OCR Interpretation


Payette enterprise. (Payette, Canyon Co., Idaho) 1909-1935, January 16, 1919, Image 3

Image and text provided by Idaho State Historical Society

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn89055199/1919-01-16/ed-1/seq-3/

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Reserve District No 12.
No. H075
REPORT OF THE CONDITION
of The Payette National Bank, at Payette, in the
State of Idaho, at the close of business, Dec. 31st, 1918
RESOURCES
J03.3ll.l7
207.0«
*225.381.08
Loan«
<1 Di scon nth
.*225,381.08
Total Loans..
«1 Note* and bills r«-(!i*<'outiled, other than bank acceptance
«old
22 069 91
_22,Of 9 «I j
57a
Overdrafts »11
.207.08 ...
Ii-r limn I.ihi.TU Bonrls, but Including II S certificate« of Indebtedness*:
circulation, par value
of indebtedness pledged as collateral for
r bills payable..
• 1 < rtit! ate , of Indebtedness owned and unpledged
5 (J. 8. Bond*,
75,000.00
IT, H. bn
Is Ue|
ited to sec
U 8 bond.
d
:i:rt iflcatc
6 . 000.00
8,000 oo
>th
Statj»
•.oo
88 ,(
U.8.bonds a
6 Liberty 1
Lib. , ty Loans bonds, 3 1-2. t and i i-4 per cent, pledged to secure
i .Stair or other deposits or bills payable...
Bonds
.15 000.00 l5.ooo.oo
4 Bonds, securities, etc. other than U. 8.
Bonds ami «ecu
« is,[literal 1er Slate or oilier deposits
lies pledged
eluded, or bill-, payable .
__6.031.52
•Hies, Oiber than U. n. bonds, not including slocks,;owned,unpledged.
. 6,972.70
postal
tec I
/
13.0M.22
.2,5oo,oo
2,300.00
Titles etc., other than U. 8 .
ve Bank Stock..
Total bondt
Stock« other than Federal Kef
block of Federal Reserve bank. 60per cent of »ubicription
*24,700.00
Value of Banking house,
Fruity in banking house.
Furniture and fixtures ...
24.700.Oq
4,415.40
2 , 000 .«
14,486.58
27,010.05
iking bouse_____
itb Federal Reserve Bank_.......--
I* t amounts due irom national banks__
16 Net amount due from bank and bankers and trust companies, otherthan ln-.
Kcal estate owned oilier than b
13 Lawful
1!
Liusli in vaults ami
710 «6
1,995.96
eluded In 13 and 15.....
1 1 Checks on banks in same city or town as reporting bank other than item 17
total of itc
29.746,67
15, 16 and 18
lidt* of city or town of reporting bank and other
9 on hanks located
111,63
3,750.00
h items
ith II. s, Treasurer, and due from U. S. Treasurer.
•d but not collected, approximate, on notes and bills receivable
fund
KedemutiOfi
Interest eari
3,765.00
not pant due _
Other a-velrt, if any
ll,949 22
.*499,246 97
Total
LIABILITIES
*75,000 00
2 , 100.00
8,792.68
Capital nlock paid in...
Surplus fund.
.. 8,792.68
v of maturity and not
Undivided profils
•redited in advai
it collected
Intereot »
65.<
d,
ite
e&rnt
Circulât i
tpp
75,000.00
Ml*Landing .. ______
►tber than bmk deposit», subject to.reserve, deposits pay
no
Demand deposits:
able within 30 days
1.2,303.86
31 Individual deposits subject to check
35 Cert! acutes of deposit due
borrowed _ ..
30 days, other than for money
less trim
13,535.51
bo.oo
5,886.10
36 Certified Checks.
checks
i islanding.
37 Cashi
3d Slate, county, »r other municipal depotitssecured by pledge of assets of
25,440.95
this bauk
3,000,00
27 25
Dividends unpaid
Ollier del
id deposits.
:
bunk deposits subject to reserve, items
_ 200,773.79
payable after 30 days, or subject to 30
vings.
Total demand deposits, other thi
39.
1
tc Deposit*, *ubj(
da y I
to Keærvt
mure notice and p<»tal
42 Certificates uf deposit#, other than for ino nt *7 borrowed.
45 Other time deposits....
Total of til
32,593 04
15,102.55
dt-poMl*
bjeet to Reserve Items 42. 45
Total.
rediscount« including those with Federal Reserve bank
.47,995.59
i,
*409,246.97
Liabilities
see item Id .
rfi contingent liabilities. 57a
fc* jale of Idaho, County of Payette,
1. C. h. LAR»ON, Cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swear that the above
statement is true to ihe best of my knowledge and belief.
22.069.91
22.069.91
C. E. LARSON, cashier
Subscribed and sworn to before me this 13th day of Jan, 1919
F. H. LYON, Notary Public
For Idaho, Residence/Payette, Idaho
Correct Attest:— O. H, Avey, J. A. Lauer, H W. Douglass
SEAL
Directors
Hank pinned
the bee on Ed
for fair
J
r.
0
Ed never could see any
chew but a big hunk of
oversweet tobacco. "You
satisfaction without extra
cost, I'll buy your plug for
a month." Hanged ii Ed
didn't walk in next day,
gTab off a plug of Gravely
and throwdown his money
just like a little man!
take this plug of Real
Gravely,''says Hank. "Take
a small chew—two or three
squares. See how long it
holds its pure, rich taste.
If you don't admit that
Gravely'gives you tobacco
It toes further— that's why you can ...
the good taste of this class of tobacco wi t h
out extra cost.
t*t
PEYTON BRAND
Real Gravely Chewing Plug
each piece packed in a pouch
P'-B-GRAVELY TOBA-CCQ^CO., DANVILLE VA
.1 Ai^sicm
B
Good Bread Suggestions
Warm the Flour
Warm the Utensils
Use Good Yeast
Mix with Lukewarm Water
Keep yeast batter and dough in a warm room
and away from from drafts.
The more you work the sponge or dough when
Kneading, the whiter it becomes.
The less you handle the dough when shaping
into loaves the better.
Bake in a steady moderate over and use
Payette Flour.
The Payette Mills
Butter Wraps Printed Here
MANDALAY BEST IN WINTER
Burmese Capital Known to All Whites
in India as an Ideal Cold
Weather Resort
Doubtless it will surprise a great
many persons to learn that Mandalay,
, famed of song and story, Is little more
than a half century old. It was built
I In 1856 by King Mlndon, who made It
I the capitul of what was then Indepen
dent Burmah.
Something more than 90# feet above
j the level of the sea, Mandalay sits
tightly upon a stretch of tableland
just In front of the Shun hills. The
city proper extends over about five
I squnre miles, but the military district
! of Mandalay covers a more extensive
! area.
With the British soldier, Mandalay
I has taken on a great deal of the char
acter of a vacation resort. In the tor
rid months of the Burmese summer
the heat becomes very great, some
times making the thermometer rise to
119 degrees In the shade; but relief Is
easily found In the adjacent hills. The
British sanitary officers have succeed
! ed In exterminating all the fevers and
other diseases with which the climate
was once Infested.
In winter—or as near to winter as It
gets—Mandalay becomes a semlpam
dlse, for the temperature stays at
about 50 degrees. Happy the British
soldier who Is assigned to this garri
son.
!
j

Like as not he sits of afternoons un
derneath the shadow of the Monlmien
pagoda gazing dreamily at the fibtillas
on the Irrawaddy.
"Can't you hear their paddles chunk
in' from Rangoon to Mandalay?"
Or perhaps he looks at the distant
mountains, fabled to be so rich In ala
baster and rubles. And very often the
whole picture as drawn by Kipling Is
complete, even to the temple bells and
the Burmese maiden.
MADE SACRIFICE OF RULERS
Somewhat Remarkable Form of Lim
ited Monarchy Was That Practiced
by Tribe of the Caucasus.
"At a certain stage of social evolu
tion," says Sir James Frazer In his j
article entitled "The Killing of the
Khazar Kings," "not a few races ap
pear to have been In the habit of put
ting their kings to death, either at
the end of a fixed term, or on the
failure of the king's health and j
strength, or simply whenever a great
public calamity, 6uch as drought or
famine had befallen the country." ;
Among tribes which have practiced ;
this remarkable form of limited mon
archy must be Included the Khazars i
or Khozars. For some nine hundred i
years this now almost forgotten tribe,
from their home in the spurs of the
Caucasus and along the western shore !
of the Caspian—called after them the I
Sea of the Khazars—played a great j
part In history on the Enropean-Asian j
borderland. It Is certainly remark- I
able that a people which had reached
such a high level of civilization and
culture should have practiced legalized
regicide. But the evidence collected
by Sir James Frazer from a very wide
survey of medieval literature leaves
no doubt on the matter.
Passing of the Tall Hat.
The quaint tall hat which Is now
only seen in Wales, or on the heads of
stage witches in pantomimes, was
originally the fashionable head-dress
for Indies during the reign of Queen
Anne. A curious result of that fashion
can, or could lately, be found at the
West-Country vicarage once held by
Lancelot Blackburne. the retired buc
caneer who became archbishop of
York. There the lintels of the door
ways are, or were, abnormally high,
to enable Mrs. Blackburne to go from
room to room without fear of damage
j to her hat.
Auctioneering
:
4 r
We know
our
business
V
v
If you are figuring on a sale
Le Us Here From You
We make a specialty of
Lwestock sales
J. M. Swanson & Son
Payette,
Idaho
Phone 118-M
JL
Ask the Bar beri
at the
STAR BARBER SHOP
ABOUT R. D. X.
for Dandruff
Cure or your Money Back
Guaranteed by the
Koken Barber Supply Co.
J. L. SMITH, Prop
Could Not Live Without Birds.
The value of birds to man is based j
principally on their feeding habits.
Their greatest help Is through their
activity in eating harmful Insects,
their eggs and larvae,
constant aid, we would be powerless
to protect our trees and crops from
the ravages of caterpillars, beetles,
borers and such creatures.
:
Without this
Good Alibi for the Bee.
That bees injure fruit Is h common
belief In some quarters, but investiga
tions recently carried out In It^ily
prove It to be without foundation.
Bees cannot perforate the skin of
fruit, and the damage attributed to
them is really due to birds, wind, hall,
hornets, wasps and certain other in
sects. Bees are, in fact, of much bene
fit to the orchardist, because they ef
fect the cross-pollenizntion of fruit
trees.—Popular Science Monthly.
$1.50
By special arrangement
we can offer you a
One Year Subscription
to
The Payette Enterprise
of Payette, Idaho
j
»
and a
Oie Year Subscription

to
THE IDAHO FARMER
for only
!
$1.50
This Special Price for
both papers is good only
for a short time
I
'
i
Use This Order Blank
The Payette Enterprise,
Payette. Idaho
Enclosed And $1.50 for
which send me The Payette
Enterprise and The Idaho
Farmer for One Year each.
Name
Post Office..
State
OC=JO<
1
Ti
Brothers
MOTOR CAR
-

Right when it began, the car has
been growing steadily better
Public
i
*
confidence ba3
sistently increased.
co li
lts perforra
has steadily improved.
:
;
ance
Ü
i
It will pay you to visit us and examine this car
The gasoline consumption is unusually low
The tire mileage is unusually high
I
*
5
R. B. MORSE & CO.
WEISER, IDAHO
:
-
:
:
:
*
$
n

-3
-
I
r ^ s
j.
r.
COAL
W
\*
b
\
If
wish to announce to the People
of Payette and Vicinity
that
We
4
we have purchased the FUEL BUSI
NESS of the Maule Coal Company , and will
be ready on January 15th, to fill your orders
for the FAMOUS CASTLE GATE COAL
PAYETTE VALLEY REX SPRAY CO., LTD.
Spray Materials, Fuel and Wood Pipe
Com «.J.
Combs have been used in the toiift
since very ancient times. The Greeks,
tlie Egyptian and the Roman ladies
used them to arrange and hold up their
hair; even ladies among fhe Swiss lake
dwellers seem to have been familiar
fcrith them. Some of these were made
•»f wood, some of bone, of horn or of
ivory. Specimens have often been
found in recent years.
a».««.* :>•
Sts' V' -V
J. A. Lauer & Brother
UNDERTAKERS and EMBALMER
GLENN G LAND ON, Funeral Director and License
embalmer Lady Assistant When Desired
T
i 4 ■
I it is»...

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