The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 82, No. 198, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 10, 1983 Page: 8 of 64
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SOURCE: Census Bureau
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PUBLISHER’S COPY
LEGAL TITLE OF BANK
1
CLOSE OF BUSINESS DATE
FEDERAL RESERVE DIST NO
STATE BANK NO
11
1778
March 31, 1983
8
) (From Schedule A. Item 8)
A
A
596
6
W
54
/
9
439
50
0
).
59
NOTE. This report must be signed by an authorized of hear and attested by not tens than three directors other than the offtosr signing the report
Available
AREA CODE/TELPHONE NO' ' I DATE SIGNED
Financing
April 7, 1983
806-364-3456
Think Now About Fixing Up Your Present Home.
SIGNATURE OF DIRECTOR
SIGNATURE OF DIRECTOR
364-3434
357.
i,
e
S1 1 1 billion
I
Congressional delegation
joins park battle
“SERVIGE’
More Then Just
A Word At Rix
PAYING FOR THE
PUBLIC SCHOOLS
(MAKE MARK FOR
NOTARY'S SEAL)
In a videotape made secret-
ly in April 1982. Ms. Parrish
told Witt and the detective
her theories on the location of
Foreman's cash and jewels.
15
16
A Conference Board survey
of executives, covering this
year's first quarter, showed
676
277
32
33
34
35
36
37
I. the undersigned officer, do hereby dectare that this A apart or Condition (including the supporting schedute) has bean prepared in conformance with the in
e’ructions and la true to the beet of my knowiedg• and belief
NEl
refr
larg
Ihwi
> Add A Room,
' A New Garage
Or Remodel What
You Have.
Ex,
Ui
Hy
WAl
thre
slna
Hid
mar
de la
time
We the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this Report of Con-
dition (including the supporting echedules) end deciare that it has been ex-
amined by us and to the boot of our knowledge end belief has been pre-
pared in conformance with the inetructions and is true end correct
17
18
18a
19
. 20
. 21
. 22
J 22a
j 22b
. 23
EXI
ner
dec
Exi
imi
sm
At
bet
an
cel
$25
8
38
Exi
Ha:
. 5
. 8
] 7
. 8
. 9
. 10
. 11
1 ’2
4 13
. 14
none
376
। 411
10 Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, end other assets representing bank premises
11 Real estate owned other than bank premises ....................................
12 Letters of credit and customers' liebility on acceptances outstanding.................
13. All other assets .............................................................
14 TOTAL ASSETS (sum of items 1 thru 13)...................................
8 Total loens (including overdrafts totaling i 164 M
9 Lease financing receivables . .
DEAR
a good si
wornout
cloths 11
beyond re
DEAR
a cotton t
corner th
DEAR
my large
cloth at n
can rema
When v
fill it will
wash well
and the nd
DEAR I
air condit
antes coul
longer tha
EL REI
While teac
pupils at 11
school for
slop feder
closing it
102-year-
more imm
33. Certified surplus..................................................
34 Undivided profits..................................................
35. Uncertified surplus. reserve for contingencies, and other capital reserves
36. TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL (sum of items 32 thru 35).....................
37 TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL (Sum of items 29, 30, 31 Bhd 36)
strongly over a year earlier,
but analysts noted continued
softness in sales of durable
goods, such as major ap-
pliances. indicating unwill-
ingness among many con-
sumers to take on additional
debt
Yet while the economy cur-
rently appears stalled. hopes
remain high that it will
resume growing this spring.
Confidence among con-
sumers surveyed in March
showed its largest monthly
increase in nine years, the
Conference Board said. Its
measure of confidence, with a
1969-70 base of 100. jumped to
76.5 from 65.8 in February,
the board said.
Ext
lari
<85.
24
25
26
4 27
1 28
] 29
NEW YORK i AP) - Con-
sumers’ confidence in the
economy keeps growing So
does that of executives. And
future gauges of the economy
are upbeat. But the economy
itself seems diffident about
improving
"After an upward surge in
January, the economy show-
ed signs of a lull in February
and March," says Robert J.
Genetski, economist of Har-
ns Trust & Savings Bank in
Chicago. "For the moment,
business activity appears to
have leveled off."
The largest share of funds to run the nation's public
school systems is raised locally But a recently
released Census Bureau analysis of 1981 school
financing found more than half of all school dollars
coming from government sources
Page tA-TSe Hereford Brand-Sunday, April 18, IM .
Consumers confidence keeps
growing for economy
V
DEAR
too much
this fish b
DEAR
or cooked
after thav
lage couli
could coo
of the cm
might all
packaged
and ooh
remainde
By the
If it’s ver
be discar
reduced t
(keep it in
Frozen
supermar
how to sa
copy of
would lib
POLLY'S
New Yorl
LY
G
5
a
• 4
ASSETS
1. Cash and due from banks ................................
2 Due from other depositories and all cash items in the process of collection
3. U.S. Treasury securities.............................................
4 Obligations of other U.S Government agencies and corporations
5. Obligations of States and political subdivisions in the United States
6. All other securities.................................................
7 Federal funds sold and securities purchased under agreements to resell
000
217
200
417
034
e
/ Homeorriee
Blommiegseenuimee
STATE
Texas
LIABILITIES
15 Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corporations.......
16. Time and savings deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corporations
17 Deposits of United States Government..................................
18 Deposits of States and political subdivisions in the United States
a Deposits of the State of Texas .................................................
19. Due to banks......................................................
20 All other deposits .................................
21. Certified and officers’ checks......... ................................
22. Total Deposits (sum ol items 15 thru 21)................................
a Total demand deposits ...................................•'........
b. Total time and savings deposits ....................................
23 Federal funds purchased and securities sold under agreements to repurchase
24 interest-bearing demand notes issued to the U.S Treasury and
other liabilities for borrowed money...................................
25 Mortgage indebtedness for which the bank is directly liable .........
26 Unearned discount on loans...........................................
27 Letters of credit and acceptances outstanding...........................
28. All other liabilities....................................................
CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION
(Including Domestic Subsidiaries)
i
2
3
Gary Phipps
105 Greenwood • Hereford, Texas 79045 • 806 364-6533 A
Tales told by wandering minstrels of the Middle Ages
were called "romances" because they were told in one
of the romance languages
R
■ ■ -
4 InMtn in Mil Tant Since fM
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
Foreman says woman
unaware o f valuables
8
a®
982 .
59 1
CITY
Hereford
J-----.1.___
Z-, Notary Public
Car sales in March rose
less than 5 percent from
depressed levels of a year
earlier, the major U.S.
automakers said this past
week. Most major retailers
reported March sales rose
29 TOTAL LIABILITIES (excluding subordinated notea and debentures) (sum otuems 22 thru 28)
30 Subordinated notes and debentures.......................................................
31 Allowance tor possible loan and investment losses ................. #..................
EQUITY CAPITAL
Carl McCaslin
LUMBER CO.
BUILDING HEREFORD SINCE 1939
I
I
...(2,132M
Washington, a state senator
from Houston, has told the
jury that Ms. Parrish discuss-
ed robbing and killing
Foreman in April 1982
tiecause Witt recruited her
after a suicide attempt.
88
344E.3rd
< L k 4 ■ h
SIGNATURE OF OFFICER AUTHORIZED TO SIGN REPORT
_g€eL...
NAME AND TITLE OF OFFICER AUTHORIZED TO SIGN REPORT
Wayne E. Williams
Sr. Vice President & Cashier
73
■ 53^
______570
- -—713
53- 165
Mi--6T9u-
Hereford State Bank____________
COUNTY
Deaf Smith
452 31
I
rrrprrr:77/3/9r/55/57rre,, ,95 9 ■’”* P 5 5"
WASHINGTON (AP) - jority Leader Jim Wright of land will not be sold as
The Texas congressional Fort Worth and a number of surplus but held in reserve
delegation is joining the bat- other members of the Texas for possible future part use.
tie over the planned closings delegation. The Corps last year initial-
of up to 46 Texas lakeside “They've agreed to go for- ly proposed the complete or
parks operated by the Army ward and do what they can partial closure of 58 such
Corps of Engineers. and try to get the ear of the parks in Texas. The state fil-
Support of the delegation Corps," said Parker ed suit to block the closures
was enlisted during a visit Parker said the U.S. House As a result of the suit, the
here by four members of the members would arrange a Corps agreed to a temporary
Texas Legislature, who want meeting with the chairman of order, effective until April 25.
rone
ZIP CODE
79045
HOUSTON i AP) — Promi-
nent attorney Percy
Foreman says a former client
accused of trying to hire so-
meone to kill him knew
nothing about cash and
jewelry she said were hidden
around his house.
Foreman, testifying Friday
in the murder solicitation
trial of Susan Parrish, agreed
with defense attorneys Fri-
day that the defendant could
be easily influenced by
others.
Ms. Parrish, in a secretly
made videotape, told one
man she believed they could
find King Solomon's mines"
in Foreman's house
Foreman, testifying out-
side the presence of jurors in
state district Judge Doug
Shaver’s court. agreed the
defendant is susceptible to
persuasion, especially in
times of emotional stress."
Defense attorney Craig
Washington contends Ms
Parrish was talked into the
idea by Neal Witt. a Houston
arson investigator she
allegedly tried to pay to kill
Foreman Witt reported the
plot to authorities, who made
videotapes of Ms Parrish
giving money an undercover
#-e-
1 HEALTH \
I INSURANCF utual Art—MU
N surance Company
detective whom she believed
was selling her poison
Shaver ruled Foreman’s
opinions of Ms. Parrish’s
mental stale were inadmissi-
ble as evidence before the
jury
But Shaver allowed
Foreman to tell the jury' that
it was impossible for Ms. Par-
rish. his former client and
confidant, to have detailed
knowledge of his financial af-
fairs. as she claimed to an
undercover detective.
On cross-exmination, pro-
secutor Ted Wilson showed
that Ms. Parrish had learned
several details of Foreman's
personal life, including his
habit of watching the televi-
sion shows featuring the
character Archie Bunker
. (
2om 8’5* A
%eeral governmes
UGNATURE OF DIRECTOR () , SIGNATURE OF DIRECTOR
69,8,
si«w o/______Texas_____ County .^5.^
Sworn fo and tubterlbbH bbfon mt lhil„ of ---Anri 1
My committion tipint Noy. a JO, -1984- - ____ e4da
the Corps to abandon, or at the appropriations subcom- not to begin dismantling any
leaat delay, closing the parka mittee with jurisdiction over of the facilities at the parks.
"Hopefully we can keep as the Corps and seek the follow- A revised Corps pUn now
many of these parks open as ing commitments from the calls for the closure of 10
we can in the state of Texas," Corps: • parks and the partial closure
Rep. Sam Russell, D-Mount - A daisy in the dismant: of 36.
Pleasant, said at a news con- ing of equipment and
ference Friday facilities st the parks while
State Sen Carl Parker, the issue is considered fur-
D-Port Arthur, said that he ther.
and three members of the — The holding of public
Texas House had met with hearings on the issue in the
Sen. John Tower, a areas of the parks
Republican, Sen. Loyd Bent- - An agreement that, even
sen. a Democrat, House Ms- if the parks are closed. the
8′58
#5
< „tnme,,,
4 3
their confidence climbed to
its highest level in nearly six
years. That measure rose to
70 from 60 in the fourth
quarter of 1982, and is up
from 43 in the final quarter of
INI, the business-supported
research group said.
In other news this past
week:
—Federal regulators
declared Biscayne Federal
Savings & Loan Association
insolvent, renamed it and
took control until the Miami
thrift can be merged with
another institution. A federal
judge denied a petition by of-
ficials and shareholders of
Biscayne to block the
takeover, but a trial to deter-
mine whether regulators had
sufficient reason to lake over
Biscayne was scheduled for
April 24.
—Assets of the nation's 306
money market mutual funds
fell <1.97 billion in the latest
week, the Investment Com-
pany Institute said. The
decline, to <180.10 billion in
the week ended Wednesday,
was the 18th straight weekly
drop in the funds’ assets, ac-
cording to the Washington-
based mutual fund trade
group. The assets fell <2.2
billion in the previous week.
—The number of U.S.
autoworkers on indefinite
layoff fell to 239.200 this week
from 239.700 a week earlier to
remain at its lowest point
since Oct. 14 Major domestic
automakers, meanwhile,
planned to build 127,124 cars
this past week, a 25.7 percent
increase from the previous
week and up 41.4 percent
from the same week last
year, the trade journal
Ward's Automotive Reports
said.
—The number of
Americans filing initial
claims for jobless benefits
rose by 14,000, to 496,000, in
the week ended March 26. the
Labor Department said. But
the insured unemployment
rate — the proportion of the
labor force getting unemploy-
ment benefits slipped to 4.4*
percent from 4 5 percent The
U.S. civilian jobless rate in
March edged down to 10.3
percent from 10.4 percent in
February
....... 1 on 000
32. Common stock (No of shares outstanding_______
Total
I General
Revenues
417 778
Noge___
4-287
Noze---
5-000
33 642
None__
1 i 191
---HU
— ,570
1 655
59 । Q34
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Nigh, Bob. The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 82, No. 198, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 10, 1983, newspaper, April 10, 1983; Hereford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1430228/m1/8/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Deaf Smith County Library.