13022. Goodrich Brothers Banking Company (Fairbury, NE)

Bank Information

Episode Type
Suspension → Closure
Bank Type
state
Start Date
January 3, 1922
Location
Fairbury, Nebraska (40.137, -97.181)

Metadata

Model
gpt-5-mini
Short Digest
c62f991b

Response Measures

None

Description

Multiple newspapers (Jan 3–17, 1922) report the Goodrich Brothers Banking Company of Fairbury, Neb., has been closed and that application will be made for appointment of a receiver. No articles mention depositors running prior to the closure. Therefore this is a suspension followed by receivership (permanent closure).

Events (2)

1. January 3, 1922 Receivership
Newspaper Excerpt
has been closed and application will be made Tuesday for appointment of a receiver, it was announced today at the attorney general's office.
Source
newspapers
2. January 3, 1922 Suspension
Cause
Government Action
Cause Details
Bank was closed and application made for appointment of a receiver (closure leading to receivership)
Newspaper Excerpt
The Goodrich Brothers Banking company at Fairbury, Neb., an old and established firm, has been closed and application will be made Tuesday for appointment of a receiver
Source
newspapers

Newspaper Articles (4)

Article from Pueblo Chieftain, January 4, 1922

Click image to open full size in new tab

Article Text

e I . FINANCIAL NOTES 1 Lincoln, Neb., Jan. 3.-The Goodrich t Brothers Banking company at FairI , bury, Neb., an old and established firm, I has been closed and application will 1 be made Tuesday for appointment of a t receiver, it was announced today at the attorney general's office. : 1 Pittsburg. Pa., Jan. 3.-The crude oil market opened for the year today with the announcement by the principal purchasing agencies that the price of Pennsylvania grade was $3.50 a barrel. a reduction of 50 cents. Corning. Cabel, Somerset and Somerset light were cut 25 cents and Ragian 10 cents a barrel. : New York. Jan. 3.-A serious break ) occurred today in the local cotton market. apparently due to reports of unsettled conditions in the west. After advancing to $19.20. early March con1 tracts broke more than $5 a bale, sell7 ing at $18.16 in the late trading. : : METAL QUOTATIONS 8 New York. Jan. 3.-Copper steady: 8 electrolytic spot and nearby, 131/614e: 1 later. 14c. , Tin easy: spot and nearby, $32.75: : : futures. $32.75. Iron steady: No. 1 northern. $19.50 20.50: No. 2 northern. $19.00@20.00; Na 2 southern. $16.50@17.00 Lead steady: spot. $4.70@4.80 Zinc. quiet: East St. Louis delivery c spot. $4.90@4.95. Antimony spot. $4.50. e DENVER LIVESTOCK 8 Denver. Jan. 3.-Cattle-Receipts 1.n 000: market opened steady. closed 15@ , steers. 25c lower: beef $6.00@7.00; cows and heifers, $4.25@6.50; calves. $7.00 10.00: bulls. $2.50@3.50; stockers and feeders. $4.50@5.80. Hogs-Receipts 2.600: 10c higher: , top. $7.25: bulk. $6.65@7.20. c Sheep-Receipts 1,500: strong; lambs. $9.75@10.25: ewes, $3.75@4.00; feeder . lambs, $8.75@9.50. : KANSAS CITY LIVESTOCK Kansas City. Jan. 3.-(U. S. Bureau of Markets)-Cattle-Receipts 9,600: all classes around steady: undertone e weak on beef steers and she stock: medium weights steady. $8.00: others. , $5.40@7.60: better grades cows. $4.50 1 5.00: common and medium mostly $3.75 I @4.25: bulk good canners, $2.50 d bulls. $3.25@4.00: top vealers. $9.00; most S packers. $4.25@6.00; good light feeders, $6.50. y Hogs-Receipts 8.000: shippers buys ing 140 to 220 pound hogs: steady with f yesterday's shipper market: $7.35 paid : for 160 to 175 pound r 7.15 for 190 to 210 pound weights: weights: $6.85 oth. ers to packers 10 to 15c higher than S yesterday's average: packer market: # best kind to packers. of sales. $6.50@7.25: $6.80@6.85: $7.35: bulk top, packing s sows and pigs low and weak. : Sheep-Receipts 5,000: sheep steady: d 106 pound shorn wethers. $5.50: lambs : strong to 15c higher: fed westerns, n $11.25. FINANCIAL QUOTATIONS New York, Jan. 3.-Call money strong: high. 51/2 per cent: low. 6 per cent: ruling rate 516 per cent: closing -


Article from Chicago Eagle, January 7, 1922

Click image to open full size in new tab

Article Text

Domestic C. O. Boyd, treasurer of the Columbia theater at Chicago, reported to the police that he was held up in his office by two men, who forced him to open a safe and give them more than $2.000. * * * The Goodrich Brothers' Banking company at Fairbury, Neb., an old and established firm, has been closed and application will be made for appointment of a receiver. * * * Donald and Alex Deleet, fifteen and seventeen years old, sons of Albert Deleet, farmer, were drowned while skating on the Menominee river near Marinette, Wis. * * * Citizens of Mountain county have asked state troops to prevent the outbreak of a general feudist war. Many persons are leaving their homes in terror, says a Lexington (Ky.) dispatch. * Herman Dienhold, seventy-two years old, known as a hermit in the eastern section of Baltimore, Md., was found frozen to. death in his dilapidated home. In a pocket police found $150.80. * * Alfred Henry Gehls, twenty-six, a chief petty officer of the navy, is dead aboard the U. S. S. Idaho at San Pedro, Cal., following a quarrel with a shipmate in which Oehls was struck over the head with a marlin spike. Captain Amory and Lieut. Louis C. Davis of the Fifteenth coast artillery were killed instantly when their automobile left the narrow Benquet road near Baguio, Philippine Islands, and went over a precipice. Theft of more than $1,000,000 in supplies from the army base in Brooklyn was believed to be cleared up by the arrest of three men for stealing $10,000 worth of shirts. Among the missing items are 3,000,000 safety razor blades. The navy's first casualty of 1922 was Chief Machinist's Mate Donald McDonald of Newport, R. I., washed overboard from the mine sweeper Quail off Montauk Point. By a majority of 5,50€ St. Paul Minn., voters decided to retain the com mission form of government. A new charter providing return to the mayor and council plan was defeated. F. Price Murphy, a manufacturing jeweler, committed suicide at Des Moines, Ia., by drinking poison. Four robbers shot and killed the as sistant cashier and a clerk of the Firs National bank at Pearl River, N. Y. and escaped in an automobile afte wounding a railroad guard.


Article from Grant County Herald, January 11, 1922

Click image to open full size in new tab

Article Text

Domestic Mrs. Elizabeth Tyler of Atlanta, Ga., has announced her resignation as assistant to E. Y. Clarke, imperial kieagle and head of the propaganda department of the Ku Klux Klan. * Announcement was made at Lima, O., that the Ohio steel foundry plant will open January 15. giving employment to more than 500 workers. * The bodies of W. F. Dickinson, a prominent Sioux City (Ia.) undertaker, and a woman named Anna Giddings were found in a stalled automobile. C.O. Boyd, treasurer of the Columbia theater at Chicago, reported to the police that he was held up in his office by two men, who forced him to open a safe and give them more than $2,000. The Goodrich Brothers' Banking company at Fairbury, Neb., an old and established firm, has been closed and application will be made for appointment of a receiver. * Deputy Sheriff W. G. McCallum of Swartz and P. D. Heflin, his brotherin-law, fought a duel with shotguns near Monroe, La., McCallum was killed. The coroner's jury returned a verdict of justifiable homicide. * * * Fire of unknown origin at Centerville, Ia., destroyed the George Steele garage and 56 automobiles. Not a car was saved. The loss is estimated at $150,000. Two bodies were slightly damaged. A law prohibiting moving-pieture shows on Sundays was adopted at Palmyra, Mo. Floyd Roy, sixteen years old, high school student, was suffocated in a fire which destroyed J. H. Matthew's home at Cedar Rapids, Iowa. *


Article from The Adair County News, January 17, 1922

Click image to open full size in new tab

Article Text

Domestic Mrs. Elizabeth Tyler of Atlanta, Ga., has announced her resignation as assistant to E. Y. Clarke, imperial kleagle and head of the propaganda department of the Ku Klux Klan. Announcement was made at Lima, O., that the Ohio steel foundry plant will open January 15, giving employment to more than 500 workers. The bodies of W. F. Dickinson, a prominent Sloux City (Ia.) undertaker, and a woman named Anna Giddings were found in a stalled automobile. C.O. Boyd, treasurer of the Columbia theater at Chicago, reported to the police that he was held up in his office by two men, who forced him to open a safe and give them more than $2,000. The Goodrich Brothers' Banking company at Fairbury, Neb., an old and established firm, has been closed and application will be made for appointment of a receiver. Deputy Sheriff W. G. McCallum of Swartz and P. D. Heflin, his brotherin-law, fought a duel with shotguns near Monroe, La., McCallum was killed. The coroner's jury returned a verdict of justifiable homicide. Fire of unknown origin at Centerville, Ia., destroyed the George Steele garage and 56 automobiles. Not a car was saved. The loss is estimated at $150,000. Two bodies were slightly damaged. A law prohibiting moving-picture shows on Sundays was adopted at Palmyra, Mo. Floyd Roy, sixteen years old, high school student, was suffocated In a fire which destroyed J. H. Matthew's home at Cedar Rapids, Iowa.