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———— NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD., 1THURSDAY, jULY 20, 1916. The Original Malted Milk il Nourishing Delicious 4 . Digestible G il ) T?:e powder dissolves in water. Needs no cooking—Keep it on hand. Rich Milk, Malted grain extract in powder. | The Original Food-Drink for all ages. For Infants, Invalids and growing children. | More nourishing than tea, coffee, etc. Pure nutrition,upbuilding the whole body. | In the home, or at Hotels and Cafes. [nvigorates nursing mothers, and the aged. | Substitutes cost YOU SaE)e Price | SAVINGS BANK OF NEW BRITAIN 178 MAIN STREET, NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT ESTABLISHED 1862 STATEMENT OF CONDITION, JULY 1, 1916. ASSETS Loans on Real Estate $4,332,940.00 [EoansoniStockSFand Blomnd s Easss 744,451.00 Loans on Personal Security ......... o, 1,750.00 State, City and Town Bonds .......... 1432,572.00 Railroad Bonds . s ... 1,681,276.73 Bank Stocksii iy ne : 162,550.00 Realf Estatc Eonecl oSTUnE s sy .4,466.15 Real Estate, Banking House ..... b 54,016.12 Deposits in Banks and T rust Companies A dE @ ShESN e N SR 288,680.00 STISPENSCPATCE OTIL R 110.47 $8,702,812.47 LIABILITIES Deposits . 00 - s B8 28347007 Interest Account ....... ek . 45,000.00 Surplus Fund ... ... e . 350,000.00 RrofitfandfEossPACC ot I, s 24,342.30 $8,702,812.47 This isa PURELY MUTUAL BANK. It has NO CAPITAL STOCK, to pay dividends upon which a part of the income from its invested deposits must be used. All of its depositors are its stockholders, and every dollar of its assets of more than eight mil- lion, seven hundred thousand dollars belongs to its depositors and they alone receive the benefit of its in- come. : Its SURPLUS and UNDIVIDED PROFITS now amount to $374,342.30. If its statement were made up upon the basis of the market value of its securities, as is required by the law of New York state, its surplus and undivided profits would be $455,266.07. INTEREST upon deposits begins the first of every month and is payable in January and July FOUR PER CENT. interest is paid. Deposits in sav- ings banks are exempt from taxation. Make vyour deposits where YOUR MONEY WILL EARN SOMETHING FOR YOU'! i DIRECTORS: E. N. Stanley G. W. Traut C. F. Smith J. A. Anderson E. A. Moore C. J. Parker C. B. Parsons J. B. Minor P. F. McDonough I. D. Russell C. B. Oldershaw H. D. Humphrey C. B. Stanley Wm. H. Hart E. H. Davison FISHERMAN! We have in stock the Complete line of Heddon Casting Baits and of others we handle—Wilson's 2 Woblers, Tangos, Apex, Success ¥ Magnet, South Bends—numerous Luminous Baits and a variety of SENG other good baits. £ e MONIER BROS.” SPCRTING 00DS STORE 38-42 MAIN STREET $1.50 to $15 [ RARE BARGAINS IN USED CARS We have a Miscellaneous stock of POPE-HARTFORD parts. 1915 Franklin Touring, in excellent condition. 1911 Pope Model W. 1913 Franklin Touring Car. 1914 Detroit Electric Car. 1915 Franklin Roadster. 1013 Franklin Touring Car. 1916 Oakland Touring Car. | UNIVERSAL AUTO COMPANY 94 High St.—Hartford—338 Pearl St. ES B | United States District Court in Cleve- JOHND.’S WEALTH MORE THAN BILLION %Rockefeller Is - Richest Man in . History of the World Cleveland, Ohio, July 20.—Informa- tion of the existence of a balance sheet compiled ten days ago on the occasion of John D. Rockefeller's sevent eventh birthday, showing that his private fortune, exclusive of en- dowment funds and other benefac- tions, exceeds a billion dollars, is said to be in possession of the authorities of Cuyahoga county. The existence of the balance sheet, indicating that Mr. Rockefeller’s for- tune exceeds that of any man in the world, and indeed, in the history of the world, was discovered in the search for | evidence to present to the United States Circuit Court of Appeals in the forthcoming attempt of Cuyahoga | county to force Mr. Rockefeller to pay taxes on holdings of more than three hundred million dollars. Mr. Rocke- feller obtained an injunction in the | 1ana preventing the enforcement of tax collection on the holdings in October, 1915, and in December of the same year Cuyahoga county filed an appeal in the United States Circuit Court. Since then county authorities have been endeavoring to obtain evidence that Mr. Rockefeller was a legal resi- dent of Cleveland. He is now at his home here, and on July 9 celebrated his seventy-seventh birthday. It was | about that time, it is understood, that a balance sheet containing the extent and the varied amounts of his holdings was presented to him. The balance sheet according to authentic informa- tion, indicated that the Rockefeller fl fortune had exceeded $1,000,000,000 and steadily was mounting upward; so rapidly, in fact, that with all of his enormous benefactions, Mr. Rockefeller was unable to dispose of the income. Half Billion in Standard Oil. Of the enormous total nearly $500 1 000,000 represents Mr. Rockefeller | holdings in the various Standard Oil | companies and their subsidiaries. He | holds approximately 247,962 shares |out of a total of 883,383 shares | issued in all the companies. The stock is now quoted around $1,700, about three times what it was before | the federal courts issued the order dissolving the great corporation into independent companies. The balance of Mr fortune, it is understood, is shown to be in enormous holdings in various railway and banking corporations, the TUnited States Steel corporation, and in national, Municipal State and in foreign bond issues. Among his hold- ings, it is recorded, there are $10,000,- 000 of Anglo-French war bonds, | floated here last year by the Allied | commission. | XNaturally, with such an am: stion of Ith, the v Rockefeller’s ng ac- ions | | cumu we of the stock 1 et day by day in- | crease or decrease the fortune by a | million or more dollars. Since the compilation of the schedule in June, immediately succeeding the announce- | ment that the half year’s gifts of the ; { Rockefeller Foundation, merely one | of his projects, were more than three | | million dollars, the fortune is said to | | have shown a great increase. That is | because of the steadily upward trend of various stocks because of the en- | livened commerce of the country. | | Have Given Away $200,000,000. ! | Neither Mr. Rockefeller nor his son, | | John D. Rockefeller, Jr., are engaged | actively in business. Since 1910, | when their joint benefactions first be- gan to loom large in the generosities | jof the world, eclipsing those of | Andrew Carnegie, it is estimated that the Rockefellers have given away ap- ties in the United | Yale, Harvard, Barnard, Union Theo- logical Seminary of New York, the |1and for betterment purposes, $3,000,- B S f America the Treasure House | of Nature’s Scenic fewels | What of sylvan beauty riv waterfall of the woods! It is Nature's artistry the highest. A million waterfalls grace this land, the charm of a single cascade defies the The woodland water- in vet commonplace. fall with its shady glen is the restful retreat dreams ever stage for vaca- tions. They babble their song of the open, to the | ns and scores, by do: automobile tourist. To rouse the motorist to this beauty of nature within a week's tour from his home is the purpose of National | . the automobile vacs tion movem that has spread acr the country from one coast to the other. During the week of August 6, 500,000 motor cars will tour the beauty spots and points of interest of the nation. Touring Wee sands of miles to the far-off country to find scenic beauty is harboring a hallucination. t off the beaten trail with your automobile within j Your own state, and you will find a | thousand wonder i has own state first,” is the golden text em- blazoned in gigantic letters for Na- tional Touring Week. Nature has been prodigal with her beautles. The mo- torist who thinks he must go thou- to delight the eye. 5 is the sermon, the inspiration, of National Touring Week. The idea alread ght the man at the wheel. automo- biles is planning a vacation tour in a motor car. The momentum already gained by the movement will carry Tt but all who have August vacations in prospect are fixing them to begin August 6th if possible. To have a motor car and not use it for vacation pleasures is to trifle church, at home and abroad, 000; to various colleges and unive States e including | Baptist and the Southern Education | Fund, about $30,000,000; the Young Men’s Christian Association, $4,000,- 000; to various hospitals and medical colleges, $20,000,000; for juvenile re- form work, $3,000,000 and to Cleve- 000. Since the war in Europe, the Rocke- feller foundation has given about $10,- 000,000 for relief work of a wide and “Seo America first by seeing your with the success of your outing. proximately $200,000,000. The most |varied character, but despite the great conspicuous of the benefactions t » | demands, the income aceruing from been the General ucation b | the endowment fund, it.is said, is not which has receive# about $60,000,000; | entirely used up University of Chicago, to which has | — been given ,000,000; ckefell CIVIL WAR ARMORER DEAD. Institute for Medical Research, $10 Plainficld, July 20.—Mr. Charles W. 000,000; Rush Medical College, $6.- | Moody, who was credited with having 1000.000: missions of the Baptist|Dplaced the armor plate on both the | $8,000,- | Merrimac and the Monitor in Civil war days, died in New London yester- day at the age of eighty-five. ¥e was a pioneer in the construction of modern steel clad vessels and aided ir designing many for the United States government. MAJOR GUNLIFF DEAD. i London, July 20.—N\ Foster | Hugh Egerton Gunliffe, military his- torian, has been killed while fightir at the front in France. Major liffe wrote the official history of well sev 1 books on | He was born x'n“ 1875. | The I am a mining engineer. My address is anywhere from Alaska to South America. If you visit me you will live hard and eat plain. But I'll give you a big welcome and the best cigaretie you ever smoked — “Helmar” Turkish Cigarettes. ‘Helmar” is always in my pocket and in my shack. The mildest tobacco for cigarettesZis Turkish. The hest tohacco for cigarettes is Turkish. Don’t pay ten cents for anybody’s cigarette you have tried ““‘Helmar,’’ a fascinating, eleva gentleman’s smoke. Makars of the Highest Grade Tirkish W"w E]y%fitfl?%flfilnzh:wa;j A Corporation 1 GoobeYE BOYs — | I'M GoING UP LIFE IN _THE] RUBE. CQUNTRY To ‘GATHER FRESH EGGS AND MILK COWS AND LEAD THE SIMPLE THIS MEET You AT STATION AND. Yoo UP To THE THe BASS CAR — HE TolD ME T THE HUSTLE L\An BANGZ Zhroor MEZHEER ~ARD Tr(s 15, ) &rvv OAUGHTER WHERE ©o You Keep THe Pigs AND CHICHEN: R N Do AND THEN A S ~ S SAY LITTLE CORDIAL- GAMIZ OF PockeT BILLIARDS You HUMOR Hima BOYS - \ THE HEAT'S GOT SAY! Tare 1T FrOM ME - IF You WANT A LITTLE SPEED Go VP N THE CounTRY