Showing posts with label banks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label banks. Show all posts

October 20, 2012

Kennedy and Woods v. Vanwinkle, Wayne, 1828

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KENNEDY AND WOODS v. VANWINKLE.--COVENANT.

COURT OF APPEALS OF KENTUCKY

22 Ky. 398; 1828 Ky. LEXIS 6; 6 T.B. Mon. 398

January 1, 1828, Decided

PRIOR HISTORY:  [**1]  Appeal from the Wayne Circuit; John L. Bridges, Judge. 

DISPOSITION: Judgment reversed with cost, cause remanded.

COUNSEL: Mayes, for appellant. 

JUDGES: JUDGE OWSLEY. 

OPINION BY: OWSLEY 

OPINION
 [*398]  OPINION OF THE COURT, BY JUDGE OWSLEY.

Vanwinkle, as assignee for William Scott, sued Kennedy and Woods upon the following covenant:

For value received of William Scott, we, or either of us, promise to pay him, against the first day of January, 1824, the just and full sum of four hundred dollars in notes on the Bank of Tennessee, Alabama, North Carolina or Virginia; that is, if neither of the banks should fail. Given under our hands the 19th December, 1822.
ROBERT KENNEDY, [Seal.]
ANDREW WOODS. [Seal.]

Breach of the covenant is alleged by Vanwinkle in his declaration, in non-payment of the $ 400 in notes in either of the Banks of Tennessee, Alabama, North Carolina or Virginia.

No plea was filed by Kennedy or Woods, and on inquiry of damages, they offered to prove the value of the notes of the Bank of Tennessee, when the covenant sued on became payable; but the evidence was objected to by the counsel for Van Winkle, and excluded by the court.

We are at a loss to conjecture upon what principle [**2]  the court was governed in rejecting the evidence, unless it was supposed that the expressions, "if neither of the banks should fail," used in the covenant, implies an understanding in the contracting parties, that the notes to be paid were to be notes on specie  [*399]  paying banks, and in value equal to gold and silver. According to the fair import of the covenant, Kennedy and Woods could not, we apprehend, have discharged their undertaking by the payment of notes on either of the banks mentioned, unless the bank whose notes might be offered in payment at the time was paying its notes in specie, and if it were true, that the notes of specie paying banks were, at all times and in all places, equal in value to gold and silver, there would be great propriety in construing the covenant so as to impose an obligation upon Kennedy and Woods to pay in notes which should be at par with the current coin of the United States. But it is evident that each of those banks whose paper was payable, might at the time payment was to be made, have been discharging their notes in specie, and yet the notes of each might, in this country, have been under par, so that, according to any construction of [**3]  the covenant, it was competent for Kennedy and Woods to prove the value of the notes of either bank.

The evidence ought not, therefore, to have been excluded.

The judgment must be reversed with cost, the cause remanded to the court below, and further proceedings had, not inconsistent with this opinion.

U.S. Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Citizens Nat'l Bank of Monticello, Wayne, 1912

Previously:


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U.S. Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Citizens National Bank of Monticello

COURT OF APPEALS OF KENTUCKY

147 Ky. 285; 143 S.W. 997; 1912 Ky. LEXIS 198

February 29, 1912, Decided

PRIOR HISTORY:  [***1]  Appeal from Wayne Circuit Court. 

DISPOSITION: Judgment affirmed.

COUNSEL: BRUCE & BULLITT, WM. MARSHALL BULLITT, KEITH L. BULLITT and CLARENCE C. SMITH for appellant.

J. P. HARRISON, P. R. HARRISON and O. H. WADDLE & SON for appellee. 

JUDGES: JUDGE NUNN. 

OPINION BY: NUNN 

OPINION
 [**997]   [*286]  OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUDGE NUNN--Affirming.

Prior to 1904, appellee, Citizens National Bank of Monticello, Kentucky, organized as a national bank with $ 25,000 capital stock, which was afterwards increased to $ 50,000. It had in its employ as cashier, Charles McConnaghy, against whose dishonesty the bank was insured during the  [**998]  first years of his service, by some company other than appellant. On March 15, 1904, appellant executed a bond insuring the bank against loss to the extent of $ 15,000, by reason of fraud or deceit on the part of its cashier, McConnaghy, which amounted to embezzlement or larceny. By the express terms of this bond it expired on March 15, 1905, and annually thereafter continuation certificates were issued to the bank, which continued the bond. The number of the bond was 292114. McConnaghy remained the cashier of the bank from the date of the execution of the bond to October 31, 1908, at [***2]  which time Johnson, a national bank examiner, found a shortage in his accounts with the bank. The cashier's first criminal acts occurred the last of 1906 or the first of 1907, and continued until the date of discovery. His shortage in the aggregate amounted to about $ 34,000, but it is not shown for what amount he defaulted in any one year. Appellant contends that the bond executed March 15, 1904, and each continuation certificate executed annually thereafter, to March 15, 1908, constituted separate and independent contracts, and that therefore, the bank must allege and prove the loss occurring under each of them, and that the rights of the parties should be determined as  [*287]  to rules of notice and time of action in accordance with this theory. If this contention is correct, then appellee could not recover for any embezzlement or larceny committed by the cashier, except those committed during the life of the last contract, as the time given, to wit, six months, for the discovery of the fraud had expired on all the contracts but the last. Appellee, on the other hand, contends that the original bond and the four certificates constitute one continuous contract, and the lower court [***3]  so held and rendered a judgment against appellant for $ 15,000 only, as that was the full amount of the indemnity under the contract. Appellant refers to the case of DeJernette v. Fidelity & Casualty Co., 98 Ky. 558, 33 S.W. 828. This court did hold that the bond and renewals in that case were separate contracts, but upon a close examination of the facts of that case and those in the case at bar, a difference will be found. It is reasonable to presume that because of the construction placed upon the contract in the DeJernette case, that portion of the public wanting indemnity insurance, required a different contract as it seldom occurs that embezzlement or larceny is detected within three, six or twelve months after committed, especially if the employee has been in the service of his employer for some time and is trusted by him and is shrewd. Therefore, in order to obtain business, the indemnity and guaranty companies gave them a contract which would protect them.

As stated, the bond in question was issued March 15, 1904, and the bank paid the premium, $ 45, at that time. Appellant agreed in the bond to indemnify the bank in the sum of $ 15,000 against any loss it might [***4]  sustain at the hands of its cashier by any acts of his which amounted to embezzlement or larceny, for the term of twelve months, provided his wrong-doing was discovered within six months from the time the contract expired. If the bond and four renewal certificates contained only these stipulations, then appellant's contention is correct, and the case would be governed by the DeJernette case, but we are of the opinion that the facts of this case show that the parties intended that the bond and four continuation certificates should constitute one continuous contract. In the original bond this language is used:

"The company shall, during the term above mentioned  [*288]  or any subsequent renewal of such term, * * * make good and reimburse to the said employer, said pecuniary loss as may be sustained by the employer by reason of the fraud or dishonesty of the said employee in connection with the duties of his office or position, amounting to embezzlement or larceny, and which shall have been committed during the continuance of said term or any renewal thereof, and discovered during said continuance or any renewal thereof, or within six months thereafter."

Similar language is used [***5]  throughout the bond, and we are unable to understand why. If the bond was intended by the parties to have no connection with any other, why was this language used? For what was it inserted? It appears from this language that appellant was obligating itself in the sum of $ 15,000 to pay the bank for any embezzlement or larceny committed by its cashier, not only from March 15, 1904, to March 15, 1905, but to any period that might be fixed by any renewal of the contract. There are also four letters in the record which, to our minds, show that the parties intended that the original bond and the four renewal certificates were to constitute one contract. These letters were written by the president of appellant on the first day of each February after the execution of the original contract, and were directed to McConnaghy, the cashier, and were for the purpose of reminding him as to when the premium on the indemnity insurance would be due. As all the letters are, in substance, the same, we will copy the last, omitting the formal parts:

"Baltimore, February 1, 1908.

"We hereby notify you that bond No. 292114, for $ 15,000 issued by this company on your behalf to Citizens National Bank, Monticello,  [***6]  Ky. will expire on the 15th day of March next. Issued the 15th day of March, 1904.

"The premium, $ 45, should be paid on or before the date of expiration, and a continuation certificate secured, otherwise the bond will lapse.

"Kindly have the certificate below filled in and signed by your employer, and forward with remittance for premium to Mr. T. S. Dugan, Louisville, Ky.  [**999]  when the renewal receipt will be sent you."

It will be observed in all these letters that the president refers to the bond or original paper as bond No.  [*289]  292114 and says that it will expire unless the premium, $ 45, is paid on or before the 15th of the following March. If the original bond and each certificate constituted separate contracts, why did he not refer to the fact that the bond in force at the time he wrote would expire on the 15th day of the following March, and ask for the privilege of issuing a new bond? It will also be observed that the president speaks of the premium and says that it should be paid on or before the expiration of the bond. If the writings were separate contracts and the first expired on March 15, 1905, and one on the 15th of each March thereafter, he should [***7]  have referred to the expiration of the contract made for that year, but instead of doing this, he referred to bond No. 292114 of 1904, in the letter copied and all the others, and also says that upon the receipt of $ 45 a "continuation certificate will be sent and that if the premium is not sent that the "bond will lapse." It appears that the only bond ever issued by appellant was the one of March 15, 1904, and it is evident to this bond that the letters refer when they say that the bond will lapse unless the premium is paid by a certain time. In the letter dated February 1, 1906, the president made a slight change of language in the second paragraph. The language used in the second paragraph of that letter is as follows:

"The premium, $ 45, should be paid on or before the date of expiration, and a continuation certificate or a new bond secured, otherwise the bond will lapse."

Thus we see the words "new bond" were inserted in this letter and indicate that a new contract was in the mind of the president, but the premium was paid and appellant sent the bank a continuation certificate, and no new bond was issued. The fact that appellant issued to appellee four continuation certificates, [***8]  each covering a period of one year, beginning on March 15, 1905, is also evidence of the fact that the parties intended that the original writing and the certificates should constitute one contract covering a period of five years. We will copy one of these certificates only, as they are in substance the same except as to date. It is as follows: (Omitting the date and signature of the official.)

"In consideration of the sum of forty-five dollars, The United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company hereby continues in force bond No. 292114 in the sum of fifteen thousand dollars, on behalf of Chas. McConnaghy,  [*290]  in favor of Citizens Nat'1 Bank, Monticello, Ky. for the period beginning the 15th day of March, 1905, and ending on the 15th day of March, 1906, subject to all the covenants and conditions of said original bond heretofore issued on the 15th day of March, 1904.

"Witness the signature of the President and Ass't Secretary this 1st day of February, 1905."

Each of the certificates refer to the fact that they continue bond No. 292114, the number of the bond executed March 15, 1904, clearly showing that one obligation existed for all these years. The bond was kept alive in [***9]  a manner similar to an insurance policy, that is, by the payment of annual premiums. (First National Bank v. Fidelity, &c., Co., 100 A. St. Rep. 765, and Fidelity Deposit Co. v. Champion Ice Mfg. & Cold Storage Co., 133 Ky. 74, 117 S.W. 393.)

Appellant makes no complaint of any wrongful act upon the part of appellee in obtaining the insurance under this bond. It does not contend that any misstatements or concealments were made in the application for the bond and upon which the bond was issued, except in one instance, and that was in answer to the following question:

"To whom and how frequently will he account for his handlings of funds and securities?
The answer to this question was:

"Twice a year by U.S. Bank Examiner and board of directors four times year."

It is not claimed that the United States Bank Examiner did not examine the cashier's accounts as stated in the answer, nor is it claimed that the bank officials did not make examinations as many as four times a year or oftener, but it does claim that the examinations were not thorough and that it was deceived thereby and for that reason should be released from all liability, as it had a right to expect from such [***10]  answer that such examinations would be thorough. At the time appellant issued this insurance, it knew that the bank was what is called "a county bank" and that the officers of it were men who, probably, could not give the accounts an expert examination, and it is presumed that it understood the answer to the question to mean that they would give the accounts the best examination they could. In addition, such statement was a mere promissory representation or an announcement of an unexecuted intention,  [*291]  and exact compliance therewith was not expected. It was not like misrepresenting a past fact within the knowledge of the bank. If the answer had stated that the accounts of the cashier had been examined by an expert accountant on a recent date, this would have been material.

Appellant also contends that it is released from liability on the bond on account of misrepresentations made by the president of the bank in his application for the continuation certificates. All these applications are, in substance, the same, therefore, we will copy but one of them. It is as follows:
"To the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company.

"This is to certify that the books and accounts [***11]  of Charles McConnaghy were examined by us from time to time in the regular course of business, and we found them correct in every respect. All monies or property in his control or custody, being  [**1000]  accounted for, with proper security and funds on hands to balance his account, and he is not now in default. He has performed his duty in a capable and satisfactory manner, and no change has occurred in the terms or conditions of his employment as specified by us, when the bond was executed."

As previously stated, this bank was examined several times each year by a United States Bank Examiner, and the president and directors made several examinations. The president and directors were not expert accountants, however, and they testified that no discrepancies were found. This question was submitted to the jury under proper instructions and it was settled in favor of appellee.

The instructions were in accord with those given in the case of Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Western Bank, 29 Ky. L. Rep. 639, 94 S.W. 3.

There is no pretense that the bank officials had any knowledge of or suspicioned that McConnaghy had committed embezzlement or done any wrong before the applications [***12]  were made for the bond or the continuance certificates, but the claim is that if appellee had exercised ordinary care it could have ascertained the same before the statements were made. This question was also submitted to the jury upon proper instructions.

The cashier, McConnaghy, about the last of 1906 to the date of his detection, was in the habit of overdrawing his account in the bank, and appellant claims that  [*292]  it was entitled to notice of this fact. It appears that McConnaghy was a man apparently of considerable wealth for that section of the country; that he was engaged in other business besides cashier of the bank, which required the use of considerable money and from which he also received considerable money. He stood high in the community and was a man of good business ability. The overdrafts were in no way concealed. The bank examiner and officers knew of them. The examiner made a report to the Comptroller of the United States Treasury showing the overdrafts. The officers of the bank did not consider that there was anything wrong in connection with the overdrafts, but they did admonish McConnaghy several times to settle them, which he did, and he repeatedly settled [***13]  his overdrafts between the dates, but it was detected on October 31, 1908, that he settled them or most of them by forging notes on solvent persons, making it appear that the bank had loaned these persons money and upon the date he issued these notes, he would place a credit to his account. It does not appear that he ever obtained or attempted to obtain any money from any of these persons. It is not claimed by the bank that the overdrafts themselves constituted the crime of embezzlement or larceny, against which appellant had indemnified it, but do claim that the manner in which McConnaghy manipulated and concealed the matter did amount to one or the other or both of said crimes as was detected on October 31, 1908. Therefore, the guaranty company claims that it should have had notice of the overdrafts at the time they occurred. It was the duty of the bank officials to give notice to appellant of any acts of McConnaghy that indicated fraud or dishonesty on his part that were likely to involve a loss upon it, and as McConnaghy concealed his fraudulent acts by forging notes and crediting his overdrafts by the apparent proceeds of the notes, it is now made clear that McConnaghy had an [***14]  evil intent when he drew the overdrafts and the question is: Did the officials of the bank suspect or have reasons to suspect, that such an intent existed in McConnaghy's mind at the time of the overdrafts? Did the officials of the bank exercise reasonable acre, considering the circumstances, to ascertain his wrongful intent? These questions were properly submitted to the jury under instructions  [*293]  as favorable to appellant as authorized by the law. ( Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Western Bank, supra.)

It appears from the record that McConnaghy stole $ 1,000 in cash from the bank after the bank officials knew he was a defaulter, but the instructions given by the court did not allow the jury to consider that item. The instructions only allowed a recovery for embezzlement or larceny of the bank's money between March 15, 1904, and October 31, 1908, inclusive, the period covered by the contract, and confined the jury to the amount named in the bond, $ 15,000. The bank's loss between these dates was much more than that sum.

It appears that appellant had a reasonably fair trial, and the judgment is affirmed.

U. S. Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v Citizens Nat'l Bank of Monticello, Wayne, 1911

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U. S. Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v Citizens National Bank of Monticello.

COURT OF APPEALS OF KENTUCKY

143 Ky. 699; 137 S.W. 240; 1911 Ky. LEXIS 494

May 18, 1911, Decided

PRIOR HISTORY:  [**1]  Appeal from Wayne Circuit Court. 

DISPOSITION: Motion sustained. 

COUNSEL: O. H. WADDLE & SON and HARRISON & HARRISON for appellant.

WM. MARSHALL BULLITT and KEITH L. BULLITT for appellee. 

JUDGES: CHIEF JUSTICE HOBSON. 

OPINION BY: HOBSON 

OPINION
 [*699]  OPINION OF THE COURT BY CHIEF JUSTICE HOBSON--On Motion to Dismiss Appeal With Damages.

On May 20th, 1910, appellee recovered judgment against appellant in the Wayne Circuit Court for $ 15,000.00. On July 20th, 1910, appellant executed a supersedeas bond but the clerk then issued no supersedeas. The time for filing the record in this court expired December 13, 1910, and the record was not filed and the time was not extended. On February 11, 1911, appellant had an appeal granted by this Court but obtained no supersedeas. On April 18, 1911, the Clerk of the Wayne Circuit Court issued a supersedeas, on appellee's counsel calling his attention to the fact that he had not issued it and it was its duty to issue it then. On April 21st, appellant obtained a supersedeas from the Clerk of this court. Appellee has entered a motion to dismiss the appeal granted by the Circuit Court with damages.

The case of L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Lucas', 120 Ky. 359, 86 S.W. 682, [**2]  controls. That case is similar to this except that there the second appeal was taken after the supersedeas was issued  [*700]  by the Circuit Clerk. But that circumstance is not material. The appeal was still pending and the Clerk was authorized to issue the supersedeas as no supersedeas had been obtained from the Clerk of this Court. It is true appellant had abandoned that appeal but it had not been dismissed. Appellee was not entitled to execution on the judgment after the supersedeas issued.

Motion sustained.

November 16, 2011

Editorial on Democratic Party & Whig Party Politics, 1838

This comes from the Kentucky Gazette of Lexington, KY on April 5, 1838.   To show that the Whig party are unworthy of their votes, the author traces the origins of that party as beginning with the Federalist party, arguing that they are different in name only.   This articles includes denouncement of the politics of John Adams, John Quincy Adams, and Alexander Hamilton, argument against the chartering of a third national bank, argument against Henry Clay for President in the upcoming election, and discussion of strict versus broad interpretations of the U.S. Constitution.

My favorite part of the below address is this fable, which the author uses to illustrate how a broad interpretation of the Constitution's general welfare clause will be used to 'hack away' at citizen's liberties:

It has an excellent moral, that old fable of the woodman and the forest.  A certain woodman (it must have been in those early days of poetry when flowers spoke and trees reasoned)--a woodman one fine morning, humbly begged of the forest, that she would be so obliging as to give him some spare limb or other from one of her trees--quite a small one would answer his purpose--merely to make a handle for his axe.  The good tempered forest thoughtlessly agreed to his proposal; the axe handle was made; and the next day, the woodman having thus obtained the means of executing his project without further leave returned, and fell to work with so much effect, that in a few days the poor forest saw the noblest of her trees levelled with the ground, the death knell of the others, as one by one they sunk beneath the murderous axe, sounded hourly in her ears.  How bitterly then did she repent of her easy compliance!




The article has over ten footnotes that go along with it, but I had such a difficult time distinguishing symbols from smudges on the page, and then trouble figuring out which note corresponded with which symbol, so I left them out of my transcription.  Therefore, please see the original article (page 1 and page 2) to view the footnotes.



October 15, 2011

"The War on the Northern Pacific"

From Harper's Weekly magazine on May 25, 1901, Volume XLV, No. 2318, comes this wonderful cartoon by W. A. Rogers and related article by Henry Loomis Nelson.  Many volumes of Harper's Weekly are available on google books, including this one (available here).  Click the images to enlarge.


"ESTABLISHING A "COMMUNITY OF INTEREST"
cartoon by W. A. Roger


The War on the Northern Pacific
By Henry Loomis Nelson

There is much confusion of rumor, and consequently much confusion of thought, touching the recent struggle, perhaps not yet concluded, for the control of the Northern Pacific Railroad.  As a stock-jobbing operation, the facts are clear and pretty well understood.  During the week which ended on the 4th of May, the healthful week when the abounding wealth of the country and its rich promise of prosperity expressed themselves in the stock quotations of the Exchange, Northern Pacific, in the language of Wall Street, was "one of the most active stocks."  It had been selling below 80 a few weeks prior to the general rise in prices, and now it went bounding up towards 120.  Some one, or some combination, was buying it in large quantities, and there was an apparent change of ownership in hundreds of thousands of shares.  Monday, the 6th of May, saw a continuation of this buying, and there began what seemed to be, and was, a struggle for the possession of the road.  Stocks went in response to the eager demands for it, and finally Mr. Keene, seeing the effort that was being made, and knowing that prices must go up until the sellers begged for mercy, helped along the movement by becoming an auxiliary buyer.  When the stock broke, it had once reached, for a moment, the price of $1000 per share for the common stock of the road.  Thousands of shares had been sold which did not exist.  Money was borrowed at astonishing rates of interest, and small fortunes were paid for the loan of Northern Pacific stock.  Loss and ruin visited hundreds of rash speculators, but no so many as would have been caught under like conditions at any other moment in the history of the Stock Exchange.  Then the question rose as to who controlled the road.  The effort to buy it away from the control of J. Pierpont Morgan & Co. and Mr. Hill was made by Kuhn, Loer, & Co., Mr. Jacob Schiff being the active partner in the transaction, the firm representing the Union Pacific Railroad interest, at the head of which is Mr. Harriman.  Which of these parties controlled the road at the end of the contest is a question still unsettled.  The aggressive war was made upon the Morgan-Hill management, who still believe that they own and influence enough stock, as the stock account stands, to maintain themselves.  The others deny this, and assert that they possess a majority of the stock.  Mr. Hill neither bought nor sold a share during the excitement, and no one of his men who are of his party, and who are in his confidence, yielded to the temptation to part with a share of his stock while the high prices prevailed.  It may require the revelations of the natural annual meeting to determine the control of the property.

August 22, 2011

William H. Vanderbilt Earned $3.66 Per Minute in Bond Interest

 This article was originally printed in The Times Dispatch of Richmond, VA on July 20, 1911.

The Times Dispatch, Richmond, VA, July 20, 1911
RECEIVED $3.66 A MINUTE

William H. Vanderbilt Once Owned $48,050,000 in Government Bonds.

Washington, July 19.--Proof that the elder William H. Vanderbilt once owned $48,050,000 in government bonds, upon which he received interest at the rate of $1,922,000 a year, has been found in the old Treasury records.  The old interest checks made out to Mr. Vanderbilt show the government paid to him $160,000 a month.  One of the department statisticians calculated that he received $220 every hour of the day and night, and $3.66 every minute.

August 16, 2011

Gold-Aluminum Alloy For Coins?

From The Columbus Journal of Columbus, Nebraska, December 12, 1894:

To Stop Counterfeiting.
----
A scientist suggests the use of an alloy of gold and aluminum for the making of money.  He says that counterfeiting would be almost impossible, as the only alloy which can be made successfully consists of seventy-eight parts of gold and twenty-two of aluminum.  The product is said to be of a beautiful purple color, with ruby reflections that cannot be imitated.


Here is a link to an 1899 article available on JSTOR about Gold-Aluminum alloys: http://www.jstor.org/pss/90757

But as cool as it sounds (I can't find a photo!), it would be a poor medium for coins.  According to this webpage, the alloy is very brittle.  I suppose this scientist was focusing solely on trying to find something difficult to make, and not on whether it would  be able to withstand general wear and tear (Oops).

August 7, 2011

Disposing of Old Government Bonds, 1911

From The Times Dispatch of Richmond, VA, July 20, 1911:

The Times Dispatch, Richmond, VA, July 20, 1911
DESTROYING OLD BONDS

More Than $2,000,000,000 of Civil War Issue Fed to Furnaces.

Washington, July 19.--More than $2,000,000,000 in redeemed bonds, representing the major part of the government's Civil War debt, is being fed gradually to the furnace in the Bureau of Printing and Engraving.  The engineers estimate that the immense sum in old securities will generate about as much steam as two tons of good coal. 

All the government securities issued and redeem between 1860 and 1898 are being thus destroyed, including nearly $1,000,000,000 in the famous 7-30 bonds, which are made in the size of greenbacks, and passed as money at the highest rate of interest the government has ever paid.  More than 1,500,000 separate bond coupons, which represent a large portion of the government's interest payments for fifty years, also will be burned.

The usual process of reducing old securities to a pulp by macerating them was at first attempted, but the job proved too great.

July 1, 2011

1882 Article About the Life of Jesse James

The Bourbon News 
Paris, Bourbon County, Kentucky: Tuesday, April 18, 1882.  
[Picture] Jesse James, The Bandit.  From the last photograph he had taken.  
The cut of Jesse James in this issue, was kindly loaned us by James J. Burns, editor of the Flemingsburg Democrat, who is not only a sprightly editor, but an accomplished wood engraver.  He copied it from a cut in the life of Jesse James published some two years ago.  The original photo was taken while the bandit was a guest at one of the principal Long Branch hotels, about the year 1870. 
The Dead Bandit. 
Jesse James was the son of a Baptist preacher of prominence and eloquence in his day.  The father was a native of Logan county, this state, and the mother, whose maiden name Zerelda Cole, was born in Woodford county, about half way between Versailles and Lexington, where her father kept a hostelry known as “Cole’s Tavern.”  On the death of her father the widow removed to the neighborhood of Stamping Ground, in Scott county, among her relatives, and there the future mother of the greatest bandit of modern times grew from childhood into girlhood, and from girlhood into womanhood, and there was married, in 1840, to Rev. Robert J. James.  In the subsequent year their first child, Frank, was born in Scott county.  In 1843 the Jameses removed to Missouri, setting in Clay county, where Jesse was born in 1845.  Mrs. James was a handsome, vivacious, devil-may-care girl, careless of good or evil report.  Tall, large-framed, and full of animal life, she was a universal favorite among those of the opposite sex, and her marriage to a clergyman was one of those surprises she was fond of indulging in.  Her hair was black as the raven’s wing, her eyes black and piercing.  Her temper was quick and fiery, her tongue sharp and cutting, and her enimity deadly and enduring.  She was constant and faithful in her friendships, and her hatreds were hot and undying.  She is now an exceedingly large woman, her hair sprinkled with gray, her eyes still keen and piercing, her temper as ungovernable as ever, and in all her ways, walks and talks, a fitting dam for such ferocious cubs as her two sons.  Her husband was a meek and humble-minded man and she made his life a hell, from which he finally fled to California, where he found the peace of death in 1851.  A few years afterwards the widow was married to Robert Mimms, whom she speedily harassed into the grave, and was succeeded in the connubial harness by Dr. Samuels, a prominent physician of Clay county.  To her is attributed the evil life led by her sons.  She upheld them in their career of crime, applauded their dare-devil deeds, and at all times extended them succor and protection.  All the affection in her nature is centered in them, and, while hard, and cruel, and vindictive toward others, she was ever the soft, loving, indulgent mother toward her children.  They inherited her own fearless spirit, and she gloried in them.  Deeds that filled the world with horror and heaped upon their names denunciation and detestation, she hailed as heroic and worthy of songs of praise and the hero’s wreath.