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Show r - ev THE BANKS AID r;i E PA RJotes tie daughter of Ambrus Sc lie of Hungary, raised her family from poverty to comfortable circumstances. She broke a large vase brut from America by an unde now deceased, and under a false bottom a Gustav Fischer. 90, of Jamaica, large amount of jewels and gold Was Plain, Mastrhaa carved on the lar- found. gest meershaum pipe in the world picture of the Battle of Bunker Jack Baker of Hollywood is emHU1. 39 miniature soldiers, ployed In a movie studio to make icicles out of transparent paper Dr. J, X McClendon, physiolo- dipped In wax, and Jess Wolf works gist of the University of Minnesota, on the set making spider webs and ia one of America! deadliest marks- cobwebs out of fine wire, thread men. He shoots houseflies exclusive- and rubber cement. ly. using an air rifle loaded with a singly drop of deadly Insecticide. With a membership of 50 the Club of Mountain Herbert Gordon of Los Angeles Home. Ark., has vowed to wipe out was arrested for spying from a catswearing. tle tower on nude women taking sun baths in the grounds of a saniErnest L. Newman, county clerk tarium. of Topeka, Kan., tells of an elderly Negro woman who had been signMrs. Henry Lamson of Saint Lou- ing relief receipts with her mark. is complained to police that her Then one week she signed an O inhusband would not tell bow much stead of an X, explaining: "I'se he earned. Just got married and changed my name." Daniel Brown, a Tennessee mountaineer who believes that man must Admitting to the Judge that he not Alter the appearance God gave usually kissed the girls to whom he him, was arrested for refusing to delivered telegrams, William Casago, permit his two sons to op vacci- New York messenger boy. was ordered to refrain from nated. anyone for six months. After plumbers had tom out most of the plumbing in her home in search of four valuable diamond BANKING SYSTEM rings, Mrs. C&llie Sweltzer of Los Angeles found the rings pinned to SHOWS PROGRESS a dress. THEjOYERIII'ElIT i Heeds Met by Advance BankingCredit BRUNSWICK, N. J"Th crm .Zm commercial hankln essential In an absolute operations of business Swrnment. Harold 0. Moulton. ItuUM- 5,at of the Brookings b Washington. D. C said tbs befors address nn to school of Banking to Z zla, S. Magna, Utah, Friday, August 21, 1936 eon-und- er UJ-P- st. Anti-Cussi- ng the lolnt auspices of Ameri- university and the -.- Bankers Association. and expansibib H the flexibility banking w jrorided by commercial Moulton tit were eliminated. Dr. to l4Curtd. it Is scarcely too much itself economic system Jthat the -- M shortly be destroyed, formally the amount of credit oUnded by commercial banks to the Lrgrnment Js smaU In amount and of financing I the purpose mainly In antlclpa- Mnporary requirements or bond sales. ties of tax collections m la periods of war and acute when the financial require-psnt- s of government expand with met rapidity, the expansion of bank credit Is on a tremen-4n-s scale. Such is the case at the l. kis-in- com-ycrei- sl iresent time. Needs Are Financed The purchase of government by individuals and by the (osunercial banks provides the with the means by which Antonlne Galsprin of Hull, Engs aianlfold activities are financed. fired five bullets into a neigland, The Treasury obUIns the funds, with violin because its music anghbors which the Reconstruction Finance How Public gov-mme- noyed him. Corporation, and other, government oedlt agencies finance their operations, through the sale of aecnritlea, krgely to commercial banka. Tbeae Mrs. Ella Holden of Portsmouth, England, asked the police to take --old daughter, charge of her toads, la turn, have gone to the a she declared whom incorrigible. olitfmw of distressed banks and sther financial institutions, to aid Six Detroit baseball players were and agricultural enterprises. a Is finance new public and private given automobiles for attending ospltal construction, and to provide banquet. It Just goes to show how nllet to the unemployed. far an after-dinnspeaker will go Dr. Moulton declared that It ia not to assure himself an audience. tns that the world depression was tsased by a breakdown of tbs AmeriLatest reports from Spain have cas banking system, "which did not. It that the bulls, given respite by Is fact, occur until the depression the revolution, are enjoying the goikid been under way for more than ngs-on to the fullest tkres years." He added: "Nor is it true that the world malThose Wilkes Barre, Pa, parents adjustments existing In 1929 can be who critlzed the school board beexplained simply by undue extenscause their children were not whippions of commercial banking credit at ed school, evidently take great the h preceding years. These involved world agricul-tirxl- , stock in "spare the board and spoil Industrial, commercial and the child." financial relations." And Jim Reeds disgruntled Democrats take a walk" to Detroit. hitch-hikin- g Perhaps they believe the FARM ACCOUNTING win be better in a city where a big share of the world's automobiles REVEALS LESSONS are manufactured. Word comes from Waukon, Ia, 80 cents bounty on rattlesnakes will not be paid in future unless four inches of each snakes tail Is presented to local supervisors, Formerly, bounties were paid upon presentation of rattles only, and some fanners are said to have raised snakes as a business, obtaining several sets of rattles from the same snake. Sound Business that the Management That Apply to All Farms analysis made of detailed a group of Wisconsin bnns revealed several important Iwons and the principles of sound tallness management derived from ttam apply equally well to other brais, says an article in the Bulla The Smithsonian Institution will tie of the Agricultural Commission of the first ( tbs American Rankers Associat- publish a translation medical book written in the western ion. The artlcleays: originally in the Axtec An ree-wfi- s kept by stopping. investment mistakes are more jtaOy than many others because they cannot easlly be corrected. II farmer pays too much for bis T his Investment costs will be normally high as long as he owns " If he constructs a 14,000 barn, 'anything Pa llical campaigns, as a rule, are annoying. But this one la a Godsend to business. Aa the campaigners. rct Up during the summer, business to given a breathing spell and a chance to forge ahead. Healthy signs are ln the sky. Skilled labor to needed, workers are demanding more money, sales are increasing, equipment to being modernized and plants are being expanded. Americas Game POLITICS - State Bank Resources Grow More Than Three Billion Dollars in a Year NATIONAL BANKS GAIN American Bankers Association Gives Details of BankNotes ing Institutions Stronger Conditions - Governor Landona acceptance speech has already aroused certain labor leaden who want everything their own way. Landon Insisted that every worker should be free from the coercion of either employee or worker. He 'did not say free from the 31. 1931 to 1935. it to noted: (1$ that deposits ln 1935 rose approx!-utatel- y lj per cent over the previous year, as compared with an increase of about 9 per cent in 1934 over the year 1933, and declines of 7 per cent and 13 per cent Jn 1933 and 1932. respectively, from tbe coercion of employer. preceding years of 1933 and 1931; and (2) He fully realized that there are that total Invested funds Increased by approximately 2 per cent in 1935 some labor leaders, just as there are some ruthless employers, who reand also In 1934, while they bad deand everything creased by i per cent ln 1933 and sort to coercion conceivable form of Intimidation In by 11 per cent in 1932." order to force the worker to Join Anal) vis Shows Stronger Position and pay tribute to the little Caesar In a surrey and analysis of earn- for so Joining. ings and expenses of stats banks Yet, it to Inconceivable ln the doing a commercial business. It Is minds of certain factions of labor brought out that In a majority of that the worker must be states they have increased I heir against the Intimidation of his earniug ability during 1935. On the exploiting, supposedly basis of data covering 7.928 banks fellow worker. In 42 states, the report says: Some of the political strategists The most significant fact to be pointed out to that new profits of contend that Landon erred In his state batiks after deducting reference to labor. He should have charge-offon Ioann. Investments, been more concllatory, they main's etc., and adding recoveries were tain. Yet It was an example of shown In 37 of the 42 states which courage and his willingness to reported In 1935. In comparison with be truthful, cost what it may. det piofits in only 11 ot the 35 states In the long run Landon's stand on repot ring-li- t 7934. Measured In terms the labor question should help him. of dollars per earh $1U0 of Invented" There are still millions of workers funds net profit in 1935 ranged beto do their own thinktween $2 40 and $ lu per $100. with who prefer find no necessity for who and ing 19 states showing pronts of $1 00. or shoulders of such on the leaning over, per $100; while ii. 1934 net his dictator-complewith men as Lewis, did not exceed $1 20 Business will not have to worry about the President doing anything drastic during the next few months for he to an astute politician. well-meani- NEW Lan-don- x. and'or'y three --.(; of Jl 0, over." per $100, showed profits MAGNA WOMAN ENROLLED IN SUMMER STUDY YORK. Continued Im provement in tbe condition of state chartered banking Institutions, with an increase of more than three billion dollars ln a year ln total resources, Is shown in a report Just is Provo A 12,000 - mountain issued by the State Rank Division of the American Rankers Associa- the campus on which Harriet F. Little of Magna Is now studying. tion. The report was prepared by the With 139 others, she 1s enrolled in divisions Committee on State Rank the Alpine term of Brigham Young of Research from data furnished by University. The main campus but the the Js.at Proys university State banking departments and par-- ' term to held 18 miles away, allels data Issued by tbe Comptrol- Alpine at Aspen Grove, 6800 feet up on the ler of the Currency for national wooded shoudera of Mt. Timpano-ga- s, banks which show similar improvedominant peak of the Wasatch ments. range. The combined resources of state . supervised banks were The students live ln rustic cabins $35,724,723,000 as of December 31, among aspens and evergreens on 1935, the state bank report says. the moraine of an ancient glacier. Total deposits amounted to They attend lectures ln Uie open1 Total loans and dis- air or under large canvas flies. They counts stood at $12 430.404,000 and hold programs ln a huge rock and total Investments were $14,170,421,-000.- " leg amphitheatre. Their laboratories are streams and lakes, flower-fille- d A year previous, tables in tbe remeadows and forests, cliffs port show, there wre 10.644 elate supervised banks, with combined resources of $32.6S0,20,..000, total deposits $27,297.950.1100, loans and dis10,-47- 3 counts $13,060,053 oou and ments $12.5S2.323 000 some of our planners insists mat they are powerful enough to do ao, or maybe they still want to help foreign fanners and workers at the expense of the United States. YUAN HEE SEE He will take It easy so that he will not bring his campaign to a premature climax, something which Hamilton has already decided to do. It will be a battle of wits between Parley and Hamilton to keep their chargee ln the pink of condition until the eve of election. safe-guard- ed profits -- O A laugh that whispered thru the Orient like a "breath of death As the cost of living soars, with the most serious shortage of wheat ln the history of the country, we wonder how the New Deal will reply to the critics of Its crop reduction program and Its planned economy for the distraught farmer. Already the President to moving away from Wallace, Just a political moving, but one which indicates that he, too. considers the effects of drought and planning as politically serious. blanching the face of the fearless Dawson Haig . terror to the heart of his . . . striking lovely American fiancee. It Is too early to predict just what effect the drought with its consequent rise ln the cost of living will have on the aspirations 'of the President. From 1933 to 1936 the government has reduced farm crops 'at an expense of $1,500,000,000 to the taxpayers. This reduction amounted to about 15 per cent For the same period Nature has reduced our crops by about 25 per In particular, Landon's appeal to cent, costing the taxpayers nothe small business man should com- thing. mand a large following for he stresAll of which means that we will sed the importance of the forgotbe forced to Import more wheat naten" small business man in the and other farm products to make tional economy, one who has been up for the scarcity. At present we taking it on the chin for years. cannot compete with Nature. But London also refrained from playing the role of salesman. He presented his case to the bar of public opinion, the Republican party and the millions of independentvoters in this country who are not charmed by appearances, soft words for the friends and harsh words for the Read This Great New Romance by Sax Rohmer Author of tho World Famous Fu Msncbu Stories . Thrills await you In this unusual tale of Oriental crime which will appear ln this paper. Watch for the Opening Installments foes. Landon did not seem to be ashamed of his Americanism as so many of our politicians and intellect-uall- s are. He promised to defend the American market for the American farmer and the American worker. Injiis blunt way, he felt that they should come first. He had no crackpot panaceas about aiding the workers of foreign nations first and hoping that such a course would spread prosperity to our shores. All in all, Landon was temperate invest- , Carelessness on the part of a lit- - 2 barn would bars his purpose, he will have bar tests, year after ex-i?- T year. entire service life of the farms. Real r False Economies a , Work'ng for greater economy, bat the farm rtoof Schentey blends three distinctive whiskies em',lia8lzo8 the importance knowledge of Investment values npeclfic Investment require-tof individual II 2000 John Kaczmarek of Chicago, powered with a gasoline motor, without He learning how to stop the thing. crashed against he until on hung to the side of a building, and had He be sent to a hosptal by police. soon declares he will try It again as as he Is able to take a lesson on pacity. rf?1 vay - 1 nng the rseture. and moderate and was not offering for the sake of political expediency, ,ossil feeble-mindedne- If a farmer cuts production of crops or livestock, ta increases his investment costs Pr knit of product produced, as a nailer number of units must then ry as large an expense load as before. This illustrates tbs importance, from the standpoint of costa, Pr&ting a farm at or near ca- 12 000 al-p- st nd faults. By going Ieet beow and climbing to the summit they can see within a few hours how pa.its live in climatic conditions varying from warm temperate to artic. Sixty-nin- e OwnaTin eight states, Canada and Mexico are represented among the students. The term will end August 29. uU hemisphere, relanguage, in 1553. It contains medies for many ailments. IncludIf it really ing morons it for cure a prescribes! should hive wide distribution. "InvestmentcoSts. including depreciation, repairs, taxes d Insurance, are approximately of all farm costs. Fun ttannore, these costa are largely Independent of the production pro-Pof the farm. "This means that t s er Principles of Glasses ol Institutions Of the reporting state banking f titutiong on December 31, 1335, 83 were commercial banka, the report states. 9 trust companies, 9 stock and mttual aavtnga hanks and less than 1 were private banka The report adds: The parallel upward movements of deposits and total Invested funds of total slats supervised banks during the years 1934 and 1935. after declines In these items in 1933 and 1933. are indications of definite steps toward recovery ln state banking. Rased on figures assembled for total state supervised banka on resources and liabilities as of Decern-he- r mans-it-M- i le tQ dtotlngulsh between and a false can into Americans finest ' Bourbon whiskey saving. This nut.?, ?!'ly throub s careful eeti-e. the contribution to Income, v - of q time, of each Item 0n1 more exPen8e than- - wll be loat In con,emPlated cut In designated M real taud un3itUre- hcZ. tapen Is - T t pi W4tin Iamp,e dropping dairy Pavement work may result la redaction. The taestin. . 0 xpen decide Is what effect the dropnin, Work W,J have on htapr0 this ths4iiDv nd tuiure Income from ta ht7APrd- U ,h estimated lots redtflu recclP' duq, to a low-ta- t ln twin nd breediIs trlT1 ng, th !fr than lbe original saw- - YOU PEERS HAS HAD NO FOR fifty years obvlU8,y rich to enjoy rich Theres a barrel of quality in every bottle of Old Quaker and it doesnt cost a barrel of money. Now 50 older, yet no Increase in pricelj PINT No.16ZJRy)No.64 (Bowifaon) -QUART No. 166 (Rya) No. 63 (Bourbon) - UtaoocoBom,W.OUld Pint No. 202 OuorlNo.203 dont have to be Schcnier Di teuton, Inc, New I |