M per cent pledged to sec s (no . Total bonds, securities, ete., other than t. che Stock of Federal Reserve Bank (50 per cent of subscrip jon) Value of banking house, owned and unincumbered .. . Lawful reserve with Federal Reserve Bank Cash in vault and net amounts due from national banks Checks on- pier banks in the same city or town as reporting bank "S. Treasurer and due from Interest earned but not “collected—approximate—on Notes and Bills Receivable not Cashier’s checks on own aad outstanding . Individual deposits subject “to check . Certificates of deposit due in less thai (of Total of demand deposits (other than bank pet org subject to Rauaive Certificates of- deposit (other than for money borrowed) Other time deposits ..22.......-.-.-.-00+ Total of time deposits subject to reserve . Bills Teveps with Federal Reserve Bank Liabilities for*tediscounts, including those with Federal Reserve Bank and discount was charged at CORRECT—Attest: per cent, unpledged .. S. Treasurer LIABILITIES CnA Rizk NO. 7 tsa. RESERVE DISTRICT NO. 12 ST CF THE CONDITION OF THE NATIONAL BANK At Cottonwood in the state of Idaho, at the close ef business on June 20th, 1919 RESOURCES . $260,425.20 $260,425.20 32,537.50 25,000.00 500.00 600.00 14,200.00 © 4,012.18 227,887.70 25,500.00 14,800.00 4,012.18 1,200.00 6,000.00 2,000.00 16,216.41 29,217.16 140.10 1,250.00 1,606.88 331.56 90.00 880,251.99 6,000.00 29,357.26 25,000.00 15,000.00 4,968.74 3,606.66 25,000.00 1,867.67 137,234 09 26,068.13 65,286.70 14,220.00 12,000.00 830,251.99 32,537.50 32,537.50 4,968.74 Interest and discount collected or credited, in advance of maturity and not earned 1,867.67 163,302.22 79,506.70 * Of the total loans and discounts shown above, the amount on which interest rates in excess of those permitted by law (Sec. 5197, Rev. Stat.), exclusive of notes’ upon which total charge not to exceed 50 cents was The number of such loans was None. STATE OF IDAHO, COUNTY OF IDAHO, SS. I, Geo. M. Robertson, Cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. GEO, M. ROBERTSON, Cashier. E. L. Parker, W. W. Flint, Feliz Martzen, directors. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 8th day of July, 1919 Herman H. Nuxoll, Notary Public. Next Time—Buy FIS CORD TIRES Big, clean-cut in - appearance, they give an excess mileage even for Cord Tires. om ‘Seg vise ya TOUGH, WEAR-RESISTING TREADS Cottonwood Garage ‘FOR BEAUTY, NOT PLUMBING French Chat iu Owner Had Amer icans Remove Modern Improve H ments They Had Installed, ors In our anxiety to get results in France we were often tactless from a French ‘point of view. This cause of irritation was exaggerated by our gen- eral ignorance of the language. I won- der if the Americar. schools, after this, will teach us speaking French instead of the book. French they taught in my generation? And we ran ato certain French peculiarities which we found it hard to understand. For example, early in our war a fine old chateau near Bordeaux was leased for a headquarters. By the terms of the lease we were to leave “everything exactly as we found It. The chateau in its four or five hundred years of existence had never known sanitary plumbing; the owners bathed in wash basins or rubber tubs. Ex- yoda @ long Ume we ia- germtesion, Grains. teth- tans, volecs, a ‘water-neating system. When, last January, we ended the lease and moved out the’ officer who conducted the business offered to leave the plumbing where’ it wai, since its removal would cost ae much’as it was worth. The French owirer retieed. We had to take out our plumbing. What he wanted from that chateaw was not sanitation, but ven¢¥able’ beauty, and the sense that he dwelt in the same identical home as his: ancestor of the tenth generation baci, The American finds {t‘hard,to under stand such a point oftview; and he is a bit brusque in expressing his opinion thereon.— Will Irwit: in the Saturday Evening Post. FLYERS TO HUNT OUTLAWS Cotton Plantations ted ln Deflance of Authority in Egpily, From the Air. The department of rvricuiture has adapted the airplare '. its-needs. and plans te have @ [3.40 feet of ma- _—- \sawo 0U ote ine Iamatr, 1umverman and orchardist during the next six months, according to an announcement from Washington ‘recently,. says the San Francisco Chronicle. The ma- chines will be used to find forest fires, map out forest and other surveys and to act as detectives to find outlaw cotton planters {n Texas, Arizona and southern California, Lieutenant Compere at Ellington a year ago investigated the cotton situ- ation. Owing to danger of an inva- sion of pink boHworm from Mexico it was necessary. to create restricted safety zones where no eotton could be grown. Certain outlaw planters in land surrounded by heavy forests have defied the government and planted tn these districts, which are difficult to find. The young Californian took a camera with him, cfuised over the for- ests at a 7,000-foot altitude, and snapped seven outlaw fields. The fields were destroyed. Compere has been released from service and will seen return to California te organize the agricultural aviation scout work on this coast. /PROPER AMERICAN ae, IS SIMS Many Reagons why Rear Adrriral Has_Obtained and Retains Gen- eral Populg@r Regard. Rear Admiral Siffis came quictly | into town the other day. made a speech or two, and when he left he had Washington hanging to his very abbreviated jacket tail. Folks’ here certainly did like the admiral. A popular idol that obtains the plaudits of Washington Is pretty good. These are some of the things the People liked about the admiral: He said very positively that he will not write a book on the war: he referred to the navy’s part in the war as its “stunt”; he boosted General Pershing to the skies, indicating that the ad- miral is without a jealous streak; he referred jocularly to himself as “the only rear admiral in captivity,” and said he was glad to exhibit himself if the folks wanted to ~s®ee him; and, best of all, he took time to talk with every one who could squeeze a word into his ears. Down at the Union’station, when the admiral was boarding his private car, a gray-haired woman rushed up and shook his hand warmly. “This is the proudest day of my life, admiral,” she said. “I now have shaken hands twice with you.” “All right. my dear lady,” the ad- mira! replied, raising his cap. “I’m glad if meeting me pleases you. Come around again the next time I’m in town and we’ll shake a third time.” If any further proof that the ad- miral is human were needed, it might be stated that he plays a rattling game of handball.—Washington Star. OLD THINGS UNDER THE SUN _ . Democracy in Ancient Jewish Days and the League of Nations, Are Two. The democratit idea is of great antiq- ulty, the Christian Herald reminds its readers. Under the prophets and judges, Israel was a democracy. It was not until they were fascinated by the barbaric splendor and unrestrained li- cense of the heathen nations around them that they began to be dissatisfied with their own simple Ways and to long for a king and a showy court. It was the lure of sin and worldly vanity. Samuel warned them against courts and kings and told them of what would happen, but his warnings went unheed- ed. The vision of the age of peace began as early as eight centuries B. C., but it was not until the Christian era that the world change in the existing order fully dawned upon the minds of men. The idea of a league of nations is not new. Such a league was fore- shadowed by Jean Bloch, in his re- markable book, “The Future of War,” Issued 20 years ago. It was also fore- seen by Emanuel Kant, who, in his es- say on.“Perpetual Peace,” wrote that the law of nations must be based on the federation of free states. At dif- ferent times leaders in national and international reform have had visions of such a league, but always as a pos- sibility of the remote future. It has remained for the United States to promulgate it at a time when the world seems prepared to Hsten. Wiping Out Predatory Animals. During 1918 hunters of the United States department of. agriculture killed 83 gray wolves In New Mexico, 34 mountain Hons, 15 stock-destroying bears, 1,860 coyotes, and 350 bobcats, we are told. These animals were killed at a total expense of $24,860, and the saving effeeted by thelr de struction, on the basis commonly ac- cepted by stockmen, amounts to $215,- 950 annually. Hunting during the spring period destroys many young, and thus prevents increase. Many coyotes not accounted for in the fig- ures given were destroyed by poison. The killing of these animals marks a long stride in extermination of gray wolves and other predatory animals, and the saving is cumulative for years to come. Pass the Sait! Two reporters were boasting of the speed of their shorthand writing. “Whenever I am reporting at a meet- Ing om a warm evening, all the people try to get near to my table. “Why?” asked the other. “Because,” said the pen pusher, “my hand goes so fast that it creates a current of air like a fan.” “A mere nothing,” said number two. “I always have to report on wet pa- per, or else the current of air caused by the movement of: my hand would blow it away. Besidés,the paper has to be wetted every few minutes, be- cause the friction caused by the rapid movements of my arm would set fire to it in no time.” Use for Rat Skins. Exhibiting the eured skin of a brown rat, the veterinary” inspector of New- castle, Eng., has’ pronounced such skins superior to the Iinings found in some expensive coats, The difficulty in creating a ratskin' Industry appears to be the uncertain source of supply; but the demand that would be aroused would be an incentive fbr destroying the rats that now constitute so serious a plague. The bedies of the animals need not be wasted, as they ferm suit- able food for pigS; poultry and dogs, Didn't Know: the Groom. “I made a terrible*break today.” “That so?” “Yes. You know I went to Lillian’s wedding.” “Yes.” “Well, the other day I met Lillian a the street, and I dida’t recogni ‘the man with her as the groom.” NO. 67 REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF THE Cottonwood State Bank At Cottonwood, Idaho, in the State of Idaho, at the close of busi- ness June 20, 1919. RESOURCES Cash on ‘hand ................ ; Badenian $ Cane Due from Banks .... : oe Checks and Drafts on other Ranks . a1. Loans and Discounts 228,434 94 4.96 Averdrafts .. ..... - Stocks, Bonds and. Warrants Tae Banking House, Furniture and Fixtures 7,542.88 Moi eel Gaara testi Stic ren teaser igeisteenissc nee EBESOI LT OLOU, LIABILITIES Individual deposits subject to check . . 181,858.79 Time Certificates of Deposit 112,099.88 Cashier’s Checks ........... 1,220.76 Total Deposits .. 244,679.43 Capital Stock paid in 25,000.00 Surplus 10,000.00 Undivided Profits, less expenses, interest and taxes pai 1,096.07 NGL cs eeacasccaceyeesncsgeccesesacssovsuesctvctossanessressepertoneetoaettses $280,775.60 STATE OF IDAHO, COUNTY OF IDAHO, SS. I, H. C. Matthiesen, Cashier of the above-named bank do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. H. C. MATTHIESEN, Cashier. CORRECT—Attest: Herman H. Nuxoll, Barney J. Stubbers, directors. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 8th day of July, 1919. I certify that I am NOT an Officer or Director of this bank. FELIX MARTZEN, Notary Public. ELECTRIC RANGES The Modern Way PRL EEE E EE EEE PERE EEE EES Ee heed REREEEEEE EEE EEE EEE EEE EEL EES BR Hebe obectorde eoheohe eter teohe ert ctectesterteeeeeotedteoge: The Method you will eventually use: the electric way Grangeville Elec. Light & Power Co. Cottonwood, Idaho When in Grangeville Eat at the aRR errarRp IY The neatest and most up to date Restaurant in the North west Lunch Counter in Connection Your Patronage Solicited Mr. and Mrs. I. E. Zuver, Prop. FRANK P. LINT, D. S. T. WILLIAM P. SHEHAN, S. T. VENETTA I. SHEHAN, S. T. Membersof Washington Association ot Drugless Physicians Stiffened Joints Rheumatism Stomach Troubles Catarrh Constipation Paralysis Liver Trouble Neuralgia Lumbago Female Complaints Nervous Troubles and Kindred Ailments Successfully Treated Without Drugs or Surgery Make ofPeallatotiee” ““"_Consultation Free CLARKSTON, WASH. The Chronicle can do your Job Printing =SS—————————— nl Billups Blk. Phone 810