NG. 8801 REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF THE SECCND NATIONAL BANK of Meyersdale, Pa. At the Close of Business, June 30, 1916. RESOURCES 1. a Loans and discounts............... $365,076.93 Totalloans ...cco vvave----- 365,076.93 2. Overdrafts, unsecured,....... $363.96 363.96 3. U. S. Bonds: : a U. S. bonds deposited to secure cir- culation (par value)..... tases eeu 65,000.00 b U. 8S. bonds pledged to secure U. S. deposits (par value) .......... 5,000.00 f U. 8. bonds owned and unpledged. 2,000.00 g Primium on U. 8S. bonds......... . 231.87 i Total U. 8. bonds............ 72,231.87 4. b Bonds other than U. 8. bonds pledg- * ed to secure postal savings Seposite 7,308.70 e Securities other than TU. 8S. bonds (not including stocks) owned un- pledged ..............ooiiiiiaail 85,044.80 Totol bonds, securities, etc .. 92,353.50 6. a Subscription to stock of Federal Re- : serve’ Bank..... ...... 3 00 ) b Less amount unpaid........ 3,300.00 3,300.00 7. a Value of banking house (if unen- cumbered)... ic. iii ian ain 55,413.45 | b Equity in banking house .......... 55,413,45 8." Furniture and fixtures .......... .... 7,961.05 9. Real estate owned other than bank- ing house ...............s. hiueunes 8,974.58 10. Net amount due from Federal Re- serve Bank ............. . ..ai.uih 12,600.00 11. a Net amount due from approved re- serve agents in New York, Chicago and St Louis. ‘ ae saesbanuanis eo EES 434.18 b Net amount due from approyed re- serve agents in other reserve citles 30,999.08 31,433.26 12. Net amount due from banks and bankers (other than included in 10 : ori)... ......... dein is oiaiy Fie ss sees 3,004.43 15. a Outside checks and other cash items 157.63 b, Fractional currency, nickels, cents 108.92 266.55 16. Notes of other national banks........ 500.00 19. Coin 2nd certificates. ................ 18,350.60 20. Legai-tender notes... ..........c..... 1,000.00 21. Redemption fund with U. 8. Treasur- i er and due from U. S. Treasurer. . .3,250.00 Total... iei. snes Sepia besos $671,080.18 LIABILITIES 25. Oapital stock paidin..... ........... $65,000.00 26. Surplus fand........... . 0a... a... 0,000 00 115.000.00 27, Undivided profits.......... $13.187.97 ) b Reserved for interes...... 2,775.00 15.962.97 c Less current expenses, interest, andtaxes paid ...................... 11,136.71 4,826.26 28. Circulating notes outstanding........ ,000.000 32. Dividends unpaid ......... Tat ahaa 1,020.00 838. Individual deposits subject to check. 157,456.99 34. Certificates of deposit due in less than 30days .......... .........4.. 4,082,56 35. Certified checks ...... .............. 310-81 37. United States deposits. .............. 5,000.00 38. Postal savings deposits.............. 3,406.38 Total demand deposits, Items 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38,39 and 40 ....... 170,256.74 41. Certificates of deposit..... ......... 89,367.06 43. Other time deposits.......... . ..... 226,610,13 Total of time deposits, Items 41, . 42, and 48 ............ Fiesseesannnny 815,977.18 Total....... Cones is ions nene $671,080.18 STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA, COUNTY OF SOMERSET ss: I, J. H. Bowman, Cashier of the above named bank do .sol- emnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief, Sh esl we ; Lato J. H.. BOWMAN, Cashie. Subscribed and sworn to be- Correct—aAttest: ; fore me this 11th dsy July, 1916. N. B. MILLER, . . Robert Cook 'W. H. HABEL, p My com. expires Mar. 26, 1919 AS SAS A NS NNN Sm, r=. JOHN N. COVER. That brisk, lively tang of a “Bull” Durham ciga- rette is bracing as ozone—as snappy and vigorous as the swing of the stroke-oar on the winning crew. You get gimp and go and satisfaction out of your smoke when you “roll your own” with “Bull” Durham. GENUINE ‘BULL DURHAM SMOKING TOBACCO Thousands of men say that the first time they ever smoked a really satisfying cigarette was when they “rolling their own” with “Bull” Durham. started It's very little trouble to learn how to roll a cigarette of “Bull” Durham. Just keep tryir« for a few timesand you'll get the knack. en you can enjoy to the ful that mellow-sweetflavor and unique aro- ma which make “Bull” Durham the mostwonderful tobaccointheworld. Ask for FREE 2 Package of ““papers’” ae ) vars with each Gc sack. i 3 GENUINE" ERIN ~~ KEYSTONE PaA3RAPHS_||[ionTana wan may On Wednesday night the war depart ment made know. the list of 29 regular army officers authorized to aec- cept commissions in the national guards’ of the various states. The foi- lowing were appointed to the Pennsyl- vania guard: Captain George V. H. Moseley, general staff, to colonel and chief of staff; Lieutenant Walter Kreuger, Third infantry, to lieutenant colonel Tenth infantry; Captain James B. Keniper, infantry, to lieutenant col- onel Eighth Pennsylvania infantry, and Captain Samuel R. Greaves, cavalry, to lieutenant colonel First Pennsylva nia infantry. A posse of Uniontown citizens, after an all-day search of the weeded sec- tions surrounding Uniontown, failed to find any trace of the assailant of Leo Britt, aged nine, whose mutilated bods Wi was found on the outskirts ¢f Union-|" town Tuesday morning. Finger marks around the neck indicated he had been strangled. A railroad train crew found the body lying in weeds. A razor, covered with blood, was found near the body. The police learned that the boy was seen last in com- pany of a tall negro. THOMAS J. WALSH. After completing 1,250,000 eighteen- pound shrapnel shells for the British government in less than ) months, from the ‘time the order was received and finding no more business of that kind in sight, the Westing- Charles E. Hughes. burgh announced preparations are un- der way to dismantle its munition making plants, sell the expensive ma- Montana in 1893. GET HUGHES’ SEAT Photo by American Press Assogigtion. President Wilson is considering the appointment of Senator Thomas J. fifteen | Walsh of Montana for associate justice of the supreme court to succeed Senator Walsh is recognized as one of the ablest Demo- house Air Brake company in Pitts- | cratic lawyers in the senate. He is a 5 native of Missouri, having moved to chinery and let out nearly 2,500 men and girls who have been employed sin that work. An arson plot is said to have been revealed by the arrest of Herman Iszak, whose grocery store was de- stroyed by fire in Connellsville. Iszak, the police say, confessed that THE WAR burgh to towns in Pennsylvania and West Virginia, where, according to the alleged confession, stores were burned for insurance. A McKeesport man is said to have been implicated. Peter Norkumis, with $150 in his pocket, dived from a window in the Buffalo flyer on the Pennsylvania railroad east of Sunbury, rather than forfeit a ticket for Wilkes-Barre, after he found he had mistakenly boarded a train for Harrisburg. The train was kumis is in the Harrisburg hospital with a broken shoulder and leg. He find immense task, sip will recover. : clainisd Militia artillery units not ordered to the Mexican border are being h mobilized in Tobyhana, Pa. under or- Raiser ia 88 ders. from Major General Leonard Fish ‘camp. 2 was struek’ by a special train on the| a funy Pennsylvania “railroad near Sunbury,| the impsstant town ef old soniuf Mr. Neidig; Sarah Neidig, The injured were also children of Mr. Neidig. Pittsburgh’s one case of infantile pa- reported. ralysis, James Platt, is improving, ac-| ment of health. anything "approaching an epidemic,” said Dr. Burns. One man. was shot and killed and three others were wounded seriously when colored strikebreakers and white longshoremen who have been on strike clashed at the Reading railway pier in Philadelphia. The dead man was Thomas Kenny, white, a union striker. are now full of the dead. lines. Loretto, a century old, the birth-| varians guffered very heavily. place in Ld necessitated by the great influx of { down by machine guns. laborers employed by centractors. seriously, when a trolley car ran wild on a steep hill on the outskirts of that, Philadelphia and freight trolley. gers were women aml children. vielding to superior Pardoe coal mine, in the eastern part of Mercer , county; has been closed after being worked continuous- ly for fifty years. Practically all the coal has been mined in that, vicinity. ern fighting. mans repulsed the heavy losses to the latter. Russians Domald Rowland, aged twenty-two, attacks south of was drowned in the Allegheny river Russian other youths were rid: .& capsized. sive early this year. James McDermitt, Jr., of Uniontow= an assistant mine foreman, was drowned in the M nongahela river at Sunshine, Pa. HY cramps while swimming. ers helow Kolki. ¥ Tr 1a'y sagan ree n saarts Over 2,000 emplcyees at the mill: | Russian war office asserts. of the Aetna Explosive company at Emporium went on strike as a direct result of a fatal explosion at the mills | northwest of Kolomea, and the A GENERAL SURVEY OF The big drive of the allies on the groceries had been shipped from Pitts-| Western front is being conducted with | the same violence that characterized ' the start of the offensive more than a week ago. Continued gains are report- ed by the French and English both north and south of the Somme. Coun- ter attacks by the Germans have been beaten off and in only one instance have the Teutons succeeded in forcing back the enemy and then only for a short distance on a small front. The French are ahead of the Eng- lsh and have halted their march along | the southern banks of the Somme to going forty-five miles an hour. Nor- give their allies an opportunity to ' straighten the ine. This the English | thrown his femous Pras- guards: mio Be ‘fight agaist the their ‘part, are" within ‘two miles of | Four persons were killed and two| Peronne, the Mey to the Teuten posi- others injured when their automobile | tidhs in’ thik} territory. The Eaglish are. beyond ' La Basses, | hav taken Pa, The dead are: J. B. Boyer, George | merous other less import#ht towns and Neidig., Charles Neidig, nineteen-year- villages have been taken by the allies. At one stage of the great offensive | seventeen; daughter of Mr. Neidig.| the whole front from Belgium te the Somme was under intense allied bom- bardment and in the sector held by the Belgian troops some activity was The German attacks on the French cording toa statement by Dr. R. Gl gront are described as entailing the Burns, acting director of the depart- severest losses. for the enemy. One “No new cases have| o¢ these . attacks, made between Es- been reported and I do not look fof | 4rees and Belloy-en-Santerre, involved the attackers’ crossing swamps: and wide tracts of flat ground without shelter of any kind. The French turned on their light batteries ana machine: guns and cut the Teutnns | down by the thousands. The marshes Piles of bodies can be seen from the French The Seventeenth division of Ba place of Charles M. Schwab, opened | regiments attacked in massed forn.a- the first town lockup in its history.| tien. "At first the French fire curtain Phe steel ki is building a summer | was sufficient to hold their charges x and the lockup is| but some got through and were cut There were six charges. Then the French charged with the bayonet and put the re- Seventeen persons were injured, one mainder of the brigade to flight. The German war office admitted enemy crashed into al gorces the Tetiton forces in the region ! Most of the passen- of Czartorysk, in Volhnia, “abandons” | certain lines” further north, in tl Kolki area the mest impertant field of battle at present in the whole east- Berlin claims the Ger- - it is both by Lomdon and Paris, iat the Germans have Concentrated | their attatks on, the English. The Wood, commander of the department | 508 Somme. | of the east, U.S. A. ‘The purpose alot rE the t stenddd Be goes Sa.mabllisation is to tesch the militia or gare ¢ German’ st gome. en , the use of : big -guns. United 5 Spertant Germiln s@tes' States. officers are in charge of the |POIfits DERI hd Sermea isos use Nu- Nh \ N The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has All Counterfeits, Imitations and ¢¢ Just-as-good *’ are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experim borne the signature of and has been made under his per= sonal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. ents What is CASTORIA QCastoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paree goric, Drops and Scothing Syrups. contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Diarrhoea. It is pleasant. It For more than thirty years it Troubles and It regulates the Stomach and ‘Bowels, ‘assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural! sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALwAYs “> 3ears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY, e TI Investigation Proves that various disease germs have their breeding-place in the ‘waste products of the body. Don’t, then, let your bowels clog and throw these harmful germs back on the blood. Take no chances with serious illness. Keep your bowels free, and the bile regulated with BEECHAM'S PILLS which promptly and surely relieve constipation, indigestion, biliousness and sick headache. They are compounded from drugs of ve 3 origin—harmless and not -habit-forming. The experience of —e generations show that Beecham's Pills prevent disease arid are oe A Great Aid to Health | Sold by fists throughout the world. In boxes; 10c, 28c. When building a home for rentifig purposes remember Jl the charm, the potential force which these two words ‘have to the seeker of a comfortable, convenient ' offi: 1g - A pleasing bathroom may easily be ., the deciding factor in the ‘fénter’s choice of a new home. For the small home or richest residence we recommend “Standard” plumbing fixtures for pleasing appearanee and durability. Two with | Field Mar- | shal von Hindenburg also beat off Lake . Narotch and northeast of Smorgen, * near the Aspinwall pumping station | the same points where the Russians when a canoe in which he and two | launched their vain and costly offen- Petrograd, on the other hand, says! more than 300 officers and 7.415 men, mostly wounded, were taken prison- 8 : All counter cttacks © ‘was seized With{ ,; the Germans on various pd#nts of the long batile line were repulsed, the Vienna admits the fall of the city of | Sadzawka, on the Pruth, eleven miles with- drawal of the Anstro-Hungarian troops Saturday. = to a line some four miles to the west. A valuable horse belonging to-M. W. | Attacks against this new front were Calligan, a gauger for the Standard repulsed. 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