New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 11, 1919, Page 14

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: 5 STATEMENT OF CONDITION JULY 1, 1919 \ N order to relieve the housing situation and aid in construction of new houses and buildings providing additional tene- ments, this bank will make mortgage loans upon such properties to the full extent of its resources and limited only by the state laws governing loans upon real estate by savings banks. Deposits received from one doliar to three thousand dollars at one time. Interest on deposits at the rate of four per cent. per annum, paid January . 1st and July Ist each year. Interest upon deposits begins the first day of each month. Deposits in savings banks are NOT TAXABLE. ASSETS Loans on Real Estate $ 5,208,455.00 Loans on Stocks and Bonds 1,081,451.00 United States Bonds e 1,174,854.11 United States Certificates 150,000.00 United Kingdom, Great Britain Ireland Bonds ......... R 100,000.00 State, City and Town Bonds ....... 5 . o Railroad Bonds ............ 1,75(‘,467498 . L . : $11,332,037.14 Bank Stocks .. ) 163,450.00 | S e Real Estate, Banking House 54,414.49 . pm 3 : OFFICERS Deposits in Banks and Trust Com- 2 . : E. H. Davison, President. panies and Cash .. 159,737.66 ’ 1L 5 C. F. Smith, Vice-president. Suspense Account ...... 354.72 4 i § 1 E. N. Stanley, Treasurer. Tax and Insurance Account 136.43 : ‘ C. B. Oldershaw, Asst. Treas. and Secretary. Noah Lucas, Asst. Treas. Deposits $10,749,472.00 United States Bond Subscription Ac- COLINERE 7,073.13 Interest Account . ... o Sl 50,000.00 Surplus Fund e 500,000.00 Profit and Loss Account 25,492.01 $11,332,037.14 Deposif in the Bafil/(. Picturéd Above k X DIRECTORS C. B. Oldersha® E. I#. Davison, i o _ P.F. McDoncagh, H.D. Humphre;;\ E. N. Stanley, ) L. D. Russell, Wm. H. Hart, oy G. W. Traut, INGAhU I heaa sociation announced yesterday that armi - . would want to com racing by an order in council, h Russian “Groun-ups”, 15 Years Old it e feome Bheck fcens SRS e e R e e 2 | that practicaily e y man who pos- the fall racing meets in Kentucky | applying to be taken back, have been arded by the state rac- | pleasure Learning to Play American Games e R e e ool mectinenl SRR B e e e ARE A[iAlN FIlLEi] asting on an average of onc and season on hoth of the local | |ptted seven days, from September 13 [ ties. The | s) and already the col- | 1cks, Dufferin Park and Hill Crest. | to 20, sive; I.atonia, 22 days, Fair” was th \ | leg are full.” They expressed themselves as confi- | September October 18, and | tracted thous] | "he general tone and c ter of | gent that the embargo will be re- | Churchill Downs, nine days, October | its institutiond | 5 ribed by is (B ed 23 to November 1. ago. | ably high is Al! Resuming, Normal Life Alter I I e much life and cheerf S— war’s Ravages vity as before the war (:'}Ilil a great | more seriousness purpose. - The Master notes not only a marked T - improvement in the strer of char- QD OF A C‘ 6A R E Washington, July 11.—The great|acter shown by the B A Bl P, iv ies of I tudent | dents but that they even gained in- < ‘1 S d teaching staffs were great- tellectually what they had lost in 3 T Jenleisd b IR S hook knowledge and have more than ade up for this loss by the power of or in‘goyernment offices durin, made up for this loss by the power 4 THERE GOES ONE OF coming to the point, and by a sense | ain filling with students of reality about their work. MY TAIL FEATHERS rmal life. This is shown | This, he concludes, shows that their ! l { received here by Licuten- | Previous university education was fur | & FOR A QUILL 4 \ s t00 bookish and abstract in type and g . nt-Colonel} J. C. Faunthorpe of the h A . \ et “neglected too much the intellectual | ; G 75 "L h em sy from A. L. Smith, of beginning things at the Oxford. New | practical and concrete end. These re- sned at men are not only keener to | * efficienc are work with more swift- han before they According 1@ tI r of B % s one of them said, Oxford sent approxir ely 12,000 of | that you had to do a lot of thinki g | j its men to the;war or into the gov- | in the trenches or else your l'nmlvtl“ Of these 9 vers was soon uy killed anc 09 are iss] " [Rislcaian d RE0 K= c g sty Oxford has made many concessions | to tk men which the Mas gards as justified by the sho now are making in their stu | merly nine terms’ residence w i than 4,000 won thonors in the war in- cluding 16 Victo ‘rosses. The f ures of Cambri university would be about the same the writer esti- S. 1 duired to obtain an Oxford de who served in the 8 from half this require ment and from some of the examina- tion requirements. These concessions will enable the majority of them to e and go into the pro- , 1t or two later then Outlining the~sdrvices rendered hy men of the AOrty eoll of Oxford the Mfffster writes that esponse for war serv- student life “dwindled to a He adds that “the impor- ance of the onse’ of these (wo lder univers was that it filied up | he gap helw. the 'destruction of the old - army .in the fight- ing of Au and Séptembe of 1914 and the coming fgrward of the newly trained territdfals in the spring of 1915. Thisixfmediate re- sponse to the call of /“B country and the personal courage —fl devotion of Russian children, like children Girl Scouts in Samara, a town in e O D Y Ll o.s o orand T prywhere else, play, but only Central Russia on the Volga River. 2:{';:‘:1?”2":}:‘:; :}':P“:, Ase “.‘:‘,‘ém,‘,zt MAY OPEN TRACKS. t‘;,"“‘g,’ srechfigen. As “ang There the Y.M.C.A. has five athletic ing made to bear the Jbrunt Toronto, July 11.—In spite of the i ;;:mof twfi;’:fir ‘t‘gm;"n, ?_elds and playgm_um.js and is get- B finy of the men | embargo placed on thoroughbred seem to think it is not proper 008 ready for a big summer season - = e e - - y any more. The girls then °f &ames: ~The boy, who lacks closely at home and the boys Irish, answers to the name of gd to loaf, drink, smoke and Shapghai and is a Russian, lives in a-Chinese city,—Harbin, Manchuria, the revoiutionu, the lot of several thousand miles west of Sa- in Russia and Siberia has mura, to which the “Y,s” growing orse than ever. 'To combat chain of athietic fields now extends. evils, the Y.M.C.A. is organ- The “Y” also is providing athle- fig a system of playgrounds. In- tics for Russian and Czech soldiers. \ ) fbad of loafing, the boys are learn- Even the Tartars are learning 4 y I0ST LAS g to play foofzall and baseball. Americart games, the 9 i < 3 THE 14 TING pEACE rules for KNOWN TO MAN IS THE PEACE Ffennis is taking the place of drink- which Have been translated into ™ WELL 1l ! Ling, and track games, handbail and ‘Russian, Chinese and Turkic. The g . e | k 5 R Smming are gogd Substitwsas for Tartarsf take to ihe new games, bus ‘ = = =——"You WeLL?. ; 5 . FOUND IN A PACKAGE OF RELU and gambil. they glso “took to” the athletic < s~ R ZO—Fkes—out the : \ e tus until a threat that they =5 THE RELIABLE ANTISEPTIC kem==Fire and S00thes barred ended the souvenir = * and in general intel- opment they will be bet- | ter men than they would have been under normal conditions and, in ‘in- fellectual equipment of knowledge, hardly, if at all, inferior,” writes the

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