The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 6, 1911, Page 6

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hae 5 agg Bator. (Everett Tr PANIG OVER WAR SCARE BERLIN, Sept Excitement which almost approaches panic reigns throughout the provinces of Germany today as the result of the war weare, The rush of depositors to withdraw their money from banks tm Metz, Stettin and other places ig growing hourly and thousands of those with smal! amounts in bank fre withdrawing them Fearing that the panic will extend here, the Berlin bankers today de fermined to insist. on legal notice being given before they will allow withdrawals. All a German frontier the residents are wildly excited. USED GREASE FOR BUTTER NEW YOKs, Sept. 6.- Engineer Richmond of the steamer Asbury Park made a complaint that he had Not veceived a tub of engine crease ordered some time before. Investi gation showed that the chef used ett True Goes, But He L "WHEW YOU AEROPLANE 90 MILES AN HOUR YU DON'T NOTICE OWT FELS'—CHAMIO (Recently Frank Champton in a Bleriot monoplane fle ; ‘of 98 miles an hour, breaking the American record for fast flight. Ye: terday he went 55 miles in 55 seconds, The course from the aviation field, just out of Los Angeles, Cal., to Long Beach, about elght tiles. In this story Champion tells about the flight and some other | things an aviator has to contend with when he is in the clouds. I flying from the aviation jin watching how she is behaving. e \That is enough to keep an aviator grounds to Long Beach I did not ae a Ges Gina te eee Rave much time to make my IM) your sensations and quite another pressions of how it felt. The dis-/to concentrate your attention on a tance was sométhing like cight| whirling seven-cylinder motor and ——— Frank Champion in Fastest Bieriot Monopiane in World, and Face of * Aviator Who Broke American Speed Record ————<—_$<—$—$—————— } Who Broke American Speed and the time caueht by men the balance of the planes that are 4 Record for An Aero- oo... 4 wee 4 mintes and Keeping you from digging a nine. | viene Fiighe. ty-mile-an-hour hole in the ground, 92 seconds. It was a flight directly , lw He lives at Long Beach, Cal., These two things don't fit In the is where he hada concession on to the ocean and on the way t© ™Y/ same place at the same tim P so T knew all the land-| When you are up in the air the|* ‘te Tike: Daring | aviation home town, | iandii ‘ pres ‘nail, but |= meet held tn Los Angeles Jan: ‘nd could take a direct) 'anding places look very & ut '* vary, 1910, he became inter iets wires and their insu! MOF | ented in flying. A year later was going mighty fast./'00m up : # he went to Hendon, England, ington, whose Bleriot TE pi alr ine ig t where he took « course In the figured that 1. mode it | S00 Se led ta, alld when pod o # Blertot Aviation school, qual t 105 miles an hour, | compe O, and when you come |# fying as an aviator and re ® to the landirg part of your trip celving pilot's license on ba May 11 of this year. He at # once returned to Long Beach, # and bas been making some ex. # perimental flights. * Sekkaeatanaeaeane * * | |@ Facts About Frank Champion seeeeeeeeeeee the | tons, ground 1 volplaned down| If you bave ever ridden in anig within yr feet of the . |) automobile faster than 60 miles an/|@ flew at about 1.400 feet and the/hour you have some idea of the! aeroplane seemed to want to climb |s@naation of fast flying, exceptleag eae eee eee kaee still higher. To get away I headed that you must imagine the auto- 5 rota bs fnto the wina in the opposite di-|™obile is in the air. The higher) SAN BERNARDINO, Cal, Sept. rection from my course and made | YOu get the slower the objects be-|5.—Willlam Benson started laugh- quite a long sweep tnat way before low you appear to move. In a|ing yesterday when some friends turning toward the ocean. Then, |Onoplane tl.) aviator does not see | played a Joke on him, He laughed when I had circled and started with the objects directly under him, but {aul night and until an early hour to the wind I let her go. With the jf course, as he goes higher his|day, when physicians, called in by ‘wind to shove you along you have |Tange of vision enlarges to a cor-| relatives to save hia life, succeeded {ts assistance in addition to the |Tesponding degree. lee conetiog kiss “power of the engine, and you gain | ———— speed accordingly. | When you take an aeroplane) through the afr at 98 miles an) jour you dont notice much about | how it feels; you are wrapped up) —_——$—$—_$<_— (Official Publication) ANCIAL tember, 1911 RESOURCES Loans and discounts $995,921.08 Overdratie eee 21 warrants and other The State furniture and res Other real estate owned Due from banks Cash on band Total 561,661.62 LIABILITIES Capital stock paid In $100,600.00 | wn Hivided profits to banke—deporite Deposits Certified checks Cashier's checks SEATTLE, WASHINGTON September 1, Mubseribed and sworn to before m: th day of September, 1911 (Heal) Ju JA Notary Public in and@ for tiv Washington, residing at Seattle Correct Attest WM. N. REDFIF D. B. PAIRLEY Directors. Loans and Discounts .........0..0s0c0ee Banking House, Furniture and Fixtures. , Other Resources ........0-064. : ‘ United States and other high grade bonds Warrants Reptember, 1911 RESOURCES Cash cn hend and due from other banks Loans and discounts § s9s,a0se3 | (verdratix 397.51 nds, warrants asd other aoe ‘securities : odrea | 12,250.60 461,380.15 4,100.51 | 88,192.46 ; : owe Camh on hand 114,811.45 | Capital Stock Paid in ....... fos Totes . Vises | Surplus and Undivided Profits. . LIABILITIES “apital stock paid in rplus fund Undivided profit» Due to vanke— deposits 4 56,667.46 Deposits 0... 3,988.187.16 Certified checks | 1.624.60 Cashier's Dividends Unpaid Deposits ........ c ye | ed bank, do at the | oregon iy heb ing statement is true tothe best of “my knowiedne and aay . VAY, Cashier Subscribed and Avorn to before me thix OFFICERS behing” of hatember. apis EK. L. GRONDAHL, President. A. Hv SOELBERG, Vice Pres, and Cashier. rigs Notary Public JOHN ERIKSON, Vice President. A. C. KAHLKE, Assistant Cashier. o a RAIA HR has Condensed Statement of Condition of of Seattle RESOURCES ST eee $ 100,000.00 We Invite Your Account Teeeeeee eee eee \* \* LA GRANI yr., Sept. 6 * lw The bull terrier owned by Dr. & *M. K. Hall, with another owned by bim, and a mate owned by Eugene (ood their fate last night wh were mistaken for wil the chicken yard of W eee | e who clubbed them to death, cate preying on his chickens The terriers were valuable, # especially those owned by Mr. @ Hall, and have taken several @ prizes. One of the dogs w stolen somé time ago and tal en to Chicago, where it won a firet prize. eee ette ean eene ‘MINISTERS CAITICISE + ANOK AN WILSON eeeeeeeeeeeeeeee Resolutions criticising Secre- Knox for sanction: ere’ congr next month, a manding that Secretary of Agr- ire Wilson refuse to pre eee renee BOSTON HAS SEA MONSTER & BOSTON, Sept. 5.—There was on exhibition Lone wharf today one of the strang nt sea monsters ever seen In Roston. In appearance ft in « cross between a seal and a tur tle. Ite weight is more than 1000 pounds, and it le about 120 years old. It bas the head of a turtle, but a tall ike a, seal and ie covered with a” heavy oblong shell, The un- usual specimen was brought into Boston the steamer Prince Artbur, from Yarmouth, N. B. ReRAATHANREREHEH DANIEL MEYER, piea SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 2 eeeeeeeseeeeeeeene er and financier, is dead at hie home here today after (Ines, Meyer, who came to Sap | Francisco at the time of the gold |rush in 1851, amassed # largé for- tune and was almost as well known jas in the state of his adoption .He «|7e" 87 years of age. A tourjet, while traveling thfough Arizona, noticed the dry; dualy ap: one of the natives, | “Rein?” The native smiled Rain? Why, say, partner, y |bullfrogs in this yere town over [five years old that hasn't learned to awim yet.” Bank 1911 $123,277.88 5,363.77 263,950.95 $1,169,000.54 15,353.24 160,00 3,487.30 $1,169,000.54 Music b Something Behind Caves ACH, H& WASS LEFT HISS PHONOGRAPH, +4 CAN HAFF SOME MOOSICK BEFORE HE SENDS For iD. D LIKE DOT FELLOW Council Refuses to Cut Expenses Katherine Cecil ‘The elty counct! yesterday refused ;feated. | | to cut down the estimated expend | ture for the city for the Counciiman Griffiths ® | duced a motion arbitrarily reducing | work with committee's extimate League, *) |® TERRIERS, NOT WILOCATS #) Instead of a cut, Councilman War- | COmInE | added to the estimate. to be used in hiring four nurses to the Ants Tuberculosis When getting Thurston told the court she would forgive Thurston if he would r He refused to do #0 on the grounds unworthy. He also complained that his wife was mak ing more money out of her literary efforts than he was with his * | trom Spiker in North La Grande, * | Erickson seconded it the other members expressed their believing them to be wild # | willingness to cut wherever possible * but declared their unwillingness to make an arbitrary cut of nearly one half million after the council bers had arrived at the present throughout th! ing Bill,” went out hunting yeater. | vie For hours he shot at doves without bringing down one then learned that his friends taken all the shot out of his shells He roared with ‘joke on himeelf and could not stop. A motion by Erickson to reduce| All night his sides shook and tears the budget by $500,000 was aino de rolled down his face. In 1907 Thurston left his wife, de had claring that for the |terary work it was necessary for him to go to the very bottom He took up a residence in PARIG—France by Schaefer Y Condo Author, Is Found Dead CORK, Ireland, Sept. 6. ine Cecil Thurston, author of “The Masquerader’ and other works, was 4 in her hotel here been known | She had been iiving » her divorce frou Thurston, whom she married in divorce Mrs. urn and Germany effected a -setile ment of the Moroccan dispute and is of the agreement reach ed will be made public shortly, ac cording to @ jeading article in the Figaro today STATEMENT OF THE CONDITION German-American Bank of Seattle ORGANIZED JAN. 19TH, 1910 REGOURCES First National Bank Seattle, Washington SEPTEMBER 1, 1911 STATEMENT RESOURCES Loans and Discounts .. SEPT. 167, 1911. Loans, discounts and overdrafts Furniture and fixtures ... Real Estate, Cash and Exchange urniture and Fixtures 1,065,613.95 Capital stock Surplus and undt Capital Stock . Undivided Profits Accounts of banks, corporations and individuals solicited Small accounts are welcome. You can start a savings account with $1.00, Open Saturdays from 6-8 p. m. ERNEST CARSTENS, Pres. JOHN E. OSTROM, Vice Pres. L J. RILEY, Cash. H. ROHWER, Asset. Cash. Seeeeeeeeeseeene M, A. ARNOLD, President J. A. HALL, Vice Pres. M. MeMICK SS, Vice President and Cashier. C. A. PHILBRICK, Assistant Cashier, The National Bank of Commerce OF SEATTLE——— STATEMENT OF CONDITION At the Close of Business September 1, 1911 RESOURCES fel Meyer, well-enown pioneer bank. | Mogering | in the money markets of the East) pearance of the country. “Doesn't! \it ever rain around bere?” he asked | Loans and Discounts State, County and City Warrants .. Real Estate, Furniture and Fixtures Foreign Government, R. R. and Other Bonds.... U. S. Government Bonds to Secure Circulation . U. S$. Government Bonds to Secure U. S. Deposits Cash in Vault Cash in Banks other securities ture and fixtures Due from banks $14,284,099.68 Exchange for $ 1,000,000.00 Surplus and Profits Acceptances Under Letters ¢ $8,760,191.90 Surplus fund Undivided profits | Due to banks—deposits Dividends unpaid . United States 11,877,105.05 $142284,099 68 | Certified checks Cashier's checks Reserved for taxes ({n- cluding certificates of money OFFICERS BACKUS, President R. R, SPENCER, First Vice President. RALPH S, STACY, Vice President. J. A. SWALWELL, Vice President. CLARK, Cashier A. SPENCER, Assistant Ci : Assistant Cas {. W. BROWNELL, Assistant Cashier DIRECTORS FE. E, AINSWORTH F. BACKUS LeROY M. BACKUS F. H. BROV W. C. BUTLER W. G. COLIANS T. A. DAVIES J.D. FARRELI JOSHUA GREEN H. C. HENRY CHAS. S. MIL jabove named R. R. SPENCER J. A. SWALW MORITZ THOMSEN . GEO. W. 'TRIMBI HUGH C, WALLACE M, H, YOUNG SAVINGS DEPARTMENT &. J, LORD. i" Correct—Attest: F. M. SULLIVAN, J. H. KANE, 331,630.41 41,280.81 300,000.00 60,000.00 12,594.17 99,995 00 384,298.29 (Official Publication) REPORT OF THE FINANCIAL CONDITION OF THE American Savings Bank & Trust Company Located at Seattle, state of Wash- ington, at the close of business on the 5th day of September, 1911. RESOURCES Loans and discounts. . .$1,2 98.30 estate Pes 78.45 and 266,631.54 furnt- 626,298.90 . 15,417.28 eek 457,699.87 other other 9,509.64 clearing eerrrereriys i) 165,351.77 $2,888,678.55 LIABILITIES. Capital stock paid in 200,000.00 300,000.00 1,500.00 |Reserved for interest... 5,800.00 88,678.55 State of Washington, county of Betts, cashier of the ban®, do solemnly | swear that the foregoing statement is true to the best of my knowledge G. K, BETTS, Cashier. Subscribed and sworn to before jme this Sth day of September, 1911. | (Notarial seal) HARRY WELTY, Notary Public, Directors, i

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