Modern High Standards of Living Are to Blame for Bank Defalcations •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••a SAYS MR. MOXEY: ? _ • • “When you can go into a restaurant at two o’clock in the morning and • behold $60,000 worth of women's gowns at the tables and $3,000 worth of J food in process of consumption, something is wrong.” • “It is not only this sort of life in New York, but, in a more sinister • i way, the sight and example of it which is bringing about a degradation 2 ' of the sense of common honesty.” • “The laxity with which the criminal laws of our land are enforced by * i many of the judges of our courts has much to do with encouraging bank • 1 officers to misuse the funds in their keeping.” • “New York is to blame for it.” Gray-whiskered, gray-haired, gray eyed, gray-clad, a slender gentleman of astonishing neatness and a certain amiable precision of speech leaned back in his office chair with his hands behind his head and smiled alertly, writes Frank C. Drake, in the New York World. Such is a first impres sion of Edward P. Moxey, whose offi cial title is “Expert Bank Examiner for the United States Department of Justice," and such were his words in speaking of the epidemic of bank de dications which has been sweeping over the country. Whereas Mr. Moxey's business is to flit about the country and peer unex pectedly over the shoulders of the cashiers of national banks here and there in order to find out if their cash balances are all right; and whereas >Ir. Moxey had found some 30 of these gentlemen with their cash balances ail wrong and, to their great grief and amazement, has put them in the peni tentiary; and whereas Mr. Moxey, fresh from sending John R. Walsh of Chicago to join the others, has come to New York to look into the book keeping of Charles W. Morse and Al fred H. Curtis, on trial for trying, it is alleged, to buy a national bank with its own money; therefore does the said Edward P. Moxey speak with some authority of bank defalcations and their causes. “You mean the ‘Broadway’ New York?” 1 asked. ‘‘Broadway” Blamed. “1 mean the ‘Broadway’ New York,’ he answered quietly. “I mean the gorgeous hotels and restaurants, the bars, the gambling houses, the myriad theaters, and palatial apartment houses, the turning of night into day. I mean the flood of money in New York upon which this life is borne along, the craving for vast incomes by which alone such a life can be lived. "To say that even a bare majority of the tens of thousands of men who nightly swell the crowd of amuse ment-crazed spenders, who live in $5,000 apartments, and whose touring cars congest the streets, are doing this with money which is honestly theirs is absurd. They are not earn ing this money; they are either jug gling other people’s cash or they are gambling with their own. When you can go into a restaurant at two o’clock in the morning and behold $60,000 worth of women’s gowns at the tables and $3,000 worth of food in process of consumption, something is wrong. And when you observe half a million dollars’ worth of automobiles waiting to take this one supper crowd to their homes—or elsewhere—you may be sure that there is queer bookkeeping somewhere. All Copy New York. “It is not only this sort of life in New York, but in a more sinister way, the sight and example of it, which is bringing about a degradation of the sense of common honesty throughout the country. That fine American as set, the 'New England conscience,' has become an object of jest. And, as 1 said, New York is to blame. As in all other matters, theatrical, literary and artistic, the other cities and towns take their cue from New York. As New York lives so they all wish to live. To-day in towns as small as 25,00i) population there are springing up all-night grill rooms with Hun garian orchestras, wherein the young business men of these communities must foregather if they are to be in the social swim with their local smart set. “The young banker or business man in the smaller community comes to New York. He is taken in hand by his business acquaintances here and shown about the town. His hosts spend money on a scale which dazzles him. They take him to luxurious hotels and cafes where they and the head waiters know each other by name and where he is introduced to a scale of living fit only for men of millions. He wmnders how his friends manage to share in this prodigality, and bit by bit he finds out. They tell him funny stories of transactions which, reduced to a proper financial analysis, are defalcations pure and simple or. at best, plain gambling. ‘Everybody does it,’ they say; ‘it's Part of the game.’ And back to his heme town goes the young banker, filled with dreams of sudden wealth and all the gay life that goes with it. First Step to Ruin. “Too often this person starts to lead the gay life before he has got the sudden wealth. He sees the rich cus tomer of his bank rolling up to the door with a big deposit or to get a letter of credit for a trip abroad. He suspects—perhaps rightly—that their money came by some financial leger demain as his New York friends have described with so much relish. Per haps, he tells himself, it isn't their money at all. Why, then, shouldn’t he manipulate it for his own gain; w’hy isn’t it anybody's to play with who can get his hands on it? The life he has seen, the methods he has learned are destroying his sense of property. He is somehow getting it into his head that this money placed in his keeping is a sort of common property and that, so long as he can keep his books looking technically right, he may juggle with it for the benefit of his own personal pocket. He really comes to believe, seriously, that this is so. “Indeed,” said Mr. Moxey with a certain stern tingle in his voice, “the attitude of trusteeship has suffered a shocking change in recent years. I say in recent years, not because I am one of those pessimistic old fogies who think that people generally were more honest in other days, which they were not. but because it has been my experience of many years, that these periods of defalcation come in cycles. Whatever the cause, there are cycles of honesty and cycles of dishonesty; and the present is a cycle of dishon esty with its cause in modem stand ards of enjoyable living. , Laws Not Enforced. And let me make my opinion em ! phatic that the laxity with which the criminal laws of our land are enforced by many of tbe judges of our courts has much to do with encouraging bank officers to misuse the funds in their keeping. These officers see too many cases of the difficulty in convicting a dishonest bank official when defended by a shrewd criminal lawyer, and they are therefore willing to take the chances of detection, and even the results of a trial, before the too fre quent judge whose interpretation of the law, admitting of evidence and charge to the jury, are all in favor of the accused. “There are many direct causes for bank defalcations, but the primal cause is the desire for luxury fostered in the great cities. Of late years the chief immediate cause is the using of the bank's funds to promote enter prises in which the bank's officers have interested themselves. In many cases the bank officer is made an j officer of the outside corporation, which fact is heralded to the world with all the advertising skill of the promoter, and upon the reputation of his name many are induced to buy stock. Now, one of the main reasons which animated the promoter in finan cially interesting the banker was that if at any time the concern required financial assistance—which is invari ably the case—it could readily be obtained through him from the bank of which he was an honored and trusted officer. Experience shows that what was at first a small loan soon increases in amount until a point is reached which means disas ter to all parties interested if addi tional aid is not given. Then it is that the demand for money must be met to prevent the bankruptcy of the new corporation and the consequent loss not only of the money invested by the banker and his many friends, but also the loss of his own reputa tion as a financier and a man of in tegrity. Glitter of Speculation. “Then, too, it often happens that I instead of becoming financially inter | ested in new projects or outside busi ness enterprises the bank officer suc | cumbs to the seductive influences of speculation. He tries his hand in the stock, grain or cotton market with the belief that in this way he can amass a fortune in a short time and without effort. “He pursues the same method that is followed by those who buy or sell stocks, grain or cotton on a margin. His whole idea is to 'get rich quick,' and in order to accomplish this he either buys or sells the largest amount possible with the smallest amount that his broker will accept as margin. A slight adverse change in j the market price of the commodity or security in which he is speculating wipes out his margin, and a call from his broker for additional margin to carry the transaction must be met. Having exhausted his own money, j and being convinced that his ideas! as to the future course of the market are correct, he makes the false step of ‘borrowing’ money from the bank and using it as margin with his broker. “It is only a question of time, vary-! ket as a lamb, and In consequence is thoroughly fleeced. Instances Innumerable. “But there are many, many causes,” continued Mr. Moxey.with a brisk lit tle sigh. "A large bank in one of our eastern cities was wrecked through the speculations of its president in stocks; another one through specu lations of its cashier in the same market. Some years ago a large bank in the middle west was wrecked by its vice-president in an at tempt to corner the wheat market; while a bank in a southern city was wiped out of existence by its presi dent’s and cashier's speculations in the cotton market. The number of cases that could be cited are in numerable, and there is not a section of the country that has escaped. The number of bank' wrecks piled upon the financial beach is a silent monu ment to this truth. “But no president, vice-president, cashier or assistant cashier of a bank can use its funds for his own profit without the fact being known to at least a portion of the clerks, and it is through their silence or stupidity re garding what is being done in their presence that bank officers are en abled and, in many cases, encour aged to take the bank’s money. If bank clerks tvould do their full duty there would be fewer cases of defalca tion by the officers than in these sorry times. Bank Clerks Tempted. “And in this connection let me re mark that while the bank officer is surrounded on all sides by temptation and some criminally use the bank's funds, one must not for a moment think that they are the only ones connected with the institution who are subject to temptation and who, far too often, listen to the voice of the tempter and become defaulters. Every clerk in the bank, whether he handles a dollar of the bank’s money or not, is subject to many, if not all of the temptations that beset his su perior officer. The defalcations by the clerical force of banks can be traced to nearly all the causes enum erated as being the cause of defalca tions by officers. “But at bottom the fault is with the officers. Many a bank clerk who has been unfaithful to his trust and has used the funds of the institution with which he was connected foi speculation, in the stock, grain or cot ton market, or for games of chance at the- gambling house, or for betting at the race track, or for extravagant liv ing, etc., has been encouraged to take his first false step by the loose man ner in which the affairs of the bank were conducted and its accounts kept. He saw the slip-shod way in which things were done, by every one con nected with the bank, that clerical errors in the books were not located and corrected, and that general mis management prevailed. Is it any won der that he used the funds of the bank and took the chances of detec tion with such a condition of affairs surrounding him? The marvel is that, under such conditions, more do not succumb to temptation. “The defaulter v-ho is merely a clerk in the bank and whose misdeeds are usually traceable to a lack of prop er supervision of his work by his superiors is generally brought to book for his dishonesty. He is usually con victed, poor fellow. He has no influ ential associates to use their power to shield him. He has no money or wealthy relatives or friends to employ able criminal lawyers to defeat the ends of justice. The bank officer, on “The New England Conscience Is Now a Jest. The Present Is a Cycle of Dis honesty Due to Moder.i Standards of Luxury.” ing according to the size of his opera tions and the fluctuations of the mar ket, before he is hopelessly involved and financially unable to return the money of the bank which he has used. He now speculates more wildly than i before and upon a much larger sca'e. with the hope that one fortunate tur of the market will enable him to ma' I enough money to square himself wit the bank. In his case history on repeats itself. He went into the mar ' the other hand, having what his clerk sorely lacks, too often escapes the just punishment which his criminal acts demand.” To Help Cause in Pacific State. Dr. Martha Hughes Cannon, former ly a state senator of Ctah, has gone to live in California with the intention '■f helping the women of that state to ecual suffrage. He is described as • erful and ndtty sneaker Story Should be Remembered. In speaking of the death at Mainz of Gottlieb Glaser, the old prompter of the Stadttheater of that city, a Bos ton paper says: “He was modest in his work and did it without show or bluster. As he lived, so he passed away, and a short paragraph was all that the press bestowed upon him. This one story should be remembered: One evening the house was crowded in honor of a popular tenor. At that time when he should have done his best the tenor's voice suddenly failed him. He looked helplessly toward the top of the house, the members of the orchestra became nervous and the audience shared in the discomfort. But help came—not from above, but— from the prompter's box. He realized the situation and began where the tenor had left off and for the first and only time sang an operatic solo. The audience applauded wildly, the ten'm bowed and the leader of the orches tra banged his applause with his baton on the prompter's box and shouted: Bravo, Glaser.” Rerrember the Pioneers. It may be that some of the yon generation are inclined to • debt they owe to the m ■ even to scoff at their :i -o. ideals. If this is true it . and there is all the the perpetuation of j .. 01 tior.s and the wielding of pioneer in f iance To belong to such an organ ar t n is to be insr-ribed on a role of honor In this new country it is al most a title of neb 'ity The sons and s a dsons of th s r u: ■ ly men and women should <> s! their history d iraditions and r s rva them from ■ >n "ater Main. ee-i t’ e means ae \ia.er mains • o. I J^_M_B1GF0RWARD HOVE BY MOLE dA/Y DOW/D/G BULL P//VE DEED W/TP PA/YD DEED DRILL £MC£LfMMV -UPPUC£ CPOWDJMG OUT £U1P£/Y TtflBER Forest experiment stations will soon be established in a number of the na tional forest states of the west accord ing to plans which have just been com pleted by the Fnited States forest service. These new stations are ex areas will furnish the most valuable and instructive object lessons for the public is general, for professional for esters, lumbermen and admisinstrative officers of the national forests. In the recently established station on the Coconino national forest one of the first problems to be taken up will be the study of the reproduction of western yellow pine and the causes of its success and failure. A solution of this problem of how to obtain satisfac tory reproduction of the yellow pine is of the greatest practical importance to the southwest, since the yellow pine, which is by far the most val uable tree there, is in many cases not forming a satisfactory second growth. The study will be carried on largely by means of sample plots. Other studies which will be taken up soon are a study of the light require ments of different species at different altitudes and the construction of a scale of tolerance which will be based on the actual measurements of the light intensity, and not only, as has hitherto been the case, on general ob servations alone; the taking of meteorological observations to deter FURLED Y BED OF BULL. F/F/S UEEOL/UGF I -1 PPOJPECrSPE Pfi./YGEPJ PEADQUAPTEM. pected to do the same for development of American forests as agricultural ex periment stations have done for the improvement of the country’s farms. As a first step in this work an ex periment station has already been es tablished on the Coconino national for est in the southwest, with headquar ters at Flagstaff, Ariz. Stations in other national forests will be estab lished later, and it is the intention ulti mately to have at least one experi ment station in each of the silvicul tural regions of the west. One of the most important parts of the work of the new experiment sta tions will be the maintenance of model forests typical of the region. These mine the effect of the forest upon tem perature, humidity, melting of snow, wind velocity, etc.; a study of the rela tive value of the germinating power of seeds from trees of different sizes, ages and degrees of health; and sim ilar studies of value to the region. A complete collection of the flora of the forest will be made to form a herba rium. These stations will carry on scien tific experiments and studies which will lead to a full and exact knowledge of American silviculture, and the indi rect benefits of the forests and will deal particularly with those problems of particular importance to the regions in which they are located. THE PINCH HITTER A Wonderful Part of the Up-to-Oate Baseball Nine Is He. “I have followed baseball for some years,” remarked the man, "and the more games 1 see the more I wonder at the mental and nervous make-up of the man who is sent to the hat in pinches. “The pinch hitter, to my mind, is the most wonderful player of them all. There are men who can go through game after game, hitting fairly well all the time, but the chances are that they will not make a hit when it is most needed. “On the other hand, there are play ers who can sit on a bench all the afternoon until the very -],ast inning and then when sent in at a critical juncture to bat for some weaker man are able to land on the ball when a hit means a run. “Hitting is so difficult an art, with all the present-day restrictions in fa vor of the pitcher, that I admire great ly the man who can hit at all. But E-—-—-—- —.—I.... the fellow who is almost certain to get a hit when it is needed in a pinch is marvelous to me, especially when you realize that he has been sitting around idle all the afternoon and the other fellows have had a chance to size up the opposing pitcher by facing him several times. “And, curiously enough, when a pinch hitter gets a regular place on a team and plays the regulation length of time day after day he isn’t likely to pan out at all as a hitter. He is very apt to fall away down before three weeks have passed.” About Due. Mrs. McGillicuddy, thinking her hus band was rather late in coming home on Saturday with his pay, went to the police station in inquire if he was there. “Is my Pat ’ere?” she asked. “No,” replied the inspector on du ty, “but sit down; we’re expecting him every minute.” A MERE CIPHFR. Bertha—Bertie, you are simply im possible. Bertie—Nothing is impossible. Bertha—That's what I said. A Linguist. The charm of Mrs. Ruth McEnery Stuart’s negro dialect stories was greatly enhanced when she read them herself, as she used frequently to do in the early days of her fame, for charity and church entertainments. Her imitation of the negro dialect was excellent, and her small son. who was very fond of her accomplishment in this line, frequently boasted of it among the other children. Once, w hen some of his schoolmates were vaunt ing the accomplishments of their sev eral mothers, he was overheard to de clare: "Well, my mother is smarter than any of yours. She can speak two lan guages.” "What are they?” demanded his companions. "White and colored.” The extraordinary popularity of fine white goods this summer makes the choice of Starch a matter of great im portance. Defiance Starch, being free from all injurious chemicals, is the only one which is safe to use on fine fabrics. Its great strength as a stiffen er makes half the usual quantity ot Starch necessary, with the result of perfect finish, equal to that when the goods were new. Bone of Contention. “Death usually heals all family dif ferences,” said the old-fashioned philo sopher. “Yes,” replied the shrewd observer, “but usually the reading of the will separates them again.”—Detroit Free Press. _ "Cheap Skates.” In the town of North Andover, in habitants have been seen to smile derisively at the following card in a hardware show window: “Kittner & Spinney, Cheap Skates. Come in and Look Them Over.” Nothing I Ate Agreed With Me. MRS.LENORA BODENHAMER. -Mrs. Ben ora Bodenhamer, R. 1 . D. 1, Box 99, Kernersville, Ji. C.. writes: “I suffered with stomach trouhleand indigestion for some time, and nothing that I ate agreed with me. 1 was very nervous and experienced a continual feeling of uneasiness and fear. 1 took medicine from the doctor, but it did me no good. "I found in one of your Peruna books a description of my symptoms. 1 then wrote to Dr. Hartman for advice. He said I had catarrh of the stomach. I took Peruna and Manalin and followed his directions and can now say that I feel as well as I ever did. “I hope that all who are afflicted with the same symptoms will take Peruna, as it has certainly cured me. ” The above is only one of hundreds who have written similar letters to Dr. Hartman. Just one such case as this entitles Peruna to the candid consider ation of everyone similarly afflicted If this be true of the testimony of one per son what ought to be the testimony of hundreds, yes thousands, of honest, s n cere people. We have in our files a great m tny other testimonials. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM Cleanses and beautifies the hat. Promotes a luxuriant gTowth. Never Falls to Bestore Gray Hair to Its Youthful Color. Cures scalp diseases a hair faliiw Omaha Directory Furs'VK'’ Aulabaugh’s complete catalogue will show you what you want. G. 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