THURSDAY, JANUARY 17, J PAGE SIX fb&id SectionJ THE WAYNES VILLE- MOUNTAINEER Charter No. 6554 Reserve District No. 5 Report of Condition of The First National Bank Of Waynesville in (be State of North Carolina, at the Close of Business On December 31st, 1945, Published in Response to Call Made By Comptroller of the Currency, Under Section 5211, 1 V. S. Revised Statutes. ASSETS Loans and discounts (including $1,524.49 overdrafts) $1,245,633.59 U. S. Government obligations, direct and guaranteed 3.24S..r(i5 30 Obligations of States and political subdivisions 206.80U.00 Corporate stocks (including $3,000.00 stock of Federal Reserve bankl 3.000.00 Cash, balances with other banks, including reserve bal ance, and cash items in process of collection 1.453,425.43 ,; Bank promises owned $7,000.00, furniture and fixtures $3,000.00 10,000 00 Real estate owned other than bank premises 1.00 Other assets 2,029 41 ! TOTAL ASSETS LIABILITIES Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corpo rations Time deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corpo rations Deposits of U. S. Government i including postal savings Deposits of States and political subdivision s Other deposits (certified and cashier's checks, etc.) Total Deposits S6. 002. 843 23 Other liabilities 6,000.00 TOTAL LIABILITIES CAPITAL ACCOUNTS Capital Stock Surplus Undivided profits Reserves 'and retirement account for preferred stock Total Capital Accounts Total Liabilities ;;nd Capital Accounts 6.008.843.23 50.000 00 60,000 00 100.611.50 40.000.00 250.611.50 6 259.454 73 MEMORANDA Pledged assets land securities loaned' 'book value): U. S. Government obligation:;, direct and guaranteed. pledged to sc; urc tli-eotis and ,thtr liabilities 1,757.000.00 Other assets pledged to si cure deposits and other liabili ties (including noU s and bills rediscounted and securities sold under re iir( ha. e agreement i 117.403 23 TOTAL Secured liabilities: Deposits secured by pledged assets pursuant to require ments of law TOTAL 1.874 403.23 1,865.106.92 1,865,166.92 State of North Carolina. County of Haywood, ss: I, JAMES T. NOL.WI). cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. .IAMES T. NOLAND, President-Cashier. Correct Attest: J. II. WAY. JR. J .11. WOODY, L. N. DAVIS, Directors. Sworn to and subscribed before me this 10th day of January, 1946. ELSIE McCRACKEN. Notary Public. COFFEE mill liiriwB Let Us Kelp You Own Your Home . . . We can lend you money to protect and conserve your home by making needed repairs, buying homes, re financing homes. Loans available immediately. Buy Shares In Our New Series Now! HAYWOOD HOME i BisildiHg and Loan ASSOCIATION MOMMA TENSS AS KI5 TRIAL OPENS i "l w ' j ' ! & . V... 4 i I S 4 ' 1 $0,259,454.73 ; 3.074.713.69 1.030.801.73 1,529,338.94 335.827.98 32,160.89 .V 1 -i.Eli-i,-n- ..--,-,frr mflft"JB LEANING FORWARD to hear witnesses bein tbe Ions story of his war crimes, Gen. Masaharu Homma (second from left) indicates intense in terest in the proceedings as his trial opens in Manila. At left is Maj. John Sheen, Jr., Baltimore, Wd., who was appointed chief defense counsel, and, riijht, Ichiro Kjshimoto, interpreter. (i:l.niaiijtial 6'oundpioto) The Laws of a People HIGHLIGHTS ON THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON By NEWMAN CAMPBELL (The International Uniform Lesson on the above topic for Jan uary 20 is Exodus 19-23, the Mem ory Verse being Psalm 119:47, "I will delight myself in Thy com mandments, which I have loved." IN THE third month after the children of Israel had left Egypt and started their wanderings to ward the promised land, they en camped in the wilderness of Sinai, before Mount Sinai. Moses went up into the moun tain to commune with God, and the Lord called to him out of the mountain and told him what to tell the children of Israel. He wanted them to be reminded that He had brought them safely out of the land of Egypt, "Now, there fore, if ye will obey My voice in deed, and keep My covenant, then ye shall be a peculiar treasure unto Me above all people: for all the earth is Mine.'" They were to be a "kingdom of priests and an holy nation" if they would but obey their Lord who had done so much for them. Moses came down from the mount and called the elders of the people together and gave them the Lord's message. "And all the peo ple answered together, and said, All that the Lord hath spoken we will do." And Moses told the Lord of their promise. They were per fectly sincere, apparently, in their promise to obey. They undoubted ly underestimated the temptations to which they would be subjected, or overestimated their strength to withstand such temptations. The record of their lives following thi3 promise is surely one of frequent disobedience and backslidings. Moses Told to Sanctify the People r The Lord then directed Moses to prepare the people to hear Him speak. They were to sanctify themselves, and on the third day the Lord will come down in the sight of all the people upon Mt. Sinai." Bounds were to be set so that the people, even the priests, could not come too near, for they were . warned that if they even "touched the border" of the mount they would die. Moses went down and Sanctified the people and "it came to pass on the third day in the morning, that there were thun ders and lightnings, and a thick cloud upon the mount, and the Voice or the trumpet exceeding loud: so that all the people that tWere In the camp trembled." "And Mount Sinai was altogeth er on a smoke, because the Lord ,descended upon it in fire: and the emoke thereof ascended as the smoke of a furnace, and the whole jaount quaked greatly. AiJdwlien the trumpet sound ed long, and waxed louder and louder, Moses spake, and God an swered him by a voice." Moses and Aaron were the only ones who were permitted to come up to the mount, and God "spake all thc-e words, saying:" and then follow what we call the Ten Commandments. The first four have fo do with man's attitude to his God; the last with his human relations. "Thou shalt have no other god before Me," then "Thou .shalt not make unto thee any graven image," and shall not worship such. Command Against Swearing "Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain, for the Lord will not hold him guilt less that taketh His name in vain." Men and women, too surely have forgotten this com mandment, as you can hear any day by listening to almost any casual conversation on the street or public conveyance or even in our homes. The fourth commandment Is about keeping the SabY th holy, because the Lord made heaven and earth in six days and rested on the seventh and blessed it. Then follow the six rules of conduct to others: honor thy fa ther and mother; thou shalt not kill; thou shalt not commit adul tery; thou shalt not steal; thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor; and, finally, thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's possessions. Over three thousand years have passed since that time, but if these laws were obeyed in their entirety today, the world would be a very much better place in which to live. Wars would cease, and intolerance, envy, mal ice and all uncharitableness would be no more. Next the people were told the type of altar which would be ac ceptable to the Lord. It should be of stone, but not of hewn stone, for putting a tool to it would be to pollute it. And there were to be no steps for fear the priest as cending them would disarrange his garment and expose his limbs. The laws laid down for the con duct of the chosen people in all their dealings with their fellow men and women follow in chapters 22 and 23. Many apply to modern living; many do not, for the He brew society was fountled upon slavery. Both natives and foreign ers could be slaves. A Hebrew could become a slave through crime or indebtedness or through his father's rie.ht to sell him. "He could not be retained in slavery more than six years, however. We have no time to comment on them and it will be impossible for the teacher to do m ire than mention some of them, although they are most interesting. New Way to Make a Cake By BETSY NEWMAN IP yon step into a friend's kitchen some day and hear her earnestly counting, 1, 2, 3, up to 250 or so, don't think she's gone crazy. She is making a cake the new way, all in one bowl, and beat ing a number of strokes to each addition of her ingredients, ac cording to directions. Workers in research kitchens have been experimenting for a long time in new method; of mix ing cakes, with a saving of after baking washing. These adventures into new ways of doing things makes the home cook's life more interesting, and I, for one, love to try them out I'll give you one such cake recipe. Today's Men a Curried Veal Over Rice Frozen Grean Beanr Raw Vegetable Salad Yellow Cake Coffee or Tea Carried Veal 1 lb. cubed veal 1 e. diced 2 tbsp. chopped celery onion Be. stock 4 tbsp. floor Seasonings 1 tbsp. curry salt and pep powder per 2tbsp.Iat :,;-;p:";::'. Cube veal, add a little water and simmer until temler. Melt fat in deep frying pan, cnok onions in fat until light brown, arid celery, flour, curry powucr and blend smooth; add stock, stir to blend, then add seasonings and cook. When done, in about 20 mins., add veal and serve over boiled rice. Serves 6. Yellow Cake 2 c. cal;e flour 1 tsp. salt l'ie. sugar 1 c. milk less 2i tsp. baking 2 tbsp. powder 1 '4 tsp. vanilla Mi c. vegetable 2 eggs shortening Grease 2 deep 8-in. cake pans. You will need a moderately hot oven, 375 deg. F. Sitt the flour, measure and sift again into mix ing bowl with sugar, baking pow der and salt. Add shortening, then of the milk, then vanilla. Beat 150 strokes. Scrape bowl and spoon often throughout the mixing. Add eggs and beat 250 strokes; add remaining milk and beat 60 strokes. Turn into pans and bake 25 to 35 mins. at 375 deg. F. Let stand in pans 6 mins., then remove to cake rack to cool. If yon nse an electric mixer, add H of milk, then vanilla and beat on low speed 2 mins. Scrape bowl and beater; add eggs and remaining milk and beat at low speed 2 mins. ;-"--",'T-v ,. - Fort Bragg To Have A New Commander FORT BRAGG Maj. -Gen. J. W. Anderson took command of this military post recently, suceeding Maj. -Gen. A. C. McAuliffe. General Anderson was deputy commander of the Alaskan Depart ment until recently. He was in command of the Third Division when it participated in the invasion of North Africa. The new post commander is a native of Chattanooga, and a grad uate of the U. S, Naval' Academy. He transferred to the army a year after finishing Annapolis. General McAuliffe, hero of fias togne, where he commanded the 101st Airborne Division, is await in" orders. He had been in com mand here only since January 3. T.Sgt. Taul R. Shelton Discharged In Utah TSgt. Paul R. Shclton. son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy li. Shelton, of i Waynesville, RFD No. 2, has re cently been discharged at Fort Douglas, Utah. j He entered the service on Nov. 2, 1942, and was engaged in farm- ' ing a' thp time he enlisted in the ' armed forces. He served for 18 ! months in the Pacific theater, and was stationed on Okinawa and the Philippines. He was attached to the 382nd Infantry, 96th Division. , VETERANS FILL COLLEGES; OVERFLOW NOW FEARED WASHINGTON The American Council on Education reports that 125,000 veterans were enrolled in college on Dec. 1, and said 600,000 will be on catnpuses by next Sep tember. The Veterans' Administration warned that many schools mav be swamped under the load, which is due for a heavy increase when liberaizations of the G. I. bill be come law. By September t,he American Council said, over-all college en rollment will be up 25 per cent over the 1,400,000 students of the peak year 1939-'40. Dr. Francis J. Brown, the coun cil's specialist on veterans' affairs, reported that most of the nation's biggest colleges, including Yale, Harvard and Dartmouth, were al ready past their capacity to handle returning G.I.s. Dr. Brown revised a previous estimate of 2,000,000 G.I. students in all levels of education and said be now believes at least double that number eventually will take advantage of government paid schooling. Temporary housing is being put to use everywhere, Dr. Brown said. CALIFORNIA FOR ARABS IS 'PROPOSED' IN IRAQ I CAIRO Agitation in the United States for establishment of a Jew- , ish national home in Palestine drew a counter-proposal from a j member of the Iraq Parliament j recently. In a tongue-in-cheek gesture, the legislator urged that California be separated from the United States and converted into a national home for Arabs. The proposal, on which speedy parliamentary action was requested, was published promi nently in the Arab picas. "So" OT " MODERN WAY TO RELIEVE DISTRQf CHILDREN S COLDS Has Special Penetrating-Stimulating Action Penetrates Into uppsr branchial tubes with Its special medicinal vapors Stimulate. chest end back tm. tscea like a n. Harming poultica Warming, soothing Vicks VapoRub is the, known home remedy you can use to relieJ wf nf -hpf mirk RnH if- um1I . : and back at bedtime. Its special penetj stimulating action starts right to workJ keeps on wonungTOr noure to i hrino crand relief. Invites rest- mtrv ful sleep, too. Try it tonight. V VaSjI I'M NOT WORRYINGr ABOUT MY FUTURE I'LL TAKE CARE OF IT U TOMORROW. i?i XiguiA. -35 Pen Bottle TOMORROW MAY BE TOO LATE. WITH THE JEFFERSON STANDARD INVESTMENT PROTECTION PLAN, YOU CAN GUARANTEE PROTECTION FOR YOUR FAMILY, SAVINGS FOR YOURSELF, AND FACE THE FUTURE WiTH ASSURANCE. S. E. CONNATSER SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE ROUTE 2 WAYNESVILLE write orphoh: YOUR J EFFERSCi STANDARD M FOR DETAILS li NO COST TODH Use The Classified Advertisements ISSHnaBKKSaHB Burley Growers The Greene ville Market Sold of the 1942 Crop 10,367,852 Average $42.8 1943 Crop The finest ever grown 13,319.718 Average 49.1 1944 Crop 18,590,922 Average 46.11 1945 Crop Up to the present 11 065,510 Average 44.35 The following reasons have to do with the price decline of this crop: (1) A medium quality crop with a less per cent of top grades. (2) .: V.. . iion of Burley is less than 40 million pounds, yet both th 1944 and 1945 crops consists o! 600 million with the possibility of 600 million grown this year (5) The war created an abnorniG demand, hence we have had c sellers not a buyers market even mixed and off tvpes many instances sold as nigh as grades of uniform quality. (6) The war having terminated it no longer a sellers market, but buyers market who can exer cise judgment in selectina thei respective grades which the) i . . i . ultimately have to sell to the dis criminating consumer. The Greeneville Market is ESTABLISHED-Tt dlma and storaae facilities whirh mfsritc iha ?c.t;: i -u:., ein noted THE ESTABLISHED MARKET of this TOBACCO GROWING BELT. Sell your next load at Bernard No. 1, 2 and 3 . . . HEADQUARTERS for ernarcPs Warehouses Greeneville, Tenn. Glutted markets (some of which like a Jack Frost Meat market lacking handling and keeping facilities should ' fold up in hot weather) Too many Ware houses . . . Too much selling space . . . Too many markets with no re-drying or storage facilities. (3) Scarcity of competent help to take care of the rush to market the crop in too short a period. (4) The normal annual consump- E

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