A EA ling GROUP JANKING WIDESPREAD 4 4 i. \ rma —— er 13 Billion Dollars of Bank agsets in Affiliated Systems Numbering 1,850 Members— In Nearly Every State. \ Jver 1,850 banks with more than fteen billion dollars in resources shown to be associated with chain group banking systems in the jted States in facts recently gath- d by the Economic Policy Commis- a of the American Bankers Agso- tion. The chairman of the com- ysion, R. S. Hecht of New Orleans, nted out that the facts indicate that most 7% per cent of our banks and fr 18 per cent of our banking re- irces are in the great net of group chain banking that now covers al- st every part of the country.” ’he commission’s facts comprised iin and group banking affiliations in | broadest sense of the ter m, the re- it sald. They included those groups which the controlling element was articular bank, there being report- 78 instances of this class involving banks and about $6,473,000,000 in pbined banking resources. They juded also groups in which a non- 1king holding company, jary to any particular trol and of this class 28 not sub- bank, was in instances ve found, involving 380 banks and rly $5,336,000,000 in resources. The ort also included groupings in fch control was exercised by in- idual persons and these cases num- ed 167, involving 1,071 banke and yut $1,468,000,000 in assets. The Total Figures rhe total was over $13,275,000,000 in (regate resources. Some of the sys- as comprised ad offices of the groups were 50 to 100 banks each. found all jurisdictions, put nine of the tes and the District of Columbia. ‘We have not included in )s,” the report says, these fig- “banking yups in which a commercial bank, a st company and an investment ise, and sometimes a savings bank, y tied together by some form of ck holdings and operated as com- mentary elements in an organiza- a rendering complete financial serv- g. We have held that su ch groups y similar to a departmentalized bank i different in the purpo€es and op tions from a chain or group bank- ; system. ‘For purposes of the present report define chain or group ns iether her rigid or informal, prations of two or more aks, banks as 8ys- in which centralized control, corporate or personal and directs the complete |. not functionally complemen- vy, each working on ite own capital d under its own personnel and lo- -ed in one or more cities or states.” yommenting on the questi the rapid development nking was in the nature on wheth- of chain of a reac- n against restrictions imposed on inch hanking by the ban many states the report servation g theory since chain b king laws says that does not wholly confirm anking is svalent in some states where vir- ally no restriction is imposed on anch banking, as well as in those ere the establishment of branch nks is prohibited. It adds: The Question of Branch Banking ‘However the facts do show that ti-branch banking laws have been a stor in some cases, and probably in me sections, in the spread of chain pking. Instances have co me to our .ention where expansion along chain nk lines has been carried out by ite banks whose expansion along anch bank lines was stopped by the ssing of state laws prohibiting fur- sr branches. Yet whether expansion yuld have been along pranch bank es if the laws irs, nad imposed no bar- it is impossible to say." There obviously a well developed banking inion in some sections that the chain nk method brings to outlying banks p strength and efficiency of a big ganization: without depriving them their local individuality and sympa- ies. In view of the mixed factors ted, we feel it is unsafe to general y as to what bearing branch banking ws have on chain developments. «The recent era of rapid chain bank velopments has found s pecific re- ction in some state legislative ae- yn tending to restrict or control ain or group banking. Also we find sharp difference of opinion among ite bank commissioners pressed their sentiments ain banking.” who have regarding In a foreword to the report, issue booklet form by the association at y New York City headquarters, airman Hecht says that mic Policy Commission "the Eco- does not ke a stand in advocacy of or in op- sition to this new method of con: ntrating banking resources through e affiliation of banks into groups and ains, ding body what we st complete national picture of pidly growing movement. eer ——— put is simply offering as a fact believe is the this SCHOOL SAVINGS GROW A total of 4,222,936 school children rticipated in school savings banking the United States during the last hool year, depositing $28,672,496 and 1ling up net savings of $10,539,928, inging total bank balances now cred- sd to this movement to above 50 illion dollars, according to the an- ial report of the Savings Bank divi- on of the American Bankers Asso- ation. Schools to the number of 16, 7 are enrolled in the plan. : From Lakes Far Inland Salt is so common ‘and so inexpen- sive that ‘one 8 apt to loose sight of its value and necessity. In certain’ parts’ of the orient salt is so scarce and so valued it is used as & medium of exchange. France has no salt nines, and, as far as the smooth table variety ip concerned, she is entirely dependent upon imports. You see a fomous brand of English packet salt in all’ paris of the country. But it’s an expensive busi- pess getting it to every swall town, and that is where the Etang de Berre comes in handy. It is on the road to Marseilles—you pass it away to your right—and it is the largest of dll the Etangs. They are great lakes of sea water, fed, often underground, by. the sea; and they are dotted along the Mediterranean coast from Marseilles to Spain. You find them again in the Landes, that flat, marshy stretch in the neighborhood of Bordeaux. Shallow evaporation pans, leading away from the Etang de Berre, and looking in the distance exactly like vast reser- voirs, have been built, and these are filled from the lake. They are then dammed off, and dry air and blazing sun do the rest. All History Recorded in Scheme of Nature Nature will be reported. All things are engaged in writing their history. The planet, the pebble, goes attended by its shadow. The rolling rock leaves its scratches on the mountain; the river, its channel in the soil; the ani- mal, its bones in the stratum; the fern and leaf, their modest epitapb in the coal. The falling drop makes its sculp- ture in the sand or the stone. Not a foot steps into the snow or along the ground, but prints, in characters more or less lasting, a map of its march. Every act of the man inscribes itself in the memories of its fellows, and in his own manners and face. The air is full of sounds, the sky of tokens, the ground is all memoranda and signa- tures, and every object covered over with hints, which speak to the intelli- gent,—Emerson. Walt Whitman Whitman was a great liberator, a great humanitarian, a great American, a great man; was he, therefore, a great poet also? Intellectually in- dolent, emotionally mushy, spiritually chaotic and formless. Walt Whitman is the great American now safely and securely enshrined and embalmed in the hearts of his countrymen not be- cause of his poetry, but because of his patriotism. There is wonderful poetic fire in Whitman as there is in the life and work of every great liberator. - Whitman was not another Shake- - gpeare nor another Milton nor another Shelley. If he is not of this immor- tal company, is he truly a great poet? Though no one need deny that he was a superb human being writing astonishingly human poems. Poignant prose poetry—From “Our Changing Human Nature,” by Samuel D. Schmal- hausen. Sea Eel a Menace There is a species of sea eel which darts like lightning at a human vie- tim and sinks its sharp teeth into an arm or ankle. A man would be help- less against one of these creatures were it not for a trick familiar to the South sea natives. In its lightning- like dive the eel gets any grip it can and holds on. Then it waits for the victim to weaken, when it will relax its grip and try to get a more ad- vantageous one. All the attacked person has to do is to endure the pain until the fish opens its mouth. Then, if the man moves quickly enough, it is possible to escape to the surface by pushing the creature away. Pulling Power of Horses Large horses are better than small snes for pulling heavy loads, tesis at the [Illinois agricultural experiment station have disclosed, authgugh many “good little team” will outpull a big zine. Trials were made with 144 dif- ferent teams, and accurate rmeasure- ments of their performance taken with a dynamometer. It was also found that a good disposition was an im- portant factor in the animals’ success as pullers, and skillful driving was shown to be as necessary as good horses. . Ben Damph Is Damp Ben Damph, a rambling country mansion belonging to the Lovelace family, is perhaps about the most in- accessible house to be found even in Scotland. It is also one of the wet- test. Rain falls almost continuously. The nearest village is about eleven miles away, and the household is con- sequently, of necessity, self-supporting. Fish from the loch, cattle from the pasture, and game from the moor pro- vide the staple sustenance of those staying at Ben Damph. Electrical Term The bureau of standards says that a lazy-man switch, also called a three- way switch, is electrically a single- pole double-throw switch. Using two of them, a light can be controlled from two places, such as upstairs and down- stairs in the case of hall lights. A related switch, called a four-way switch, is electrically a double-pole re- versing switch. Any number of four- way switches may be used with two three-way switches to control a light from any number of points. But- horse owners have insisted that a | one, says Popular Mechanics Maga- ; ee ioe TRIP TO Mystery Ship Expected t> Lower Record. Atlanta, Ga.—Some time next spring when the elements between Los An- geles and New York returp to nor- maley, Doug Davis, crack Atlante pt- jot, expects to fly the distance i» sbout twelve hours. The record, now held by Cap. Frank Hawks, is close to seventeen hours. But that fact apparently offers little obstacle to the man who recently clipped three hours from the record of the trip from New York to Atlanta. He used a Travelalr “Mystery” ship —a bullet-like monoplane which looks like a bumble bee upside down but which functions with unprecedente’ efficiency. Would Fly Straight Up. Davis won the cup for America’s most meritorious Ayer of 1929 in the same projectilelike craft at the Cleve- land air races. He was in New York early in November and wanted to er +er it in an air race in Atlanta. 80 he took breakfast in Gotham and funch in Georgia, actually flying the 800 miles in four hours and thirty minutes through rain and fog. The entire trip required five hours, with two stops of fifteen minutes each for fuel, Davis believes his “Mystery”. ship has greater pessibilities than any simi- ilar craft extant, believes its highly developed maneuver ability and ex: cessive speed would make it an in- vulnerable fighting unit in time of war. He recently sald that shortly he ex- pected to open its throttle somewhere in the vicinity of the ground, point its nose “absolutely straight up,” and cut swiftly heavenward for one solid mile at an angle of 180 degrees. Fastest Climbing Plane. Already he has climbed to 3,000 feet in that manner after a 250-mile-an- hour start. Present equipment of the plane, he said, does not permit more altitude because of gas tank adjus’ ment, which he expects to alter. The plane can take off at an angle greater than 45 degrees and hold It “all the way to the ceiling” Davis said. “I believe it is unquestionably ‘he fastest climbing plane ever built.” It is an open cockpit affair and re- sponds so swiftly to the controls that a sudden change of direction wiil pro- duce temporary blindness for the pl- lot. That happened in the Cleveland races, Davis said, when he rounded # oylon too abruptly. A nine-cylinder motor of 300 horse power twirls the plane's 22 degree pitch propeller 2.200 revolutions per minute and propels the whole craft tore than 250 miles an hour. “a novice ig out of place at its con- trols, but it is perfectly safe in the hands of an experienced pilot,” he | said. Plans Airplane Capable of 2,000 Miles an Hour New York.—Within a few years Fritz von Opel, German inventor of the rocket powered car, hopes to have perfected a practical airplane capable of speed of 2,000 miles an ‘hour. The machine, he said, would be driven by a new fuid explosive which his engl | qeers are now testing. This fluid is produced by combining two other high-powered explosives according to a secret formula, and by next year, Von Opel said, he expects to have built a rocket driven plane with which he will attempt a flight qcross the English channel. Herr Von Opel, who is only thirty, arrived in New York recently aboard the North German Llyod liner Colum- bus with his wife. He is to remain in the United States for a year, study- ing the motor industry, and also will confer with navy officials at Washing: ton. The young inventor ridiculed the idea of shooting a rocket to the moon, and especially that of a man travel. ing to the moon in a rocket driven car. His rockets have far more prac tical use, he believes. Tax Irks Chinese Shanghai.—Angry at a new 30 per cent “superstition fax” which the local Chinese municipality has ordered levied against religious incense and candles, shopkeepers affected have joined to resist the duty and threaten to declare a strike unless the order is rescinded. Loitpitreiplpstostsatpatantaitantadaiodiosiosiondsodosdesfesiosloafreivd Millions of Children in China Illiterate Peiping, China.—Three mil- lion Chinese children in Hopel province alone are unable to read or write in their own Or any other language, the depart- ment of educativn of: the prov- ince reports. The department urges institu tion of compulscry education for all children as soon as possible. but estimates that such a pro gram would require $30,000,000 at the start, and as the province has been bareiy able to meet ordinary administrative ex penses, it is not velieved that a real beginning can be made in the near future. As a temporary measure, the department suggests that com- pulsory education be started first In large cities, where the [ people may be able to afford it, b ‘ Sods orelesle vos, *e "s" oo, joaseieeleel Loe 2, "e" ve, ofealedieafefediodt Sool, tostostodte oe * "a" ete Pee . o¥ ve" oo # a os », "a ye’ 00 ca Sealer . BR ot poigeigeefeelorefeoeip iat ttt Nt tt TTT RT EE hae, a 8 8 8 SB BB BN BBS Se Bebe Pe te iuetoal 6S SAB SiR eB >" lool - 3 Edude a i i a 12 HOURS Ti ——Ralph:Russell Sloat, “of: Scran- ton, -and Nicholas Watkins : a“ Phila- delphia negro, scheduled to go to the Monday morning, have another month’s lease of life, as the board of pardons has continued the hearing on their application for a commuta- tion of sentence until the Febru- ary meeting of the board. XECUTOR'S NOTICE. — No is hereby given that letters testament- ary in the estate of L. Hutchison, late of the Borough of fonte, deceased, have been granted to the undersigned by the Register of Wills Centre County, All persons indebted the said estate are requested to make pafent of the same and those havin claims against the estate to present he duly er for adjustment and payment, T NATIONAL BANK, E tor, 75-1-6t Nefonte. Penn . DMINISTRATOR’'S NOTICE—Letters \ of administration on the est Anna T. cLaughlin, late of the porough of Bellefonte, county of Centre and State of Pennsylvania, deceased having been granted to the undersigned all persons knowing themselves in to said estate are hereby notified to make immediate payment of such indebtedness and those ving claims will present them, properly authenticated, for settle- ment. J. M. CUNNINGHAM 75-4-6t Administrator. A administration on the es- tate of Esther K. Gray, late of Patton township, Centre county, Pennsyl- vania, deceased, having been gran to the undersigned all DMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE— Let- ters persons knowing themselves indebted to said estate are requested to make immediate payment of such indebtedness and those having claims should present them, properly au- thenticated, to GEORGE M. GLENN, Administrator Th50.6t Harrisburg Academ Harrisburg, Pa. UDITOR'S NOTICE.—W. A. e V8. H. F. Bosley, in the Court of Com- mon Pleas of Centre county,No. 49 February Term, Notice is her 1930. by given to all rsons {in interest by the undersigned, appointed Auditor by the Court of Common Pleas of Centre County to piss upo nthe facts in dispute, determine the respective rights of the plaintiff in the writ of execution to the above Number and Term, and the rights of other claimants to the whole or any part of said fund and make a sched- ule of distribution, that the undersigned has fixed Tuesday, the 11th day of Febru- | ary, 1930, at ten A. M., for a hearing | in Temple Court, at which time and place | all parties in interest are requested to at- ' tend and they shall be h : eard. 75-3-3t ELLIS L. ORVIS, Auditor ee i OTICE IN DIVORCE.—Agnes { Summers vs. Nevin Floyd Summers. | In the Court of Common Pleas of Centre County, No. 47 November Term 1929. Libel in Divorce] To Nevin Floyd Summers, Respondent. WHEREAS, Agnes Ruth Summers, your wife, has a libel in the Court of Common Pleas of Centre County, praying a divorce from you, now you are hereby notified and requested to appear in the Court on or be ore the fourth Monday of February, 1929, to answer the com- plaint of sald Agnes Ruth Summers, and in default of such appesrance you will | be liable to have a divorce granted in your absence. ARRY E. DUNLAP, Sheriff of Centre County January 22nd, 1980. 75-4-4t S HERIFF'S SALE.—By virtue of d the Court of Common Pleas of Cen- | tre County, to me directed, will be ex- ( posed to. public_sale at the Court House | in borough- of Bellefonte on | FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7th, 1930. | a The Following Property: ALL that certain messua, | ad tract of | of Union, "County e, tenement 16 e Township of Centre and State of land situate in t | Fepnsyivania, bounded and described as ie : cd follows, to-wit: | BEGINNING at a ! side of Bald Eagle land of Ida M. Lucas, formerly Walter | W. Lucas, North 49 degrees and 30 min- utes West 116 perches to stones; thence along land of Martha L. Hall formerly | Robert Hall, South 56 degrees 30 min- | utes West 68 perches to stones; thence South 25 degrees East 108 perches to a on the South side of Bald Eagle thence along the edge of said : of Mills Alexander North ' 48 degrees and 30 minutes East to a post; | thence along same North 62 degrees, East | 92 perches to a st, the place of begin- ning. Containing 61 acres and 100 perches. Seized, taken in execution and to be | sold as the property of Edward A. Peters, ' owner. | Sale to commence ; of said day. ost on the South reek; thence along . Creek; Creek by lands at 1:30 o'clock p. m. . BE. DUNLAP, Sherift | Sheriff's Office, Bellefonte, Pa., . January 13, 1930. EED F chair at" Rockview, ast | Te Put Your Cash in a Good Bank ~OME people still keep too much money at home. It is subject there to many dangers. Recently, a man in California according to the Public Ledger, put more than ! $700 in a tin can and buried it in his yard. But certain insects found their way into this home-made bank, and finding that the bills were good to eat, maybe they had grease on them from handling, reduced them to powder. Now the owner is trying to convince the Treasury Department that this dust represents good money—which will be difficult. Better put your cash in a good bank. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK BELLEFONTE, PA. writ of Levari Facias issued out of | Complete Commercial Banking Service =D ANAL TMOR VAG) o the Business Men of our com- munity, this reliable Bank off- ers unsurpassed facilities of a Banking FRNA\NAR SARA HRMAAAIO AARANTO IANO complete Commercial Service. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK STATE COLLEGE, PA MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM i rr Ths End GAN 75-3-3t | {0 If Your Overcoat. Size | We offer subject to Market changes: Iu Ea 1 | per 1001b | Is 38 or Larger | Quaker scratch feed ..occcooomeee 40 | E | ake FULO Fer egg mash od L bl uaker 209, dairy ration... 50 | | i er 247, dairy ration 268 you will find what you want at Faubles | Quaker calf meal.........cococoee 4, 3 3 | Quaker sugared Schumacker.. 2.30 at prices that will save you from | Wayn~ 329% dairy ration... 3.00 Wane 237% dairy zation Ha 20 [ Wayne 209% dairy ration........ .65 | Wayne egg mash... 3.25 ; J y D Il : Wayne oge mash. 322 Ten to Twenty Dollars Wayne 289, hog meal Sa . A 180 ON A SINGLE OVERCOAT A. middlings ............... 2.30 B. middlings ........... . 2.00 Corn and Oats Chop..... 2.00 Cracked COTM .oooenvivisnsensinsosurssas 2.23 Corn CHOP cooceeconmemeimnemnnnenceceas 2. Flax Meal ...ooooooommeeiinnerinneiens 2.40 » i Linseed oil JT 390 e have left 54 Men’s Overcoats ” otton seed meal..............cccceeee ; , i 1 ie Gluten feed "I 250 \ V nothing smaller than size 38—an Alfalfa meal ......oeoiiieiiiiiennee . a scrap em 100 we are out to make a complete Hog tankage ..........coooenees 2.70 Oyster Shells ......oememseneens 1.00 clean-up. Mica spar grit... 1.50 Stock Salt .ooooereiiienneeens 1.00 Common Fine Salt. 1.25 Quaker oat meal ............... 3.40 , . Menhaden 55% fish meal....... 4.00 It’s our loss and we are taking Bone neal Sr Ai aera id Charcoal .................. 1 i Dried buttermilk ... 9.50 it gracefully ’ Dried skim milk 9.00 : . Pratt's poultry worm powder.. 10.00 it’s your opportunity. Pratt’s poultry regulator... 9.00 Cod Liver Oil cans gal... 1.80 Cod Liver Oil bulk gal... 1.30 Orders for one ton or more de- livered without extra charge. We make no charge for mixing your rations. Your orders will be appreciated and have our careful attention. A. F. HOCKMAN Feed store—23 West Bishop Street & : : Phone 98-3 Mill—Hecla Park, Pa. Phone 2824 5-2tL.