I Uncle Sam's .-W'-V, " nwntwi .in Illlllll lllll VlT SryjrrTSTJ JS fall iVlif lrSTi ; i isr;;iijii!p K M 8? i i 4 I-'. - sV--" '' -'a-.- I rizs imvrzvJi' officii ASHINGTONi U. C (Special Corre Bpondence of The Bee.)- Do you want to open an account with Uncle Sam, banker? You can do It at several hun dred places over the union. A thousand or more banks will have been established by the time this letter is published, and this number will be extended until It covers the 40,000 and odd money order postofflces tdroughout the United States. The postal savings bank bill was passed only last congress, and the business was started with 1100,000, This was to. establish forty-eight banks, each state having one. When congress met again In the spring more banks were started. Forty five additional ones were in operation in April, thlrty- alz more were added in June, and from that time . on they have gone ahead at the rate of fifty per week. At the beginning of the year the forty-eight which were first started had taken in only about $75,000. but with the new banks the deposits have quadrupled, and they will soon amount- to a million dollars or BHsre. Two Billions of Hoarded Treasure. Indeed, it Is Impossible to prophesy how much money will come Into the postofflces. The amount will run into the hundreds of millions. It can do that and till not affect the banking institutions which we have today. The officials of the Treasury department, who keep track of the money In circulation and In the banks,1 say that there is an, enormous sum not ac counted for which lies idle, either In htdlng or in the pockets of the people. This amount is more than two thousand million dollars. It is enough to give $100 to every famlluy In the United States and enough to buy the Steel trust and leave something over for a few railroads or so. It Is about 2 per cent of the aggregate wealth of the nation, and if it could be collected together into one pile. It would almost pay the national debt twice over. Take it out of hiding and turn It Into government bonds and We should not have to borrow a cent from outside na tions, and at the same time would have enough sur-' plus capital to complete the Panama canal and dig a ditch big enough for the largest ocean steamers from the Great Lakes to the gulf. Similar hoards have existed in all countries, al though nowhere to such an extent as in ours. We are the richest of the nations, and we have more loose money than any of the others. Take for In stance the Hindus, where the standard is so low that you can hire a man for 10 cents a day, and where many of the people figure on how much they will eat for supper in order to know whether they '.rill have enough left for breakfast. That country is known to have a hoard In gold or silver or Jewels hid away under Its floors, and since the British gov ernment has established postal savings banks there $600,000,900 have been taken out and deposited, and the accounts in the postofflces are almost" one mil lion in number. Uncle Sam's New Banking System. But how about taking care of a business like this? Think of the work of handling 40,000 different banks, each of which has hundreds of deposit ac counts! Think of the deposits and withdrawals, of calcu lating the interest and of keeping the accounts, where the Iobs of a cent in the balance may set a clerk crasy, as Is common in the banks of today! These are some of the troubles that are agitating the other nations which have similar banks and are eosting them millions. It is so in Great Britain, where a big building at London is devoted to keeping the books. . The banks have been in operation there for twenty-five years, and the separate accounts are one million in number, while the total deposits now equal $781,000,000. The cost of the machine la such that I understand the business is run at a loss. Similar books are kept In France, Germany and In nearly every civilized country on the face of the globe. This was one of the difficulties which faced Uncle Bam when he took hold of the problem. Our postal aavlngs bank business Is bound to be twice as large as that of any other nation, and should we carry It on In the same way, Mr. Theodore L. Weed, the chief clerk pt the Postoffice department and the secretary o the w Plans for Managing New Postal Savings Bank sunjitm &r izasmmi board of banking trustees, tells me we should have to establish, in time, a great accounting system here at Washington, with a great force of clerks to keep track of the moneys In these thousands of offices scat tered over more than three million square miles. Nevertheless, we have begun the business without a cent of additional expense for clerical hire. And moreover, the prospect is that it will be carried on without any material change In our government ma chinery when the deposits are hundreds of millions, and that at an expense which, In the light of its cost to other nations, will be ridiculously small. An Idea Worth Millions. For the invention which has done away with this enormous bookkeeping, Uncle Sam Is Indebted to Mr. Frank Hitchcock, his postmaster general. It Is an In vention worth millions, for It is estimated that It will save at least a million dollars a year to the govern ment. It will certainly do away with the possible employment of 2,000 bookkeepers, which even at as low a salary as $1,000 a year, would make an annual draft on the treasury of $2,000,000, and that in ad dition to other machinery which would greatly add to the total. Mr. Hitchcock conceived the Idea during his trip to Europe last summer. He there saw the complicated machinery of other nations, the most of It based on the system devised by Gladstone, which has been adopted by forty other countries. This was the use of the passbook, which In England meant the posting of the deposit books of 15,000 offices, and of keeping sets of books for them. It Involved the em ployment of 2,000 clerks In London, and of a great bookkeeping establishment there. In our own country the offices would surely be three times as many as In Great Britain, and they will probably be 60,000 or 60,000 or more. To handle them on the European system was evidently very expensive, and Mr. Hitch cock, in working over the matter, originated a plan whereby the accounts would to a great extent keep themselves, and that without mistakes. Certificates vs. Bank Books. This plan was the wiping out of the passbook, and the issuance of drafts or certificates of deposit. This has been Installed, and it is the present system. The depositor bands In his money, but in place of having a credit made on a bank book he is given a certifi cate of deposit for the amount he puts in. The certificates are In the denominations of $1, $2, $5, $10, $20, $50 and $100, and they bear Interest at the rate of 2 per cent per annum. They are neither transferable nor negotiable, and are not worth any thing except in the bands of the person buying them. They are issued In ' duplicate, and the original and duplicate must each bear the signature of the de positor. The duplicate Is retained by the postmaster and if the man would withdraw his deposit he must bring back the original, and sign his name in the presence of the postmaster, who compares it with the signature on the duplicate. It is after Just the same method that the traveler's checks issued by banks and express companies are cashed all over the world today, and the same as that used In letters of credit. One might forge another man's signature, but It takes great skill to make such a forgery offhand In the presence of the man you are trying to de fraud. If a certificate of deposit should be lost or de stroyed it can be duplicated by applying to the post master, the signature, made In this way, being evi dence of the claim. The postmaster keeps a record of these duplicates, not In a book, but In a set of manlla Jackets or envelopes after the card Index sys tem, each manlla Jacket bearing the name of a de positor and having in It that depositor's duplicates. It Is as simple as rolling off a log. It la Foolproof. Again the need of bookkeeping Is avoided by the fact that deposits are made only in multiples of one dollar; and that the money has to be left in one year to draw interest, the interest beginning only oa the first day of the month. The depositor knows that if he takes out any money in less than a year he loses his interest. If he leaves It in for one year he gets 2 per cent; and he must leave it la two years to get 4 per cent. In other words, tnere are no rracuons to be considered. The system seems to be foolproof, TIllJ UAIAI1A SUINUAI UViW. .IUl.il iQ. xvli. B , i i i m l IWHHl!lilBll!SI!ll 1 : aftE QFU27UZ& The depositor knows just what is coming to him. He can draw as much or as little as he pleases, provided the denominations are right; and when his money is all drawn the tearing up of the manlla Jacket closes the account and wipes his name from the government rolls. In fact, there is no other record. v Not Intended for Millionaires. These banks are not intended for millionaires. In fact, the most that any one can have on deposit at any one time Is $500; and it is not passible to de posit more than $100 in any one month. When the first forty-eight banks were opened many farmers came in with sums ranging from $1,000 to $10,000, and were surprised when they were told that only $100 could be taken per month. One old woman called at the Postoffice department here in Washing ton. She had a big fat pocketbook with her, which contained the savings of years. She said that she had lost her money in a private bank failure twenty five years ago and that since that time she had been praying for a government bank where her funds would be safe. At one of the other stations two farmers brought in two canvas bags of coins, which together held more than $3,000, and asked to deposit it; while at Dubois, Pa., a German miner offered $1,700 and was sur prised when the postmaster would accept only $100. At Ashtabula, O., a woman deposited $100, and said she would return monthly until her account had reached the limit; while at the same office a man who was refused the chance to put in $500 at a lump said he did not care to open an account where the money went in on such small Installments. A Chance for Women and Children. These banks will be patronized by the women and children. The laws provide that a husband has no control of the deposits made by his wife, nor guardians any control over those made by their wards. Even the children can deposit, and their parents cannot get the money, except by their consent and by their sig natures in the presence of the postmaster. Any boy who has a dime may begin an account by buying a Bargain Counter "Don't keep a rag-bag," was the fundamental motto of A. T. Stewart That pioneer American mer chant prince was accustomed once a week, and some times oftener, to go up and down the aisles of his store, stopping at various counters and fingering dry goods or fancy goods or the many little articles dis played on the notion counter. "How is this article selling?" or, "What is the de mand for these goods.?" he would ask. If the reply was that the article 'or goods In question was selling rapidly Mr. Stewart would say no more, but pass on. But if he discovered that the demand was falling off for a certain article or a certain line of goods, or else that there was not a ready sale for the articles or goods because of the price, he would say: "Put these things on a special table and mark the price down until you can sell them. Don't keep a rag-bag." - It was this rule or motto that gave rise to the bargain counter, as we know it today; and In his long career as a merchant it enabled him to turn every- Ihlnf he had to sell Into cash as speedily as possible, SAMS JVUm C&RKLEJZS ZZST ALAsSEA postal savings card, upon which he can paste nine other 10-cent postal saving stamps, which he may buy as he gets the money. When the 90 cents' worth of stamps have been stuck on the card it represents a dollar, and may be exchanged for a dollar deposit draft at the postoffice. His name then goes into a manlla Jacket and he is one of the patrons of Uncle Sam's great banking system. Suggestion for the Benevolent. In all places where the banks have been established many children are among the depositors. In some Instances postmasters have been asked to address the public school children on the system, and school teach ers from all parts of the country are writing the de partment for Information concerning it. At one of the Pennsylvania offices a boy has opened an account In order that he may have a start in life when he is through school, and In other places men are opening accounts for children and starting them on the way to save. One philanthropic man In Owensboro, Ky., baa purchased postal savings cards for all the public school children of that town, his idea being to encourage thrift through the use of this government system. This seems to be an excellent idea, and I suggest It to such of you as have a charitable dollar to put It where It will bring big results. Take a village or town which has a thousand school children. An investment of $100 In these 10-cent postal saving cards would start the children of that whole town to saving, and would be better charity than the pauperizing, indiscriminate gift-giving which is so common today. One might take the children of a single school or class and do the same. Indeed, this system of giving is subject to countless variations. Government Bonds for Savings Bank Depositors. Connected with the postal savings bank act Is a provision by which the certificates of deposit may be used to buy government bonds. This went into effect the 1st of July, and many bonds have already been purchased. The law provides that postal savings, in the sums of $20, $40, $60, $80 and $100, and mul tiples of $100 and $500, may be turned In for bonds, which shall be In the above denominations, and shall bear interest at the rate of iy per cent per annum, payable semi-annually. These bonds cannot be bought except by postal savings bank depositors, but they are so arranged that any one can have a part in the government debt of the United States, and can own a government bond. They will be sold to such depositors at par. They are exempt from taxation, and they will probably have a market value some what higher than at the rate they are sold to de positors. This, It is thought, will add to the stability of our government. Every man who owns such a bond will want to support the government and will feel that he has a part in It. t will probably result in a great part of our bonds, which are now held by the rich, here and in other countries, going Into the hands of the people. Patronised by Foreigners. So far we have thousands of foreigners who have been taking out deposits In these new postal savings banks. These men know the postal savings banks of their own countries, and they have faith in ours be cause they are backed by the government Postmaster General Hitchcock tells me that vast sums have an- aually been sent abroad by the foreign element of this country In order that they may be deposited In the banks of Europe. Some of this goes to the banks di rect and some is sent to friends, who put It in the postal savings banks of their respective countries. In the four years ending with 1909, more than $312,000,000 of such money orders were issued, and si large part of them were for savings deposits. Now that the postoffice bank has been established a great deal of this money will f,o into it. This has been the case In the banks opened In the mining camps, where many foreigners are employed. It is so, also, in the milling centers and in all laboring towns. At one of the Pennsylvania offices a group of foreigners, both men and women, called to see the postmaster, and on being informed that they could only deposit $100 each they went away saying: "No good to us. Take too many months to make deposits, come back when government gets bank fixed better way." Wanted to Pay the Postmaster. At Frostburg, Md., an Italian who deposited $50 of fered to pay 60 cents for the certificate, and when he was told it did not cost anything and that his deposit would also draw interest, he was much pleased. At an Ohio office a Syrian woman tried to deposit $370, and at Orovllle, Cal., a number of foreigners offered from $1,000 to $2,000 each,' which, of course, was impossible. At Ashtabula, O., a foreigner came from Palnesvllle with $800, and at Globe, Ariz., the post master says that his depositors rank as to the amount of money held as follows: American, English, Aus trian, German, Russian, Mexican and Swedish. At many of the places interpreters have asked for literature on the system, saying that they want to ex plain It to the foreign laborers of their settlement, while at Dubois, Pa., two priests of foreign churches there are studying the system, and say they will spread the news among their flocks. It Runs Easy. In my talk with the postmaster general and the officials In charge of the bank here at Washington I have been shown the system and the accounts of Its operation to date. The Increase in number of de positors and amount of deposits Is rapidly growing and that as to every branch of the business. The de posits of the stations first opened have a larger ratio of Increase every week, and the growth at the new stations is proportionately rapid. At the present Is sue the deposits at the forty-eight original postofflces at the close of a year from their date of opening will amount to over $800,000, and If the system should be extended to all the money order offices It will at the same ratio at the end of the first year thereafter have something like $200,000,000 on deposit. In the building of new postofflces the government will put In special offices for the savings banks. This will be the case In the new postoffice at Washington, D. C, which is soon to be built, and eventually sim ilar arrangements will have to be made in all the large cities. The most surprising feature of the work so far Is the ease with which It Is handled. The new banks are running without complications. There have been no objections from the local savings Institutions and the postofflces promise to bring a vast amount of new money Into circulation. Indeed the postal savings bank Is the greatest financial success of this adminis tration. FRANK O. CAEPBNTEJJi I s V A IK v