Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 268, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 March 1929 — Page 23

BANK TO MOVE TWO MILLIONS TO NEW HOME State Savings to Take Over J. F. Wild Building Saturday Night. Moving $2,000,000 in securities, money, and fixtures from its present business site at 9 East Market street to their new home in the J. F. Wild Bank building, 123 *East Market street, is the job the State Savings and Trust Company has In its hands when the business fay ends Saturday. Bank officials say the depository kill be moved by Saturday at midnight and be ready t-o cater to customers in their new home when i||panking hours begin at 9 a. m. j. Monday. M Ten truckiloads of fixtures and safety deposit boxes will be moved to the bank's new building. A armored car guarded by- police will be used to move the money and securities. Twenty-Year Lease Taken Scott R. Brewer, president of the bank, said $2,000,000 in insurance has been taken out by the bank to cover it in case of holdup and burglary during the “moving day.” The bank gave up its present quarters to make way for the construction of an office building and to obtain larger quarters. A twentyyear lease has been taken on the Wild Bank building. The lease was signed with the receiver of the bank and approved by the court. “We will have 40 per cent more room in the new building, and due to business expansion it is necessary for us to have the additional space,” Brewer said. Lease of the building for ninetynine years on 9 East Market street was sold by the bank to the Tower Realty Company. ‘Rainy Day* Savings The bank has been located at that address since its organization in 3.913. In celebrating its use of the new business home the bank will give an umbrella Monday to each person beginning ass saving account. The accounts are to be known as the “rainy day savings.” The bank has a capital stock of $375,000 with deposits of $1,715,855.95. Officers of Bank Officers of the bank in addition to Brewer are: James A. Houck, vicepresident and treasurer: Edward B. Funk and Kathryn Holland, assistant secretaries; Myron S. Harlan, manager of insurance department; Don E. Brewer, manager of bond department; Wendell Hicks, manager sos rental department; Hiram D. Keehn,trust officer. Directors are: Robert J. A ley, Edgar Ashby, Linton A. Cox, James ' S. Cruse, William A. Pickens, David A. Rothrock, Clarence C. Wysong, McKinney, Houck, Scott R. Brewer, Harlan, UlcohoTfrowi sugar CANE BY NEW METHOD Used as ‘Anti-Knock’ Element in Gasoline. By UnitedJgress WASHINGTON, Ind., March 29. A process of manufacturing alcohol for use as an “anti-knock” element in gasoline from ordinary sugarcane has been discovered in Australia and a company formed there f<jr marketing it, the commerce department has been advised by its representative in Sydney. A plant, which has been erected In Queensland, will, it is said, be able to produce between 500,000 and 600,000 gallons of the fuel yearly. Experiments, it is said, resulted in the production of a 99 per cent pure alcohol.

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Two nations have been stirred by the mysterious disappearance of pretty Barbara Pitcher, above. She was an art student in McGill university and her family is socially prominent in Montreal, Quebec. Police feared her a victim of a white slave ring and a $5,000 reward h'AS been offered for information leading tr> her whereabouts. Her parents are convinced she left home tired of study and the social whirl and

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‘BE PREPARED,’ SAYSJOOLIBGE Peace May Come, but Onlv in Future, Writes Cal. Bn United Press PHILADELPHIA, March 29.Calvin Coolidge, writing in the April issue of the Ladies’ Upme Journal, declares that “perhaps peace is an ideal that can come only to future generations that are more perfect than our own,” but that meantime we should “take every precaution to prevent war, of which adequate defense is one.” The former President wrote on “Promoting Peace” as the first of three ar riles. “Our national defenses should not be so large that our country’ would feel we would undergo no peril in attacking others,” he wrote, Coolidge believes our army and navy should be "large enough so that others would see that there would be a great deal of peril involved in attacking us.” “The first duty of a government is order.” Cooldge wwote. “We are told it is heaven’s first law. In our day we have come to take order for granted as something almost selfexistent. But it is not. In fact, it is very difficult to maintain, as we are constantly reminded by recurring waves of crime, and the outbreak of warfare. Order is of the first importance, because without it we could have no liberty and no progress. Property would be of little value, every ‘ home would be insecure and all life in danger.'* Ehvood Club Leads Bn Times Special ELWOOD, Ind.. March 29.—The local Kiwanis Club led the entire State of Indiana in attendance of members at meetings during February. D. A. Strauss, North Manchester, state secretary announces.

Auto Plunges Into Creek Bn Times Special ANDERSON, Ind., March 29. Gilbert Thompson. 19, Lawrenceville, 111., escaped with slight injuries: when his automobile plunged from ! the road into Fall creek, near here. !

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