yFv. , r ,-. -" VOLUME 8, NUMBER 7 2 posit and carry on builnoM a a pr Ivtlo banker without uny reflation or restriction ax to tfto it ii.- inn niMut vnti ntlKllL manner uny roKUiauon or rwui; ,,; of conducting the business, you might have claimed credit ror such rjiu uimuh . standing a you intent have been able to ucqwlro. But you did not do that. You associated youi self witli a bank wIioho prestige and reputation dopond morn upon tho law and upon tho pr Biimption given by tho peoplo to tho law, than upon superior earn or management. t.v i tin niililit! UIO ('(jnnuum;u nun "j , ' , In your bank, but It is solfiHh to insist, mat me rllrf.pnr. tho confidence 8I10WI1 ii.iinln IttiVft Tin I ,,..,,. ..., ..- ....- ------ . ,, IT .. - . Milill I Al MIFII Villi I III lll mo of tho advantagoB which it now has over mller bankH. The bank exists for tho benefit I IK M II11K Hi' iw tinniiiiivi """ The for the do- lit It lo in Minn " ..itriit tn nhinlii further security, . - ..ii ti...t .... nn n r iiiKt.M mifin ir tm ri rnuuii ri iiiiii. viiui uuiiii .ww... I'V"' II B01 BUI ilm neonle exist for the benefit of tho bank. laws regulating banking are made for the do pnsllors rather than for the stockholders, be ciiu.no the sio. kholderH are able to protect tncm sclves, wliile the depositors are helpless. The law requiroH that a certain percentage of the deposit Khali be kept as a reserve why? For the benefit, of depositors. Tho law pro vides that not more than ten per cent of the p.iiiiimI find Miirnlux shall be loaned to one per son why? For the protection of depositors. lOvory law panned for tho protection of doposi torn tends to equalize the banks, and you can make Just an sound an argument In favor of the mtw.ni nf nil rest .rlctionB as you can make nirfiinitt ilm irniiriLiit.en of donosits. Tho funda- JlKi'llinL Ull! f,iiciiniin;i; vi ,v... -., - menial diflicully is that you look at tho ques tion from the standpoint of tho banker and not from tho standpoint of tho depositor, and you insist that the depositor shall lie loft unsecured in order that your bank may have an advantage over smaller banks. What security do you give your depositors that, other banks do not give their depositors? Is it that tho ofllcors of your bank aro better men? They may die, and inferior men tako their places. Is It because your directors aro hotter than other directors? The board of di rectors may change. Is it because your stock holders aro better than others? Your stock is sold on tho market and a change may take place any day In tho ownership of tho stock, that 'will ontirely change tho character oC VYie" bank; and if such change lakes nA?iec7 who will know it? Will not the new 'rectors and the new o fllccrs claim to be conservative? When a bank fails, tho public fljruls out for the first time what has . . ''V ...... been goMfe on behind tho counter. ja'H banks aro "conservatively" managed Until thev fail, and then thov tako their nlnrn among "recklessly" managed banks. As a mat ter of fact nearly all hanks are managed well enough to protect 'depositors from loss but the trouble is that the depositors have no way of knowing with certainty which are good and which aro bad. If tho depositors could know just what banks are safe, and what unsafe, they might not need tho protection of the law, but they do not know this until too late. In tho recent stringency, tho banks all over tho country felt themselves justified In suspend ing payment upon checks, and Tor tho first time In our history tho depositor was told how much or his own money ho would be allowed to draw out for the carrying on of his business. Why was this extraordinary step necessary? Because the banks throughout tho country had deposited a part of their reserves in Now York and other reserve cities, and could not withdraw them Each bank feared a run if It permitted the withdrawal of doposits, and why would deposi tors want to withdraw? Because they were afraid of losing their deposits, if they did not withdraw. You will remember that tho biir hanks were not any better than the littlo ones . In that crisis, and as a result of the stringency that followed, immenso loss was suffered bv men who had deposited money in tho banks with tho firm belief that they could withdraw the money 1 answer your first argument, therefore, bv saying, that you overestimate the personal cle ment in the prestige that you enjoy and under estimate the advantage that you derive from tie law; and. second that our laws should bo made for the benefit of all tho people and not for tho benefit of a few of the people. The of those who deposit In the banks is larger thin tho number of stockholders, and you must nn forget that widows and orphans a depositors in hanks as well as purchasers of haul stock While 1 can ad.nro tho interest which vou feel In the widows and orphans who are stoekho dors 1 must remind you that the widows and The Commoner. orphan who deposit money in hanks are also entitled to consideration. It is supremely selfish In you to forget the interests of the larger num ber of depositors who make banking profitable. Banking would not be very advantageous it vou only loaned the money of the stockholders. The real profit of banking comes from the loan of depositors' money and it Is a little heartless In you to look at the question entirely from the standpoint of those who get the benefit of the deposits. The law considers the welfare of those who make the deposits and it is unfortu nate that those in charge of the banks do not always take a view of the situation broad enough to include the interests of depositors. Your second argument is, that the guar antee of deposits would lead to reckless bank ing and that the business communities would protest against the guarantee system on the ground that it would make all banks insecure and drive the better class of people out of the banking business. That, of course, is a prophecy, and a prophecy is more difficult to answer than an argument based upon history. Insofar as ex perience teaches anything, it teaches just the contrary. A guarantee law has been passed in Oklahoma, and tho result is that the bankers of southern Kansas have joined with the de positors in asking for a special session of the legislature in Kansas to consider a guarantee system, and they have done so, because they fear that deposits will bo withdrawn from Kan sas and carried Into Oklahoma. In my home city, a vote was taken In the Commercial club, which Is composed of business and professionl men, and the vote stood about ten to one In favor of tho guaranteed bank. And since you refer to the silver question, I beg to inform you that tho men who voted ten to one in favor of the guaranteed bank, voted about three to one against the restoration of bimetallism. Instead of driving men out of the banking business, the Oklahoma law has led a number of national bankers to take steps toward changing their banks into state banks in order to take advan tage of the state law, in case national hanks are not allowed to enter the system. If na tional banks aro not permitted to avail them selves of state guarantee systems, the state banks aro likely to gain an advantage over the national banks, and the national bankers under stand this. When I tried to secure the passage of a bill in Nebraska, providing a guarantee fund for state banks, it was opposed by the national banks on tho ground that people would remove their doposits from the national banks to the state banks, if the state banks were made abso lutely secure; and it is to avoid injustice to either class of banks, that I have urged that national banks should be permitted to take ad vantage of guarantee systems established in the slates and that state banks should be permitted to tako advantage of any guarantee system es tablished by congress. The guarantee of deposits will not produce recklessness in management. You are selected by the stockholders, not by the depositors. You will endeavor to manage your bank in the inter est of the stockholders, and your argument shows that you consider their interests as paramount 1 mler a guaranteed system of banks, vou would si ill bo responsible to your stockholders They would lose all that they have and be subjected to the 100 per cent liability in addition, before other banks could lose anything on account of your bank's failure. Would this not be sufii- "Ul -u iiuiKtj you careiui? And If your regard for your stockholders would make you careful why would not other bank officials be made careful by their regard for their stockholders? The guarantee of deposits does not relieve the stockholders of responsibility neither does it relieve the director or the officer of care Tho guarantee of deposits simply means that the de positors who have no choice in tho selection of officers shall not be held responsible because of mismanagement by officers. ause of Do you think we could improve the char acter of our bankers by repealing all laws n?oI valine for regulation and inspection? I? SS why do you think it would lower the nhiLS ' nfos&mCialS t0 inCreaS - -ctitlaoTuee- Your indictment against banking is more i-ere than I have over hmn.ru "..1S moro than is brought by depositors geneX Ynn are not willing to trust nthOT i,lft"y:, ou frmt nf hnlnl, i,. . V ""n.s LO tile e.- yet you expect depositors to t.r ?, nT? ' ?,"d even though the donnelo ". ," fc"w "". tnoy put into tho biSST V'MI M trust each other, they ought not be surprised at some timidity among "depositors. The fact is, that the country is suffering to day from lack of confidence in banks more than from any other cause. The money can not bo drawn from hiding and hoarding unless the de positors are assured of the safety of tho hanks. The amount of the tax on each bank would be little compared with the benefit which it would receive from its share of the increased de posits, and as for making banks unsafe, the guarantee system will insure safer banking. Nearly every bank failure is due to the ap propriation of the money by the directors or officers. In discussing this question in New York recently, I put the question to ex-Secretary Gage and to Mr. Baker, the president of the National Bank of New York, and they admitted in the presence of a company of some eight hundred that almost all bank failures are trace able to the misconduct of directors. They also admitted that the law ought to make it a crim inal offense for a bank official to loan more than one-tenth of the capital or surplus to one person. Why have we not been able to secure bet ter regulation of banks? The answer is simple. The bad banks don't want any regulation and the good banks prefer to make a business ad vantage out of the recklessness of other banks. When banks become mutually responsible for each other's depositors., it will be easier to secure the proper regulation of the banks. The financiers of the country have had their way for a generation, and they" have not used their influence to protect depositors. They have failed so completely that the postmaster general has recommended the postal savings bank for the security of savings. Millions of dollars are sent out of this country every year to be de posited in the government banks of Europe be cause of distrust of our banks, and the guaran teed bank is being advocated as a means of protecting depositors. Those who preside over the. big banks have not been as interested as they ought to have been in the general public. They have been satisfied to raise their own bank stock to a premium, by pointing out the insecurity of de posits in smaller banks, and they object to hav ing this advantage removed. The big bank has two advantages over the small bank even when the depositors are made secure. In the first place, a big bank can loan more to one per son than a small bank can and Is thus able to draw the business of the larger merchant. This is an advantage that the big bank will still have. A bank with a capital of a million and a surplus of a million can loan two hundred thousand dollars to one individual, while a bank with a capital of a hundred thousand and a surplus of a hundred thousand, can only loan twenty thousand dollars to one person. There is also a prestige In the big bank that business men understand. There is a cer tain vanity to which the big bank appeals. The depositor has the advantage of business ac quaintance and business connection with the big bank. Ho can refer to it when his business standing is asked, and this advantage the big bank will still have. Why should it ask for an advantage based upon the insecurity of all depositors and the insecurity of all communities? Why not make all banks equally good" so far as the depositor is concerned? Why not pro tect all widows and all orphans from danger of loss to their deposits? Why not protect all business men from the danger of having pay ment on their checks suspended? Why not protect all communities from the embarrassment that follows a bank failure? Why not protect banks from runs and withdrawals based upon timidity and fear? Why not make banks so secure that people will deposit all their money in tho banks instead of putting some of it away under carpets? The amount of money that will be drawn from hoarding and hiding by the guarantee of bank deposits will give us a larger circulation han can be secured through frantic w LU??n lhe Svernnient for its surplus funds. SSnf?? S Were in dIstress, they did not tl f . call11?pon the government for the the people's money and that money was of It J? f th0m w!thout interest t0 the extent ThE miL W llundJred and fl"y million dollars. nSi?o?? Vn m,isGd by taxation upon all the P, Pjf, and ,wh le Jhe people's money was being loaned to the banks to tide them over a strin SSf S8, peopl themselves were afraid to Sj,"01' oney n the banks and many of them were witlwirnwimr ti,ni 'n. . banks. """ muuey irom mo It all depends upon the point of view. If legislation is to have for its object the welfare ff MtehirrdiMtn -