CBT CORP /KY/
DEF 14A, 1996-03-08
STATE COMMERCIAL BANKS
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<PAGE>
                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549

                  Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of
            the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Amendment No.    )

    Filed by the Registrant /X/
    Filed by a Party other than the Registrant / /

    Check the appropriate box:
    / /  Preliminary Proxy Statement
    /X/  Definitive Proxy Statement
    / /  Definitive Additional Materials
    / /  Soliciting  Material  Pursuant  to  Section  240.14a-11(c)  or  Section
         240.14a-12
    / /  Confidential, for use of the Commission only (as permitted by Rule
         14a-6(e)(2))

                                          CBT CORPORATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)

Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

/X/  $125 per  Exchange Act  Rules 0-11(c)(1)(ii),  14a-6(i)(1), 14a-6(i)(2)  or
     Item 22(a)(2) of Schedule 14A.
/ /  $500  per  each party  to  the controversy  pursuant  to Exchange  Act Rule
     14a-6(i)(3).
/ /  Fee  computed  on   table  below   per  Exchange   Act  Rules   14a-6(i)(4)
     and 0-11.
     1) Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     2) Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     3) Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed
        pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     4) Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     5) Total fee paid:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
/ /  Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.
/ /  Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act Rule
     0-11(a)(2)  and identify the  filing for which the  offsetting fee was paid
     previously. Identify the previous filing by registration statement  number,
     or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.
     1) Amount Previously Paid:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     2) Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     3) Filing Party:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     4) Date Filed:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
<PAGE>
                                     [LOGO]

                                CBT CORPORATION
                                  333 BROADWAY
                               PADUCAH, KY 42002

                                 MARCH 8, 1996

Dear Stockholder:

    The  annual  meeting of  stockholders  of CBT  Corporation  will be  held on
Tuesday, April 16,  1996, at  2:00 P.M.,  Paducah time,  at the  main office  of
Citizens  Bank and  Trust Company, 333  Broadway, Paducah,  Kentucky. The formal
Notice of the Meeting and Proxy Statement appear in the pages that follow.

    In addition to  the election  of directors,  stockholders will  be asked  to
consider and vote upon amendments to the 1993 Stock Option Plan.

    We  recommend that you vote for the  amendments referred to above, which are
set forth in more detail in the accompanying Proxy Statement.

    We hope you will be able to attend the meeting in person. In addition to the
specific matters set  forth in the  notice of  the meeting, we  look forward  to
discussing with you any questions you may have concerning the Corporation.

                                          Sincerely,

                                                [SIGNATURE]

                                          William J. Jones
                                          PRESIDENT AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER

           PLEASE SIGN AND DATE THE ENCLOSED PROXY AND RETURN IT PROMPTLY
       IN  THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE,  IF YOU DO NOT  EXPECT TO BE PERSONALLY
       PRESENT AND WISH YOUR  STOCK TO BE VOTED.  IF YOU LATER FIND  THAT
       YOU  MAY BE PRESENT OR FOR ANY  OTHER REASON DESIRE TO REVOKE YOUR
       PROXY, YOU MAY DO SO  PRIOR TO THE TIME  THE PRESENCE OF A  QUORUM
       HAS BEEN DETERMINED AND DECLARED.
<PAGE>
                                CBT CORPORATION

         -------------------------------------------------------------
                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                                 APRIL 16, 1996
         -------------------------------------------------------------

To the Holders of Common Stock of CBT Corporation:

    NOTICE  IS  HEREBY GIVEN  that  the annual  meeting  of stockholders  of CBT
Corporation, (the "Corporation"), a  Kentucky corporation, will  be held at  the
main office of Citizens Bank and Trust Company, 333 Broadway, Paducah, Kentucky,
on  Tuesday,  April 16,  1996, at  2:00  p.m., Paducah  time, for  the following
purposes:

    1)  To elect  directors to hold  office until the  next annual election  and
       until their successors shall be duly elected and qualified;

    2)   To  consider and vote  upon a proposal  to amend the  1993 Stock Option
       Plan; and

    3)  To transact such other business as may properly come before the meeting.

    Only holders of common stock of record at the close of business on  February
9, 1996, will be entitled to vote at the meeting or any adjournment thereof.

                                          By Order of the Board of Directors,

                                                [SIGNATURE]

                                          William J. Jones
                                          PRESIDENT AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER

                                          March 8, 1996
<PAGE>
                                CBT CORPORATION
                                  333 BROADWAY
                            PADUCAH, KENTUCKY 42002
                            ------------------------
                                PROXY STATEMENT
                            ------------------------

    This Proxy Statement is furnished in connection with the solicitation by the
Board of Directors of CBT Corporation (the "Corporation") of proxies to be voted
at the annual meeting of stockholders to be held on Tuesday, April 16, 1996. Any
stockholder  giving  a proxy  has the  right to  revoke it  by a  written notice
delivered to the Secretary of the Corporation, P.O. Box 2400, Paducah, Kentucky,
42002-2400, or in person  at the meeting,  prior to the time  the presence of  a
quorum has been determined and declared. All proxies will be voted in accordance
with  the directions  of the  stockholder and, to  the extent  no directions are
given, will be voted "for" the  nominees for directors and "for" the  amendments
to the 1993 Stock Option Plan.

    This   Proxy  Statement  and  form  of  proxy  are  first  being  mailed  to
stockholders commencing on or about March 8, 1996.

    The  Corporation  will   bear  the  entire   cost  of  soliciting   proxies.
Solicitation  will be primarily by mail. Certain officers of the Corporation and
its subsidiaries  may solicit  proxies  personally or  by telephone  or  special
letter, but such persons will not be specially compensated for such services.

                         SHARES OUTSTANDING AND VOTING

    Only stockholders of record at the close of business on February 9, 1996 are
entitled  to notice of, and to vote at, the annual meeting. At February 9, 1996,
there were  issued  and  outstanding  7,910,069  shares  of  common  stock.  The
Corporation  has no class  of stock other  than common stock.  Each share of the
common  stock  is  entitled  to  one  vote  on  all  matters  presented  to  the
stockholders with the exception of the election of directors. In the election of
directors,   cumulative  voting  rules  apply.  Under  cumulative  voting,  each
stockholder is entitled to cast  as many votes in  the aggregate as shall  equal
the  number of shares of the common stock  owned by him or her multiplied by the
number of directors to be  elected. Each stockholder, or  his or her proxy,  may
cast  all of  his or  her votes (as  thus determined)  for a  single nominee for
director or may distribute them among two or more nominees, at the stockholder's
discretion. As  to  the  authority  of  the persons  named  as  proxies  in  the
accompanying proxy card to cumulate votes, see the section entitled "Election of
Directors".

    At February 9, 1996, the trust department of Citizens Bank and Trust Company
("Citizens")  held of record 1,013,726 shares  of the Corporation's common stock
in  a  fiduciary  capacity  representing  approximately  12.8  percent  of   the
Corporation's outstanding shares of common stock. With respect to 562,505 shares
(approximately  7.1  percent), the  instrument creating  the trust  or fiduciary
relationship specifically directs  Citizens to  vote the shares  and the  shares
will  be voted  "for" the proposals  presented for  consideration. The remaining
shares held by the trust department of  Citizens will be voted at the  direction
of the beneficial owners.

    At  February 9,  1996, to  the knowledge of  the Corporation,  there were no
other record or beneficial  owners of more than  5 percent of the  Corporation's
issued and outstanding common stock.

    Shareholders  are being  asked to approve  the amendments to  the 1993 Stock
Option Plan so that  executive officers who receive  stock pursuant to the  Plan
will  be eligible  for the  exemption provided  by Rule  16b-3 promulgated under
Section 16(b) of the Securities and Exchange  Act of 1934. For purposes of  Rule
16b-3,  the Securities and Exchange Commission  has provided that an affirmative
vote of a majority of all  outstanding shares of the Corporation's common  stock
represented  in  person or  by proxy  and entitled  to vote  on the  proposal is
necessary for approval. Under this requirement, abstentions and broker non-votes
will have the effect of a "No" vote.

                                       1
<PAGE>
            BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP BY DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS
                       OF COMMON STOCK OF THE CORPORATION

    Set forth below is information with respect to shares of common stock of the
Corporation  beneficially  owned  as  of   February  9,  1996  by  the   current
director-nominees,  the  executive officers  named  in the  Summary Compensation
Table  herein,  and  all  director-nominees   and  executive  officers  of   the
Corporation as a group. Unless otherwise noted, the named person has sole voting
and investment powers with respect to the reported shares. Where the holdings of
a  family member are noted  as being held "individually",  the family member has
sole voting  and  investment power  with  respect  to the  shares.  Where  joint
ownership is noted, the joint owners share voting and investment power as to the
shares.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        AMOUNT AND NATURE OF   PERCENT OF CLASS
NAME                                                    BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP     OUTSTANDING
- ------------------------------------------------------  --------------------  ------------------
<S>                                                     <C>                   <C>
Irving P. Bright, Jr. ................................            69,377               **(1)
John Burman...........................................            48,234               **(2)
Patrick J. Cvengros...................................            81,736              1.0(3)
William H. Dyer.......................................            56,023               **
Louis A. Haas.........................................           347,330              4.4(4)
Joe Tom Haltom........................................           291,032              3.7
Kerry B. Harvey.......................................            29,782               **(5)
F. Donald Higdon......................................             3,298               **
M. Leon Johnson.......................................            59,946               **(6)
William J. Jones......................................            65,346               **(7)
Ted S. Kinsey.........................................            19,750               **(8)
Louis M. Michelson....................................             6,718               **(9)
Bill B. Morgan........................................           213,267              2.7(10)
C. Thomas Murrell, III................................             9,497               **(11)
Louis D. Myre, MD.....................................            36,952               **(12)
J. Russell Ogden, III.................................            39,056               **(13)
David M. Paxton.......................................             3,300               **(14)
Robert P. Petter......................................            24,420               **
Joseph A. Powell......................................            21,449               **(15)
John E. Sircy.........................................               587               **(16)
William A. Usher......................................            10,000               **
All directors and named executive officers of the
 Corporation and its subsidiaries as a group (26
 persons).............................................         1,437,100             18.2%
</TABLE>

- ------------------------
**  Represents less than 1 percent of total outstanding shares of common stock.

(1)  Shares represented include 6,206 shares  owned individually by Mr. Bright's
    wife and 12,000 shares in a trust for which she serves as Trustee.

(2) Shares represented include 22,582 shares individually owned by Mr.  Burman's
    wife.

(3)  Shares represented include 32,676 shares  owned jointly by Mr. Cvengros and
    his wife.

(4) Shares  represented include  5,904  shares held  in custodian  accounts  and
    58,000  shares held in agency accounts  for Mr. Haas' children, 7,886 shares
    owned jointly by he and his wife  and 177,108 shares of an estate for  which
    Mr. Haas serves as executor.

(5) Shares represented include 19,888 shares owned jointly by Mr. Harvey and his
    wife, 102 shares owned jointly by Mr. Harvey's wife and daughter, 102 shares
    owned  jointly  by  Mr.  Harvey  and  his  daughter,  and  164  shares owned
    individually by Mr. Harvey's wife.

                                       2
<PAGE>
(6) Shares represented include  10,234 vested shares  held by the  Corporation's
    Retirement,  Savings, and  Profit Sharing  Plan and  2,000 shares  of vested
    stock options.

(7) Shares represented  include 8,798  vested shares held  by the  Corporation's
    Retirement,  Savings, and  Profit Sharing Plan  and 52,653  shares of vested
    stock options.

(8) Shares represented include 10,884 shares jointly owned by Mr. Kinsey and his
    wife, 300 shares owned individually by  Mr. Kinsey's wife, and 2,000  shares
    owned individually by Mr. Kinsey's children.

(9) Shares represented include 1,596 shares owned by Michelson Jewelers, Inc.

(10)  Shares represented include 4,850 shares owned by Mr. Morgan's wife, 98,724
    shares owned by Mr. Morgan's father,  600 shares owned by Mr. Morgan's  son,
    1,745  shares owned  by Mr. Morgan's  daughter and  son-in-law, 9,704 shares
    owned by Mr. Morgan's sister and  brother-in-law, 1,504 shares owned by  Mr.
    Morgan's  sister and brother-in-law, and 4,384  shares owned by Mr. Morgan's
    brother and sister-in-law.

(11) Shares  represented include  210 vested  shares held  by the  Corporation's
    Retirement,  Savings, and  Profit Sharing  Plan and  8,333 shares  of vested
    stock options.

(12) Shares represented include 16,012  shares owned individually by Dr.  Myre's
    wife and 4,140 shares in a trust for which she serves as a Trustee.

(13)  Shares represented  include 90 shares  held in custodian  accounts for Mr.
    Ogden's children, 1,467 vested shares held by the Corporation's  Retirement,
    Savings, and Profit Sharing Plan and 32,499 shares of vested stock options.

(14) Shares represented include 3,200 shares owned jointly by Mr. Paxton and his
    wife.

(15)  Shares represented include 3,438 shares owned individually by Mr. Powell's
    wife.

(16) Shares  represented include  387 vested  shares held  by the  Corporation's
    Retirement, Savings, and Profit Sharing Plan.

    Section   16(a)  of  the  Securities  Exchange  Act  of  1934  requires  the
Corporation's executive officers, directors  and persons who  own more than  ten
percent (10%) of the Corporation's common stock to file reports of ownership and
changes  in ownership with the Securities  and Exchange Commission ("SEC"). Such
persons are required by SEC regulation to furnish the Corporation with copies of
all Section 16(a) forms they file.

    Based solely on its  review of the  copies of such forms  received by it  or
representations from such persons that no Form 5s were required, the Corporation
believes  that all filing requirements applicable to its officers, directors and
greater than ten percent (10%) beneficial owners were complied with in 1995 with
the following exceptions: Michael L. Woolfolk did not timely file a Form 3, with
respect to his election as an  executive officer of the Corporation; Mr.  Bright
did not timely file two reports covering 3 transactions; Mr. Dyer did not timely
file  two reports covering 3 transactions.  All of the exceptions were corrected
as soon as they were discovered.

                                  PROPOSAL ONE
                             ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

    Among items to be acted  upon at the annual  meeting of stockholders is  the
election  of seventeen directors  to the Board of  Directors of the Corporation.
Each of the persons elected  will serve a term in  office of one year and  until
his  successor  is duly  elected and  qualified. All  nominees for  director are
currently directors of the Corporation.

                                       3
<PAGE>
    Set out below  is information concerning  all of the  current directors  and
director-nominees  of  the  Corporation,  including  their  positions  held with
Citizens, Bank of  Marshall County  ("BMC"), Pennyrile Citizens  Bank and  Trust
("Pennyrile"),  Graves County  Bank, Inc. ("Graves"),  United Commonwealth Bank,
F.S.B.("United"), and Fidelity Credit Corporation ("FCC").

    IRVING P. BRIGHT, JR., 63, business  consultant. Until 1994, Mr. Bright  was
the  President and Chief  Executive Officer of  Bright's, Inc.(a retail clothing
store). Mr. Bright has been  a director of the  Corporation since 1983. He  also
serves as a director of Citizens.

    JOHN  L. BURMAN, 62, manager of Kentucky  Farm Bureau. Mr. Burman has been a
director of  the  Corporation  since 1993.  He  also  serves as  a  director  of
Pennyrile.

    PATRICK  J. CVENGROS,  59, retired. Until  1992, Mr. Cvengros  served as the
President and Chief Executive Officer of the Corporation. Mr. Cvengros has  been
a director of the Corporation since 1983. Mr. Cvengros also serves as a director
of  Citizens and  FCC, as well  as serving  as a director  of Computer Services,
Inc., Paducah, Kentucky.

    WILLIAM H.  DYER, 60,  President and  Chief Executive  Officer of  Tennessee
Valley  Towing (a  river barge  company). Mr.  Dyer has  been a  director of the
Corporation since 1991. Mr. Dyer also serves as a director of Citizens.

    LOUIS A. HAAS, 54, investor. Mr.  Haas was formerly the President and  Chief
Executive   Officer  of  DuBois   Pharmaceutical  (a  wholesale  pharmaceuticals
company). Mr. Haas has been a director  of the Corporation since 1991. Mr.  Haas
also serves as a director of Citizens.

    JOE  TOM  HALTOM,  68, Chairman  of  BMC.  Mr. Haltom  previously  served as
Chairman of BMC Bankcorp, Inc., which was acquired by the Corporation on May 31,
1994. Mr. Haltom was  named a director  of the Corporation  in 1994. Mr.  Haltom
also serves as a director of BMC, Graves, and United.

    KERRY  B. HARVEY, 39, a partner in the  law firm of Owen, Harvey and Carter.
Mr. Harvey was  named a director  of the  Corporation in 1994.  Mr. Harvey  also
serves as a director of BMC and United.

    F.  DONALD HIGDON, 64, retired. Mr.  Higdon was formerly the General Manager
of Kraft Food Service, Inc. (a wholesale food distributor). Mr. Higdon has  been
a  director of the Corporation since 1991.  Mr. Higdon also serves as a director
of Citizens.

    WILLIAM  J.  JONES,  40,  President  and  Chief  Executive  Officer  of  the
Corporation.  Mr. Jones  served as Executive  Vice President  of the Corporation
until January 1992, when he assumed his  current position. Mr. Jones has been  a
director  of the Corporation since 1991. Mr.  Jones also serves as a director of
Citizens, BMC, FCC, and Pennyrile.

    TED S. KINSEY, 50, President and Chief Executive Officer of Parkway Chrysler
(an automobile dealership). Mr. Kinsey was  named a director of the  Corporation
in 1994. Mr. Kinsey also serves as a director of BMC.

    LOUIS  M. MICHELSON, 51, President and  Chief Executive Officer of Michelson
Jewelers, Inc. (a  retail jeweler).  Mr. Michelson has  been a  director of  the
Corporation since 1991. Mr. Michelson also serves as a director of Citizens.

    BILL  B. MORGAN, 66,  Senior Vice President  of Bradshaw and  Weil, Inc. and
Cornerstone Insurance  Group  (insurance  agencies).  Mr.  Morgan  served  as  a
Brigadier  General in the  United States Air  Force until 1992.  Mr. Morgan also
served as  Vice President  of Morgan,  Trevathan and  Gunn, Inc.  (an  insurance
agency)  until 1995, when  he assumed his  current role. Mr.  Morgan was named a
director of the Corporation in 1994. Mr. Morgan also serves as a director of BMC
and Graves.

    LOUIS D. MYRE, 69, retired  physician. Dr. Myre has  been a director of  the
Corporation since 1983. Dr. Myre also serves as a director of Citizens.

    DAVID  M. PAXTON, 39,  Vice President and Chief  Financial Officer of Paxton
Media Group (a  television broadcasting and  newspaper publishing company).  Mr.
Paxton has been a director of the Corporation since 1991. Mr. Paxton also serves
as a director of Citizens.

                                       4
<PAGE>
    ROBERT  P. PETTER,  60, President  and Chief  Executive Officer  of Henry A.
Petter Supply Company (an industrial supply  wholesaler). Mr. Petter has been  a
director  of the Corporation since 1983. Mr. Petter also serves as a director of
Citizens.

    JOSEPH A. POWELL, 63, President and  Chief Executive Officer of Old  Hickory
Clay  Company  (a  mining  company).  Mr. Powell  has  been  a  director  of the
Corporation since 1991. Mr. Powell also serves as a director of Citizens.

    WILLIAM A.  USHER,  66,  Chairman  and  Chief  Executive  Officer  of  Usher
Transportation  Company (a trucking  and transportation company).  Mr. Usher has
been a  director of  the Corporation  since 1991.  Mr. Usher  also serves  as  a
director of Citizens.

    The  Board of Directors  has no reason  to believe that  any of the nominees
will be  unavailable  to  serve  as  director.  If  any  nominee  should  become
unavailable  before the annual meeting, the  persons named in the enclosed proxy
card, or their substitutes, or a majority of them, reserve the right to vote for
a substitute nominee  selected by the  Board of Directors.  In addition, if  any
stockholder  or stockholders shall vote shares cumulatively or otherwise for the
election of a  director or  directors other than  the nominees  named above,  or
substitute  nominees, or  for less than  all of  them, the persons  named in the
enclosed proxy card, or their substitutes, or a majority of them, shall have the
right, in their discretion, to vote  cumulatively for some number less than  all
of  the nominees  named above or  any substitute  nominees, and for  such of the
persons nominated as they may choose.

MEETINGS AND COMMITTEES

    During the  year ended  December 31,  1995, the  Board of  Directors of  the
Corporation  held five regular meetings.  During 1995, committees established by
the Board  met  as follows:  the  Executive  Committee met  fifteen  times,  the
Investment  Committee met  four times, and  the Audit Committee  met four times.
Attendance by directors at these meetings averaged 89 percent during 1995,  with
all  directors attending more than  75 percent of the  aggregate number of Board
meetings and  meetings of  committees on  which he  served except  for David  M.
Paxton,  who had  a 71  percent attendance  record, and  Louis D.  Myre, who was
present 60 percent.

    The members of the Executive Committee are Irving P. Bright, Jr., Patrick J.
Cvengros, Louis A. Haas, Joe Tom Haltom, William J. Jones, David M. Paxton,  and
William  A. Usher. The  functions performed by the  Committee include: acting as
the Compensation Committee; making recommendations to the Board of Directors  in
matters  involving  dividends,  expansion  plans,  significant  expenditures and
strategic initiatives;  reviewing and  making recommendations  to the  Board  of
Directors  regarding proposed directors,  the compensation of  directors and the
composition and  size of  the Board  and its  committees; and  reviewing  credit
policies and the adequacy of the allowance for credit losses of each subsidiary.

    The  members of the Audit  Committee are Louis A.  Haas, Kerry B. Harvey, F.
Donald Higdon, David  M. Paxton,  Robert P. Petter,  and Joseph  A. Powell.  The
Committee  recommends  to  the  Board the  engagement  of  independent auditors;
reviews with independent auditors the scope and results of the audit engagement;
reviews the scope, frequency, and  results of internal audits and  examinations;
reviews  the  adequacy of  the Corporation's  system  of internal  controls; and
reviews  the  regulatory  examination  reports   of  the  Corporation  and   its
subsidiaries.

    The  members of the Investment Committee are Patrick J. Cvengros, William J.
Jones, Bill B. Morgan, David M. Paxton,  Dr. Charles W. Ransler, and William  A.
Usher.  Dr. Ransler serves on the board  of directors of Citizens. The Committee
reviews the composition and performance of the investment securities  portfolios
of  each subsidiary bank; establishes policies for monitoring the composition of
subsidiary's investment  securities  portfolios; and  establishes  policies  for
monitoring liquidity and interest rate risk for the Corporation.

    The  Corporation has no standing  nominating committees. All nominations for
membership on the Board originated with the Board of Directors.

                                       5
<PAGE>
COMPENSATION OF DIRECTORS

    Prior to October 1995, each  non-management director of the Corporation  was
paid  $200 for  each Board meeting  or committee meeting  attended. Beginning in
October 1995, each director  of the Corporation was  paid $1,000 for each  Board
meeting attended and $500 for attending each committee meeting.

                             EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
                           SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE

    The  following table  contains information  concerning compensation  paid or
accrued by  the Corporation  and its  subsidiaries for  the fiscal  years  ended
December  31, 1993, 1994, and 1995 to,  or on behalf of, the Corporation's Chief
Executive Officer and each of the  four other most highly compensated  executive
officers of the Corporation during 1995 whose compensation exceeded $100,000.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
               (A)                    (B)        (C)         (D)              (E)               (F)             (G)
<S>                                <C>        <C>        <C>          <C>                  <C>            <C>
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                             LONG-TERM
                                                                                           COMPENSATION
                                                                                           -------------
                                                      ANNUAL                                SECURITIES
                                                   COMPENSATION                             UNDERLYING
NAME AND                                      ----------------------     OTHER ANNUAL         OPTIONS        ALL OTHER
PRINCIPAL POSITION                   YEAR     SALARY($)   BONUS($)    COMPENSATION($)(1)   (# SHARES)(2)  COMPENSATION(3)
- ---------------------------------  ---------  ---------  -----------  -------------------  -------------  ----------------
<S>                                <C>        <C>        <C>          <C>                  <C>            <C>
William J. Jones                        1995  $ 200,000   $       0        $       0           120,000       $   26,461
  President and Chief                   1994    180,000      54,216                0            20,000           26,069
  Executive Officer, CBT                1993    165,000      48,411                0            14,000           20,788
  and Citizens
John E. Sircy (4)                       1995    130,000           0                0            70,000           19,998
  Executive Vice President and          1994     88,461      30,000            6,358            10,000           18,416
  Chief Operating Officer,              1993          0           0                0                 0                0
  CBT and Citizens
M. Leon Johnson                         1995    100,000      38,271                0             3,000           15,948
  President and Chief Executive         1994     92,800      29,591                0             6,000           16,927
  Officer, FCC                          1993     86,800      33,984                0                 0           11,088
C. Thomas Murrell, III                  1995    120,000      18,144                0             5,000           12,812
  Executive Vice President              1994    115,513      30,000                0             6,000           12,284
  Commercial and Consumer               1993    105,000      17,965                0             6,500           10,920
  Banking, Citizens
J. Russell Ogden, III                   1995    110,000           0                0             2,000           11,605
  Executive Vice President              1994    106,072      18,610                0             5,000           11,132
  Financial Services, Citizens          1993     96,720      16,549                0             6,500            9,923
</TABLE>

- ------------------------------

(1) The amount shown in column (e) represents the amount reimbursed to Mr. Sircy
    in  1994 for the payment of taxes incurred in connection with his receipt of
    relocation expenses.

(2) All option  grants have been  adjusted to reflect  the October 1994  2-for-1
    stock split.

(3)  The amounts  shown in column  (g) for  each named executive  officer is the
    total of the  Corporation's contribution  to the 401(k)  and Money  Purchase
    (MPP)  retirement plans, subsidiary directors' fees, and term life insurance
    premiums for the fiscal  year ended December 31,  1995 as summarized on  the
    following chart:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                    SUBSIDIARY
                                     401(K)/MPP   DIRECTORS' FEES    TERM LIFE     TOTALS
                                     -----------  ---------------  -------------  ---------
<S>                                  <C>          <C>              <C>            <C>
Mr. Jones                             $  16,164      $   9,850       $     447    $  26,461
Mr. Sircy                                13,764          6,000             234       19,998
Mr. Johnson                              10,100          5,600             248       15,948
Mr. Murrell                              12,564              0             229       12,812
Mr. Ogden                                11,364              0             241       11,605
</TABLE>

- ------------------------------

(4) Mr. Sircy joined the Corporation in April 1994.

                                       6
<PAGE>
                       OPTION GRANTS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR

    Shown below is information on grants of stock options during the fiscal year
ended December 31, 1995, to the named executive officers.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                     INDIVIDUAL GRANTS
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
              (A)                       (B)              (C)              (D)              (E)          (F)         (G)
<S>                               <C>               <C>            <C>                <C>            <C>         <C>
                                                     % OF TOTAL
                                     NUMBER OF         OPTIONS
                                     SECURITIES      GRANTED TO
                                     UNDERLYING     EMPLOYEES IN   EXERCISE OR BASE
                                      OPTIONS        FISCAL YEAR       PRICE PER       EXPIRATION
NAME                              GRANTED(#)(1)(2)     1995(4)        SHARE($/SH)         DATE
- --------------------------------  ----------------  -------------  -----------------  -------------
                                                                                                      POTENTIAL REALIZABLE
                                                                                                        VALUE AT ASSUMED
                                                                                                     ANNUAL RATES OF STOCK
                                                                                                     PRICE APPRECIATION FOR
                                                                                                        OPTION TERMS(5)
                                                                                                     ----------------------
                                                                                                                    10%
                                                                                                         5%      ----------
                                                                                                     ----------
William J. Jones                       20,000              9.05%       $   22.50            01/05    $  283,000  $  717,200
                                      100,000(3)          45.25%           23.75            03/05     1,494,800   3,785,000
John E. Sircy                          10,000              4.52%           22.50            01/05       141,500     358,600
                                       60,000(3)          27.15%           23.75            03/05       896,400   2,271,000
M. Leon Johnson                         3,000              1.36%           22.50            01/05        42,450     107,580
C. Thomas Murrell, III                  5,000              2.26%           22.50            01/05        70,750     179,300
J. Russell Ogden, III                   2,000               .90%           22.50            01/05        28,300      71,720
</TABLE>

- ------------------------------

(1)  Stock options have no value on the date of grant because the exercise price
    per share is equal to the market price per share of the Corporation's common
    stock on the day preceding  the date the option  is granted. A stock  option
    has  value to  the optionee in  the future only  if the market  price of the
    Corporation's common stock at the time  the option is exercised exceeds  the
    exercise price.

(2) Options are not exercisable during the first two years after the date of the
    grant. Thereafter, options may be exercised on or after the anniversary date
    of  the grant  in three  equal installments  so that  the full  grant may be
    exercised no sooner than four years after  the date of the grant, except  as
    noted in footnote (3).

(3)  Options are not exercisable  during the first five  years after grant date.
    Commencing on the fifth anniversary of the date of grant, 100 percent become
    exercisable.

(4) A  total  of 221,000  options  were granted  to  a total  of  twenty-one(21)
    officers of the Corporation and its subsidiaries during 1995.

(5)  The dollar amounts under columns (f) and (g) are the result of calculations
    at the  5  percent and  10  percent rates  set  by the  SEC.  The  potential
    realizable  value over the option terms of the options included in the above
    table are computed using the assumed rates set by the SEC and should not  be
    viewed  as,  and are  not  intended to  be,  a forecast  of  possible future
    appreciation, if any, in the Corporation's stock price.

                         AGGREGATE OPTIONS EXERCISED IN
               LAST FISCAL YEAR AND FISCAL YEAR-END OPTION VALUES

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
            (A)                   (B)           (C)                   (D)                           (E)
<S>                          <C>            <C>          <C>              <C>            <C>          <C>
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                              NUMBER OF SECURITIES          VALUE OF UNEXERCISED
                                                         UNDERLYING UNEXERCISED OPTIONS     IN-THE-MONEY OPTIONS
                                SHARES                         AS OF 12/31/95(#)              AT 12/31/95($)*
                              ACQUIRED ON      VALUE     ------------------------------  --------------------------
NAME                          EXERCISE(#)   REALIZED($)    EXERCISABLE    UNEXERCISABLE  EXERCISABLE  UNEXERCISABLE
- ---------------------------  -------------  -----------  ---------------  -------------  -----------  -------------
<S>                          <C>            <C>          <C>              <C>            <C>          <C>
William J. Jones                       0     $       0         39,166         155,334     $ 519,331    $   245,699
John E. Sircy                          0             0              0          80,000             0         34,200
M. Leon Johnson                        0             0              0           9,000             0         24,720
C. Thomas Murrell, III                 0             0          4,166          16,334        37,751         72,229
J. Russell Ogden, III              2,500        39,775         25,666          14,334       339,571         96,669
</TABLE>

- ------------------------------
* Amounts shown represent the difference between exercise price and December 31,
1995 market value of $23.00.

                                       7
<PAGE>
                               EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

    Information regarding  the current  executive officers  of the  Corporation,
including  their  names,  ages,  positions with  the  Corporation,  and  a brief
description of  their  business  experience  during  the  past  five  years,  is
presented  below.  Executive  officers  are elected  annually  by  the  Board of
Directors.

    WILLIAM J. JONES, 40, President and Chief Executive Officer and a  director.
Mr.  Jones also serves as President and Chief Executive Officer of Citizens. Mr.
Jones has been associated with the Corporation for the past 11 years. Additional
information regarding Mr. Jones is set forth on page 4.

    JOHN E. SIRCY, 39, Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer. Mr.
Sircy also serves  as Executive Vice  President and Chief  Operating Officer  of
Citizens  and  as  a  director  of  Graves  and  United.  Mr.  Sircy  joined the
Corporation in his current role in April 1994. Prior to that, he served as  Vice
President  and Chief Financial Officer of First Illini Bancorp, Inc., Galesburg,
Illinois, until January 1991. At that time, Mr. Sircy became Vice President  and
Controller  of Norwest Bank Iowa,  N.A. in Des Moines,  Iowa, until August 1992,
when he was named Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, a  position
he held until April 1994.

    M. LEON JOHNSON, 55, President and Chief Executive Officer, FCC. Mr. Johnson
serves  as  a director  of Citizens  and FCC  and has  been associated  with the
Corporation for 11 years, serving in his current role.

    C. THOMAS MURRELL, III, 52, Executive Vice President-Commercial and Consumer
Banking, Citizens. Mr. Murrell joined the Corporation in November 1991 as Senior
Vice President and Chief Credit Officer of Citizens. Prior to that, he served as
Executive Vice  President  of the  Corporate  Banking Group  at  First  Security
National  Bank and Trust  Company, Lexington, Kentucky.  Mr. Murrell assumed his
current role in March 1994.

    J. RUSSELL  OGDEN, III,  48,  Executive Vice  President-Financial  Services,
Citizens.  Mr. Ogden  served as Senior  Vice President of  Trust and Investments
until March 1994, when he assumed  his current position. He has been  associated
with the Corporation for 14 years.

                       COMPENSATION COMMITTEE INTERLOCKS
                           AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION

    The  Corporation  does not  have a  compensation committee  of the  Board of
Directors. However, all compensation matters, including executive  compensation,
are  decided by the Executive Committee of  the Corporation, except as set forth
below. The following directors  served on the  Executive Committee during  1995:
Irving  P. Bright,  Jr., Patrick  J. Cvengros,  Louis A.  Haas, Joe  Tom Haltom,
William J. Jones, David M. Paxton, and William A. Usher. Director Cvengros  was,
until 1992, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Corporation. Mr. Jones,
President  and Chief Executive Officer, did not participate in any discussion or
decisions regarding his own compensation.

                         COMPENSATION COMMITTEE REPORT
                           ON EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

    The  Executive  Committee  of  the  Board  of  Directors  (the  "Committee")
determines  annually  the compensation  to be  paid  to the  Corporation's Chief
Executive Officer and other executive officers, including the executive officers
named in the Summary Compensation Table, except that the Stock Option Committee,
consisting of all members of the Committee, except Mr. Jones, made all decisions
about awards  under  the Corporation's  stock  option plans.  During  1995,  the
Committee  retained the  services of executive  compensation consultants (Watson
Wyatt) to  provide  professional  assistance,  data  and  advice  regarding  pay
practices at the Corporation. This report discusses the objectives and procedure
used  by the  Committee to establish  1995 compensation for  the Chief Executive
Officer and the  four other officers  named in the  Summary Compensation  Table.
This  report describes the basis on  which such 1995 compensation determinations
or recommendations were made by the Committee with respect to the  Corporation's
executive   officers.  This  report,   required  by  rules   of  the  Securities

                                       8
<PAGE>
and Exchange Commission, provides specific information regarding compensation of
the Corporation's  President and  Chief Executive  Officer ("CEO")  and  general
information  regarding compensation of the Corporation's executive officers as a
group. The Corporation's CEO  and four other  most highly compensated  executive
officers are sometimes referred to as the "Named Executives."

    Section  162(m)  of the  Code limits  to  $1,000,000 in  a taxable  year the
deduction publicly  held  companies  may  claim  for  compensation  paid  to  an
executive  officer,  unless certain  requirements are  met. The  Corporation has
reviewed this provision and has determined that the Corporation is not  affected
by  Section  162(m)  because  no  compensation  paid  to  any  officer currently
approaches or is expected to approach $1,000,000 in the near term.  Accordingly,
no change to any of the compensation plans is contemplated at this time.

                 COMPENSATION PHILOSOPHY AND OVERALL OBJECTIVES
                     OF THE EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION PROGRAMS

    The  Corporation  seeks to  ensure that  executive compensation  is directly
linked to Corporate performance and shareholder value, as well as comparable pay
practices in  the industry.  Each year,  the Committee,  in making  compensation
decisions  and recommendations,  and the Board  of Directors,  in approving base
salaries, review the performance of the Corporation and compare such performance
to specified  internal and  external performance  standards. The  Committee  has
developed  the following  compensation guidelines  as the  principles upon which
compensation decisions and recommendations are made:

    - Provide  variable  compensation  opportunities  that  are  linked  to  the
      financial   performance  of  the  Corporation  and  that  align  executive
      compensation with the interest of shareholders.

    - Provide incentives  to  increase  corporate  performance  and  shareholder
      value.

    - Establish executive officer base pay levels somewhat below the competitive
      market,  while providing incentive  awards (from the  annual and long-term
      plans)  above  the  market,  provided  that  performance  objectives   are
      achieved.

    - Provide  a competitive total compensation package that is "at risk" driven
      and enables the Corporation to attract and retain key executives.

    The Committee's executive  officer compensation policies  are structured  to
reward  contributions  to  the Corporation's  performance  and to  enable  it to
compete favorably  with peer  institutions in  attracting and  retaining  highly
qualified  individuals as executive officers.  The Corporation generally defines
its peers as financial  institutions of $1  to $2 billion  in assets located  in
non-metropolitan  areas  in  the southeast  and  midwest regions  of  the United
States. The primary objective of the Committee's compensation policies is to pay
for performance. As a result of a study conducted by the executive  compensation
consultants  the  Committee refined  its  executive compensation  philosophy and
strategy  and  established   a  desired  compensation   mix  from  the   various
compensation components. The Corporation's executive compensation strategy is to
set   base  pay  at  90  percent   of  the  competitive  market  with  incentive
opportunities  from  annual   and  long  term   plans  providing  total   direct
compensation   (base,  annual  incentive  and  long-term  incentive)  at  target
performance higher than  the Corporation's  peer organizations. As  a result,  a
significant  portion of each executive officer's potential compensation for 1995
consisted of an incentive component with a pay-out based on the Corporation's or
Subsidiary's performance for the year  and the executive officer's  contribution
to that performance.

                        COMPENSATION PROGRAM COMPONENTS
                       AND EXECUTIVE OFFICER COMPENSATION

    The compensation program for executive officers primarily consists of annual
compensation   (comprised   of  base   salary  and   annual  performance-related
incentives) and long term compensation (consisting of stock options).

                                       9
<PAGE>
ANNUAL COMPENSATION

    BASE SALARIES:  Salary ranges were established based both on a study of peer
data and  an  assessment  of  the  relative  internal  responsibilities  of  the
executive positions. Generally, the midpoint for each executive officer's salary
range  was set at approximately 90% of  the median of industry peers. Individual
base salaries for executive officers other than Mr. Jones are recommended by the
Corporation's Chief Executive Officer and approved by the Committee. Mr.  Jones'
base  salary is determined by the  Committee. Salaries are reviewed annually and
adjusted periodically, typically at 12 month intervals. A salary range for  each
executive  officer position  is established  using survey  data. Adjustments are
based upon the  relationship of the  executive officer's current  salary to  the
range  for  the position  and  a subjective  evaluation  of overall  company and
personal performance. Base salaries  paid in 1995 to  the Named Executives  were
below  the  median  of estimated  base  salaries  of industry  peer  survey data
available. With  respect to  Mr.  Jones, the  Committee considered  his  current
salary  compared to the established range and the performance of the Corporation
as well as his personal performance.

    ANNUAL INCENTIVE COMPENSATION:   At  the beginning  of the  fiscal year  the
Committee  also set potential  1995 incentive award levels,  payable in cash, at
threshold, target  and maximum  performance points  for each  executive  officer
other than Mr. Johnson. Mr. Johnson, as President and Chief Executive Officer of
FCC,  receives an incentive award of 2  percent of FCC's pre-tax net income. All
other executives are  classified as Corporate,  Affiliate or Financial  Services
officers,  with  each  classification  having  a  different  set  of performance
measures. Corporate executives,  which would  include Mr. Jones  and Mr.  Sircy,
receive  payouts based upon the pre-tax net income of the Corporation. Threshold
performance must be achieved  for any awards to  be made. Affiliate  executives,
which  would include Mr. Murrell, receive  payouts based upon the performance in
five, equally-weighted categories: Corporate  pre-tax net income, affiliate  net
interest  margin, fee  income, loan growth  and deposit growth.  With respect to
loan growth, minimum acceptable credit  quality standards must be maintained  to
qualify for an award on that factor. For each factor, threshold performance must
be  achieved for  an award  on that  factor to  be made.  The Financial Services
incentive award, for which Mr. Ogden is eligible, is based upon the pre-tax  net
income  of  the  Financial  Services  business  unit,  consisting  of  trust and
brokerage. The  payout  percentage of  Financial  Services' pre-tax  net  income
varies  from  3  to 6.5  percent,  depending on  profitability  level. Threshold
performance must be achieved for any awards to be made. Payout percentages  vary
by  position, with target payouts  ranging from 35 to  50 percent of base salary
for Named  Executives. Of  the Named  Executives, Mr.  Johnson and  Mr.  Murrell
received incentive awards in 1995.

LONG-TERM COMPENSATION

    Long-term  compensation is provided in the form of stock options granted and
is intended  to  increase  management  ownership of  stock  and  to  provide  an
incentive for executive officers to improve long-term Corporate performance. All
options  are granted at fair market value and are exercisable in accordance with
the terms of the Corporation's incentive stock option plans.

    In fixing the grants of stock options to the individual executive  officers,
other  than the  President and  CEO and the  Executive Vice  President and Chief
Operating Officer ("COO"), the Committee  reviewed with the CEO his  recommended
individual  awards,  taking  into account  the  respective  responsibilities and
contributions of each of the executive officers. The 1995 awards to the CEO  and
COO  were fixed separately by the Committee  and were based, among other things,
on a review of  competitive compensation data from  national surveys, data  from
selected  industry peers, the officers'  total compensation, current outstanding
stock options and recommendations from the Committee's compensation  consultant.
Rather  than granting  smaller option awards  each year, the  Committee chose to
grant a significant  block of options  in 1995 to  the CEO and  COO in order  to
strengthen their tie to shareholder interests for an extended period of time.

                                       10
<PAGE>
1995 COMPENSATION FOR THE PRESIDENT AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER

    In  light of  the Committee's  stated executive  philosophy and compensation
plans, the  Committee  made  the  following decisions  for  1995  regarding  the
compensation  for  Mr. Jones,  the Corporation's  President and  Chief Executive
Officer:

    - BASE SALARY  Mr. Jones' base  salary was increased effective January  1995
      from  $180,000 to $200,000,  an increase of  approximately 11 percent. The
      amount  of  this  increase  was   based  on  the  continued   satisfactory
      performance  of Mr.  Jones as  evaluated by  the Committee.  The Committee
      believes that, as adjusted, Mr. Jones' base salary remains lower than  the
      median average salary paid to CEOs by industry peers.

    - ANNUAL  INCENTIVE  Although eligible, Mr.  Jones did not receive any award
      under the Company's  annual incentive  compensation program  for 1995,  as
      discussed above under "Annual Incentive Compensation."

    - LONG-TERM  INCENTIVE   The number  of options  to acquire  shares of stock
      granted to  the  Chief Executive  Officer  under the  Corporation's  stock
      option  plans  are  based  on  competitive  practices.  Administration  is
      consistent with  the provisions  of  the plans  as described  above  under
      "Long-Term  Compensation." In 1995, Mr. Jones received options for 120,000
      shares. Of that amount, 20,000 shares were granted in January and  100,000
      shares were granted in March.

SUMMARY

    The   Committee   believes   that  base-pay   levels   and   increases,  and
performance-based incentive  awards, are  reasonable  and competitive  with  the
compensation  programs provided  to officers  and other  executives by financial
services organizations of similar  size and complexity  to the Corporation.  The
Committee  believes further  that the degree  of performance  sensitivity in the
annual incentive program continues  to be reasonable,  yielding awards that  are
directly  linked  to  the  annual  financial  and  operational  results  of  the
Corporation. The Corporation's long term  incentive stock option plans  continue
to   provide,  in  the  view  of   the  Committee,  financial  opportunities  to
participants and retention features for the Corporation that are consistent with
the  relative  returns  that  are  generated  on  behalf  of  the  Corporation's
shareholders.

       MEMBERS OF THE COMMITTEE:
       Irving P. Bright, Jr.
       Patrick J. Cvengros
       Louis A. Haas
       Joe Tom Haltom
       William J. Jones
       David M. Paxton
       William A. Usher

                                       11
<PAGE>
                         COMPARATIVE STOCK PERFORMANCE

    The  Performance  Graph  set  forth  below  compares  the  cumulative  total
stockholder return on the  Corporation's common stock for  the last five  fiscal
years  with the cumulative total return of the NASDAQ Market Value Index ("Broad
Market Index"),  the  MG Industry  Group  045 Index  (thirty-four  bank  holding
companies,  ranging in asset size  from $500 million to  $10 billion, located in
the East South Central United States) ("Industry Index") and a peer group of  20
publicly  traded bank  holding companies  in non-metropolitan  areas with assets
between $1 and $2 billion  located in the southeast  and midwest regions of  the
United States ("Peer Group Index"). The Corporation believes that the Peer Group
Index  is more  representative for comparison  purposes than  the Industry Index
because  the  companies  comprising  the   Peer  Group  have  asset  sizes   and
non-metropolitan locations comparable to that of the Corporation. The cumulative
total  stockholder return computations set forth in the Performance Graph assume
the investment  of $100  in the  Corporation's common  stock, the  Broad  Market
Index,  the Industry Index and the Peer Group Index on December 31, 1990 and the
reinvestment of all dividends.  The 20 bank  holding companies (in  alphabetical
order)  and their states  that constitute the  Peer Group Index  are as follows:
Brenton Banks Inc.,  IA; Carolina  First Corp., SC;  City Holding  Co., WV;  F&M
National  Corp., VA; First  Commerce Bancshares, NE;  First Financial Corp., IN;
First Source Corp., IN; First United Bancshares, AR; Firstbank of Illinois  Co.,
IL;  Heritage  Financial Services.,  IL;  Homeland Bankshares  Corp.,  IA; Irwin
Financial Corp., IN; Mid-America Bancorp, KY; Mississippi Valley Bancshares, MO;
Park National Corp., OH; Peoples First Corp., KY; Pikeville National Corp.,  KY;
Trans Financial Inc., KY; United Bankshares, Inc., WV; and Wesbanco Inc., WV.

 COMPARISON OF FIVE YEAR CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURN OF THE CORPORATION, INDUSTRY,
                       PEER GROUP AND BROAD MARKET INDEX

EDGAR REPRESENTATION OF DATA POINTS USED IN PRINTED GRAPHIC

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
            CBT CORPORATION    BROAD MARKET   INDUSTRY    PEER GROUP
<S>        <C>                <C>             <C>        <C>
1990                     100             100        100           100
1991                  134.44          128.38     163.59        140.52
1992                  235.35          129.64     169.68        222.59
1993                  326.62          155.50     179.35        251.66
1994                  366.46          163.26     180.09        258.85
1995                  410.02          211.77     241.99        317.94
</TABLE>

                                       12
<PAGE>
               EMPLOYMENT CONTRACTS AND TERMINATION OF EMPLOYMENT
                        AND CHANGE IN CONTROL AGREEMENTS

    The  Corporation has entered into Severance Protection Agreements dated June
28, 1995 ("Severance  Agreements") with  William J. Jones,  President and  Chief
Executive  Officer,  and  John  E. Sircy,  Executive  Vice  President  and Chief
Operating Officer, which  provide for  the payment  of certain  benefits to  Mr.
Jones  and  Mr.  Sircy  upon  the  termination  of  their  employment  with  the
Corporation within twenty-four (24) months following a change in control of  the
Corporation.

    Pursuant  to the Severance Agreements, if,  following a change in control of
the Corporation,  as defined  below, Mr.  Jones' or  Mr. Sircy's  employment  is
terminated  by the Corporation for cause, disability or death, or is voluntarily
terminated by Mr.  Jones or Mr.  Sircy for  other than good  reason, as  defined
below,  they would be entitled to all compensation earned or accrued through the
termination date but not paid. If, following a change in control, Mr. Jones'  or
Mr.  Sircy's employment  is terminated  for any  other reason  (including by Mr.
Jones or Mr. Sircy for good reason),  each would be entitled to [i] all  accrued
compensation  earned or  accrued through  the termination  date, [ii]  a payment
equal  to  two  times  annual  base  salary,  [iii]  immediate  vesting  of  all
outstanding  stock options,  [iv] benefits  under all  medical, hospitalization,
vision and dental plans in which each participates for a period of two years  or
until  comparable coverage began under any plan  of a new employer, [v] an award
under the Corporation's incentive compensation plan equal to the amount which he
would have  received  in  the  year  of termination  prorated  to  the  date  of
termination,  [vi] reimbursement of reasonable moving expenses, [vii] reasonable
attorney fees and other expenses, if any, incurred to enforce the provisions  of
the Severance Agreement, and [viii] all benefits payable under the Corporation's
retirement plans.

    For  purposes  of  the Severance  Agreements,  a  change in  control  of the
Corporation includes the following events: [i] the acquisition by any person  of
20 percent or more of the combined voting power of the Corporation's outstanding
securities; [ii] the members of the Board of Directors on June 28, 1995 (or such
other newly elected directors whose election was approved by at least two-thirds
of  the Board)  cease for any  reason to constitute  at least a  majority of the
members of the  Board; [iii]  the Corporation's shareholders  approve a  merger,
consolidation,  reorganization or  share exchange  unless (a)  the Corporation's
stockholders immediately before such  transaction own immediately thereafter  at
least  50  percent of  the  voting securities  of  the surviving  corporation in
substantially the same proportion, and (b) the members of the Board of Directors
immediately before  such  transaction constitute  at  least 50  percent  of  the
members  of  the Board  of  the surviving  corporation,  and (c)  no  person has
beneficial ownership of 20 percent or more  of the combined voting power of  the
surviving  corporation's  securities;  and [iv]  the  Corporation's shareholders
approve an agreement for the sale of  all or substantially all of the assets  of
the Corporation.

    Under  the  Severance Agreements,  good  reason includes  [i]  a significant
adverse  change  in  duties  or  responsibilities  or  a  change  in   reporting
responsibilities  or  offices, [ii]  a material  reduction in  base salary  or a
failure by  the Corporation  to increase  base salary  by at  least the  average
percentage  increase for all officers of  the Corporation during the preceding 2
years, [iii] a  failure to  provide employee  benefits which  are comparable  to
those  provided  to  similarly  situated employees,  [iv]  a  relocation  of the
executive's offices of  more than 50  miles, [v] any  action which would  affect
participation  in or materially reduce benefits under any compensation plan then
in effect or which would deprive  the executive of any material fringe  benefit,
[vi]  the  Corporation's  failure  to obtain  the  assumption  of  the Severance
Agreements by any  successor to the  Corporation, and [vii]  any termination  of
employment  which is not effected pursuant to the notice and other provisions of
the Severance Agreements.

                                       13
<PAGE>
    The  Corporation entered into  the Severance Agreements  in order to promote
conditions of continuity and stability in the Corporation's business, management
and policies,  as  well  as  reduce  the threat  of  potential  removal  of  the
Corporation's   management,  in  the  event  of  a  change  in  control  of  the
Corporation. The Corporation believes that the Severance Agreements will thereby
help to ensure that there would be sufficient time and information to review any
proposal and  appropriate  alternatives  and  to  negotiate  on  behalf  of  the
Corporation  and its  shareholders from  a position  of strength.  The Severance
Agreements were not adopted in response to any specific effort to obtain control
of the Corporation and the Board of Directors is not aware of any such effort to
obtain control of the Corporation.

    Upon a Change  in Control  of the  Corporation, as  hereafter defined,  with
respect  to the Corporation's 1993 Stock Option Plan (the "1993 Plan"), and upon
a takeover or merger of the Corporation, with respect to the Corporation's  1986
Stock  Option Plan (the "1986  Plan"), at the discretion  of the Plan Committee,
the exercise  dates of  all outstanding  options under  the Corporation's  stock
option plans will accelerate so that each option outstanding may be exercised on
or  after the date of the Change in  Control. In addition, the shares subject to
the Corporation's stock option  plans will be  converted into (automatically  in
the  1993 Plan and at the discretion of  the Plan Committee under the 1986 Plan)
and replaced by shares of common stock or other equity securities having  rights
and  preferences no less  favorable than common  stock of the  successor and the
number of shares subject to  the options and the  purchase price per share  upon
exercise of the options will be correspondingly adjusted so the there will be no
change in the aggregate purchase price payable upon exercise of any such option.
Change  in Control of the Corporation, for  purposes of the 1993 Plan, means (a)
any  share  exchange  or  merger  or  consolidation  of  the  Corporation  or  a
significant subsidiary of the Corporation if either (i) the Corporation will not
be  the surviving or  acquiring corporation or  will not own  100 percent of the
outstanding capital stock  of the surviving  or acquiring corporation  following
consummation  of  the  transactions contemplated  by  the plan  or  agreement of
exchange, merger or consolidation, or (ii) there will be a substantial change in
the proportionate  ownership  of  outstanding  shares of  voting  stock  of  the
Corporation  as  a  result of  the  transactions  contemplated by  such  plan or
agreement of exchange, merger or  consolidation; (b) any sale, lease,  exchange,
transfer  or other disposition of  all or any substantial  part of the assets of
the Corporation or a subsidiary of the Corporation followed by a liquidation  of
the  Corporation; (c)  the commencement of  any tender offer,  exchange offer or
other purchase offer for, and/or any agreement to purchase, as much as (or  more
than)  30  percent of  the  outstanding Common  Stock  of the  Corporation  or a
subsidiary of the Corporation; or (d) the Board of Directors or the shareholders
of the Corporation approve, adopt, agree to recommend, or accept any  agreement,
contract,   offer  or  other  arrangement  providing   for,  or  any  series  of
transactions resulting in, any of the transactions described above.

               TRANSACTIONS WITH EXECUTIVE OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS

    The executive officers and directors of  the Corporation are at present,  as
in  the past,  customers of  subsidiaries of  the Corporation  and have  had and
expect to  have business  and banking  transactions with  such in  the  ordinary
course of business. In addition, some of the executive officers and directors of
the  Corporation are  at present,  as in the  past, also  officers, directors or
principal stockholders of  corporations which are  customers of subsidiaries  of
the  Corporation  and  which  had  and  expect  to  have  business  and  banking
transactions with the Corporation in the  ordinary course of business. All  such
banking  transactions were made in the ordinary course of business, were made on
substantially the same terms, including interest rates and collateral, as  those
prevailing  at the time  for comparable transactions with  other persons and, in
the opinion  of management  of the  Corporation and  its subsidiaries,  did  not
involve  more than normal risk of collectibility or present other unfavorable or
unusual features.

                                       14
<PAGE>
    Mr. Harvey, a director of the Corporation  and BMC, is a partner in the  law
firm of Owen, Harvey, and Carter, Benton, Kentucky, which was retained by BMC in
the  last fiscal year and is proposed to be retained in the current fiscal year.
In 1995, Mr. Harvey's law firm received payment by BMC of approximately  $31,000
for legal fees and retainers.

                                  PROPOSAL TWO
                APPROVAL OF AMENDMENTS TO 1993 STOCK OPTION PLAN

    The  Corporation's 1993 Stock Option Plan (the "Plan") was adopted effective
March 17, 1993, subject to shareholder approval which was received on April  20,
1993.  The  stated purpose  of  the Plan  is  to strengthen  the  Corporation by
providing an additional means of  retaining and attracting competent  management
personnel  and providing to participating officers and other key employees added
incentive for high levels of performance and for unusual efforts to increase the
earnings of the Corporation through the opportunity for stock ownership  offered
by the Plan.

    At  the Annual Meeting, the shareholders of the Corporation will be asked to
approve an amended and restated 1993  Stock Option Plan. The Board of  Directors
of  the Corporation  adopted, subject to  the approval of  its shareholders, the
amended and  restated 1993  Stock Option  Plan (the  "Amended Plan"),  effective
March  16, 1995. Approval of the  Amended Plan by the Corporation's shareholders
is required if executive officers who receive options are to be eligible for the
exemption provided  by  Rule  16b-3  promulgated  under  Section  16(b)  of  the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

SUMMARY OF THE PLAN

    The  Plan currently provides for the grant of options intended to qualify as
incentive stock options ("ISOs") under Section 422A of the Internal Revenue Code
of 1986 (the  "Code"). The aggregate  number of  shares of Common  Stock of  the
Corporation which may be issued upon exercise of ISOs granted under the Plan may
not  exceed 400,000  shares. If  any outstanding option  under the  Plan for any
reason expires  or is  terminated, the  shares of  Common Stock  subject to  the
unexercised portion of the option shall again be available for options under the
Plan  as if no option had been granted  with respect to such shares. There is no
restriction as to the number of options or the maximum number of shares that may
be granted  to  any  one  person.  However,  the  aggregate  fair  market  value
(determined  as of the dates options are  granted) of the shares with respect to
which ISOs  are exercisable  by any  single employee  during any  calendar  year
cannot exceed $100,000.

    The  Plan is  administered, interpreted  and applied  by a  committee ("Plan
Committee") consisting  of not  less  than three  directors,  none of  whom  are
employed by the Corporation or its subsidiaries. The Plan Committee is empowered
to  select  key employees  of the  Corporation  and its  subsidiaries (including
executive officers and  directors who  are salaried employees)  to whom  options
will  be granted under  the Plan, to  determine the number  of shares subject to
each option,  to  fix the  period  or periods  during  which an  option  may  be
exercised,  and to  fix the  prices at  which shares  subject to  options may be
purchased. The  Plan Committee  may act  by majority  at a  meeting at  which  a
majority of the members of the Plan Committee is present, or by a writing signed
by all of the members of the Plan Committee.

    The  number, price and kind of shares subject  to the Plan may be subject to
adjustments in the event of  any reorganization, recapitalization, stock  split,
stock  dividend, combination  of shares, merger  or consolidation,  or any other
change (after the effective date of the Plan) in the nature or number of  shares
of  Common Stock  of the Corporation  in order  to avoid the  dilution of shares
subject to outstanding options and to  continue in force outstanding options  by
substituting  thereunder the option shares of  a successor corporation which may
subsequently acquire the Corporation.

    Each option is evidenced by a written agreement between the Corporation  and
the  key employee. While the Plan Committee  is empowered to establish the price
at which shares may  be purchased, the Plan  currently requires that the  option
price  for each ISO must be at least  equal to one hundred percent (100%) of the
fair market value of  the shares on the  business day immediately preceding  the

                                       15
<PAGE>
date  of the grant,  as determined by the  average of the  closing bid and asked
quotations or  the  closing high  bid  quotation for  the  Common Stock  in  the
over-the-counter market on the immediately preceding business day as reported by
NASDAQ.

    In addition, the Plan fixes the maximum term of any option granted under the
Plan  at ten  years from  the date  of the  grant of  the option.  The Plan also
generally provides than any  ISO granted may not  be exercised within two  years
from  the date of its grant and then will be exercisable only one third per year
so that the full grant is not exercisable until the fourth year from the date of
grant. Notwithstanding the  foregoing, if there  is a Change  in Control of  the
Corporation, as defined in the Plan, all outstanding ISOs may become immediately
exercisable at the discretion of the Plan Committee.

    Options  granted pursuant to  the Plan are not  transferable except upon the
death of optionee,  in which event  they may be  transferred only in  accordance
with  and to the extent provided for by the laws of the descent and distribution
of Kentucky. If  an optionee ceases  to be  employed by the  Corporation or  its
subsidiaries  for any reasons other than for  cause, the period during which the
unexercised portion of his or her ISO may thereafter be exercised is  restricted
to  a  period of  not  more than  one  year. If  an  optionee is  dismissed from
employment  for  cause,  as  determined  by  the  Plan  Committee  in  its  sole
discretion,  his or her ISO terminates as  of the date immediately preceding the
date of termination of employment.

    Currently, all  employees  of  the  Corporation  and  its  subsidiaries  are
eligible to participate in the Plan.

    While the Board of Directors of the Corporation intends to continue the Plan
in  effect until the scheduled termination date,  the Board may modify, amend or
terminate the Plan without  a vote of the  shareholders; provided that,  without
the  approval of a majority  of the votes represented and  entitled to vote at a
duly held meeting of the stockholders, the maximum number of shares which may be
delivered under the Plan may not be increased, the option price under any option
may not be reduced and  the period during which an  option may be exercised  may
not be extended.

SUMMARY OF MATERIAL AMENDMENTS TO THE PLAN

    The  Board  of Directors  intends to  submit to  the shareholders  for their
approval at the  annual meeting  the Amended  Plan. The  Amended Plan  generally
would  permit the Plan Committee to grant "non-qualified" stock options ("NSOs")
and provide for additional means for  payment of the option exercise price.  The
Amended  Plan provides  that the  Plan Committee  may authorize  the granting of
ISOs, NSOs or a combination of ISOs and NSOs. Unlike ISOs, which are intended to
qualify for favorable tax treatment under Section 422A of the code, NSOs are not
specifically  authorized  or   qualified  for  favorable   federal  income   tax
consequences.  The current  provisions of the  Plan would remain  in effect with
respect to the  terms of any  ISOs granted  under the Plan.  However, under  the
Amended  Plan, the Plan  Committee may determine  the option price  per share of
common stock at  the time an  NSO is granted,  the period for  which the NSO  is
granted  (which may not  exceed 10 years), the  time or times  and the manner in
which the NSO shall be exercisable, and  such other provisions of the NSO as  it
may deem necessary consistent with the terms of the Plan.

    Currently,  the Plan provides that the option price shall be paid in full in
cash, or by certified check, or, if the Plan Committee in its discretion  agrees
to  accept, in shares  of Common Stock,  or such combination  of cash and Common
Stock as the Plan Committee in its discretion agrees to accept. The Amended Plan
also provides that, subject to such rules as the Plan Committee may impose,  the
option  price may  be paid in  whole or in  part in such  other consideration as
shall constitute lawful consideration  for the issuance of  Common Stock and  be
approved  by  the  Plan.  Moreover,  subject  to  such  restrictions,  terms and
conditions as  the  Plan Committee  may  impose,  an optionee  may  request  the
Corporation  to "pyramid" the optionee's shares; that is, to automatically apply
the shares which the

                                       16
<PAGE>
optionee is entitled to  receive on the  exercise of a portion  of an option  to
satisfy  the exercise for  additional portions of the  option, thus resulting in
multiple simultaneous exercises of an option by use of whole shares as payment.

GRANTS MADE SUBJECT TO SHAREHOLDER APPROVAL OF PLAN

    Subject to shareholder approval of the  Plan, NSOs to purchase an  aggregate
of 160,000 shares of Common Stock at an exercise price of $23.75 were granted on
March  16, 1995 to current executive officers as a group. The NSOs granted under
the Amended Plan  have an exercise  price equal to  the fair market  value of  a
share  of the Corporation's Common Stock on the  date of grant and a term of ten
years from the date of grant. The NSOs granted may not be exercised within  five
years  from the  date of grant  and thereafter may  be exercised in  whole or in
part. Notwithstanding the  foregoing, if  there is a  Change in  Control of  the
Corporation,  such NSOs will become immediately exercisable at the discretion of
the Plan Committee. If the optionee ceases to be employed by the Corporation  or
its  subsidiaries for any reasons other than  for cause, the period during which
the unexercised portion of his NSO may thereafter be exercised is restricted  to
a  period of not more than one year. If an optionee is dismissed from employment
for cause, as determined by  the Plan Committee in  its sole discretion, his  or
her  NSO terminates as of the date immediately preceding the date of termination
of employment.

    Subject to  shareholder  approval of  the  Amended Plan,  NSOs  to  purchase
100,000  shares of Common Stock  were granted to Mr.  Jones, President and Chief
Executive Officer of  the Corporation,  and NSOs  to purchase  60,000 shares  of
Common  Stock  were granted  to Mr.  Sircy, Executive  Vice President  and Chief
Operating Officer.

    As of  February 9,  1996, the  fair market  value of  the Common  Stock  for
purposes of the Plan, as reported by NASDAQ, was $23.00.

FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES

    Generally  there will be no  income tax consequences to  the optionee or the
Corporation when  an ISO  or NSO  is  granted under  the Plan.  When an  NSO  is
exercised, the excess of the then fair market value of the Common Stock over the
option price will constitute ordinary income to the optionee and the Corporation
will  be  entitled  to deduct  an  equal  amount as  compensation  expense. Upon
disposition of the stock by the  employee, long-term or short-term capital  gain
or loss, as the case may be, will be recognized, equal to the difference between
the  amount realized on such disposition and the basis for the stock, which will
include the amount previously recognized as ordinary income. The holding  period
for  capital gains purposes will  commence on the day  the optionee acquires the
shares pursuant to the option.

    There also is no tax consequence to the optionee upon the exercise of an ISO
granted under the Plan. The optionee will  be taxed, at capital gains rates,  at
the  time he or she disposes of the Common Stock acquired pursuant to his or her
exercise of an ISO,  on the spread between  the sales price and  his or her  tax
basis  in the Common Stock. If the  optionee disposes of the Common Stock sooner
than two years from the date the ISO  was granted or one year from the date  the
Common  Stock was  transferred to  him or  her pursuant  to the  exercise of the
option,  the  optionee  will  be  taxed  in  the  year  of  such  "disqualifying
disposition,"  at  ordinary income  tax rates,  on the  spread between  the fair
market value of  the Common Stock  on the date  of exercise of  the ISO and  the
option's  exercise price. The Corporation will not be entitled to a compensation
deduction unless there is  a disqualifying disposition of  the Common Stock.  If
there  is a disqualifying disposition of  the Common Stock, the Corporation will
be entitled to a compensation deduction in the same amount that the optionee  is
required to include in his or her gross income.

EFFECT ON POTENTIAL TAKEOVER ATTEMPTS INCLUDING POSSIBLE DISADVANTAGE

    While the purpose of the Plan is to promote the interests of the Corporation
by  attracting, maintaining and affording an  incentive to the Corporation's key
officers and employees, certain provisions of the Plan may have an anti-takeover
effect. In the event of a Change in Control, the

                                       17
<PAGE>
ability  to  exercise  all  outstanding  options  will  be  accelerated  at  the
discretion  of the  Plan Committee.  Additionally, in the  event of  a Change in
Control, the common stock or other comparable securities of the acquiring entity
may be substituted for the Common Stock  of the Corporation subject to the  Plan
and outstanding options.

    The  effect  of  these  provisions  of the  Plan  may  be  to  discourage an
unsolicited tender offer or other unsolicited takeover bid for the Corporation's
Common Stock.  These provisions  of the  Plan may  make the  Corporation a  less
attractive takeover target. Additionally, these provisions may encourage persons
desiring to take over or control the Corporation to initiate such action through
negotiations  with the then incumbent Board  of Directors and management instead
of through a direct offer to the shareholders. The provisions of the Plan  could
make  the accomplishment of a transaction more  difficult or more costly even if
the transaction is favorable to the interests of the shareholders. Management of
the Corporation presently is aware of  no specific efforts to obtain control  of
the Corporation, either in a friendly or hostile manner.

                                 VOTE REQUIRED

    The  adoption  of this  proposal will  require the  affirmative vote  of the
holders of  a  majority  of  the  outstanding shares  of  Common  Stock  of  the
Corporation present, or represented, and entitled to vote on the proposal.

    THE  BOARD  OF  DIRECTORS  UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS  THAT  YOU  VOTE  FOR THIS
PROPOSAL.

                         INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS

    For the fiscal year ending December 31, 1995, the accounting firm of  Arthur
Andersen  LLP  served as  the Corporation's  independent public  accountants and
auditors. The Board of Directors has  approved the selection of Arthur  Andersen
LLP  to serve as  the Corporation's independent  public accountants and auditors
for the year ending December 31, 1996. A representative from the firm of  Arthur
Andersen  LLP  is expected  to  be present  at the  annual  meeting and  will be
available to  make  a statement  should  he desire  to  do so,  and  respond  to
questions of stockholders.

    On  June 28, 1995, the  Board of Directors of  the Corporation determined to
discontinue the services of Deloitte & Touche LLP (the "Former Accountant"), the
independent public accounting firm who  was previously engaged as the  principal
accountant  to audit the Corporation's financial  statements. On that same date,
the Corporation  engaged  a  new  independent  public  accounting  firm,  Arthur
Andersen  LLP, as its principal accountant  to audit the Corporation's financial
statements. The  decision to  change accountants  was recommended  by the  audit
committee  of the Board of Directors and approved by the Board of Directors. The
Former Accountant's reports  on the Corporation's  financial statements for  the
past  two years did not contain any adverse opinion or disclaimer of opinion and
were not qualified  or modified as  to uncertainty, audit  scope, or  accounting
principles.  During  the  Corporation's two  most  recent fiscal  years  and the
subsequent  interim  period,  there  were  no  disagreements  with  the   Former
Accountant  on  any  matter  of accounting  principles  or  practices, financial
statement disclosure or auditing scope or procedure, which disagreement, if  not
resolved  to the satisfaction of the Former  Accountant, would have caused it to
make a reference to  the subject matter of  the disagreement in connection  with
its reports.

                                       18
<PAGE>
                                 ANNUAL REPORT

    UPON  WRITTEN REQUEST, THE  CORPORATION WILL PROVIDE  WITHOUT CHARGE TO EACH
STOCKHOLDER, A COPY  OF THE CORPORATION'S  ANNUAL REPORT ON  FORM 10-K WHICH  IS
REQUIRED  TO BE FILED WITH  THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE  COMMISSION FOR THE YEAR
ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995. ADDRESS ALL REQUESTS TO:

                   SECRETARY
                   CBT CORPORATION
                   P. O. BOX 2400
                   PADUCAH, KENTUCKY 42002-2400

                   STOCKHOLDERS' PROPOSALS AND OTHER MATTERS

    Proposals by stockholders  to be  presented at  the 1997  annual meeting  of
stockholders  must  be  received by  the  President  of the  Corporation  at its
principal office no  later than  November 1, 1996,  for inclusion  in the  proxy
statement and form of proxy relating to that meeting.

    The  Board of Directors of the Corporation  does not know of any matters for
action by stockholders at the annual meeting other than the matters described in
the notice. However, the enclosed Proxy will confer discretionary authority with
respect to any other matters which may properly come before the meeting.

    It is important that proxies be returned promptly. STOCKHOLDERS, WHETHER  OR
NOT  THEY EXPECT TO ATTEND  IN PERSON, ARE REQUESTED  TO RETURN THEIR PROXIES IN
ORDER THAT A QUORUM MAY BE ASSURED. Return may be made in the enclosed envelope,
to which no postage need be affixed.

                                          By Order of the Board of Directors,
                                          William J. Jones
                                          PRESIDENT AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER

                                          March 8, 1996

                                       19
<PAGE>

                                   CBT CORPORATION
                                1993 STOCK OPTION PLAN


                  (As Amended and Restated Effective March 16, 1995)

                                       PREAMBLE

          CBT Corporation adopted the CBT Corporation 1993 Incentive Stock
Option Plan, effective March 17, 1993.  The Plan was subsequently approved by
the shareholders of the Company.  The Company now desires to amend and restate
the Plan, subject to shareholder approval, effective for options granted on and
after March 16, 1995, to provide for granting of nonstatutory stock options and
to permit the Plan Committee to determine the vesting period of options granted
under the Plan.  The Plan is renamed "CBT Corporation 1993 Stock Option Plan" to
reflect that nonstatutory options can now be awarded under the Plan.  These
amendments shall not affect outstanding options granted under the Plan before
March 16, 1995, and the provisions of the Plan as in effect before these
amendments shall apply to such options.  The Plan as so amended and restated
reads as follows:


     1.   PURPOSE.  The purpose of the Plan is to strengthen the Company by
providing an additional means of retaining and attracting competent management
personnel and by providing to participating officers and other key employees of
the Company and its Subsidiaries added incentive for high levels of performance
and for unusual efforts to increase the earnings of the Company through the
opportunity for stock ownership offered by the Plan.


     2.   DEFINITIONS.  For purposes of this Plan, capitalized words and phrases
shall have the following meanings:

          A.   BOARD.  The word "Board" means the Company's Board of Directors.

          B.   CHANGE IN CONTROL.  The term Change in Control means: [a] any
share exchange or merger or consolidation of the Corporation or a significant
subsidiary of the Corporation if either [i] the Corporation will not be the
surviving or acquiring corporation or will not own 100% of the outstanding
capital stock of the surviving or acquiring corporation  following the
consummation of the transactions contemplated by the plan or agreement of
exchange, merger or consolidation, or [ii] there will be a substantial change in
the proportionate ownership of outstanding share of voting stock of the
Corporation as a result of the transactions contemplated by such plan or
agreement of exchange, merger or consolidation; [b] any sale, lease, exchange,
transfer or other disposition of all or any substantial part of the assets of
the Corporation or a subsidiary of the Corporation followed by a liquidation of
the Corporation; [c] the commencement of any tender offer, exchange offer or
other purchase offer for,



<PAGE>


and/or any agreement to purchase, as much as (or more than) 30% of the
outstanding Common Stock of the Corporation or a subsidiary of the Corporation;
or [d] the Board or the shareholders of the Corporation approve, adopt, agree to
recommend, or accept any agreement, contract, offer or other arrangement
providing for, or any series of transactions resulting in, any of the
transactions described above.

          C.   CODE.  The word "Code" means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986,
as amended.

          D.   COMMON STOCK.  The term "Common Stock" means the Company's common
stock or the common stock or securities of a Successor that have been
substituted therefor pursuant to Section 8.

          E.   COMPANY.  The word "Company" means CBT Corporation, a Kentucky
corporation, with its principal place of business at 333 Broadway, Paducah,
Kentucky  42001

          F.   EXCHANGE ACT.  The term "Exchange Act" means the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, as amended from time to time.

          G.   ISO.  The acronym "ISO" means an option to purchase Common Stock
which at the time the option is granted qualifies as an incentive stock option
within the meaning of Code Section 422.

          H.   NSO.  The acronym "NSO" means a nonstatutory stock option to
purchase Common Stock which at the time the option is granted does not qualify
as an ISO.

          I.   OPTION PRICE.  The term "Option Price" means the price to be paid
for Common Stock upon the exercise of an option granted under the Plan, in
accordance with Section 7.A.

          J.   OPTIONEE.  The word "Optionee" means an employee to whom options
have been granted under the Plan.

          K.   OPTIONEE REPRESENTATIVE.  The term "Optionee Representative"
means the personal representative of the Optionee's estate, and after final
settlement of the Optionee's estate, the successor or successors entitled
thereto by law.

          L.   PLAN.  The word "Plan" means the CBT Corporation 1993 Stock
Option Plan, as set forth herein, and as amended from time to time.

          M.   PLAN COMMITTEE.  The term "Plan Committee" means the committee
appointed by the Board to administer the Plan, pursuant to Section 4.

          N.   SUBSIDIARY.  The word "Subsidiary" means, as defined


                                          2

<PAGE>


in Code Section 424(f), any corporation (other than the Company) in an unbroken
chain of corporations beginning with the Company if, at the time of the granting
of an option under the Plan, each of the corporations other than the last
corporation in the unbroken chain owns stock possessing fifty percent (50%) or
more of the total combined voting power of all classes of stock of one of the
other corporations in such chain.

          O.   SUCCESSOR.  The word "Successor" means the entity surviving a
merger or consolidation with the Company, or the entity that acquires all or a
substantial portion of the Company's assets or outstanding capital stock
(whether by merger, purchase or otherwise).

          P.   TEN PERCENT SHAREHOLDER.  The term "Ten Percent Shareholder"
means an employee who, at the time an option is granted, owns stock possessing
more than ten percent (10%) of the total combined voting power of all classes of
stock of the Company or Subsidiary employing the Optionee or of its parent
(within the meaning of Code Section 424(e)) or Subsidiary.

     3.   STOCK SUBJECT TO PLAN.  Subject to adjustment as provided in Section
8, the aggregate number of shares of Common Stock which may be issued under the
Plan shall not exceed four hundred thousand (400,000) shares.
_______________________ (_________) shares have been issued under the Plan as of
March 16, 1995, leaving ____________________ shares (_________) shares available
for issuance under the Plan effective March 16, 1995.  Authorized and unissued
shares shall be delivered under the Plan.  If any option expires or terminates
for any reason, the shares of Common Stock subject thereto shall again become
available under the Plan.

     4.   ADMINISTRATION.

          A.   PLAN COMMITTEE.  The Board shall appoint an option committee,
known as the Plan Committee, to administer the Plan, whose membership shall be
determined and reviewed from time to time by the Board.  Members of the Plan
Committee shall serve until delivery of their written resignation to the Board
or until removal by the Board.  The Plan Committee shall consist of not less
than three (3) members of the Board who are not and have not at any time for one
(1) year before appointment to the Committee been eligible to receive stock or
options under any plan of the Company or any of its affiliates.  Members of the
Plan Committee shall be subject to any additional restrictions necessary to
satisfy the requirements for disinterested administration of the Plan as set
forth in Rule 16b-3 under the Exchange Act.

          B.   PLAN ADMINISTRATION.  The Plan Committee shall have full power
and authority to construe, interpret and administer the


                                          3

<PAGE>


Plan and may from time to time adopt such rules and regulations for carrying out
the Plan as it may deem proper and in the Company's best interests.  The
decision of a majority of the members of the Plan Committee shall constitute the
decision of the Plan Committee and the Plan Committee may act either at a
meeting at which a majority of the members of the Plan Committee is present, or
by a writing signed by all of the members of the Plan Committee.  The
interpretation of any provisions of the Plan by the Plan Committee shall be
final, conclusive, and binding upon all persons and the officers of the Company
shall place into effect and shall cause the Company to perform its obligations
under the Plan in accordance with the determinations of the Plan Committee in
administering the Plan.

     5.   GRANT OF OPTIONS.

          A.   PLAN COMMITTEE'S AUTHORITY.  Subject to the terms, provisions and
conditions of the Plan, the Plan Committee shall have exclusive jurisdiction:
[i] to select the employees to whom options shall be granted; [ii] to authorize
the granting of ISOs, NSOs or a combination of ISOs and NSOs to employees; [iii]
to determine the number of shares of Common Stock subject to each option; [iv]
to determine the time or times when options will be granted, the manner in which
each option shall be exercisable, and the duration of the exercise period; [v]
to fix such other provisions of the option agreement as it may deem necessary or
desirable consistent with the terms of the Plan; and [vi] to determine all other
questions relating to the administration of the Plan.

          B.   $100,000 ISO EXERCISABILITY LIMITATION.  Notwithstanding Section
5.A, the aggregate fair market value (determined as of the date the option is
granted) of the Common Stock for which ISOs will first become exercisable by an
Optionee in any calendar year under all ISO plans of the Company and its
Subsidiaries shall not exceed $100,000.  Options granted in excess of this
limitation shall constitute NSOs.

     6.   ELIGIBILITY.  Key employees of the Company and its Subsidiaries,
including officers and directors who are also employees of the Company or a
Subsidiary, are eligible to receive ISOs and NSOs under the Plan.  Key employees
to whom options may be granted under the Plan will be those selected by the Plan
Committee from time to time who, in the sole discretion of the Plan Committee,
have contributed in the past or who may be expected to contribute materially in
the future to the successful performance of the Company and its Subsidiaries.

     7.   TERMS OF OPTIONS.  Each option granted under the Plan


                                          4

<PAGE>


shall be evidenced by an option agreement signed by the Optionee and by a member
of the Plan Committee on behalf of the Company.  An option agreement shall
constitute a binding contract between the Company and the Optionee, and every
Optionee, upon acceptance of such option agreement, shall be bound by the terms
and restrictions of the Plan and of the option agreement.  Such agreement shall
be subject to the following express terms and conditions and to such other terms
and conditions that are not inconsistent with the Plan as the Plan Committee may
deem appropriate.

          A.   OPTION PRICE.  The Option Price per share of Common Stock shall
be determined by the Plan Committee at the time an option is granted.  The
Option Price for ISOs shall be not less than: [i] the fair market value of
Common Stock on the date of grant, or [ii] in the case of an ISO granted to a
Ten Percent Shareholder, one hundred ten percent (110%) of the fair market value
of Common Stock on the date of grant.  The fair market value of Common Stock
shall be determined by the average of the closing bid and asked quotations or
the closing high bid quotation, whichever is available, for the Common Stock in
the over-the-counter market, as reported by the National Association of
Securities Dealers Automated Quotation System on the business day immediately
preceding the date of grant.  The Option Price shall be subject to adjustment as
provided in Section 8.

          B.   OPTION PERIOD.  Subject to Section 7.C, each option agreement
shall specify the period for which the option thereunder is granted and shall
provide that the option shall expire at the end of such period.  The Plan
Committee may extend such period provided that, in the case of an ISO, such
extension shall not in any way disqualify the option as an ISO without the
Optionee's consent.  In no case shall such period, including any such
extensions, exceed ten (10) years from the date of grant, provided, however,
that in the case of an ISO granted to a Ten Percent Stockholder, such period,
including extensions, shall not exceed five (5) years from the date of grant.

          C.   LAPSE OF ISO.  An ISO shall lapse at the earliest of the
following times:

               [1]  ten (10) years from the date of grant;

               [2]  five (5) years after the date of this Agreement if Optionee
     is a Ten Percent Shareholder on the date of this Agreement); or

               [3] three (3) months after termination of employment with the
     Company or a Subsidiary for reasons other than death, Disability, or
     discharge for cause;

               [4]  one (1) year after termination of employment with the
     Company or a Subsidiary because of Optionee's death


                                          5

<PAGE>


     or Disability; or

               [5]  immediately upon termination of employment through discharge
     for cause, as determined by the Plan Committee in its sole discretion; or

               [6]  on the date Optionee becomes employed by or renders services
     for a financial institution in competition with the Company or its
     Subsidiaries in any county in which the Company or any of its Subsidiaries
     is located following Optionee's termination of employment with the Company
     or its Subsidiaries, as determined by the Plan Committee in its sole
     discretion.

          D.   ISO INSTALLMENT EXERCISE PERIOD.   Except to the extent provided
otherwise by Section 7.H, in no event shall an ISO be exercisable during the
first two (2) years after the date of grant.  Thereafter, an ISO may be
exercised on or after the anniversary of the date of grant in three (3) equal
annual installments so that the full grant may be exercised not sooner than four
(4) years after the date of grant.

          E.   LEAVES OF ABSENCE.  The Plan Committee may, in its discretion,
treat all or any portion of any period during which an Optionee is on military
or on an approved leave of absence from the Company or a Subsidiary as a period
of employment of the Optionee by the Company or Subsidiary for purposes of
accrual of the Optionee's rights under the Plan.  Notwithstanding the foregoing,
if a leave of absence exceeds ninety (90) days and reemployment is not
guaranteed by contract or statute, the Optionee's employment by the Company or a
Subsidiary for the purposes of the Plan shall be deemed to have terminated on
the 91st day of the leave.

          F.   MANNER OF EXERCISE.  To exercise an option, the Optionee shall
deliver to the Company:  [i] seven (7) days' prior written notice specifying the
number of shares as to which the option is being exercised and, if determined by
counsel for the Company to be necessary, representing that such shares are being
acquired for investment purposes only and not for purpose of resale or
distribution; and [ii] payment by the Optionee, or a broker-dealer (as provided
in Section 7.G), for such shares of the Option Price for the number of shares
with respect to which the option is exercised.  On or before the expiration of
the seven (7) day notice period, and provided that all conditions precedent
contained in the Plan are satisfied, the Company shall, without transfer or
issuance tax or other incidental expenses to Optionee, deliver to Optionee, at
the offices of the Company, a certificate or certificates for the Common Stock.
Options are exercisable only in whole shares, and fractional share interests
shall be disregarded.  If Optionee fails to accept delivery of the Common Stock,
the Optionee's rights to exercise the applicable portion of the option shall
terminate.


                                          6

<PAGE>


          G.   PAYMENT FOR SHARES. Except as otherwise provided in this Section
7, the Option Price for the Common Stock shall be paid in full when the option
is exercised.  Subject to such rules as the Committee may impose, the Option
Price may be paid in whole or in part in [i] cash, [ii] whole shares of Common
Stock owned by the Optionee evidenced by negotiable certificates, [iii] by a
combination of such methods of payment, or [iv] such other consideration as
shall constitute lawful consideration for the issuance of Common Stock and be
approved by the Committee (including without limitation, assurance satisfactory
to the Committee from a broker registered under the Exchange Act of the delivery
of the proceeds of an imminent sale of the Common Stock to be issued pursuant to
the exercise of such option, such sale to be made at the direction of the
Optionee).  Moreover, subject to such restrictions, terms and conditions as the
Committee may impose, an Optionee may request the Company to "pyramid" the
Optionee's shares; that is, to automatically apply the shares which the Optionee
is entitled to receive on the exercise of a portion of an option to satisfy the
exercise for additional portions of the option, thus resulting in multiple
simultaneous exercises of an option by use of whole shares as payment.  If
payment of the Option Price is made in Common Stock, the value of the Common
Stock used for payment of the Option Price shall be the fair market value of the
Common Stock, determined in accordance with Section 7.A, on the business day
preceding the day written notice of exercise is delivered to the Company.

          H.   ACCELERATION.  Notwithstanding the provisions of Sections 7.B or
D to the contrary, if there is a Change in Control, at the discretion of the
Plan Committee, the exercise dates of all outstanding options shall accelerate
so that each option outstanding may be exercised on or after the date of the
Change in Control.

          I.   ISOS.  Each option agreement which provides for the grant of an
ISO shall contain such terms and provisions as the Plan Committee deems
necessary or desirable to qualify such option as an ISO within the meaning of
Code Section 422.

          J.   TRANSFERABILITY OF OPTIONS.  Options granted under the Plan may
not be transferred by the Optionee otherwise than by will or the laws of descent
and distribution, and during the lifetime of the Optionee to whom granted, may
be exercised only by such Optionee.

     8.   ADJUSTMENT OF SHARES.  In the event of capital adjustment after the
effective date of the Plan in the Common Stock of the Company by reason of any
reorganization, recapitalization, stock split, stock dividend, combination or
exchange of shares, merger or consolidation, or any other change (after the
effective date of the Plan) in the nature or number of shares of Common Stock of
the Company, a proportionate adjustment shall be made in the maximum number and
kind of shares which may be delivered under the Plan,


                                          7

<PAGE>


and in the Option Price under and the number and kind of shares of Common Stock
covered by outstanding options granted under the Plan.  By virtue of such a
capital adjustment, the price of any share under option shall be adjusted so
that there will be no change in the aggregate purchase price payable upon
exercise of any such option.  Such determination by the Plan Committee shall be
conclusive.

          Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, if [a] there is a
Change in Control of the Company, and [b] as a result of the transactions
contemplated by the Change in Control, a Successor will acquire all or a
substantial portion of the assets or outstanding capital stock of the Company,
then the kind of shares of common stock which shall be subject to the Plan and
to each outstanding option shall automatically be converted into and replaced by
shares of common stock, or such other class of equity securities having rights
and preferences no less favorable than common stock of the Successor, and the
number of shares subject to the options and the purchase price per share upon
exercise of the options shall be correspondingly adjusted, so that, by virtue of
such Change in Control of the Company, each optionee shall have the right to
purchase [i] that number of shares of the Successor which, as of the date of the
Change in Control, have a fair market value equal to the fair market value of
the shares of the Company theretofore subject to an option, [ii] for a purchase
price per share which, when multiplied by the number of shares of the Successor
subject to the option, shall equal the aggregate exercise price at which the
Optionee could have acquired shares of the Company under such option.

          The granting of an option pursuant to this Plan shall not affect in
any way the right and power of the Company to make adjustments, reorganizations,
reclassifications, or changes of its capital or business structure or to merge,
consolidate, dissolve, liquidate, sell or transfer all of any part of its
business or assets; provided, however, that the Company shall not, and shall not
permit its Subsidiaries to, recommend or agree or consent to a transaction or
series of transactions which would result in a Change of Control of the Company
unless and until the person or persons acquiring or succeeding to assets or
capital stock of the Company or its Subsidiaries as a result of such transaction
or transactions agrees to be bound by the terms of the Plan so far as it
pertains to options therefore granted and agrees to assume and perform the
obligations of the Company and its Successor under the Plan.

     9.   COMPLIANCE WITH OTHER LAWS AND REGULATIONS.  Upon the exercise of an
option at a time when there is not in effect a registration statement under the
Securities Act of 1933 and any applicable state securities laws (the "Securities
Laws") relating to the shares of Common Stock issuable upon exercise thereof and


                                          8

<PAGE>


available for delivery, a prospectus meeting the requirements of the Securities
Laws, the shares of Common Stock may be issued only if the Optionee or Optionee
Representative represents and warrants in writing to the Company that the shares
being purchased are being acquired for investment and not with a view to the
distribution thereof.  The shares of the Common Stock shall contain such legends
or other restrictive endorsements as counsel for the Company shall deem
necessary or proper.  No shares of Common Stock shall be purchased upon the
exercise of any option unless and until there shall have been satisfied any
applicable requirements of the Securities and Exchange Commission or other
regulatory agencies having jurisdiction and of any exchanges upon which stock of
the Company may be listed.  The Company covenants that it will take all actions
necessary to register under the Securities Laws the Common Stock issuable upon
exercise of options granted pursuant to this Plan.

     10.  NO RIGHTS AS SHAREHOLDER.  No Optionee or Optionee's Representative
shall have any rights as a shareholder with respect to Common Stock subject to
Optionee's option before the date of transfer to the Optionee of a certificate
or certificates for such shares.

     11.  NO RIGHTS TO CONTINUED EMPLOYMENT.  The Plan and any option granted
under the Plan shall not confer upon any Optionee any right with respect to
continuance of employment by the Company or any Subsidiary, nor shall it
interfere in any way with the right of the Company or any Subsidiary by which an
Optionee is employed to terminate Optionee's employment at any time.

     12.  TERMINATION.  The Plan shall terminate on December 31, 2002, and may
be terminated at any earlier time by the Plan Committee.  No option shall be
granted after termination of the Plan.  Termination of the Plan, however, shall
not affect the validity of any option theretofore granted under the Plan.

     13.  AMENDMENT.  The Board shall have the right, at any time, to amend,
suspend or terminate the Plan in any respect that it may deem to be in the best
interests of the Company, except that, without approval by shareholders of the
Company holding not less than a majority of the votes represented and entitled
to be voted at a duly held meeting of the Company's shareholders, no amendment
shall be made if shareholder approval is necessary to continue to qualify the
Plan under the Securities and Exchange Commission Rule 16b-3.  No amendment of
the Plan, however, may, without the consent of the Optionee or Optionee
Representative, make any changes in any outstanding option theretofore granted
under the Plan which would adversely affect the rights of such Optionee or
Optionee Repre-


                                          9

<PAGE>


sentative.

     14.  TAX WITHHOLDING.  Upon the exercise of any option granted under the
Plan, or upon the disposition of any Common Stock acquired by the exercise of an
ISO granted under the Plan within two (2) years from the date of grant or one
(1) year after such Common Stock is transferred to the Optionee, the Company
shall have the right to require Optionee to remit to the Company an amount
sufficient to satisfy all federal, state and local withholding tax requirements,
or, alternatively, the Company shall have the right to retain Common Stock
otherwise payable to the Optionee pursuant to exercise of an option in an amount
sufficient to satisfy such withholding requirements, before the delivery to the
Optionee of any certificate(s) for shares of Common Stock.

     15.  GOVERNING LAW.  This Plan and the stock option agreements entered into
under the Plan shall be governed by, and construed in accordance with, the laws
of the Commonwealth of Kentucky.

     16.  EFFECTIVE DATE.  This Plan, as amended and restated, is effective upon
the approval by the Board on March 16, 1995; subject, however, to the
ratification of this Plan, as amended and restated, by the shareholders of the
Company.  The Plan was originally approved by the Board on March 17, 1993 and
ratified by the affirmative vote of a majority of the shares present or
represented by proxy at the Annual Meeting of Stockholders held on April 20,
1993.  The effective date of each option shall be the day on which it is granted
to any Optionee.

          Dated as of the 16th day of March, 1995.

                              CBT CORPORATION



                              By:
                                  ---------------------------------------------

                              Title:
                                     ------------------------------------------

ATTEST:




- ---------------------------------


                                          10

<PAGE>
                                CBT CORPORATION
               THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS.

The  undersigned shareholder(s)  of CBT  Corporation hereby  appoints Patrick J.
Cvengros and William J. Jones, or either of them, as Proxies, with full power of
substitution in and for  each of them, and  hereby authorizes them to  represent
and  to  vote  as  designated below,  all  the  shares of  Common  Stock  of CBT
Corporation which the undersigned is entitled  to vote at the Annual Meeting  of
Shareholders to be held on April 16, 1996, or at any adjournment or adjournments
thereof, with all the powers the undersigned would possess if present personally
at said meeting, or any adjournment or adjournments thereof.

The Directors recommend a vote FOR Proposals 1 and 2.

1.  ELECTION  OF  DIRECTORS     / /  FOR ALL  NOMINEES  LISTED BELOW  (except as
    otherwise indicated below)   / / WITHHOLD AUTHORITY to vote for all nominees
    listed below

    Irving P. Bright, Jr., John L. Burman, Patrick J. Cvengros, William H. Dyer,
    Louis A. Haas, Joe Tom Haltom, Kerry B. Harvey, F. Donald Higdon, William J.
    Jones, Ted S.  Kinsey, Louis M.  Michelson, Bill B.  Morgan, Louis D.  Myre,
    David M. Paxton, Robert P. Petter, Joseph A. Powell, William A. Usher

(INSTRUCTIONS:  TO WITHHOLD AUTHORITY TO VOTE FOR ANY INDIVIDUAL NOMINEE, STRIKE
A LINE THROUGH THE NOMINEE'S NAME IN THE LIST ABOVE.)

2.  PROPOSAL TO  APPROVE AMENDMENTS  TO THE  1993 CBT  CORPORATION STOCK  OPTION
    PLAN.

                 / / FOR         / / AGAINST        / / ABSTAIN

3.  In  their discretion,  the Proxies  are authorized  to vote  upon such other
    business as  may properly  come before  the meeting  or any  adjournment  or
    adjournments thereof.

                 (continued, and to be signed on reverse side)
<PAGE>
THIS  PROXY, WHEN PROPERLY EXECUTED, WILL BE VOTED IN THE MANNER DIRECTED HEREIN
BY THE UNDERSIGNED STOCKHOLDER. UNLESS AUTHORITY TO VOTE FOR THE NOMINEES LISTED
ABOVE IS WITHHELD, THIS PROXY WILL BE  VOTED FOR THE NOMINEES LISTED ABOVE  WITH
THE  DISCRETIONARY AUTHORITY DESCRIBED IN  THE ACCOMPANYING PROXY STATEMENT AND,
IF NO DIRECTION IS MADE, WILL BE VOTED FOR PROPOSAL 2.

    Please sign exactly as name appears below.

    When shares are  held by joint  tenants, both should  sign. When signing  as
attorney,  executor, administrator, trustee or  guardian, please give full title
as such. If a corporation, please sign full corporate name by President or other
authorized officer.  If  a  partnership,  please sign  in  partnership  name  by
authorized person.

Dated:---------------------------------------------------------, 1996

- --------------------------------------------------------------------
Signature

- --------------------------------------------------------------------
Signature (if held jointly)
Please  mark, sign,  date, and  promptly return  the proxy  using the
enclosed envelope.


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