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FLORIDA BANK CLOSED. First National, of Jacksonville, Was Overloaded with Poor Assets. WASHINGTON, March 16.-The First National Bank of Florida at Jacksonville, Fla., was closed to-day by direction of the controller of the currency upon the report of an examination made by National Bank Examiner Charles A. Hanna, which showed the bank to be insolvent. National Bank Examiner J. W. Norvell has been appointed receiver. The failure of the bank, it is said at the Treasury Department, was due to losses which absorbed the entire capital and surplus, leaving a deficiency in assets which are of a slow character and of poor grade, consisting laregly of phosphate and lumber mill machinery, insurance policies, real estate, etc. The bank has liabilities of $375,182. The resources and liabilities of the bank, as shown by the late report of condition, Feb. 16, 1903, were:. Resources-Loans and discounts, $204,111; overdrafts, $2,293; United States bonds to secure circulation, $50,000; stocks, securities, claims, etc., $21,829; banking house and other real estate, $29,220; due from banks and bankers, $19,695; cash items, redemption fund, etc., $22,737,6 specie, $25,294; total, $375,182. Liabilities--Capital stock, $50,000; surplus and undivided profits, $11,519; circulating notes, $48,200: due to banks and bankers, $46,997; individual deposits, $188,465; bills payable, $30,000; total, $375,182. NEW YORK, March 16.-The Chemical National Bank is the correspondent of the First National Bank of Jacksonville, Fla., which has suspended. A representative of the Chemical Bank says the failure is unimportant. JACKSONVILLE, Fla., March 16.-The First National Bank was one of the oldest and strongest institutions in the State. Secretary General Spinner, of the United States Treasury, was its first treasurer.