The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 3 July 1934 — Page 4

Few Farmers To Benelil !>v Faw

IT AMOUNTS TO THAT WHEN YOU GET THE EXTRA

MILEAGE • THE KEENER PERFORMANCE • THAT COMES WITH

more LIVE POWER per gallon

FARM (URDU IIKAD FRAZIKIM.KMKK V(T WILL AFFECT I K"

WASIIINCTCN, July William I. My?rs, r- vcrnor <>l' the farm credit administration, said today onl> a “very sIIrHI minority” of fanners will “have to Rf> into bankruptcy to save their homes” under the PrazierLemke act Rivingr a partial six-year moratorium on farm nmrtRaRes. The measure was siRiieit Friday hy President Roosevelt, hut his action was not announced until Saturday. He expre scd the opinion that “in so* of capital will not greatly exceed, if they exceed at all. the I >sscs that

AT NO EXTRA COST

For the same amount of money von would pay for "regular” gasoline you ean get Standard Red (Town Superfuel. And actually you’ll he money ahead! Beeause Standard Red Crown Superfuel delivers more litv pnu'er per pullon—a higger store of instantly usahle energy that ean he turned into longer mileage, smoother rlimhing power, higher top speed, or any other super-performance you want. It’s a faet. Standard Red Crown

Superfuel gives you your full money's worth plus. That has been established hy tests of many gasolines. But—prove it to yourself. —Do this: Cet a tankful from any Standard Red Crown Pump. Then wateh the mileage it gives you — watch how that extra live poiver livens up your engine. See if you don’t agree that it gives you more fur your gasoline money.

STANDARD RED CROWN

SUPERFUEL

— more hVe power per gallon

would b? sustained if this mea-urc* were not signed.” Myers, in a statement, >:iid the legislature fits in with the farm credit program, “smeo it attempts to prevent occasional selfish creditors front foreclosing on distressed farm debtors.” The general recovery pr 'gram of the past year and loans made by the federal land hanks and the land hank commissioner have relieved th‘ “great majority of distressed farm mortgage cases,” Myers added. He said more than Kii per cent of the installments on laud hank i mmissioner loans which matured priar to June 1 were paid before they were due. Of the delinquent loans, two thirds were for less than thirty day , he added.

<Gi IR!A^A\PA\ » «

CET SET TO LAIJOH ...

When litis little girl with big ideas starts the eternal going around in circles!

A Picture with | A 4th Of July Wallop!

Clews Fail In

Dillm^tr Haul

AT ALL STANDARD OIL STATIONS AND DEALERS-ALSO DISTRIBUTORS OF ATLAS TIRES

No Failures Of Insured Banks

SI < < ESS <)l FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE PLAN NOTED IN INDIANA

INDIANAPOLIS, July 3 (UP)— Success of the Federal Deposit Insurance plan in Indiana was noted today in a slate hank department report showing no failures among insured banks during the first sis months of this year. Despite the perfect record among FDIC members, .'tfi other banks, the

majority of the Class I! institutions, have been do ed, Richard A. McKinley, director of the state hanking department announced. Inability to meet the stringent insured deposit requirements and failure to apply for examination were the principal reasons for the 35 failures, McKinley said. Seven of the 35 were Class “A” hanks following the moratorium declared by President Roosevelt in March, 1930, McKinley’s report showed. Two were closed and their assets placed in trusteeship; one went into voluntary liquidation and four closed through failure. Only one hank operating under the insured deposit plan has gone out of

business since Jan. 1. That institution, the Danville Trust Company, withdrew hy sale of its assets to another hank, all depositors and creditors being paid in full without assistance from the FDIC, McKinley said. Twenty-eight Class “B” banks were among the closed institutions. These had been operating under restrictions. Originally, 326 banks in the state qualified for deposit insurance. Since Jan. 1, when the nation-wide insurance plan went into effect, 24 additional banks have obtained assistance, adding new capital and writing off losses. Of the 326 institutions, 223 have effected capital increases amounting

to $10,429,000 prior to admission by the deposit corporation. This sum re-pre-a-nted approximately 50 per cent of the original capital stock of these institutions.

Ella I!. Patterson of (ireencastle filed suit in circuit court Tuesday ag iinst (rt'nrge W. Patterson in which she asks a divorce, $5 a week support money during pendency of the action, $50 attorney fees, and $1,000 alimony. According to the complaint tile couple married Get. 21, 1933 and separated June 2k, 1934. The plaintiff charges her husband has refu ed to provide a home, has threatened her life, and is addicted to liquor. Fred V. Thomas is attorney for the plaintiff.

Intimate Glimpses oi the Lile of Movielands Mane Dressier

m

pi PSilSS

STATE POLK E HEAD DIRU I > SEAR< II ALONG 1RAII NOW BELIEVED ( OLD

INDIANAPOLIS, July The John Dillinger trail grew cold again today. (.'apt. Matt IjCa'-h of the state |>'>- liee was absent from his -Tfire on a mission that was reported to he connected with the search for the fugi live felon. But officers admitted that they h oi no information that would lead to eat ly apprehension of Dillinger or any members of hi - gang. No trace was found of the gang that robbed the Met -hanl National bank at South Bend last Saturday of approximately $28,000. On monit or of this gang 'was identified a, Dillinger. 'An official of the bank al o declared that Dillinger was in tie band that robbed the hank. The only clew was the finding in Chicago of five money bags. 'The empty bags, found on the west side, were forwarded to South Bend to ascertain if they had been carried away by the bandits. A report that Dillinger had boon frequenting a roadhouse on the north side of Indianapolis in r<vent week was investigated by police and fed-

WARREN WILLIAM • EDW. EVERETT HORTON • FRANK McHUGH CLAIRE DODD

in sei ink

I Ills I. \l (ill

AESO SELECTED COMEDY \\|) SHORT SUBJECTS SCREEN ODDITY I Vitaplmi LITTLE FELLOW I Darling

oral agents. A man reported to retMi.lde Dillinger was reported to have lien visiting the roadhouse recently with several associates and to have been lavish with tips to employes.

Harrim.ui Sentenced

Porn In Cobourg, Ontario, on Nov. 9, 1873, Marie Dressier took part in amateur theatricals at the age of five, and went on the stage at 14, there'to remain until motion pictures beckoned her to fame and fortune. Making her start during the days of the silent pictures, khc gained unovicdooi heights in lir27. ami in 1931 won the eoveted

Norma Shearer presenting acting trophy to Marie Dressier. trophy of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for (he best acting of the year. A scries of intimate glimpses of the star, from her first photograph as a stage actress, to her most recent picture as a film luminary, are shown in the film-fashioned strip

above.

PARDON IS SOUGHT YORK, Pa., (UP)—John Curry, tho ruddy faced country youth whose part in the widely publicized “hex” murder five \ears ago sent him to prison for life, is asking his freedom. Barred from a normal boyhood by a bloody lock of hair, and a strange spell of witchcraft, Curry has developed into normal young manhood under the tutelage of special instructor. at the Eastern Pennsylvania penientiary, Philadelphia. He is 2<>. He no longer is the bewildered youngster who toll an incredulous world of his participation in a brutal murder to get the “hexed” lock of hair, which, found in his possession, loti to his conviction, officials said. He litis studied art and acquired speed and skill at a typewriter. The warden and the district attorney, who was in office at fjie time of Curry’s trial, urge that he lie pardoned. “Th ■ boy ought to bo released.” Warden Karl Smith wrote to the pardon hoard. “He has gotten all the punishment he required. He is well prepared to go out into the world now and behave himself. If he is not re-

leased in the near future, hel be the same type he is now,! he influenced by the uimatuJ ciations that are all around! the penitentiary.”

noth i; to iiiiimm < >f Hue of Board of Edurallor.

• istlo, Indiana:

Tht* undersigned tnemlien Board of Education of the Gn Consolidated hkdioolN will sealed bids from this datr ai 8 p m July 17. 1914, t ion of school children of

I

flip,

consideration of such bids v tract to the lowest or bent ouch hcreinti fi er descr 1 1 ed the stipulations set out bei • route avernffinK 10 mill

will i o- let on

tract for school owned bus B be taken for drivers' service*| The Hucre*nful bidder Imll, with the Board of Education! the nmnunt of $1,000. fm tit* ami efficient performanc> of i nations and will he subject to lions s»i out by the Super’ of Schools as sanctioned by’ Board of Education in all in' hit inn to the transpnrt int: u for the children on said rout! All bidders must be bet* J iH' s 'd 2.'i and f»0 years, ini

defects in siKht or hea also be married, must (1 rc»*ncast le (Mty or

furnish and find must hi

< Mle

r less

years, . hearing

Mty

c < i rry

aide

To

liabil

wn

Ity ;

ftiriilsli

tor.v loideme good moral and dependability in curing

| I

dren.

The

right

to rejeH Signed:

will i all hidfl

said Hoard

cet any

!>r. B O'Brb r I Emmet t < Jrcen. I -l Harry Wells, S< 1 (Blanks for bidders may I at office of the Huperinb’il Schools in the* IHkIi School BJ

Norma Smiles as Trial End

Joseph Harriman

Joseph Hnrriinan, former pi ident of the llarrinmn N liomd hank of New York City, is pictured leaving tlr New York Edern! court aft'-r being yntenerd to a term of four and om half years in a {• deral prison on his conviction of misapplication of bank funds. He wur permitted to leave the court on a stay of execution, penclipg an appeal.

E' lined from the ordeal of her trial during which she was

*•' i irmi uiiring wmen sue »<>•

guilty of being an accessory in the murder of two guards durin? 1 bunk holdup, Norma Brighton Millen, left, registers a smile * < njoy «n exercise period in the yard of the jail at Dedham, Me vuth cnother inmate. Her hit: band, Murton Millen, and two otf

face electrocution for the murders.

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