FEWW-! TTiie , a -. iT77 li "1-" ' , ' ' IIIIMl ll'llll'''"MwfiliiafijLiClitiSll I - tbs ntgwrii''K:iij 'tiwb - tirmu ni nwi im.ii, 1ww"" l""wliMfc'W 1 ; v ",,. !' ' r JANUARY 3, 1908 The Commoner. s GOVERNMENT GUARANTEE OF DEPOSITS Charles N. Crewdson, author of Tales of the Road, has this to say about the Bryau plan to have the United States government guarantee payment of deposits In national banks: The Great Power lets the sun shine; It lets the rain fall; It sprouts the seed planted in the earth. Man wants to work. A few finan ciers are now saying, man must stop work and that the sun must shine and the rains must fall upon many unplowed fields, that when the grain be harvested the people shall have no money for their crops, and that many men -who want to work must stop work and that every business man and nearly all bankers themselves must Buffer. Mr. Bryan can stand pat on imperialism, tariff and the trusts, but the present livest question before the American people and the question of more importance to them than any other question in our nation's history is: How shall the government provide money for the .people? The plan Mr. Bryan suggested seems to mo a business man a sane, definite solution of this questioli. Mr. Bryan's plan as I understand it is this: First The United States government shall guarantee that every man who puts his monoy in a national bank can go to that bank and get his money when he wants to. Second That not the stockholders, but the depositors shall, upon demand, have the return of their money guaranteed by the government. Third That the government shall lightly tax the national banks to pay losses brought about by national bank failures. Fourth That this tax charge, which would doubtless be less than one-tenth of one per cent per annum of their average deposits, should be used for two purposes: First, to pay for thorough examination of the national banks, so that the losses to the government and to sound banks would be as little as possible; and second, in case of a national bank failure to at once pay the depositors in that bank, their money in full. Fifth To punish severely bank examiners and bankers themselves, who might be dis honest. BENEFITS This would benefit: First All people, because it would give them a safeplace to put their monoy; because it would keep" all money in circulation; because, the people having safe banks in which to put their money, would not lock it up or bury it in the ground. Second This would benefit all business men in all kinds of business because, when they were doing a sound business and had legitimate assets, they could at all times borrow a reason able amount from the banks. This plan would give stability to business and prevent either rapid increase or decrease in prices. Third This plan would benefit the man ufacturer, because the wholesale merchants, feeling that their orders would not be cut off, would not cut their orders at the factories. Fourth It would be a good thing for the wholesale merchants, like Claflin & Co., of New York, or Marshall Field & Co., of Chicago, or the Simmons Hardware Co., or the Hamilton Brown Shoo Co., of St. Louis, or any wholesale dealer in any city, because the retail merchant could borrow reasonable amounts from their local banks, would not be scared to death a"bout having to pay the money back on short demand and would not cut oft their orders. Fifth It would benefit traveling men, who work for manufacturers and wholesale mer chants, because their sales would not be cut off, but would keep right on. Tens of thousands of traveling men, right now, are having their 1907 income cut down one-third or more, be cause their sales are cut off. If you do not be lieve it, ask any traveling man you meet. Sixth This plan would be a good thing for the retail merchant, because manufacturers and -wholesale merchants would not be so tight on their credits. Next, they could, with less danger, borrow reasonable amounts from the banks; next, their business would be bigger because people who farm would get stable prices for what they raise, and men who earn wages would have jobs. It would benefit the clerks who work in retail stores, because they would not have their salaries cut down and not bo thrown out of their jobs. SeventhThis plan would bo a good thing for real estate owners, because real estate values would not take sudden drops, and be cause the money they owed to banks would not be suddenly called in. Eighth This plan would be a good thing for builders, for the same reason it would bo a good thing for owners of real estate. Ninth This plan would be a good thing for farmers, because there would be plenty of money, that would safely circulate, to niovo their crops. It would also be good for tho farmer, because tho prices of his crofts would keep more or less even, instead of falling down all at once because money got tight. Tenth This plan would be a good thing for people who work for wages, because they could always have jobs. Eleventh This plan would be a good thing for bankers themselves. First, because if tho people who had their money in tho banks knew that the government guaranteed that they could get it whenever they wanted It, they would not want it, and there would be no runs on banks. Tho banks could do a safer business. Second, tho banks could loan a greater percentage of, their deposits, because they would not bo scared all the time, because they were afraid of a run. Third, the amount of business that tho banks would get from the greater percentage of de posits they could loan, would, many times over, pay the amount the government would tax them for tho purpose of guaranteeing deposits and for establishing a system of thorough bank ex amination. Twelfth This plan would not bo a good thing for stock gamblers, because if tho gov ernment were guaranteeing depositors they would see to it that no money was loaned on stocks with too much water In them. But this plan would not be a bad thing for the man who wished to buy stocks for a legitimate in vestment. Thirteenth This plan would not bo a good thing for over-capitalized trusts, because they could not borrow more than they ought to have, and because no one bank should be allowed to loan more than a reasonable percentage of their capital stock, which amount they could lose and still be sound. Fourteenth This plan would be a good thing for every legitimate business, for all of these above reasons and it would prevent any panic that might otherwise arise, because the country would not be subjected to 'the will of a few financiers who, under the present banking system can cause a panic any tlmo they want it, by refusing to give to their depositors their money, upon demand. STATE BANKS Mr. Bryan's solution of the state bank prob lem is an easy one. Tho states would have to guarantee the depositors in state banks, just the same as the government would guarantee depositors in national banks, otherwise the peo ple would put their money in national banks in stead of state banks, and furthermore, the state banks could share in the national guaranty by putting themselves on equal footing with na tional banks. This plan would not prevent any privato Individuals from loaning their money to any body they wanted to, at whatever hazard they wished to risk. Stock gamblers could get their money from private people if the private people would let them have it, but they could not get the people's money, deposited in banks and gamble with "that." Buyers of stocks, however, could borrow money on legitimate stock Invest ments, just tho same as a merchant could bor row money on his merchandise or a farmer could borrow money oh his farm. POSTAL BANKS Tills plan is better than our having postal savings banks, because the people and business men would have greater use of the volume of money if it were in banks where private indi viduals who owned the national banks could loan money on legitimate enterprises. The postal banks would have to deposit their money in other banks and then we would have all the dangers that we now have, and while the postal bank plan would be some im provement upon our present plan It would not bo as good as tho plan of Uio government's guar anteeing all depositors in national banks against loss. EMERGENCY ASSIST CURRENCY This kind of money would moan simply this: that tho banks could Ihkuq money upon their assets, buy more assets with this money and Issuo mora monoy and, on a given amount of capital make their liabilities so groat that when tho top-heavy top quit spinning it would fall over and smash to ploecs. Thero is Just as much monoy In the country as thero was six months ago and yot all business Is tied up and senrcely a man In America Is not suffering a loss right now; and everybody under our presout banking system will keep on being in dangor of having a panic como any tlmo that a few financiers may say bo. I believe Mr. Bryan's plan to bo a sane, easy, quick solution of the proHont monoy prob lem and I believe, as a business man, that If his plan Is put to work it will bo kopt at work and that America will never again fool another panic, CHARLES N. CREWDSON. Paragraphic Punches The Haguo conference having adjourned, Mr. Taft is loft alono In tho pacification bus iness. Milwaukeo Sentinel. "Wo must walk In tho light,'' says Brother Rockefeller. All right, but don't raise tho price of it! Atlanta Constitution. They are putting U2.000.000 of safety ap pliances along the Harrlrnan roads. And at tho moment a few on Harrlrnan. New York World. Mr. Roosevelt Is going strong on honesty these days, but he continues to dodge the ques tion about that campaign fund. Florida Times-Union. Perhaps It Is true that all of John D. Rock efeller's Jokes are old. Like his monoy, they are merely appropriated. Louisville Courier-Journal. If the price of paper continues In Its pres ent direction, it won't be long before even paper railroads are worth somewhere near what they ask for 'em. Ohio State Journal. . It was all right for Mr. Roosevelt to turn on the light. The trouble was that in doing so he fell against the burglar alarm and woke up tho baby. Richmond Times-Dispatch. ' t A man in Wisconsin was shot in mistake by a neighbor who took him for a rabbit. Evi dently, nature study Is too much neglected in the schools of that state. Baltimore American. - Tho tariff on lumber gives the treasury little revenue, but it puts a tax on every man who builds a home, and authorizes lumber men to pocket it themselves. Los Angeles Express. The plaint of foreign markets Is that Amor-, lean merchants do not pack goods rightly. They ought to sec how some of our distinguished citi zens pack whole conventions and ship then through. Detroit News. The man who will stand In line all night to draw his money out of a solvent bank may show determination and endurance, but thoy aro so unprofitably directed as to be worse than wasted. New York Tribune. If somebody tapped Stuyvesant Fluh's tele phone, as alleged, high finance has more in com mon with porch-climbing than had been be lieved. Philadelphia Public Ledger. Mark Twain confesses that he lost ?17,000 by being "let in on the ground floor of a good thing" by kind friends. He ought not to com plain. How many literary men would havo ?20,000 to lose. Chicago Record-Herald. Jjj.J-flt-v Wt VJW. Ht. -SrfV - 4-Sv-- jI .-Ali. i- Ji- jjtff.h- -